If you want to win your lawsuit, the first thing to do is understand it is a
law-suit ... not a battle of wits or a creative writing
contest.
There are rules. Rules
you cannot violate and win. Rules you must require the other side to follow. Rules you
must require the judge to follow.
You wouldn't sit down to
a game of poker and bid 3 no-trump or turn one card over and say, "Hit me!" Those
tactics work well for bridge or blackjack, but they don't work at all in a game of poker
... because the rules are different.
Why then do so many
people go to court ignoring the rules of procedure, the rules of evidence, and the
rules of causes of action that win lawsuits?
Because, dear friends,
those rules are very hard to learn in a law library ... if you don't have our
course to explain them to you.
We have so many people
contact us who say they've spent years in the law library and still can't figure out
what's going on.
We
understand.
Many of you have excellent arguments. The
law is on your side ... but you don't know the
rules.
So you lose ...
needlessly.
Too many of you are struggling with the
advice of amateurs ... and losing ... needlessly.
We make it easy to
understand the rules of procedure, the rules of evidence, and the all-important rules
that control causes of action that determine the outcome of every
lawsuit.
If you don't know
your "causes of action" and the elements that must be pled and proved, you haven't
got a chance against a seasoned lawyer.
If you haven't come to
see the common-sense of the rules of evidence and know how to recognize hearsay, for
example, you cannot win.
If you ignore the rules
of procedure, write 30-page pleadings, file motions without setting them for hearing, and
fail to exercise your powerful right to discover evidence from the other side and from
non-parties like the phone company or an expert witness, you might as well give up
now.
The 3 essential
keys ... power you need to
control crooked lawyers and corrupt
judges.
1. The
rules of
Pleadings.
2. The
rules of Proof.
3. The
rules of Procedure.