self-study/Appellate Practice
The importance of judicial economy
By David M. Axelradself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Ralph Baxter: Major part of legal system is broken. But it can be fixed.
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Criminal Law
Plain view doctrine: What you see is what you get
By Gary S. Paerself-study/Civil Practice
Pandemic-era appellate rulings take on arbitration issues
By Neville L. Johnson, Douglas L. Johnsonself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Recent USPTO Director Andrei Iancu: Innovate or Decline and Fail
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Estate Planning
Proving testamentary capacity in suits involving tortious interference with inheritance
By Mark J. Phillips, Jake V. Phillipsself-study/Family Law
But we agreed! Domestic violence and custody disputes
By Scott J. Nordself-study/Employment
Supreme Court eviscerates limits on the ministerial exception
By Jeremy B. Rosen, Felix Shafirself-study/Civil Practice
Appealing orders on arbitration in federal court
By Patrick J. Burns Jr., Gary A. Wattself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Climate change litigation: lawyering challenges
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Courts, clients, management and justice
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Appellate Practice
Settling successfully: Guidance for crafting proper 998 offers
By Charles M. Kagayself-study/Legal Ethics
Ethical billing: avoiding scum and villainy
By Brandon Kruegerself-study/Family Law
Was it a gift, or wasn’t it?
By Scott J. Nordself-study/Employment
Premium pay for meal break rounding violations after Donohue
By Kacey R. Riccomini, Arthur F. Silbergeldself-study/Civil Practice
Errors relating to the presence of a jury
By David M. Axelradself-study/Legal Ethics
You had me at hello.
By Amy L. Bomseself-study/Constitutional Law
Self-incrimination and restraining orders in California
By Dean Hansell, Bryant Y. Yangself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
No courts, no law: the many futures of trial courts
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Constitutional Law
Restraining orders and the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution
By Dean Hansell, Bryant Y. YangSELF-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.