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From litigation-legal
Builds or reviews patent claim charts (infringement, invalidity, review) and civil element charts for any cause of action or defense, with pin-cited cells and gap detection as priority output.
npx claudepluginhub anthropics/claude-for-legal --plugin litigation-legalHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/litigation-legal:claim-chart [--patent | --civil] [--infringement | --invalidity | --review] [--claim <n>] [--count <name>] [--target <slug>][--patent | --civil] [--infringement | --invalidity | --review] [--claim <n>] [--count <name>] [--target <slug>]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` → role, work-product header, decision posture, document storage.
Builds element charts mapping patent claims to accused products or legal claim elements to evidence, producing evidence/proof-gap tables for patent and Turkish civil litigation.
Generates detailed claim charts mapping patent claims to accused product features for infringement analysis (literal, induced, equivalents). Useful for claim charting or product-patent mapping.
Performs structured freedom-to-operate triage for products/features, building claim-charts against plausible patents and flagging open questions for patent counsel review.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md → role, work-product header, decision posture, document storage.matter.md (side, jurisdiction, phase, theory, pleadings).--patent → patent claim chart. Require patent number and at least one asserted claim. Sub-modes: --infringement, --invalidity, --review.--civil → civil element chart. Require the cause of action (or defense) and the side.references/element-templates.md in the skill directory for the baseline element list. Confirm the controlling pattern instruction or statute with the user before mapping.=, +, -, @, tab, or CR._sources companion), and Excel or Sheets per user preference. Work-product header on every output.claim-charts/ folder if a matter is active; otherwise the practice-level claim-charts/ folder. Append a one-line entry to history.md if a matter is active.Before working with a set of litigation documents, ask: "Were any of these documents obtained through disclosure or discovery in legal proceedings?" If yes:
Confirm: "This use is within the proceedings in which the documents were disclosed, or I have permission / consent, or the documents are now public." If not confirmed, flag it: "⚠️ Disclosed documents may have use restrictions. Confirm this use is permitted before proceeding."
Put this at the top of every output. Do not drop it. Do not soften it.
This chart is a draft for attorney analysis and verification, not a filed contention, an MSJ brief, an opening statement, or a legal opinion. Every mapping is a lead the attorney must verify against the source. The elements listed come from pattern jury instructions, the Restatement, or the claim language as parsed — the controlling authority in the user's jurisdiction (CACI / NYPJI / the circuit's pattern charge / the governing statute / a Markman order) may differ and always controls. Gap detection is a starting point for discovery or a motion; it is not a conclusion about the merits.
Under-flagging a gap is a one-way door — a complaint filed without plausibility on an element, an MSJ response served without evidence for a disputed element, or a case tried without proof of damages. Over-flagging is a two-way door — the attorney clears flags in review. The default is biased toward the two-way door.
Check ## Matter workspaces in the practice-level CLAUDE.md. If Enabled is ✗ (the default for in-house users), skip the rest of this paragraph — skills use practice-level context and the matter machinery is invisible. If enabled and there is no active matter, ask: "Which matter is this for? Run /litigation-legal:matter-workspace switch <slug> or say practice-level." Load the active matter's matter.md — especially the case theory, the pleading / complaint (for the elements actually alleged), the jurisdiction, any Markman order or stipulated constructions (patent mode), and the phase of the case. Write outputs to the matter folder at ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/matters/<matter-slug>/claim-charts/. Never read another matter's files unless Cross-matter context is on.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md → role, work-product header, decision posture, document storage, case-theory scaffoldingmatter.md — claims, defenses, side, jurisdiction, phase, theoryIf CLAUDE.md has [PLACEHOLDER] markers, surface this bounce:
I notice you haven't configured your practice profile yet — that's how I tailor risk calibration, landscape, and house style to your practice.
Two choices:
- Run
/litigation-legal:cold-start-interview(2 minutes) to configure your profile, then I'll run this tailored to YOUR practice.- Say "provisional" and I'll run this against generic defaults — US jurisdiction, middle risk appetite, lawyer role, no playbook — and tag every output
[PROVISIONAL — configure your profile for tailored output]so you can see what I do before committing.
If the user says "provisional," build the claim chart normally using these generic defaults: middle risk appetite, lawyer role, US jurisdiction, no practice-level playbook (work from the matter's pleadings and the elements of the claims as pleaded). Tag the reviewer note and every row of the chart with [PROVISIONAL]. At the end of the output, append:
"That was a generic run against default assumptions. Run
/litigation-legal:cold-start-interviewto get output calibrated to YOUR practice — your risk calibration, your landscape, your house style. 2 minutes."
Conflicts gate — unbypassable. Before building a claim chart, check ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/matters/_log.yaml for the matter slug. 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 build a claim chart 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 and writes the _log.yaml row this skill reads from.
Ask at the top, before anything else:
Which kind of chart?
- Patent claim chart — element-by-element mapping of claim limitations against an accused product (
--infringement), prior art (--invalidity), or another party's chart (--review). For patent contentions, IPR petitions / responses, FTO charts.- Civil element chart — elements of a cause of action (or affirmative defense) mapped against the evidence. For complaint plausibility checks, discovery planning, MSJ prep, order-of-proof outlines.
Plus intake (common to both):
--review, load it.--infringement — claim elements vs. accused product (PLR 3-1 infringement contentions, IPR/PGR response exhibits, complaint exhibits)--invalidity — claim elements vs. prior art (PLR 3-3 invalidity contentions, IPR/PGR petition exhibits, §102/§103 defenses)--review — audit a chart someone else producedParse asserted independent claims into numbered elements. Handle:
Preamble. Note whether it's limiting — a question of claim construction (Catalina Marketing Int'l, Inc. v. Coolsavings.com, Inc., 289 F.3d 801 (Fed. Cir. 2002)). Flag preamble-limiting: unresolved unless the construction order resolves it.
Transitional phrase. "Comprising" (open) / "consisting of" (closed) / "consisting essentially of" (semi-open). Affects whether additional unrecited elements defeat infringement.
Elements separated by commas / semicolons, numbered [1a], [1b], [1c]. Keep numbering stable — it's the chart's spine.
Means-plus-function (§112(f)) — every "means for [function]" or non-structural functional term. Scope is the structure disclosed in the spec plus equivalents. Cite corresponding structure by col./line. If the spec fails to disclose structure, flag indefinite-112f.
Markush groups, Jepson claims, product-by-process, method-step order dependencies — flag with a note on unusual construction rules.
Dependent claims — reference parent; chart only the additional limitations. Execute, don't gesture. If asserted claims include dependents, produce the actual additional-limitation rows for each dependent in Step 4 — do not emit a note that dependents "should be charted."
Structural-term cognates — default to construction-dependent. For each element that recites a structural noun with a common cognate in the prior art of the field, default the row's state to literal-construction-dependent (not literal) unless the spec expressly defines the term or an existing Markman order forecloses the ambiguity. These are the terms most commonly disputed at Markman — presuming a clean literal read under-flags the risk. Common cognate families to flag proactively:
| Field | Cognate family (flag as structural-term-cognate) |
|---|---|
| Fasteners / anchors | barb / thread / projection / ridge / fin / tooth |
| Fluidics / catheters | lumen / channel / bore / passage / conduit |
| Mechanical housings | hub / boss / flange / collar / shoulder |
| Fasteners / joints | socket / recess / pocket / cavity |
| Electrical / electronic | contact / terminal / pad / lead |
| Optical | lens / reflector / window / aperture |
| Structural | wall / member / support / strut / rib |
| Surfaces | surface / face / interface |
This list is not exhaustive — if the claim recites a structural noun that could reasonably be read narrowly (pointed barb vs. any projection) or broadly (channel vs. any passage), flag structural-term-cognate in _constructions and default the row to construction-dependent. The attorney can demote it to literal after a Markman order or a definition in the spec forecloses the ambiguity.
Show the parse to the user. Confirm before mapping. A wrong parse poisons every row below it.
Flag disputed terms:
For each flagged term, state the construction(s) under which the mapping works and the construction(s) under which it fails. If a Markman order exists, apply it. If briefing is underway, chart under each side's proposed construction.
For each element, for each target:
Find evidence. Accused product: documentation, manuals, data sheets, source code, teardowns, deposition testimony, expert reports. Prior art: column/line for US patents, paragraph for published apps, page/figure for NPL. For prior art, flag whether the reference qualifies (§102(a)(1), (a)(2), (b); AIA vs. pre-AIA cutoffs). If prior-art status isn't obvious, mark prior-art-status: needs-evidence.
Quote verbatim. Character-for-character. No paraphrase. Cut at sentence boundaries and mark elision.
Characterize the mapping.
| Mapping | Meaning | Where |
|---|---|---|
literal | Claim language reads on the accused feature / prior-art disclosure | Both |
literal-construction-dependent | Literal under X; fails under Y | Both |
doe | Equivalent (function-way-result or insubstantial differences) | Infringement only |
anticipation | Every element in a single reference, arranged as claimed (Net MoneyIN, Inc. v. VeriSign, Inc., 545 F.3d 1359 (Fed. Cir. 2008)) | Invalidity only |
obviousness-combination | Secondary reference supplies the missing element; motivation to combine required under KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398 (2007) | Invalidity only |
partial | Some of the element is present | Both |
not-found | Element not present | Both |
needs-evidence | Can't tell from available material | Both |
construction-dependent | Turns on how a disputed term is construed | Both |
State per cell. mapped / mapped-doe / partial / not-found / needs-evidence / construction-dependent / anticipation / obviousness-combination.
Flag open questions. "This maps if [X]. Need [teardown / source code / deposition / expert] to confirm."
No silent supplement. Thin documentation means needs-evidence, not extrapolation from similar products.
For each asserted dependent claim, produce an actual row (or set of rows) charting the additional limitation(s) against the target. The parent dependency is noted, and infringement / invalidity of the dependent requires the parent's. Produce the rows, not a placeholder note that rows should be produced.
If the user provided a list of asserted claims that includes dependents, the chart's output MUST contain rows for each of them. If the user gave only the independent claim and said "chart the independents for now," fine — then the output doesn't chart dependents, but it surfaces the dropped ones explicitly ("Asserted dependents [X, Y, Z] not charted in this run — request: rerun with --include-dependents or paste the dependent claim text"). Do not silently skip dependents.
A dependent-claim row format:
| [#] | Element (verbatim) | Accused feature (or prior-art disclosure) | Evidence (pin-cited) | Mapping | State | Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 [add'l] | "wherein the barb extends at an angle of 15° to 30° from the body axis" | AnchorFast Mini barb angle 18° per [CM-AM-2026-03 Fig. 4 + §2.3] | [CM-AM-2026-03 §2.3] "barb angle 18° ±2°" | literal-construction-dependent | mapped | ☐ |
For every element charted as literal where the accused feature is structurally similar but not literally identical — or every element where the literal mapping turns on a contested construction — produce a paired DOE candidacy row (infringement mode). Do not footnote "DOE analysis is separate" without producing the actual DOE mapping.
A DOE candidacy row adds a one-paragraph function-way-result sketch, flags prosecution history estoppel and dedication-to-the-public risks per element, and cites the evidence that would support the equivalent. If DOE is inapplicable (the element reads literally on the accused product beyond dispute), skip. If literal is construction-dependent and DOE would be the attorney's fallback under the narrower construction, produce the DOE row.
Format:
| [#-DOE] | Element | Accused feature | Function-way-result | PH estoppel? | Dedication risk? | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1b-DOE | "at least one barb" | three-barb opposing-face array | function: resist withdrawal; way: mechanical engagement with cancellous bone; result: anchor remains seated under tensile load. | [needs-evidence: prosecution history] | [needs-evidence: disclosed-but-unclaimed alternatives in spec] | construction-dependent |
As with dependents: if the skill can't produce the DOE rows for a reason (no accused-product evidence to ground function-way-result, no prosecution history available), say so explicitly and route to needs-evidence. Do not skip DOE silently.
Flag, don't opine:
For §102: every element in a single reference. Partial across references is §103.
For §103: primary reference + secondary reference(s) + documented motivation under KSR. Flag explicit teaching/suggestion/motivation, market or design-need motivation, reasonable expectation of success, and secondary considerations (Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1 (1966)) — commercial success, long-felt need, failure of others, industry praise, copying.
Also flag:
Invalidity must be shown by clear and convincing evidence — Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Ltd. P'ship, 564 U.S. 91 (2011). Prima facie in a chart is not proof at trial.
For each row: is the mapping supported? Is the pin cite accurate? Is the element fully accounted for? What's the strongest counter? What's the rebuttal opportunity? Output verdicts per row (supported / weak / unsupported) and the chart's vulnerabilities.
Map the elements of a cause of action (or affirmative defense) against the evidence. The killer outputs are (a) a chart that says what evidence goes with what element and (b) a gap list that tells the attorney what's missing.
## Side in the practice profile for the default — plaintiff defaults to mapping the prima facie case (proving the elements); defense defaults to mapping gaps and affirmative defenses (disproving or avoiding the elements). Confirm the posture matches this matter before starting.Three paths:
(a) Template library. Reference references/element-templates.md (in this skill's directory). Baseline elements for common causes of action and common affirmative defenses, with citations to the Restatement / pattern instructions and a jurisdiction caveat. Select the template that matches the pleaded count.
(b) Custom. User defines elements, or pastes a jury instruction / statute / a count from the complaint to parse. Parse into numbered elements.
(c) Affirmative defenses. Also support mapping defenses — statute of limitations, laches, estoppel, waiver, unclean hands, release, accord and satisfaction, failure to mitigate, comparative fault, contributory negligence, assumption of risk, etc. Defenses have their own elements the defendant must prove (or, for some, the plaintiff must negate once raised).
Jurisdiction-specific formulations — surface proactively. If the practice profile's ## Company profile → Core jurisdictions or the active matter's matter.md names Delaware, New York, or California (the three most-common commercial fora), surface the state-specific formulation proactively alongside the baseline — do not ask "does your jurisdiction add/drop/reword" first. The user shouldn't have to teach the skill the local rule; the skill should offer it and let the user choose.
Divergences to surface without being asked (non-exhaustive — add to this list as patterns recur):
| Cause of action / defense | Baseline (Restatement / pattern) | Jurisdiction-specific formulation |
|---|---|---|
| Breach of contract | 4 elements (contract, performance, breach, damages; CACI 303) | DE: 3 elements — contractual obligation, breach, damages (causation folded into breach) per VLIW Tech., LLC v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 840 A.2d 606 (Del. 2003). DE adds a 5th element — no adequate remedy at law — when the claim seeks specific performance. |
| Breach of contract — goods | Common-law breach elements | If goods + U.C.C. Article 2 jurisdiction (all 50 states except LA): load U.C.C. breach elements (conforming tender, acceptance / rejection / revocation, cure, cover, seller's remedies). Present both; let user pick. |
| Breach of contract — multi-lot goods / installment contract | Common-law breach or U.C.C. § 2-711 (single-delivery breach framework) | Installment contracts under U.C.C. § 2-612 — "substantial impairment of the value of the installment" replaces the perfect-tender rule; aggregate breach requires "substantial impairment of the value of the whole contract." If the contract calls for goods to be delivered in separate lots (multiple shipments, deliveries), default to § 2-612 framing — it is the governing regime and the analysis is materially different from single-delivery breach. Flag for signer: "This is drafted as an installment contract under § 2-612 — confirm that characterization matches the contract's delivery structure." |
| Negligence | 4 elements (duty, breach, causation, damages; Restatement (Second) Torts § 281) | CA: follow CACI No. 400 formulation (negligence per se per CACI 418 when applicable). NY: PJI 2:10 formulation — slightly different language on proximate cause. |
| Negligent misrepresentation | Restatement (Second) Torts § 552 — justifiable reliance, pecuniary loss | NY: requires contemporaneous privity or a relationship "so close as to approach that of privity" per Credit Alliance Corp. v. Arthur Andersen & Co., 65 N.Y.2d 536 (1985). |
| Fraud | 9 elements (often condensed to 5 — representation, materiality, knowledge of falsity, intent to induce, justifiable reliance, damages) | DE: 5 elements per Stephenson v. Capano Dev., 462 A.2d 1069 (Del. 1983). CA: CACI 1900 formulation — 5 elements with reliance being "justifiable." NY: requires pleading with particularity under CPLR 3016(b), and scienter is a distinct element. |
| Breach of fiduciary duty | Restatement / common law — fiduciary duty, breach, damages | DE: the most-developed body of fiduciary-duty law (Aronson v. Lewis, Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, In re Trados) — default to the Delaware formulation for any DE-entity matter regardless of forum. |
When a jurisdiction-specific formulation differs materially from the baseline, the chart opens with a one-line callout:
Jurisdiction note: You told me this is a [DE/NY/CA] matter. Here's how [jurisdiction]'s formulation differs from the baseline: [divergence]. The chart below uses the [jurisdiction] formulation. If that's wrong, say so and I'll reload.
Confirm the element list with the user before mapping. If the user's jurisdiction isn't DE/NY/CA, ask: "Does your jurisdiction's pattern instruction add / drop / reword any of these?" If yes, use their version.
For each element:
[Doe Dep. 42:15–43:7][Smith Decl. ¶ 12][DEF00012345 at 3][Def.'s Resp. to RFA No. 5][Trial Ex. 14 at 2][Jones Expert Rep. at 18][Pl.'s Resp. to Interrog. No. 8]strong / moderate / weak / none. Keep it simple. Over-calibrated strength scores are noise; weak and none are the rows that matter.supported / partial / disputed / gap / needs-discovery.After mapping, produce a gap list. This is the point of the chart.
Elements with thin or no evidence: [list]
- If asserting (plaintiff): these defeat your complaint's plausibility (Iqbal/Twombly), your MSJ opposition, or your case at trial. Close them before the next motion.
- If defending: these are your MSJ targets and your directed-verdict motion. The plaintiff has to prove each element; a gap is a defense.
- If pre-discovery: these are your discovery priorities — the depositions, document requests, and interrogatories that turn a gap into
supportedor confirmnone.
Gap detection is not a conclusion about the merits. It's a map of where the case is light.
Ask the phase. Same chart; different framing on the output:
gap or needs-discovery element, what discovery is needed? Which witnesses, which document custodians, which interrogatories, which RFAs.supported cell for the movant with no contradicting evidence is summary-judgment ammunition; a disputed cell is MSJ-defeating.For an opposing party's MSJ brief, a motion to dismiss, or outside counsel's draft: for each element, does their cited evidence actually prove it? Where is their chart thin? What's your strongest counter?
_elements sheet.Prepend the work-product header from ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/CLAUDE.md ## Outputs.
One table per claim / defense / patent-claim per target.
Patent mode example:
| [#] | Element (verbatim) | Accused feature | Evidence (pin-cited) | Mapping | State | Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | "a processor configured to..." | SoC per datasheet | [Datasheet p. 7] "..." | literal-construction-dependent | mapped | ☐ |
| 1b | "means for [function]" (§112(f)) | [alleged equiv.] | [source, file.c:124] "..." | needs-evidence | needs-evidence | ☐ |
Civil mode example:
| [#] | Element | Evidence supporting (pin-cited) | Evidence contradicting | Strength | State | Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Existence of a contract | [Ex. 3, MSA § 1; Smith Dep. 22:4–14] | none | strong | supported | ☐ |
| 2 | Plaintiff's performance | [Jones Decl. ¶¶ 4–9] | [Doe Dep. 101:3–11: "they never delivered Phase 2"] | moderate | disputed | ☐ |
| 3 | Defendant's breach | — | [Doe Dep. 101:3–11] | none | gap | ☐ |
| 4 | Causation | — | — | none | needs-discovery | ☐ |
| 5 | Damages | [Expert Rep. at 18 — $2.4M lost profits] | [Def.'s Expert Rep. at 6 — critiques methodology] | moderate | disputed | ☐ |
Follow with:
Two files per chart:
[chart-slug].csv — values[chart-slug]_sources.csv — verbatim quotes, pin cites, notesCSV / spreadsheet cell safety. Before writing any cell value, check the first character. If it is =, +, -, @, tab (\t), or carriage return (\r), prepend a single apostrophe (') to neutralize Excel/Sheets formula interpretation. Verbatim evidence from adversarial sources (opposing counsel's contentions, competitor product manuals, third-party prior art, scraped web pages, deposition transcripts, discovery productions) can contain strings that a spreadsheet will execute as formulas (=HYPERLINK(...), =cmd|...!A1, +WEBSERVICE(...)), turning the chart into a data-exfiltration or RCE vector when an attorney opens it. RFC 4180 quoting alone does not defeat this — the leading = is still interpreted. Apply the apostrophe prefix in CSV, XLSX, and Sheets outputs. Log cells where this was applied so the reviewer can see which quotes were neutralized.
Ask which the team works in. Use the pattern from corporate-legal's tabular-review skill — same cell-level citation model, same state-based color coding, same Verified column, same schema sheet:
mapped, yellow = construction-dependent / partial / DOE, orange = needs-evidence, red = not-foundsupported, yellow = partial / disputed, orange = needs-discovery, red = gapVerified column per evidence column, blank by default — reviewer marks it_elements sheet documenting the element source: pattern jury instruction (CACI No. X, NYPJI §Y, federal circuit pattern charge), statute (cite), Restatement section, or patent-claim parse. This is what makes the chart auditable — a reader can see where the elements came from._gaps sheet listing every gap, needs-evidence, or needs-discovery row with what's still needed_claim-parse sheet (element decomposition), _constructions sheet (disputed terms and assumed constructions)Apply the apostrophe-prefix neutralization to every cell written into the spreadsheet.
Prepend the work-product header as the top row. Alongside it, include:
This chart is derived from source documents that may be privileged, confidential, or both. It inherits the sources' privilege and confidentiality status — distribution beyond the privilege circle can waive privilege. Store with the matter's privileged files and make distribution decisions deliberately. Nothing in this chart has been filed or served; it is a draft for attorney review.
claim-chart-infringement-[patent#]-claim[#]-[target]-YYYY-MM-DD.{md,csv,xlsx}claim-chart-invalidity-[patent#]-claim[#]-[ref]-YYYY-MM-DD.{md,csv,xlsx}element-chart-[count-slug]-[side]-YYYY-MM-DD.{md,csv,xlsx}chart-review-[subject]-YYYY-MM-DD.{md,csv,xlsx}If matter workspaces enabled and a matter is active: ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/matters/<matter-slug>/claim-charts/. Otherwise: ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/litigation-legal/claim-charts/. Surface the path. Append a one-line entry to the matter's history.md.
After the chart is written, give a one-screen readout:
If ## Who's using this Role is Non-lawyer:
This chart is a research draft, not a legal filing. Serving contentions, filing a brief, or relying on this for a merits opinion has Rule 11 and substantive legal consequences. An attorney in the relevant jurisdiction must review before this is used for any legal purpose.
Here's a one-page brief to bring to an attorney:
[Generate: claim / patent, side, jurisdiction, phase, elements, supported / gap / needs-discovery counts, the three most load-bearing open questions.]
Deliver the chart alongside the brief.
needs-evidence or gap.needs-evidence / gap, not "extrapolate." Do not fill from web search, training data, or "how these cases usually go" to close a gap.partial tells the attorney what part is missing.=, +, -, @, \t, \r and prefixed with '. Default: neutralize-then-write.ip-legal:infringement-triage (patent mode) — the first-pass flag list. This skill is the full chart that comes next.ip-legal:fto-triage — FTO uses the same mechanics from the potentially-accused posture. If evaluating own product vs. a third-party patent, route to FTO and use this skill's format.corporate-legal:tabular-review — the underlying cell-level citation and verification-state pattern. A claim / element chart is a specialized tabular review.litigation-legal:chronology — the chronology is the timeline; the element chart is the proof matrix. A chronology entry often becomes a cell's evidence cite.litigation-legal:deposition-prep — a needs-discovery cell often becomes a depo topic. After a depo, new testimony fills cells.litigation-legal:brief-section-drafter — an MSJ brief's fact section is often built directly off the supported rows of an element chart.End with the next-steps decision tree per CLAUDE.md ## Outputs. Customize the options to what this skill just produced — the five default branches (draft the X, escalate, get more facts, watch and wait, something else) are a starting point, not a lock-in. The tree is the output; the lawyer picks.
needs-evidence / gap — never a guess.