Dear Legal Writer: Stop writing “the court found”!

“Find” and “hold” mean very different things.

▪️ “Find” refers to determining facts—what actually happened. This is the job of a fact-finder (a jury, or sometimes a judge in a bench trial or preliminary hearing).

▪️ “Hold” refers to a legal conclusion—a court’s determination of what the law means or what the law requires, given the facts.

So:

✔️ When a jury decides what facts actually happened, the jury “finds.”

✔️ When a court decides what the law means or what it requires, the court “holds.”

WHAT THIS MEANS IN AN APPELLATE BRIEF:

Appellate courts don’t usually make factual findings.*

Appellate courts review the factual findings made below and decide whether those findings are supported under the applicable standard of review.

 👉 So don’t use “find” to describe what an appellate court does.

WHAT THIS MEANS IN A SUMMARY JUDGMENT BRIEF:

When a trial court decides whether an alleged set of facts meets the legal threshold for purposes of Rule 56, the court is making a legal conclusion, not a factual finding.

👉 So don’t use “find.” The best alternatives are:

decided
concluded
determined
ruled
held**

Please let me know what questions you may have.

(The find-hold distinction is one that trips up a lot of folks.)

💌 Amanda

#DearLegalWriter
#Dear1L

♦️ ADVANCED NOTES FOR PRACTITIONERS:

*N.B. 1:

Certain uncommon situations call for an appellate court to make or modify findings of fact—for example, when a rule or statute expressly authorizes it, or when the case is in a posture where the appellate court is acting in a quasi-trial capacity (such as certain equity proceedings or administrative-review regimes).

But even there, the better practice is to avoid writing that the appellate court “found” anything.

**N.B. 2:

A school of thought exists that trial courts don’t make “holdings.” I agree with that analytically, given that trial court decisions are not precedential except to the parties before the court.

Nevertheless, I have used the verb “hold” to describe trial courts’ conclusions of law, and doing so has become standard practice generally, in my experience.

📬 What’s your view on using “hold” for a trial court’s conclusions of law?

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Dear 1L, Justice Elena Kagan apparently didn’t rush to “write home about” her 1L fall grades, either.

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Dear 1L, “To be sure” is a genteel expression that lawyers use a lot. Perhaps you’ve noticed.