The brilliant cartoonist, Wiley Miller (“Non
Sequitur”), captured the misunderstandings between men and women as few
others have. For example, the wife says: “Let’s go shopping.” The husband
hears: “Let’s go drain the life force from your body.” The husband
says: “Honey, are you almost ready yet?” The wife hears: “Life as we
know it will cease to exist unless you can alter the space-time
continuum.”
My experience with jurors has led me to conclude that
similar misunderstandings occur regularly in the Courtroom between attorneys
and jurors. For example, the lawyer says: “Negligence.” The juror hears:
“Forgetfulness.” The lawyer says “Proximate.” The juror hears “Approximate.”
The lawyer says: “Standard of care.” The juror hears: “Like OSHA.” The lawyer
says: “Preponderance.” The juror hears: “Heavy thinking.”
I could go on and on. Lawyers like to say a graphic will
“depict” things. Jurors need to know what the graphic will “show.” The lawyer
says this event was “prior” to the current one. Jurors want to know what came
“before” what. And “aforementioned” doesn’t even compute.
You must speak a language the jurors understand if you are
to persuade them. For example, explain legal terms such as negligence so there
can be no confusion with the more common use of the term, forgetfulness. Use
words you used before you became a lawyer: familiar words, easy-to-understand
words, words that don’t require more than a high school education.
With that, you are far more likely to have – a winning case!