LEGAL PRINCIPLES
Apparently one and all seem to be slightly PTS on the subject of legal. Courts come from R6 and, as a result, it is difficult sometimes for people to understand this.
Lawyers are an unnecessary profession. Barristers have to try cases in England and the Internal Revenue courts but, other than that, anybody can try his own cases by tradition and you have to have permission to appear before the US Supreme Court.
A lawyer, then, is not an indispensable professional man. He makes himself "indispensable" by being an expert. He uses big terms and makes it all very difficult and that makes people slightly incomprehensible on the subject.
I know, the normal reaction you say is: "Aah," someone and they say, "Aaaah, I don't
I don't know, aaaah!" If somebody is going to legal, aaaah, aaaah, seems very complicated... send him down to Qual and get it run out.
BETTER REASONS
Legal is not a complex subject. All it is, is the system by which you figure out better reasons.
The enemy says: "Oh well, I'm innocent because there were seven oak trees standing in the grove and I only cut down six of them, so I did not destroy the forest because there is an oak tree and so forth." Ah well, you don't know the point of the matter: A forest is a plurality of trees." He loses.
To be on the ball just think of the better reason. There is no final answer ever, but you've got to give an answer that is so convincing that it is the final answer, that people will buy it as the final answer.
Criminal law is different. Murder is murder. The corpse was there, the guy was standing with a knife in his hand and seven guys saw him do it. Well, there's the final answer.
The psychiatrist has got a perfect answer. He says "Of course, yes, everyone saw him do it because he is insane." Well, nobody can define that, so they get in four or five psychiatrists; fill their pockets full of money and say, "Yes, that's right, he was suffering from "demenure grandeur." (And) they just made it up on the spot). That's a better reason. So then they send him over to the spit-bin, like St. Elizabeth's, and he stays there for three days and is discharged.
So, just think of legal as a better reason. Make sure people know the definitions and make sure that it's all a better reason.
Dig into the files. But you know what you are doing, you are not giving up and are just looking for a better reason. They walk around in a circle a few times and figure out and sometimes you have to go back and say, "Well, they consumed all the goods you gave them back when we sent them the signed receipts." And you go back and he wouldn't take them all away and here are the back; he didn't want them back. So, that's why we had to give them away. He refused to accept the goods." "Oh Good, Well that's all right, he's guilty then."
There's another side to this. Not only better reasons why you're innocent, but better reasons why they're guilty. So, anybody is permitted to conduct a special committee, something or other and "Well," on the defense. "Yes, but not to have it own corporate collected property." "Oh, that's true, Didn't think of that." You keep thinking up reasons why they are guilty.
They try to justify by precedents. Nearly everything is tried by precedents; it is what went on before; what has been adjudicated on this subject. Therefore you hear lawyers saying: Barts and Barton, 1692. A cargo of goods was landed on the street of London and no demurrage was paid on this to the City and the City tried to claim demurrage and Barts and Barton didn't have to pay it and it was round against the City
in this particular case, so therefore Barts and Barton proves conclusively that Smith and Company has a perfect right to leave their ship in the middle of the fairway."
You have to know that you have to go to the books. That's what lawyer isn't normally good for going to the books. A lawyer is only as good as he's been educated and most English solicitors have not been educated at all. All they are is a solicitor business for real this is it is not a complex subject.
The gist of this, so don't depend on them. You must not be confused about it and we must not flub by tooting around with legal in a stupid way. That's what law fattens on: the stupidity of the citizen.
CONFESSIONS
One of the earliest things we learned about legal is you could take a confession to people and hand it to them and nine times out of ten they would sign it. That is why the insurance companies, instead of paying out claims, go around and get waivers of claims. They end up a claim adjuster. A guy got $10,000 coming to him. The claims adjuster cuts the thing down to fifty cents by giving him all kinds of reasons why it can't be done: "It doesn't say that," and he reads the small print and then says, "It is too bad and we will give you your fifty cents," and they guzzle a bit and then "Sign on this line the lawyers for him."
In handling law we're going up against people that it's too much for; including much for. So all we have to do is get a clear, simple concept of what we are doing and through hell and high water carry it forward, with better reasons.
ANSWERING A LAWSUIT
If you were sued for parking your chewing gum under a chair you would have to answer that suit. So you answer the suit by saying that you are now suing the person who sued you for $10,000. That is to negate. That's an answer to a suit. You pay out a $10,000 damage for damage to reputations, then he just loses his suit has to don't just tamely say "No, I didn't do it." You say, "No, I'm suing you for $10,000 and a better reason, because I wasn't even in town at that time. And this is a blackening of my reputation and I demand $10,000 in damages. They refute this if and I'll give you in you're suing them for $10,000. Always sue them for a juicy amount back. That is routine in an answer.
If a suit is not answered, it's lost. You have to answer a suit in fifteen days and if you don't, the judgment can be awarded against you providing somebody applies for it. So you have this guy served with a summons for parking chewing gum under his chair and a $5,000 damage suit for doing so. He's got to answer that, and fifteen days later, if he has not answered it, then you apply for a judgment.
The court, although it's supposed to operate exactly in its proceedings, doesn't. It tries to get the guy to answer and it delays and is very illegal in normally.
So you can place a suit in this wise: You sue, the guy doesn't answer, you apply for judgment and it would simply be awarded. That is all there is to that. But there's this way of suing: You sue the guy through a lawyer, he files a suit in court, sends him a writ and the guy is supposed to answer and he will; he files with a piece of paper or an appearance and then some other piece of paper is answered and all of a sudden the other guy says he wants to settle this out of court. This is done by conference and then they tell the judge it has been settled out of court.
A settlement out of court is usually rumored around, but you can get the settlement filed in court as part of the settlement. A judgment as part of settlement.
Then there is an awarded judgment. The court just goes back and forth and back and forth and finally there is a hearing and then the judge finds either way and rewards judgment or refuses it and dismisses the case.
Legal is a type of warfare. A warfare of better reasons.
Founder