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From litigation-legal
Drafts legal brief sections in house style consistent with case theory. Use for written submissions or oral argument outlines.
npx claudepluginhub anthropics/claude-for-legal --plugin litigation-legalHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/litigation-legal:brief-section-drafter [section — e.g., 'statement of facts', 'argument II'][section — e.g., 'statement of facts', 'argument II']The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
1. Load `~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md` → case theory, house style.
Drafts Turkish petition sections (maddi vakıalar, hukuki nedenler, deliller, talep ve sonuç, appeal grounds) with source-tied facts and verification flags for legal points.
Enforces Volokh's Academic Legal Writing rules for law review articles, seminar papers, and legal scholarship. Mandates docx templates, counterargument rebuttals, and primary source citations.
Orchestrates legal brief drafting in Korean law: intake, draft, citation verification (statute & case law), and final PDF generation. Each step requires user approval.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md → case theory, house style.If the user's jurisdiction includes England & Wales and they're asking for a trial witness statement for the Business & Property Courts (or any CPR-governed proceeding), PD 57AC applies. The statement must be in the witness's own words, must not contain argument, must identify the documents the witness used to refresh their memory, and must carry the required confirmation of compliance and the legal representative's certificate.
Drafting a narrative "as the witness" from a chronology, document set, or your account of the case is exactly what PD 57AC was designed to prevent. Courts are actively sanctioning AI-assisted witness statement drafting. If you ask me to do it, I won't.
What I WILL do: prepare question prompts to elicit the witness's actual recollection; capture and organize what the witness says (their words, not mine); generate the list of documents they were shown; run a PD 57AC compliance checklist against a statement they've drafted; draft the solicitor's certificate of compliance. I help you get the witness's evidence into the statement. I don't write the evidence.
For US depositions, declarations, and affidavits: different rules, but the same discipline applies. A declaration in the declarant's voice that the declarant didn't write is a credibility problem at best.
A good brief section is consistent with the theory, cited to the record, written in house style, and checkable. This skill produces the first draft — emphasis on draft. Partner edits.
Ask before drafting: "Is this for a written submission or oral argument?" They are different crafts:
Two rules that govern every citation and every quotation in advocacy drafting. The canonical statement lives in the plugin's CLAUDE.md shared guardrails; repeated here because this skill is the most common place the rule gets tested.
Verbatim quotes from the record must be verbatim. Never put quotation marks around words attributed to opposing counsel, a witness, the court, or any record document unless you have the exact passage in front of you and can cite to it. A quote that's almost right is worse than a paraphrase — it misrepresents the record, it's sanctionable if filed, and it will be caught. When you want to characterize what someone said but can't find the exact words:
[verify against record — Tr. p. __]."[verify exact quote — record cite pending][verify exact quote] in the output.Before citing any passage with quotation marks, have the source open. If you're working from memory or a summary, no quotation marks.
Pinpoint cites must support the whole proposition. If the argument is "opposing counsel said X, Y, and Z" and you're citing one pinpoint, verify the pinpoint supports X AND Y AND Z. If it only supports Z, either (a) split the cite — "said X (Tr. p. 10), Y (Tr. p. 12), and Z (Tr. p. 15)" — or (b) narrow the proposition to what the pinpoint actually supports. A cite that supports part of a claim is how a tribunal catches you stretching. It's the single most common way a lawyer's credibility erodes in front of a court. This is the "misgrounded citation" failure mode: the cite exists, the passage exists, but the passage doesn't support the proposition as stated.
When the law is against you, say so. When an argument is weak — the authority cuts the other way, the facts don't support it, the inference is a stretch — don't construct a shaky argument and present it as if it were solid. Flag it:
"This point is weak — [authority] cuts the other way. Consider whether to press it (here's how you'd frame it), concede and pivot to [stronger point], or drop it.
[review — strategic call]."
Asserting a weak argument without flagging it erodes the lawyer's credibility with the tribunal and creates a candor problem (MR 3.1 — a lawyer must have a basis in law and fact). The draft should make the lawyer smarter, not confident about a bad position.
When this draft is cite-checked — by you, by another skill, or by a reviewer running through what you produced — the check must be exhaustive, not selective:
Echo key framings; don't lift sentences. Consistency with prior submissions is good — it reinforces your theory of the case and makes the record coherent. But there's a line between echoing and repeating.
A rebuttal that sounds like a re-read of the opening loses ground. The draft should advance the argument, not restate it.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md → case theory, house style (citation format, structure, tone, length norms).
Conflicts gate — unbypassable. Before drafting, check ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/matters/_log.yaml for the matter slug this skill is being invoked on. If the matter is not in _log.yaml, refuse and route:
"I don't see [matter slug] in the matter log. Run
/litigation-legal:matter-intakefirst so the conflicts check runs and the matter workspace is set up. I won't draft substantive work product on a matter that hasn't been intaken — the conflicts check is the gate."
Do not proceed on an unintaken matter. Intake is what runs conflicts, sets up matter.md / history.md, and writes the _log.yaml row this skill reads from. Skipping it produces work in an unmanaged location and bypasses the firm's conflicts discipline.
| Section | What it does | Inputs needed |
|---|---|---|
| Statement of facts | Tells the story, in our frame, cited to record | Chronology, key docs, depo cites |
| Standard of review | Sets the bar the court applies | Procedural posture |
| Argument | Makes the legal case | Issue, authorities, facts |
| Conclusion | Asks for relief | What we want |
Before writing: what does this section need to accomplish for the theory?
If the section you're about to draft contradicts the theory — stop. Either the theory is wrong or the section approach is wrong. Flag it, don't paper over it.
Research the forum's local rules and the judge's standing orders for length, formatting, citation, and filing requirements; don't rely on preferences. Cite primary sources (local rule number, standing order section) in the drafting notes. Verify currency — local rules change.
Per ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md:
Every fact → record cite (Bates, depo page:line, exhibit). Every legal proposition → case cite with pincite.
Marker discipline — use liberally:
[VERIFY: specific factual assertion] — anything not confirmed against the record[UNCERTAIN: specific legal proposition] — anything not confirmed against current authority[CITE NEEDED: specific cite — fact/rule believed but cite not yet pinned]A draft with unresolved markers is not final. The markers make the verification step explicit.
No silent supplement. If a research query to the configured legal research tool (Lexis+, Westlaw, CourtListener, Trellis, Descrybe, or firm platform) returns few or no results for an authority the draft needs, report what was found and stop. Do NOT fill the gap from web search or model knowledge without asking. Say: "The search returned [N] results from [tool]. Coverage appears thin for [issue / holding]. Options: (1) broaden the search query, (2) try a different research tool, (3) search the web — results will be tagged [web search — verify] and should be checked against a primary source before relying, or (4) leave the [CITE NEEDED] marker and stop here. Which would you like?" A partner decides whether to accept lower-confidence sources; the skill does not decide for them.
Source attribution. Tag every citation in the draft with where it came from: [Lexis+], [Westlaw], [CourtListener], [Trellis], [Descrybe], or the MCP tool name for citations retrieved from a legal research connector; [web search — verify] for web-search citations; [model knowledge — verify] for citations recalled from training data; [user provided] for citations the partner or senior associate supplied. Citations tagged verify carry higher fabrication risk than tool-retrieved citations and should be checked first. Never strip or collapse the tags — they are the reviewing attorney's fastest signal about which citations to Shepardize first before the brief is filed.
Before the brief is filed (the consequential act — this skill drafts, but the gate runs at the filing step regardless of who triggers it): Read ## Who's using this in ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md. If the Role is Non-lawyer:
Filing a brief has legal consequences — it becomes the record, binds the client on arguments and facts asserted, and a Rule 11 / equivalent certification attaches to signature. Have you reviewed this with an attorney? If yes, proceed. If no, here's a brief to bring to them:
[Generate a 1-page summary: the section drafted, the theory tie-in, authorities relied on, open
[VERIFY]/[UNCERTAIN]/[CITE NEEDED]markers unresolved, what could go wrong (factual misstatement, unsupported citation, argument outside the theory), what to ask the attorney before filing.]If you need to find a licensed attorney, solicitor, barrister, or other authorised legal professional in your jurisdiction: your professional regulator's referral service is the fastest starting point (state bar in the US, SRA/Bar Standards Board in England & Wales, Law Society in Scotland/NI/Ireland/Canada/Australia, or your jurisdiction's equivalent).
Do not treat the draft as filing-ready without an explicit yes. Drafting itself does not require the gate — filing does.
The section, in house style, with markers inline.
Preface (not in the brief — a note to the reviewing attorney):
[WORK-PRODUCT HEADER — per plugin config ## Outputs — differs by role; see `## Who's using this`]
## Drafting Notes — [Section] — [date]
**Theory tie-in:** [How this section supports the case theory]
**Authorities relied on:** [list — all need Shepardizing]
**Record cites to verify:** [N] flagged inline
**Open questions for the partner:** [anything the draft assumes that should be confirmed]
**Length:** [words/pages vs. house norm]
---
**Cite check before filing.** Citations in this draft were generated by an AI model and have not been verified against a primary source. Run every case, statute, and regulation through Lexis+, Westlaw, CourtListener, or your firm's research platform for accuracy, good-law status, and subsequent history. Fabricated or misquoted citations in filed briefs have resulted in Rule 11 sanctions.
**Draft only — not a filing.** Filing this section initiates (or participates in) a proceeding and carries Rule 11 / Rule 3.3 exposure. A licensed attorney reviews, edits, and takes professional responsibility before it goes on the docket. Do not file unreviewed.
The statement of facts is advocacy through selection and sequence, not argument.