Currently in trial on a landmark social media case, Rahul Ravipudi takes time out to share his battle-tested philosophies in this episode of “Verdict Academy.” A partner at Panish | Shea | Ravipudi in Los Angeles, Rahul is a member of the Inner Circle of Advocates and all four elite invitation-only trial organizations: ABOTA, IATL, ISOB, and ACTL. With host Kevin Morrison, he breaks down his top three tips for trial lawyers. Tune in to hear what they are.
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Great trial lawyers are made, not
born. Welcome to Verdict Academy,
Speaker:preserving trial wisdom for trial
lawyers. Join host Kevin Morrison,
Speaker:trial attorney in San Francisco,
Speaker:as he recreates those invaluable hallway
conversations that remote work has made
Speaker:rare.
Speaker:Candid insights and hard-won lessons
from America's most accomplished trial
Speaker:lawyers. Produced and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:Welcome to another episode
of Verdict Academy,
Speaker:where we bring you the best trial
lawyers in the country to share their top
Speaker:three trial tips in 30 minutes.
Speaker:This episode's guest is the
honorable Mark W. Bennett.
Speaker:Judge Mark Bennett has been a trial
lawyer in over 20 federal courts,
Speaker:has tried over 400 jury trials as
a federal district judge in six
Speaker:districts spending the Middle District
of Florida to the District of the
Speaker:Northern Mariana Islands. He's
taught at five law schools,
Speaker:authored more than 25 law review articles,
Speaker:spoken at more than 500 CLE
programs in 41 states and
Speaker:several foreign countries.
Speaker:He's mediated and arbitrated
more than 620 matters.
Speaker:And perhaps most importantly,
Speaker:he's won a hot pepper eating contest
judged by the Justice Clarence
Speaker:Thomas.
Speaker:Judge Bennett retired from the bench in
: Speaker:University Law School's Institute for
Justice Reform and Innovation and as a
Speaker:meat eater and arbitrator with a
national practice. I can tell you,
Speaker:I personally recommend an article he
wrote titled Eight Traits of Great Trial
Lawyers:A Federal Judge's View on How to Shed the Moniker,
Lawyers:"I am a litigator," which is in
the review of litigation and on his
Lawyers:LinkedIn profile. If you are a student
of all things jury trial, as I am,
Lawyers:I strongly recommend you follow
Judge Bennett on LinkedIn where his
Lawyers:thought-provoking and insightful
ideas about the jury trial are a
Lawyers:must-read. Judge Bennett,
welcome to Verdict Academy.
Lawyers:Thank you so much, Kevin. It's
a great honor to be here today.
Lawyers:I very much appreciate it.
Lawyers:It's a great honor to have you on.
Lawyers:We're going to get into the format of
the show is three trial tips to our
Lawyers:younger and less experienced attorneys
and even older folks like me.
Lawyers:But before we get there, Drew, you
obviously love jury trial, right?
Lawyers:It's a passion of yours?
Lawyers:Yes.
Lawyers:Yeah.
Lawyers:I believe the Seventh Amendment.
Lawyers:Oh, you and I bleed the
same blood, my friend.
Lawyers:What drew you to become a courtroom
lawyer and then a courtroom judge?
Lawyers:Well, thank you. Did not come from
a family of lawyers. Matter of fact,
Lawyers:growing up, I didn't know a single lawyer.
Lawyers:My mother was very ill and died when
I was pretty young and I was raised by
Lawyers:an African American kind of
nanny that my father hired.
Lawyers:And when I would come home
from elementary school,
Lawyers:I would sit on her lap and we
would chat and I would ask her
Lawyers:about her growing up in the Twin
Cities, Minneapolis, St. Paul.
Lawyers:And I was kind of appalled by the
discrimination that she encountered in her
Lawyers:life. She was never bitter ever, but
just matter of fact. And I was curious.
Lawyers:And so I asked her a lot of questions.
And so from a very early age,
Lawyers:I knew I wanted to become a civil rights
lawyer and be a voice for people who
Lawyers:needed a strong advocate.
Lawyers:How old were you when you started
your relationship with her?
Lawyers:I was probably seven, six or seven.
Lawyers:Okay. And this is in the ... Which
timeframe are we talking about?
Lawyers:1950.
Lawyers:Okay. So obviously racial
justice issues, voting rights,
Lawyers:all that stuff was very hot topic and ...
Lawyers:Yes.
Lawyers:Got it. And so basically
at a very young age then,
Lawyers:you were driven to do
justice for folks like her.
Lawyers:Absolutely. Wow.
Lawyers:And you thought you could do that in a
courtroom as opposed to some other area?
Lawyers:Yes. Well, right around a year
or two after I met Tessie,
Lawyers:my father was a children's
dentist in downtown St. Paul,
Lawyers:and I would take the city bus from where
we lived, about a 20-minute bus ride.
Lawyers:And I'd go to the public library across
from where my dad's dental practice
Lawyers:was. And then I'd meet him for lunch and
then go back to the library and then he
Lawyers:would drive me home at the end of the day.
Lawyers:And one day I got bored and so I walked
a couple more blocks down to the Ramsey
Lawyers:County Courthouse in St. Paul.
Lawyers:And I went in and I just happened to
watch a trial and it was a burglary trial.
Lawyers:And I remember I didn't think the defense
lawyer was very good. And I thought,
Lawyers:"Well, gee,
Lawyers:why don't you ask these questions on
cross-examination?" And I thought,
Lawyers:"I think I could do a
better job than that,
Lawyers:being the precocious child that I was.
" And so that was my first
Lawyers:exposure to a courtroom. And
I thought, "I could do that.
Lawyers:" Wow.
Lawyers:Got a little taste at a young age and
you just can't get it out of your system.
Lawyers:Exactly. Still can't. That's right.
Lawyers:Incredible. So did you go to
college with knowing that, hey,
Lawyers:this is a path to law school
and a path to the courtroom.
Lawyers:Did you hate that whole mission?
Lawyers:Exactly. Yeah.
Lawyers:I know most people in law school
don't know what they're going to do,
Lawyers:change their mind three or four times.
Lawyers:I was just always focused on doing trial
work and I started off doing primarily
Lawyers:civil rights and employment
discrimination, although
I did a few other things,
Lawyers:but that was the primary
focus of my practice.
Lawyers:I also had a very substantial
First Amendment practice,
Lawyers:and that's the practice that got me
into multiple federal courts around the
Lawyers:country. In addition to some
of my civil rights cases,
Lawyers:I also did federal criminal defense,
Lawyers:and that got me into other
districts as well. All.
Lawyers:Right. Well, let's get to the heart of it.
Lawyers:We're going to have a nice conversation
here about these three topics.
Lawyers:Topic one, Judge Bennett, the use of
questionnaires for jury selection.
Lawyers:How do you feel about
those and how do you use.
Lawyers:Them? I'm a huge believer
in jury questionnaires.
Lawyers:And when I was chief
judge of the district,
Lawyers:we had a fairly kind of
standard questionnaire that
the administrative officer
Lawyers:rolled out to federal court,
which is basic information.
Lawyers:A lot of federal judges would give the
lawyers the morning of the jury trial
Lawyers:that information. I
thought that doesn't work.
Lawyers:So I expanded the questionnaire into
things that I would want to know if I were
Lawyers:a trial lawyer, and then we
did something that was unusual.
Lawyers:We sent those questionnaires
out well in advance of trial.
Lawyers:When they came into the clerk's office,
Lawyers:we sent them to the lawyers in
the case at least seven days
Lawyers:prior to the trial. We had
a random jury selector,
Lawyers:so we knew which of the first
14 jurors would be in the box.
Lawyers:We disclosed that to the lawyers.
Lawyers:We didn't disclose who would follow
them because that would affect a lot of
Lawyers:their judgments.
But I wanted them to know early on,
Lawyers:week before the trial started,
who were the 14 jurors.
Lawyers:They got copies of the questionnaires
from all of the potential jurors that were
Lawyers:being brought in.
Lawyers:They just didn't know who was going to
follow the 14 if some were challenged for
Lawyers:cause or excluded. And
then in major cases,
Lawyers:we did a case specific
questionnaire. So for example,
Lawyers:I had a trial that was scheduled
to last three months. It did.
Lawyers:And we took 14 days in jury
selection picking the jury.
Lawyers:We sent out that questionnaire
four months prior to trial to 400
Lawyers:prospective jurors. We got them all
back. It was sent out to the lawyers.
Lawyers:And then I had the lawyers meet
and confer and they agreed that of
Lawyers:that 400, 200 would just be
poor jurors for both sides,
Lawyers:and they eliminated those. And then when
we brought jurors in and small panels,
Lawyers:I think it was 15 per day,
Lawyers:they had all the questionnaires and
we had excluded the obvious ones that
Lawyers:neither side thought would be a good
juror. So we were able to run a ...
Lawyers:Even though it took 15
days to pick a jury,
Lawyers:we were able to run a much more efficient
jury selection because my whole theory
Lawyers:of being a trial judge was what was called
a jury centered approach to judging.
Lawyers:And the question was, what would I want
if I were a juror? And everything I did,
Lawyers:including my no sidebar rules,
I didn't allow sidebars,
Lawyers:was aimed at what would jurors want.
Lawyers:So as a huge believer in
jury questionnaires, I
thought for the most part,
Lawyers:when people were sitting in their living
room filling out a questionnaire and
Lawyers:had time to think about it,
they weren't in an intimidating,
Lawyers:beautiful federal courtroom
with 28 foot high ceilings and
Lawyers:very fancy courtroom.
Lawyers:They were more at ease to actually be
forthcoming about what they would say in
Lawyers:the questionnaire.
Lawyers:That's not to say that sometimes
once I got into the courtroom,
Lawyers:they would get answers that were
inconsistent with the questionnaire,
Lawyers:and that's okay because we could fare it
out why that was. But I was just a huge
Lawyers:believer in jury questionnaires and a
huge believer in getting that information
Lawyers:to the lawyers ahead of time so that
they could process and think about it and
Lawyers:not have to scramble the morning of trial.
Lawyers:I never understood why judges did that.
It made no sense to me whatsoever.
Lawyers:I'm laughing because
this is music to my ears.
Lawyers:This is a dream.
Lawyers:And this is what happens when you put
a trial lawyer on the trial bench,
Lawyers:someone who knows what they're
doing. Why is the rest of the bench,
Lawyers:especially the federal bench,
so tough on this issue?
Lawyers:So they either don't allow
a questionnaire or they do.
Lawyers:It's like three questions,
name rank, serial number,
Lawyers:and you get 62 seconds to do voir dire.
Lawyers:Why is the rest of the bench, I would say,
Lawyers:is it fair to say the rest of the bench
is not adopt this practice, Judge?
Lawyers:Would you agree with that?
Lawyers:Yes, I would agree with that.
Lawyers:I think there's a culture
in most districts that it's
always been done that way.
Lawyers:That's the way we're going to do
it. So the new judges come in,
Lawyers:particularly judges that haven't
had extensive trial experience,
Lawyers:and then they go to new judges school,
what we call baby judges school,
Lawyers:and they learn about being a managerial
judge that just flies in the face of
Lawyers:what would jurors want and
what would trial lawyers want?
Lawyers:What's a better way to conduct a trial?
Lawyers:You obviously know how to do it.
Lawyers:Is there any tips that you can give us
as to how we can persuade a judge to
Lawyers:change his or her mind and maybe
not go to your dream level,
Lawyers:but at least get better in this area?
Lawyers:Well, I think one thing that's helpful is,
Lawyers:so in the case where we spent
15 days in jury selection,
Lawyers:I had a lot of input into
the jury questionnaire.
Lawyers:It was not a simple questionnaire.
It had 99 questions,
Lawyers:paired down from about 200
that the lawyers suggest.
Lawyers:And I worked with the lawyers and
we agreed on the 99 questions.
Lawyers:So I think one of the big tips is
if the judges have to do the work,
Lawyers:they're not going to do it because
they think they're overworked.
Lawyers:So if the lawyers can agree and work on
a questionnaire and say to the judge,
Lawyers:"We've agreed on the questionnaire,
Lawyers:we would like the assistance of
the clerk's office to send it out.
Lawyers:" Then there's less work for the judge.
Lawyers:There's not a whole lot of work for
the staff because it's all set out
Lawyers:electronically. And if
the lawyers agree to it,
Lawyers:you'd have to be kind of a real jerk
of a judge not to go along with it,
Lawyers:although I suppose some wouldn't
because they haven't done it that way,
Lawyers:but at least you've eliminated the problem
of the judge having to do any extra
Lawyers:work.
Lawyers:That's obviously a huge issue.
The issue that I run into,
Lawyers:it's going to take too much time. And
I always tell the judge, Your Honor,
Lawyers:the time that we're going to spend upfront
is going to reduce the actual trial
Lawyers:time. So if you want to put me on the
clock, put me in the clock, include this,
Lawyers:and I'll take it out of my trial
presentation. It's just so novel to them.
Lawyers:They just can't seem to follow
that. I mean, anything I can do?
Lawyers:Most judges didn't allow the lawyers to
actually participate in jury selection.
Lawyers:They would have them submit questions.
Lawyers:I partnered with the lawyers at the
pretrial and they knew from my scheduling
Lawyers:and management order that they could
have as much participation as they
Lawyers:wanted as long as it was reasonable.
And sometimes I was horrified.
Lawyers:They wanted me to do it all.
Well, I was glad to do it.
Lawyers:I had a kind of a canned power.
Lawyers:I did all my jury selection and PowerPoint
and I would adjust it for the case,
Lawyers:but they wanted me to
do it. I would say, "No,
Lawyers:it's your case." I allowed
the lawyers to participate.
Lawyers:I'd heard other judges complaining about
they'll ask inappropriate questions.
Lawyers:Never once did I have a lawyer ask what
I thought was an inappropriate question
Lawyers:in jury selection. They just didn't do it.
Lawyers:So sometimes they wanted me to
handle the difficult issues sometimes
Lawyers:against my better judgment.
They wanted to handle it, which was fine.
Lawyers:When I say against my better judgment,
Lawyers:I thought I did a little bit better
job sometimes than the lawyers did,
Lawyers:but sometimes they did a great
job, but it's their case.
Lawyers:So you should tailor the case to
meet the objectives of the lawyers.
Lawyers:And when you have really good lawyers,
Lawyers:they get along really well and you can
give them a lot of slack because they're
Lawyers:not going to abuse it.
Lawyers:I couldn't agree with you more.
Lawyers:And I just wish more that Bench adopted
your view. We get better trials.
Lawyers:We get better results.
Lawyers:Absolutely. We would get
fairer results. Fairer.
Lawyers:Results. That's what I mean by that.
Lawyers:You get actual less biased jurors who
actually weeded out the biases that
Lawyers:always existed. It doesn't matter
what kind of a case, criminal defense,
Lawyers:real estate deals, whatever it is.
You'd weed that stuff out. Incredible.
Lawyers:I get fair results. Wow.
Lawyers:I'm working as a consultant now on
a case in a state on the West Coast,
Lawyers:and the judge is allowing the
lawyers to submit three proposed
Lawyers:questions that he or
she may or may not ask.
Lawyers:I came up with what I thought were
nine really good questions and told the
Lawyers:lawyers on this team, if you
think any of them are helpful,
Lawyers:pick the three that you might want
to submit, but it's like, what?
Lawyers:You're only allowing them
to submit three questions.
Lawyers:This is a really important case,
potential multimillion dollar case,
Lawyers:and you're not allowing the
lawyers to ask questions,
Lawyers:and you're only letting them submit
three questions. Why would you do that?
Lawyers:Because it's always been done that way.
Lawyers:Yeah. Laziness always been done and
a fear that the time's going to ...
Lawyers:They've got all these cases on their
case list and the case they're managing
Lawyers:cases and they're afraid that this is
going to take an inordinate amount of
Lawyers:time. I think that's got
to be part of it. Can.
Lawyers:I just tell you one story about
it's always been done this way?
Lawyers:Please.
Lawyers:Early in my career as a
federal district judge,
Lawyers:I had this lady in the front row. We were
on the first day of the actual trial.
Lawyers:She was elderly and she raised
her hand and she said, "Well, gee,
Lawyers:I don't know what to do. A juror
raised their hand." So I said, "Yes,
Lawyers:ma'am." She said, "Well,
I've got a question for you.
Lawyers:I noticed you're drinking." And
she said, "It's probably water.
Lawyers:Everybody else in the courtroom has
water. We don't have anything to drink.
Lawyers:Why is that? " And I looked
at her and I said, "Well,
Lawyers:you're not going to like my answer
because it's always been done that way.
Lawyers:But you know what? I'm going to
change that. And on the next break,
Lawyers:you can bring in anything you want to
drink as long as it's non-alcoholic." And
Lawyers:within two weeks,
Lawyers:I had cup holders installed in the
jury box so that jurors could bring in
Lawyers:anything they wanted to drink. But
it's always been done that way is not a
Lawyers:satisfying answer to anyone.
Lawyers:It's just not because there's a
better way to do everything. Yeah.
Lawyers:Thomas Edison said there's a better
way to do everything. Go find it.
Lawyers:And I felt as my job as a lawyer
and as a judge was to go find it.
Lawyers:It is not.
Lawyers:Right?
Lawyers:Let's move to the next
topic, opening statements.
Lawyers:Why are most opening
statements dead on arrival?
Lawyers:Well, thank you, Kevin. In my judgment,
Lawyers:most opening statements are
dead on arrival because most
Lawyers:lawyers are not very good storytellers.
Lawyers:And it would make my skin
crawl an opening statement
Lawyers:when a lawyer, let's say they had six
witnesses in the case. So they would say,
Lawyers:"The witness will be Joe Blow from Kokomo
and here's what he's going to say."
Lawyers:And our next witness would
be Jane Doe from Kokomo.
Lawyers:Here's what she's going to
say. It was just piecemeal.
Lawyers:It didn't tell a cohesive story.
Lawyers:So most lawyers do not know how
to tell a story that motivates
Lawyers:jurors to rule in favor of their client,
whatever their respective story is.
Lawyers:They're just not good storytellers.
Lawyers:And that's the primary problem
with opening statements.
Lawyers:I'll give you an example. It
happens to me from a criminal.
Lawyers:Some criminal defense lawyers
watch your podcast. Yeah.
Lawyers:Anybody who does trial, I hope
is listening to it. Go ahead.
Lawyers:So I had a lawyer who did a fair
amount of criminal defense work.
Lawyers:She was a D+ lawyer on a really good day.
Lawyers:She went to a trial college for like a
couple weeks or a month. She came back,
Lawyers:she was trying a criminal case and
she gave the best opening statement,
Lawyers:one of the best I'd ever heard.
It was a cocaine conspiracy case.
Lawyers:The government had the bricks of the
kilos of cocaine on the evidence table.
Lawyers:She picked up a kilo and she told
the opening statement as if the kilo
Lawyers:could talk. And it was,
"Okay, so this kilo,
Lawyers:who did you first meet in
this conspiracy?" And she
went through everybody and
Lawyers:then did you ever meet my client?
Nope, you never met your client.
Lawyers:It was captivating.
Lawyers:And she went from a D+ lawyer on
a good day to a solid A lawyer.
Lawyers:That opening statement was fabulous
because she told the story from a
Lawyers:unique point of view. Point
of view is really important.
Lawyers:She told the point of view
from the drug evidence.
Lawyers:I never would've thought
of that on my own.
Lawyers:It was brilliant as she told the great
story and got her first not guilty
Lawyers:verdict.
Lawyers:Yeah, story. Look,
Lawyers:our brains as humans are hardwired to
listen to stories since we're all gather
Lawyers:around the campfire millennia
ago. We were telling stories,
Lawyers:right? That's how you communicate.
Lawyers:And so our brains are desperate to
hear story and they love to story.
Lawyers:You say, "Let me tell you the story."
And you mean like, oh, a story,
Lawyers:a story time, right?
Lawyers:Exactly. And in my 8Trades article,
Lawyers:I give examples of some
of my favorite TED Talk,
Lawyers:people who are really good storytellers.
Lawyers:And so you can model it
after it's an acquired skill.
Lawyers:One day when my daughter
was maybe six years old,
Lawyers:I took her to a public library to listen
to a professional storyteller and I was
Lawyers:captivated. And at the end
I went up to her. I said,
Lawyers:"Have you ever thought about going to
law school?" And she laughed. She said,
Lawyers:"No." She said, "Well, why would you
say that? " And I explained it to her,
Lawyers:that you do what most lawyers are
unable to do, incapable of doing,
Lawyers:right?
Lawyers:The litany of the evidence. Let's
list the evidence and eyes glaze over.
Lawyers:As jurors start thinking, "Let's
see, who's picking up the kids today?
Lawyers:Where's the laundry?"
Yeah, fantastic tip. Third,
Lawyers:hips for improving direct examination.
Lawyers:I think direct is often viewed as
quote easy, that people overlook it,
Lawyers:they kind of mail it in.
That's my view on direct.
Lawyers:Tell us about how you improve direct exam.
Lawyers:Yeah, I think direct is
actually much harder than cross.
Lawyers:I see a lot of lawyers that are pretty
good at cross, sometimes even very good.
Lawyers:I see very few that are
very good on direct.
Lawyers:So here are the problems with direct.
Lawyers:Most lawyers have their
questions written out.
Lawyers:And if they have 16 questions,
Lawyers:they're going to ask all 16
questions come hell or high water.
Lawyers:They don't even listen to
the answer of the witness.
Lawyers:So a great direct is where you have-.
Lawyers:Excuse me.
Lawyers:Yeah.
Lawyers:Are you suggesting trialers
are supposed to listen?
Lawyers:The greatest trial lawyers
are the best listeners.
Lawyers:Most lawyers are not
good listeners, period.
Lawyers:They don't pick on cues during oral
argument when I'm asking questions.
Lawyers:They don't listen to the witness because
they're so hell bent on asking the next
Lawyers:question. They don't listen to what
the answer to the first question is.
Lawyers:And so yeah, if you want to
write out your questions, fine,
Lawyers:write them out and then put them aside.
Ask a question, listen to the witness.
Lawyers:And then I think you've probably
had other people talk about looping.
Lawyers:You take the witness's answer and
you repeat part of that answer to
Lawyers:form your next question.
Lawyers:It's just like you're having
a conversation with a neighbor
Lawyers:in your backyard over the fence line.
You don't have written out questions.
Lawyers:The best, deepest, most
interesting conversations,
Lawyers:you don't have questions written out.
Lawyers:You listen to the person and
you ask follow-up questions,
Lawyers:right?
So when my wife and I go to parties,
Lawyers:she likes to meet everybody at the
party and have kind of a superficial.
Lawyers:I like to focus on one person and I
will get to know that person so well
Lawyers:because I ask questions, I listen,
Lawyers:I'm not concerned about
me saying anything,
Lawyers:I'm listening and I'm
asking follow-up questions.
Lawyers:And at the end of two hours,
Lawyers:they think I'm one of their best friends
because I've listened to them and
Lawyers:that's what you need to do.
I'll give you another example.
Lawyers:There was a really terrific trial
lawyer. He was very interesting.
Lawyers:He tried both civil and criminal cases
in front of me and we were trying a very
Lawyers:difficult case and he took his
chair from behind council table,
Lawyers:picked it up. He called his client
to do a direct, picked up the chair,
Lawyers:moved it up to the witness box,
sat about a foot from his client,
Lawyers:folded his hands and
started talking and having
Lawyers:conversation.
No notes, just a conversation.
Lawyers:And I felt like we were
all in a living room,
Lawyers:ease dropping on this conversation and
the jurors were in rapture because he
Lawyers:changed the dynamic of the
courtroom to have a very
Lawyers:intimate conversation. It was
dramatic and it was compelling,
Lawyers:but he knew how to do a direct
examination by asking simple
Lawyers:questions. That's another thing.
Lawyers:Most lawyers can't ask simple questions.
Lawyers:Simple questions are the
key to direct examination.
Lawyers:Who, what, when, where, why
basically and talk essentially?
Lawyers:Yes. My very first trial,
Lawyers:I was a magistrate judge first week
on the job and my colleague had
Lawyers:some cases down at the state prison
in Fort Madison, Iowa. And I said,
Lawyers:"I'd love to go down and do them for you.
" So he said, "Great." So I went down,
Lawyers:very first case, he beat me
up on the way to the shower,
Lawyers:case against the guard. So pro se
plaintiff calls the first witness,
Lawyers:"Did you see Joe Bow beat me up
on the way to the shower?" "No,
Lawyers:no further questions.
""Okay." He had six witnesses.
Lawyers:We threw five witnesses in less than
10 minutes. Gets to the sixth witness.
Lawyers:Didn't even ask the witness
his name, just said,
Lawyers:"Did you see Guard Joe Blow beat me
up on the way to the shower?" "Yes.
Lawyers:"Best follow-up question
I've ever seen in a trial.
Lawyers:"What did you see?" Very few
lawyers would ask a question that's
Lawyers:simple.
It was brilliant, simple.
Lawyers:Why is also key?
Lawyers:Why is one of my favorites
during whatever deposition,
Lawyers:because deposition to me is like trial.
"Well, this is blah, blah, blah, blah,
Lawyers:blah. "And they're prepared to
say that. And you say," Why?
Lawyers:"And then you really get the answer.
You really get what they're thinking.
Lawyers:Yes.
Lawyers:100%. It's so critical.
Lawyers:Absolutely.
Lawyers:My goodness, this has gone so fast.
I could do this again. You know what?
Lawyers:I'm going to break my rule of three and
just add one more. I'm going to add,
Lawyers:one of your interests is why
deposing experts as a waste of time
Lawyers:and money. Tell us about
that, Judge Bennett.
Lawyers:When I say I rarely depose
the other side's expert,
Lawyers:I mean rarely.
Lawyers:Now, just to be clear,
Lawyers:this is in federal court where you've got
the report that is supposed to lay out
Lawyers:all the opinions, right? That's
what we're talking about.
Lawyers:Because some state courts, as you
know, don't have that anyways.
Lawyers:We don't have reports,
Lawyers:but you can require the
other side to give all of the
Lawyers:opinions of the expert, even
though there may not be a report,
Lawyers:I think in most states that I'm
familiar with. So here's my point.
Lawyers:You need to pin down what the expert
is going to testify through discovery,
Lawyers:but you don't need to
take their deposition.
Lawyers:The problem with taking the
deposition is most lawyers give
Lawyers:away how they're going to approach
that witness on cross-examination.
Lawyers:That's the last thing you want to ever do.
Lawyers:And so I required experts
to fully disclose.
Lawyers:I would lock them in through
the interrogatories. Now,
Lawyers:I did take an expert witness
one time in New York City,
Lawyers:and I told the other lawyer," I'd like
to take the deposition of this expert.
Lawyers:"He wasn't from New York either.
Lawyers:I said," But only if we do it at
the expert's office. "He said," Why?
Lawyers:"I said," That's just my rule.
"He said," Okay. "We went in,
Lawyers:went into the expert's office, I
introduced myself. I said," Now,
Lawyers:I've read your report. Do you have
anything you want to add to your report?
Lawyers:""No." "Do you understand that if you
decide to add or delete anything from
Lawyers:your report, you have an obligation to
supplement your interrogatory answers,
Lawyers:so I know that. ""Do you
understand that? " "Yes.
Lawyers:""And do you think that's fair to
require you to do that? " "Absolutely.
Lawyers:"I said," Well, it's very
nice to meet you. I'm done.
Lawyers:"It lasted less than seven minutes. Now,
Lawyers:here's what I did during
those seven minutes.
Lawyers:That was back then I was much
younger. I had a good memory.
Lawyers:I memorized the name of every single
treatise he had within arm's reach.
Lawyers:I then went on and bought those treatises.
When it came time to cross-examine
Lawyers:him,
Lawyers:he thought," Who is this goofball that
came all the way to Iowa to New York and
Lawyers:didn't ask me anything about my
opinions? This guy must be a flake.
Lawyers:"So I pull out of my second brief bag,
Lawyers:the books of these treatises and I
go through them and ask them if he
Lawyers:recognizes them as an authoritative
treatise and he would say yes.
Lawyers:And then I said," As a matter of fact,
Lawyers:don't you have these within arm's
length in your office? ""Yes, I do.
Lawyers:" And you have them within arm's length
because they're important to you and you
Lawyers:like to be able to
consult with them quickly.
Lawyers:And I did the bolstering
and the accrediting of him.
Lawyers:And then I proceeded to tear them
apart with things in the treatises
Lawyers:that he had recognized,
Lawyers:but that was one of the very few times
I deposed an expert. I didn't see any
Lawyers:value in it. It cost the
clients a lot of time and money.
Lawyers:I just didn't need to do it.
Now, I would be loaded for bear.
Lawyers:I would read everything the expert wrote.
Lawyers:I would try and find other cases
where the expert had testified to.
Lawyers:Now it's so easy with the
internet and you get access.
Lawyers:I don't understand the reason
to take opposing party's expert.
Lawyers:I just don't get it.
Lawyers:Yeah. You got to save the
good stuff for trial 100%.
Lawyers:I never understood these five hour depths
of the expert to try to filet them.
Lawyers:What do you show your good stuff
for, man? Save it for the jury.
Lawyers:When you don't impose the other side
expert and they're used to having their
Lawyers:deposition, it makes them kind of nervous.
Lawyers:Either they totally underestimate you and
they just think you're a flake or they
Lawyers:think, "What is this guy up to that
he doesn't have to depose me? ".
Lawyers:It totally does. Yep.
Lawyers:Right?
Lawyers:100%.
Lawyers:About either one, right?
Lawyers:100%. He's either a totally
incompetent or a genius,
Lawyers:flew by the half hour.
Lawyers:Any final words to younger trial
attorneys trying to figure out how to get
Lawyers:better in this profession, Judge?
Lawyers:Yeah. You learn more from your
failures than your successes.
Lawyers:It's really good to watch other lawyers,
Lawyers:but it's really important to do a
postmortem after everything you do to try
Lawyers:and think of how you could do better.
Lawyers:I have a mantra that I say
every morning when I wake up,
Lawyers:"What can I do better today that I've
never done before?" And I'm a lifelong
Lawyers:learner. I'm always
trying to prove my craft.
Lawyers:I had a very difficult
mediation on Saturday.
Lawyers:It went better than it probably
should have, great lawyers,
Lawyers:and my postmortem was very short,
Lawyers:but sometimes my postportem
can be pretty long.
Lawyers:Why did I make that mistake?
I've made that mistake before.
Lawyers:Why do I keep making it?
Lawyers:And so don't beat yourself up
too bad if you make a mistake,
Lawyers:but always try and learn from your
mistakes and try and learn from others. If
Lawyers:you have a spare moment and you know
there's some really good lawyers at your
Lawyers:local courthouse trying a case, go watch
them. When I would hire law clerks,
Lawyers:I hired great law clerks,
but I would tell them,
Lawyers:"You're really going to learn more what
not to do than you're going to learn
Lawyers:what to do because we're going
to see a few great lawyers,
Lawyers:but a lot of pretty marginal lawyers,
Lawyers:but it's a great learning
experience either way.".
Lawyers:Incredible. Judge Mark W. Bennett,
Lawyers:it's been a pleasure and an honor
to have you on Verdict Academy.
Lawyers:Thank you for your time, sir.
Lawyers:Thank you so much for having
me. I really enjoyed it, Kevin.
Lawyers:Thank you for listening
to Verdict Academy.
Lawyers:If today's insights resonated with you,
Lawyers:please subscribe and
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Lawyers:In a world where we see each other less,
Lawyers:learning from experienced trial
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