Cover image for Understanding civil procedure
Title:
Understanding civil procedure
Author:
Shreve, Gene R., author.
ISBN:
9781531025731
Personal Author:
Edition:
Seventh edition.
Physical Description:
xxii, 599 pages ; 26 cm.
Series:
Carolina Academic Press understanding series

Understanding series (New York, N.Y.)
Contents:
Selecting a court : an introduction -- A court with jurisdiction over persons and things -- Notice and opportunity to be heard -- A court with jurisdiction over the subject -- A convenient court -- Ascertaining the applicable law -- Simple pleading and practice -- Complex pleading and practice -- Discovery -- Disposition without trial -- Trial and post-trial motions -- Appeal -- Remedies -- Respect for final judgments.
Abstract:
"This well-established treatise is premised on the assumption that the key to understanding the principles of civil procedure is to know why: why the principles were created and why they are invoked. The treatise is written to answer these questions as it lays out the basic principles of civil procedure. It also reflects the authors' belief that students of civil procedure can understand and appreciate complex principles when they are clearly presented; teaching civil procedure does not require dumbing it down. The authors use the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as a model, but they also refer to different state rules and doctrines where appropriate in order to present a representative cross-section of state models. Although they discuss important civil procedure cases in the text, thus supporting the most widely used civil procedure casebooks using these same cases, they also provide useful references to secondary sources and illustrative cases for the reader who wants to explore further. Finally, they also treat thoroughly the most recent developments in personal jurisdiction and electronic discovery, among the most dynamic topics in modern procedure. The resulting treatise will be useful to law students as a supplement to their civil procedure coursework, and to practitioners as a quick reference and refresher to procedural issues that arise in litigation"-- Provided by publisher.