Maricopa County Superior Court Judges Randall Warner and Christopher Whitten team up to talk about telling stories to judges. In this episode, the judges, from their unique vantage point on the bench, reveal what they want to hear or read from counsel, what they don’t, how to write briefs that tell a compelling narrative, where they find inspired (and inspiring) storytelling, and the summer vacations they’re dreaming of.
Topics4:11 Why storytelling matters7:04 Judges’ versus jurors’ needs10:35 Storytelling techniques14:30 Finding inspiration19:10 Great legal storytellers21:14 Advantages for both sides of “the v”24:09 Writing interesting briefs28:57 Telling the same story at trial as in briefs30:29 Judges’ pet peeves in briefs34:40 Opposing counsel’s miscasting your client38:42 Storytelling about unsympathetic clients41:47 Signoff questions
Quotes“Fundamentally, every case is about a story, whether it’s a technical legal dispute or whether it’s a fact dispute at trial, it’s a competition to see whose story resonates more with whoever’s making the decision, whether it’s a judge or jury.”
Judge Randall Warner “Even as we’ve tried cases less and less often, we’ve gotten better and better at collecting facts, and I think that’s made us worse and worse at storytelling.”
Judge Christopher Whitten ResourcesJudge Randall Warner (
bio) (
episode)Judge Christopher Whitten (
bio) (
episode)Building Trial Skills: San Diego (
course)Dominic Gianna on
MTRR (
episode,
episode)James Brosnahan on
MTRR (
episode)
David Mann storytelling (course) (episode)