Trial Issues Flashcards
Right to Jury Trial
- Must demand in writing, no later than 10 days after service of last pleading raising jury triable issue
- 7th amendment preserves right in law but not in equity in civil cases over $20
Right to Jury Trial (CA)
Generally demand at trial setting conference
- 25 days before trial scheduled to proceed, deposit jury fees.
- CA constitution protects right to jury trial, but not in small claims court
Jury Trial Waiver (CA)
- failure to appear at trial
- agreement
- written consent
- oral consent in open court/on record
- by stipulation
- by contract (CA and Fed)
- failure to announce at time case set for trial
- failure to deposit daily jury fees
- failure to advance jury fees
Note: CA more likely to reinstate jury trial after inadvertent waiver
Law/Equity Distinction
- focus on remedy
- CA: focus on historical treatment of cause of action
- always try jury issue (legal issue) first, even if legal claim incidental, then try equitable
- **CA: equity first rule: judge may first resolve factual issue (without jury) in equity complaint. If any legal issues remain, they may be tried by jury (Contra to fed)
Non-Suit (***CA)
Motion BY D after P’s opening statement or P’s conclusion of presentation of evidence: grounds are that facts are legally insufficient (RJ effects)
-acts as delayed demurrer attacking opening statement and/or case in chief, which may be granted as to some issues or all issues and is an adjudication on the merits (res judicata effect, but P is usually allowed to re-open)
***No fed counterpart
Directed Verdict (CA)
Similar to nonsuit, but may be made by either party in a jury trial
- at completion of presentation of all evidence
- challenges the legal sufficiency of the non-moving party’s evidence
- adjudication on the merits (res judicata effect)
Motion for Judgment as Matter of Law
- Motion made during bench/jury trial, asserting that there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a jury to find for the other party
- timing:
- by D - twice (close of P’s evidence, close of all evidence)
- by P - once, at close of all evidence
Verdict (CA)
CA Constitution: permits 3/4 of the jury to render a verdict in a civil case