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The Curious Lawyer: Bill of Rights - The Seventh Amendment


Level: Intermediate
Runtime: 62 minutes
Recorded Date: June 22, 2022
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Agenda

  • Substantive nature of Seventh Amendment, SCOTUS interpretations of two components; right to jury trial and reexamination of facts
  • Historical scope and rationale, purpose and goal of right to jury trial, role of juries versus judges on fact finding
  • Case law on scope: what kinds of cases, number of juries, suspension in emergencies (COVID)?
  • 12 jurors? 6, 8? Science of 12 vs 6
  • Equity vs Legal claims
  • Modern trends on juries
  • Finding facts in front of juries of peers
Runtime: 1 hour, 2 minutes
Recorded: June 25, 2022

For NY - Difficulty Level: For both newly admitted and experienced attorneys.
For NY - Difficulty Level: Both newly admitted and experienced attorneys

Description

Did you know that the Seventh Amendment – which guarantees the right to a trial by jury in certain cases – does not require jury trials in civil cases in state courts? In the latest installment of “The Curious Lawyer” series, Peter Afrasiabi takes a deep dive into each of the ten amendments in the Bill of Rights, reminding us what each amendment protects and illustrating its impact on the other constitutional protections we enjoy. Whether you are a budding constitutional scholar or simply looking for interesting facts to share at a cocktail party, the Bill of Rights series is for you.

This program was recorded on June 25, 2022.

Provided By

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Panelists

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Peter Afrasiabi

Founding Partner
One LLP

Peter Afrasiabi is a founding partner at One, LLP, and focuses his practice on copyright, patent, trademark and entertainment litigation. In addition, Peter is a professor and the Director of the Appellate Clinic at University of California, Irvine School of Law.

Peter graduated from University of California, Los Angeles and University of Southern California Gould School of Law.


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