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  • An appellate attorney reviewing a motion.
    • Insights

    What Does an Appellate Attorney Do?

    By Chris • March 9, 2026
    If you’ve lost a court case — or won one that’s now being challenged — you may be asking yourself whether you need an appellate attorney and, more fundamentally, what an appellate attorney actually does. The answer matters, because appellate…
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    • Appellate Law
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    • Appeals
  • Open book with handwritten notes.
    • Litigation

    Transcript Requests

    By Cherise Bacalski • February 2, 2026
    Part of the appellate process that gets little attention is transcript requests. But here’s a tip: if you are appellate counsel entering the case at the appellate stage, counsel with trial counsel and your client to understand which hearings you’ll…
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    • Practice Tip
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    • Appeals
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    • Criminal Appeals
  • a watercolor of a man writing on a paper
    • Appellate Briefing

    Amending a notice of appeal

    By Cherise Bacalski • January 26, 2026
    In many cases, final judgment is final judgment. But if there is anything decided after final judgment occurs—for example, an attorney fee award—then appellate counsel should file an amended notice of appeal. Otherwise, you will not be able to appeal…
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    • Practice Tip
  • a watercolor of a man and woman shaking hands
    • Appellate Briefing
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    • Litigation

    What is the remedy on appeal?

    By Cherise Bacalski • October 21, 2025
    Raising issues on appeal can be a tricky judgment call. You know something unjust happened, but on appeal you must frame it properly as a cognizable issue on appeal. You must also understand what the remedy is. For example, in…
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    • Legal Writing
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    • Practice Tip
  • a man standing in a library
    • Appellate Briefing

    The Rule is King

    By Cherise Bacalski • October 13, 2025
    Remember, in legal writing, the Rule is King. That means that apart from citing the rule that governs the case *in your argument*–and of course analyzing the facts of your case through its lens–you, legal drafter, should also structure the…
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    • Legal Writing
    • |
    • Practice Tip
  • a group of people sitting in a courtroom
    • Appellate Briefing

    Correctness or Abuse of discretion?

    By Cherise Bacalski • October 8, 2025
    In appellate law, standard of review can either make or break you. A standard of review announces the level of deference a high court gives a lower court’s rulings. Some rulings are discretionary rulings, and those discretionary rulings are given…
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    • Standards of Review
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    • Legal Writing