This is the property of the Daily Journal Corporation and fully protected by copyright. It is made available only to Daily Journal subscribers for personal or collaborative purposes and may not be distributed, reproduced, modified, stored or transferred without written permission. Please click "Reprint" to order presentation-ready copies to distribute to clients or use in commercial marketing materials or for permission to post on a website. and copyright (showing year of publication) at the bottom.
Subscribe to the Daily Journal for access to Daily Appellate Reports, Verdicts, Judicial Profiles and more...

self-study/Alternative Dispute Resolution

May arbitration awards violate public policy?

By Imani Buckner, Josephine Petrick, Gary A. Watt

self-study/Civil Practice

Law and motion overview

By Sunil R. Kulkarni

self-study/Family Law

The family law declaration: a relatively brief history

By Scott J. Nord

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

Change Lawyers; Change Generations; Changed Legal Profession

By Howard B. Miller

self-study/Constitutional Law

OT20: It’s a wrap

By James Azadian, Becky James

self-study/Appellate Practice

50 ways to leave your appeal

By Benjamin G. Shatz

self-study/Alternative Dispute Resolution

Third-party discovery in arbitration: Be careful what you ask for

By Amy Semmel

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

The California Taxman Cometh: Impact, Complying, and Avoiding

By Howard B. Miller

self-study/Civil Practice

Competency in the civil litigation arena

By Scott J. Nord

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

Bench trials on appeal: top tips for preserving appellate issues

By Elizabeth A. Evans, Arezoo Jamshidi

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

The growing split over presuming irreparable harm in federal trade secret cases

By Conor Tucker

self-study/Appellate Practice

On amicus letters

By Myron Moskovitz

self-study/Family Law

271 sanctions: game changer or just the bogeyman?

By Scott J. Nord

self-study/Appellate Practice

The importance of judicial economy

By David M. Axelrad

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

Ralph Baxter: Major part of legal system is broken. But it can be fixed.

By Howard B. Miller

self-study/Criminal Law

Plain view doctrine: What you see is what you get

By Gary S. Paer

self-study/Civil Practice

Pandemic-era appellate rulings take on arbitration issues

By Neville L. Johnson, Douglas L. Johnson

self-study/Administrative/Regulatory

Recent USPTO Director Andrei Iancu: Innovate or Decline and Fail

By Howard B. Miller

self-study/Estate Planning

Proving testamentary capacity in suits involving tortious interference with inheritance

By Mark J. Phillips, Jake V. Phillips

SELF-STUDY CREDIT:

Earn one hour of MCLE self-study credit by reading an article and answering questions. Submit a completed test and $36 payment for an MCLE certificate.

PARTICIPATORY CREDIT:

Earn one hour of general participatory credit by watching a video or listening to a podcast and answering questions. Submit a completed test and $36 payment for an MCLE certificate.

CERTIFICATION:

The Daily Journal Corporation, publisher of the Los Angeles and San Francisco Daily Journals, is approved by the State Bar of California as a continuing legal education provider. These self-study and participatory activities qualify for Minimum Continuing Legal Education credit in the amount of one hour. The Daily Journal Corporation certifies that this activity conforms to the standards for approved education activities prescribed by the rules and regulations of the State Bar of California.