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Try Your Own Case
How to represent yourself in court
by Jordan Marsh

Overview


Try Your Own Case includes:

• 15 chapters of instruction, explanation, tips and illustrations regarding every phase of the litigation process, from investigating your case through trial.

• Glossary of Legal terms

• 112-page appendix with forms, instructions, and sample pleadings

• Word Index

REVIEWS

Reader's Choice Book Award FINALIST

"Our verdict: GET IT."  - Kirkus Reviews

"...[A] comprehensive, extensively researched, well written and engaging guidebook. Marsh’s writing is clear, simple and accessible for both the lay-reader and more experienced professional."

- Reader's Choice

"[A]n essential guide for individuals planning to represent themselves in legal proceedings."

-Reader's Favorite


Read more

Description


In Try Your Own Case, veteran trial lawyer Jordan Marsh takes his decades of courtroom experience and lays it all out to give self-represented litigants a fighting chance to get the best result possible in court.

Try Your Own Case is an exceptionally readable guide for a complicated process.  Marsh uses  common sense, humor, and plain English to walk you through the different elements of a lawsuit -- from investigating your case, through pleadings, discovery, motions, and trial. 

Whether you have tried unsuccessfully to find an attorney to represent you, or you are determined to go it alone, this book will walk you through the litigation process and give you the tools to try your own case effectively and persuasively.

It is estimated that at least 75 percent of civil cases nationally include at least one self-represented (pro se) litigant. According to a recent study, more than 25 percent of all federal civil cases are filed by people without lawyers. That's a lot of self-represented litigants, most of whom are going up against qualified and well-paid attorneys.

It doesn't seem like a fair fight. But isn't the point of a justice system to decide cases fairly? That's the general idea, but it rarely works out that way. The American judicial system -- like the judicial systems in most countries -- is adversarial. That means courts attempt to reach the best result and find the truth by two (or more) sides essentially competing against each other within the rules to convince a judge or a jury that their side should win. But that assumes both sides to a lawsuit have roughly equal resources and representation, which is often not the case.

Fair or not, our legal system is not going away anytime soon. This book is an attempt to even the playing field between litigants who are represented by attorneys and those who are not. How? Through knowledge. A good attorney's greatest asset is knowledge. Knowledge truly is power. This book is here to walk people without lawyers through the civil justice system and provide them with the knowledge to navigate this complicated system and put up a good fight.

If you're going it alone, you should have the tools to navigate the legal system competently.

This book is your toolbox.

Read more

About the author


Jordan Marsh has been trying cases for three decades. He began his career as a legislative intern before moving on to the City of Chicago Law Department, where he represented the city and its employees in personal injury, civil rights, and other matters.

Jordan litigated countless cases in state and federal courts, ranging from soft-tissue cases to catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases, trying more than 70 cases to verdict. Jordan was named one of the 40 Illinois Attorneys Under 40 to Watch by the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, which hailed him as "one of the city's most energetic and resourceful trial attorneys."

Since 2016, Jordan has been representing citizens against law enforcement and other government officials, as well as insurance companies and corporations, obtaining millions of dollars in settlements and verdicts for his clients. Jordan has taught trial advocacy classes, coached, and judged trial advocacy competitions, and served as a faculty member with the Kirkland Institute for Trial Advocacy. Jordan lives in the Chicago area with his family and a dog named Paulie.

Read more

Book details

Genre:LAW

Subgenre:Trial Practice

Language:English

Pages:412

eBook ISBN:9798350969412

Paperback ISBN:9798350966183


Overview


Try Your Own Case includes:

• 15 chapters of instruction, explanation, tips and illustrations regarding every phase of the litigation process, from investigating your case through trial.

• Glossary of Legal terms

• 112-page appendix with forms, instructions, and sample pleadings

• Word Index

REVIEWS

Reader's Choice Book Award FINALIST

"Our verdict: GET IT."  - Kirkus Reviews

"...[A] comprehensive, extensively researched, well written and engaging guidebook. Marsh’s writing is clear, simple and accessible for both the lay-reader and more experienced professional."

- Reader's Choice

"[A]n essential guide for individuals planning to represent themselves in legal proceedings."

-Reader's Favorite


Read more

Description


In Try Your Own Case, veteran trial lawyer Jordan Marsh takes his decades of courtroom experience and lays it all out to give self-represented litigants a fighting chance to get the best result possible in court.

Try Your Own Case is an exceptionally readable guide for a complicated process.  Marsh uses  common sense, humor, and plain English to walk you through the different elements of a lawsuit -- from investigating your case, through pleadings, discovery, motions, and trial. 

Whether you have tried unsuccessfully to find an attorney to represent you, or you are determined to go it alone, this book will walk you through the litigation process and give you the tools to try your own case effectively and persuasively.

It is estimated that at least 75 percent of civil cases nationally include at least one self-represented (pro se) litigant. According to a recent study, more than 25 percent of all federal civil cases are filed by people without lawyers. That's a lot of self-represented litigants, most of whom are going up against qualified and well-paid attorneys.

It doesn't seem like a fair fight. But isn't the point of a justice system to decide cases fairly? That's the general idea, but it rarely works out that way. The American judicial system -- like the judicial systems in most countries -- is adversarial. That means courts attempt to reach the best result and find the truth by two (or more) sides essentially competing against each other within the rules to convince a judge or a jury that their side should win. But that assumes both sides to a lawsuit have roughly equal resources and representation, which is often not the case.

Fair or not, our legal system is not going away anytime soon. This book is an attempt to even the playing field between litigants who are represented by attorneys and those who are not. How? Through knowledge. A good attorney's greatest asset is knowledge. Knowledge truly is power. This book is here to walk people without lawyers through the civil justice system and provide them with the knowledge to navigate this complicated system and put up a good fight.

If you're going it alone, you should have the tools to navigate the legal system competently.

This book is your toolbox.

Read more

About the author


Jordan Marsh has been trying cases for three decades. He began his career as a legislative intern before moving on to the City of Chicago Law Department, where he represented the city and its employees in personal injury, civil rights, and other matters.

Jordan litigated countless cases in state and federal courts, ranging from soft-tissue cases to catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases, trying more than 70 cases to verdict. Jordan was named one of the 40 Illinois Attorneys Under 40 to Watch by the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, which hailed him as "one of the city's most energetic and resourceful trial attorneys."

Since 2016, Jordan has been representing citizens against law enforcement and other government officials, as well as insurance companies and corporations, obtaining millions of dollars in settlements and verdicts for his clients. Jordan has taught trial advocacy classes, coached, and judged trial advocacy competitions, and served as a faculty member with the Kirkland Institute for Trial Advocacy. Jordan lives in the Chicago area with his family and a dog named Paulie.

Read more

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