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RULES
FOR THE TWENTY-FIFTH ANNUAL
JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL MOOT COURT COMPETITION
IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND PRIVACY LAW
October
26-28, 2006
§ 1000. Organization and Administration of the Competition
§ 1010. Teams
§ 1020. Briefs
§ 1030. Outside Assistance
§ 1040. Filing of Briefs
§ 1050. Oral Arguments
§ 1060. Preliminary Rounds
§ 1070. Elimination Rounds
§ 1080. General Conduct Requirements
§ 1090. Requests for Interpretation of Rules and Problem
§ 1100. Receipt of Moot Court Competition Mailings Presumed
§ 1110. Announcements of Team Scores
§ 1120. Awards
Appendix Certificate of Work Product and Service
§ 1000. Organization
and Administration of the Competition
The John Marshall Law School, Chicago, Illinois, sponsors the annual John
Marshall Law School Moot Court Competition in Information Technology and
Privacy Law. The Competition is a project of the John Marshall Law School
Center for Information Technology and Privacy Law and is presented in
cooperation with the Moot Court Executive Board of the John Marshall Law
School. The Competition is conducted under the supervision of the Moot
Court Competition Committee. The Committee has authority to interpret
the Competition rules, to resolve any complaints or disputes in connection
with the Competition, and to amend these rules. Decisions of the Committee
regarding any aspect of this Competition are final.
§ 1010. Teams
(1) A team consists of two or three members. Only two team members will
be permitted to argue within a single round of oral arguments, but all
team members may participate in oral arguments during the course of the
Competition.
(2) Team members must be matriculated in a full or part-time program in
the law school they represent.
(3) No team member may have completed a law degree - J.D. or its equivalent
- prior to September 30, 2006.
(4) A law school may enter only one team and is registered when the Committee
accepts the team's application and registration fee and notifies the team
that its application has been accepted. The registration fee will not
be refunded in the event a registered team withdraws or defaults.
(5) Law schools in the United States that are approved or provisionally
approved by the American Bar Association are eligible to apply for entry
into the Competition. Accredited educational institutions outside the
United States with a program of study in law may apply at the discretion
of the Committee.
(6) There will be no substitution of team members after a team has submitted
its brief, except upon the written consent of the Committee pursuant to
a petition for substitution based on good cause.
§ 1020. Briefs
(1) Each team will elect to write its brief for the petitioner (or appellant)
or the respondent (or appellee).
(2) Briefs shall conform to the Rules of the United States Supreme Court
except as modified by these rules. A formal statement of jurisdiction
is optional. All citations must be complete and in the form prescribed
by The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (18th ed., 2005). A team
may elect to use ALWD Citation Manual: A Professional System of Citation
(3rd ed., 2006) in lieu of The Bluebook; a team that so elects must include
a footnote to that effect in the Table of Authorities section of its brief.
(3) Briefs will be scored on a scale of 100 points. Scholarly research,
presentation of concise and cogent arguments, and writing style will account
for 90 points of the score, and technical matters (including timeliness)
will account for the remaining 10 points. The brief score will remain
constant throughout the Competition and will be weighted equally with
oral argument scores to determine a team's aggregate score for each round.
(4) The combined length of the summary of argument and argument sections
of the brief may not exceed 40 double-spaced pages, printed on one side
of each page, with typed matter not exceeding 6.5 x 9 inches (165 x 229
mm) excluding page numbers. The paper used may be either 8.5 x 11 inches
(letter size) or 210 x 297 mm (A4 size). Briefs must be formatted using
12 point Times New Roman font. Footnotes and quoted material need not
be double spaced, and a slightly smaller type size may be used for footnotes.
Appendices, if included, shall contain only the relevant text of cited
authorities such as statutes, constitutions, and regulations. Appendices
shall not contain excerpts from cases or law review articles, arguments
to supplement the brief, or any other material. Each printed copy of the
brief must be fastened along the left margin with either three staples
or a plastic binding.
(5) The name of the law school must not appear anywhere in the brief.
The cover of the brief must state only the team number assigned by the
Committee.
(6) By submitting briefs, teams consent to publication of their briefs
online and in print, and agree to assign copyright ownership to The John
Marshall Law School upon request.
§ 1030. Outside
Assistance
(1) Participating law schools may not use the Competition Record in an
intra-school competition for the purpose of selecting team members for
the Competition. No team may receive any assistance in writing its brief.
This rule shall not prevent the faculty, administration, other students,
or attorneys from participating with team members in preliminary general
discussions of the problem.
(2) After the brief has been filed, teams may receive assistance in the
preparation of their oral arguments. However, this assistance is limited
to judging and critiquing oral argument practices. Competitors are solely
responsible for argument formulation and strategy.
(3) As part of the certification required by § 1040, each team member
will attest that the team's brief is solely the result of the named team
members' efforts and that the team members did not receive faculty or
other outside assistance contrary to the provisions of this section.
§ 1040. Filing
of Briefs
(1) The filing deadline for briefs is 11:59 pm on Friday, September 29,
2006.
(2) Each team will file the following items with the Committee by the
filing deadline: (a) seven printed copies of the brief; (b) a copy of
the brief in Microsoft Word format, on either a 3.5-inch floppy disk or
a compact disc; (c) a certificate of service and work product, in the
form specified in the appendix following these rules; and (d) an e-mailed
copy of the brief suitable for posting on the Competition's web site,
in either Adobe PDF (preferred) or Microsoft Word (acceptable) format.
(3) The printed copies, disk, and certificate of service and work product
(original copy only) must be sent to the Committee at the following address
via registered or certified Priority Mail, for teams from the United States,
or via Air Mail, for teams from other countries.
Moot Court Competition Committee
c/o Moot Court Board
The John Marshall Law School
315 South Plymouth Court
Chicago, Illinois 60604
The date of filing will be established by the postmark date (not including
a private postage meter), if an official and legible postmark appears
on the envelope, or by the date of receipt at John Marshall if no such
postmark appears. A penalty of 5 points will be deducted from the total
brief score for each day that a brief is late. Briefs filed more than
seven days late will not be accepted and the team will be disqualified.
A penalty of 2 points will be deducted from the total brief score for
failure to comply with the submission procedures in this rule.
(4) The copy for posting on the Competition's web site must be sent via
electronic mail to the Competition Coordinator at ITcenter@jmls.edu, subject
line to read: Team (#) - Respondent (Petitioner) Brief. The filename for
this document should be in this format: team123.pdf or team123.doc, where
"123" represents the team number. If the brief is divided into
multiple files, the part number should be appended (e.g. team123-1.pdf,
team123-2.pdf, etc.). The body of the message to which the file is attached
should identify the team number, the name of the school, the names of
the team members, and the side on whose behalf the brief was written (Respondent
or Petitioner).
(5) The Committee will post a copy of each team's brief on the Competition's
official web site at www.itmootcourt.com after the filing deadline. Teams
need not serve copies of their brief upon one another.
(6) A brief may not be corrected, revised, or supplemented after it has
been submitted to the Committee.
§ 1050. Oral
Arguments
(1) Oral arguments will be held in Chicago, Illinois, on October 26, 27,
and 28, 2006.
(2) Each team will be allowed thirty minutes for argument in each round.
Each team may use reasonable discretion in allocating the thirty minutes
between two oralists. The team representing the petitioner (or appellant)
may reserve up to five minutes of its time for rebuttal by addressing
such request to the Court at the commencement of argument. Before commencement
of oral argument, each team must advise the bailiff of the allocation
of time between its members. The Court may interrupt argument for questions
and in its discretion may allow additional time.
(3) Team members will announce their names and team number at the beginning
of the argument but must not reveal the name of their law school. Judges
must neither ask nor know the identity of the teams arguing before them
either before or after grading the arguments. To minimize the likelihood
that judges will learn the identity of teams, advisors and other persons
accompanying a team must not associate with team members in the courtroom
or elsewhere while in view of judges. Advisors and other persons accompanying
a team should not be present in a courtroom if their presence is likely
to compromise the anonymity of one or both competing teams.
(4) Bailiffs will signal by card when five minutes and two minutes remain
in the time allotted for each speaker's argument and at the expiration
of the time allowed.
(5) In determining the scores, judges may not take into consideration
the merits of the case.
(6) Judges may not disclose winners or scores to anyone other than the
Committee or its designee. They may comment on the performance of speakers
or teams after the scores have been submitted for tabulation.
(7) During a round, only the participating oralists and the third member
of a team, if any, may sit at the counsel table. Other persons from the
same law school may be present in the room but may not be seated with
and may not confer with those seated at the counsel table. If the judges
provide a critique at the conclusion of a round, only the team members
and advisors may be present in the room during the critique.
(8) No team members, advisors, relatives or friends of team members or
advisors may listen to the arguments in any preliminary, octofinal, quarterfinal
or semifinal rounds in which they are not directly competing. This rule
does not apply to a team subsequent to its elimination from the Competition.
(9) The Committee may direct that any round or portions thereof be recorded
or transmitted using any medium now known or later developed. By participating
in the Competition, all teams consent to such recording or transmission.
§ 1060. Preliminary
Rounds
(1) Each team will argue in two preliminary rounds. Barring extraordinary
circumstances, no team will argue the same side of the case or against
the same team in both preliminary rounds. The Committee will pair teams
through a random selection process subject to the foregoing constraints.
(2) In each of the preliminary rounds, each student who argues will be
scored on a scale of 100 points. Each team will receive a single oral
argument score for the preliminary rounds that will be the average of
the four individual oralist scores.
(3) The aggregate score for the preliminary rounds will be the total of
the brief score and the average oral argument score.
§ 1070. Elimination
Rounds
(1) Octofinal Round: The sixteen teams with the highest aggregate scores
from the preliminary rounds will qualify for the octofinal round. Ties
in qualifying scores will be broken in favor of the team having the higher
brief score. If two teams have the same brief score, ties will be broken
in favor of the team with the highest aggregate point difference over
both opponents in the preliminary rounds.
(2) Quarterfinal Round: The winner of each octofinal pairing will advance
to the quarterfinal round.
(3) Semifinal Round: The winner of each quarterfinal pairing will advance
to the semifinal round.
(4) Ambassador Round: An additional round may be held immediately prior
to the final round, between two teams selected by the Committee based
upon their performance through the quarterfinal round.
(5) Final Round: The winner of each semifinal pairing will advance to
the final round.
(6) Scoring: In each elimination round, each team that argues will be
scored on a scale of 100 points. Each team's average oral score will be
added to its brief score to determine its aggregate score. The winner
of each pairing will be the team with the higher aggregate score for that
round and will advance to the next round. Ties will be broken in favor
of the team having the higher brief score.
(7) Pairings and Side Selection: A seeding chart for the sixteen teams
advancing to the octofinal round will pair the team with the highest aggregate
score from the preliminary rounds against the team with the lowest aggregate
score from the preliminary rounds and the remaining teams will be paired
in the same manner, i.e., second highest aggregate score from the preliminary
rounds versus the second lowest aggregate score from the preliminary rounds,
etc. As teams are eliminated, the remaining teams will be paired in each
round according to their position on the original seeding chart. For each
elimination round, the selection of sides will be by coin toss. The seeding
chart will not be disclosed to competitors until after the conclusion
of the Competition.
§ 1080. General
Conduct Requirements
All competitors are required to conduct themselves in a responsible and
professional manner in preparing briefs and presenting oral arguments.
The Committee will investigate and resolve any reported infractions of
these rules. Every participating school and its representatives are bound
by these rules.
§ 1090. Requests
for Interpretation of Rules and Problem
(1) The Committee will make all necessary interpretations of the rules
and the record on appeal. All questions must be submitted to the Committee
via email on or before September 1, 2006.
(2) The Committee will inform participating teams of the questions and
answers by posting interpretations after September 1, 2006 on the Competition's
official web site, www.itmootcourt.com. Such interpretations will be final.
(3) All requests for interpretation should be sent to:
Moot Court Competition Coordinator
ITcenter@jmls.edu
Subject line to read: Request for Interpretation
§ 1100. Receipt
of Moot Court Competition Mailings Presumed
Each team is presumed to have received any Competition mailing or email
addressed to the contact person indicated on the team's registration form.
Teams are responsible for providing and updating their contact person's
current email address.
§ 1110. Announcements
of Team Scores
Oral argument and brief scores will be posted on the Competition's official
web site after the end of the Competition.
§ 1120. Awards
Trophies will be awarded to the first place, second place, semifinalist
teams and the winner of the Ambassador Round; to the teams that submitted
the best petitioner's brief and the best respondent's brief; and to the
best oralist, as determined by oral argument scores in the preliminary
rounds. The winning briefs will be published in The John Marshall Journal
of Computer & Information Law. A participant must have argued in both
of the preliminary rounds in order to be eligible for the best oralist
award.
Appendix
TWENTY-FIFTH ANNUAL
JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL MOOT COURT COMPETITION
IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND PRIVACY LAW
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
AND WORK PRODUCT
We, the undersigned,
certify that the _________________________ (school's name) brief is solely
our work product and that we have not received faculty or other outside
assistance contrary to the provisions of § 1030 of the Rules of this
Competition.
We also certify that
a copy of our brief has been sent via electronic mail to the Competition
Coordinator in accordance with § 1040 of the Rules of this Competition.
TEAM MEMBER #1 __________________________
(Printed or typed name)
__________________________
(Signature)
TEAM MEMBER #2 __________________________
(Printed or typed name)
__________________________
(Signature)
TEAM MEMBER #3 __________________________
(Printed or typed name)
__________________________
(Signature)
DATE ______________________________
TEAM NUMBER __________
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