While I get up to blogging speed, I might throw a few no-brainers out there. This is not a bad thing. With the volume of legal information out there, occasionally you need a refresher course in the basics.

I find one invaluable resource that I always rely upon when asked about Maryland forms is George Liebmann’s Civil Procedure Forms of the Maryland Practice set. (Liebmann is, of course, one of the great scholarly minds of Maryland law.) This, of course, has examples of the standard and esoteric forms you will find in Maryland civil practice. If you are ever asked to write a motion you have never written before, like say a “Motion for Non-disclosure of Secret Processes on Deposition,” this is the book that shows you how to do it (and with some helpful commentary to boot). If you don’t own a copy, your local public law library or general public library (in Maryland of course) should have one available.

Posted by J Cannan