There are no guaranteed outcomes in litigation and motion practice. When a lawyer brings a client's case before a judge, the results can be unpredictable. To turn an unpredictable result into a calculated risk, lawyers do laborious research to know how and why a judge ruled on previous motions. That work is what Context on Lexis Advance offers: insight into how judges think and rule; in minutes not hours and days.
In November 2018, LexisNexis Legal & Professional launched Context as a component of Lexis Analytics Suite to help attorneys better prepare briefs and argue motions in federal court. Using technology acquired in June 2017 from Ravel, a provider of legal research, analytics, and visualization software, Context analyzes text in court documents and case citations to output language federal judges use most often to decide motions. Language and citation analytics of case law is not limited to motion practice. For example, Context also helps lawyers challenge expert witness testimony.
I tested Context and found it saves time in researching and preparing motions in federal court and sets the stage for brief writing. Reviewing judges' rulings on motions and the outcomes of challenges to expert witness testimony in Context is like talking to a litigator steeped in practicing law before a judge.
Judges in Context
LexisNexis imported into Context data on judges, lawyers, and expert witnesses from a legacy product, called Litigation Profile Suite. A judge's Overview page lays out a judge's judicial experience, experience as an attorney, and education.
A judge's Overview page charts the number of opinions (based on cases) a judge published per year and groups the cases in bar graphs by area of law, such as Civil Procedure, Criminal Law & Procedure, Civil Rights Law, and Torts. The Overview page includes a judge's current contact information using a court website and telephone number.
A judge's Analytics page pairs 100 motions with their outcomes in bar graphs that show the total number of each motion decided from cases.
Figure 1: The Motion Outcomes tab of the Analytics page for Chief Judge Colleen McMahon, of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, lists motions paired with outcomes in bar graph displaying the percentage of motions granted, partially granted, and denied in the primary colors green, blue, and red, respectively.
Judge McMahon decided 672 motions for summary judgment, granting 49%, denying 32%, and granting partial summary judgment in 19% of cases. The right window pane shows cases where the judge ruled on summary judgment with the most recent cases on top. Where the judge decided multiple motions in a case, Context summarizes the motion outcomes (seeHirsch v. Complex Media, Inc., in Figure 1). Click on a case, and Lexis Advance brings it into view.
Filters on the left side of the page winnow the case display by practice area and court. Context will soon add a keyword filter to the Motion Outcomes tab to hone in on cases by relevant keywords.
I clicked on Judge McMahon's rulings on motions for reconsideration, where the judge granted only 13% of 80 motions. In the most recent cases, McMahon denied the motions. Rather than page through the cases until I found a motion McMahon granted, I clicked on the granted or green section of the Outcome Analysis bar graph for a motion for reconsideration. The action filtered the case view to only cases where the judge granted the motion. The same was true when I clicked on blue, which screened the look of cases on partial rulings, and red, which provided the cases in which the judge denied the motion.
Context listed ten cases where McMahon granted a motion to reconsider. Before diving into that material, I changed to the Citation Patterns tab to review the most common language the judge used in ruling on motions.
The Citations Patterns tab displays the opinions, and language within them, which is frequently cited by a judge. McMahon most cited Coppedge v. U.S. in ruling on motions. The language from that case she reused most pertains to whether an appellant appealed from an order in good faith, demonstrated by seeking review of a nonfrivolous issue.
Besides listing the language most frequently cited in opinions, the Citation Patterns tab contains a judge's most commonly cited judges. McMahon most frequently cites her cases. The top case is Ruotolo v. City of New York, where leave to amend a complaint to cure its defects was denied where the plaintiff had an opportunity to change the complaint but failed to remedy its deficiencies. Takeaway: Read McMahon on McMahon before you argue a case before the judge.
The Relevant Material page displays the results of a Lexis Advance search using a judge's name. The search returns all the sources in Lexis Advance on the judge, but also give you filters to narrow your search. Search within the results or apply a filter, which includes court, source, attorney, law firm, and experts. When the expert filter is on, select an expert to find the cases that included or excluded the expert's testimony before a judge in Context. To challenge an expert's testimony, view expert witness testimony in Context.