
APPENDIX B: ASSESSMENT TASK 2 – COURT APPLICATION (30% OF FINAL MARK)
General information
This Assessment task is worth 30 marks of your final mark.
The task is either making (Applicant) or opposing (Respondent) an application before the
Supreme Court in your respective state based on a fact scenario, which will be uploaded on to
the unit web page at the start of semester. Whilst the matter would ordinarily commence in the
County/District Court, for the sake of consistency with our studies, you are to assume it will be
heard in the Supreme Court. You will appear in the simulated court to make or resist the
application on a designated day and time set in the Court Fixture and only those students
appearing before the court will be present. In other words, there will be no audience for the
applications. You are required to apply the law (statutory provisions and case law) to your
submissions.
You must be prepared to answer questions form the presiding judicial officer (your tutor). You
may work in pairs to research and strategise over the arguments, but your oral submissions
must be prepared and delivered individually. You should also carry out and demonstrate legal
research and apply your research to your submissions. You will also be expected to show
competence in basic advocacy, in other words, effective communication (see the marking rubric
below).
The Court Fact Pattern and the Court Fixture will be placed on the unit web page under the
“Modules” and “Weeks 6 and 7” tabs. The Court Fixture will list: who you are acting for; which
issue you are to address; who your partner is; the opposing students; and, the date and time for
your appearance before the simulated court.
Please note that the bench may ask you about the facts to ascertain the value of any common
law precedent so with any case you cite, you should be able to state briefly the relevant facts of
the case, the hierarchy of the court, the number of judges (and the composition of any majority
or minority) and the outcome of the case and the reasoning behind that outcome.
PLEASE NOTE: any student unable to attend the court on the specified day and time will still
be required to present their oral argument to their tutor at a date and time to be determined and
at the convenience of your tutor. In this sense every student will be assessed equally in this unit.
You will need evidence of your reasons not to be able to appear on the designated day and time
(please note, medical certificates or other evidence will be checked for accuracy and students
will be subject to University disciplinary proceedings if their documentation is false or
misleading).
Court submissions
- There is no written submission for this assessment it is an oral submission only.
- Court will be conducted during the times and days of your normal tutorial – see the Court
Fixture available on the unit web page for your exact day and time (under the “Modules”
and “Weeks 6 and 7” tabs). - There is no audience in the court room (your usual tutorial room) for the oral presentation
of your submissions; just yourselves (4 students) and your tutor – so no need to be nervous – this is a conversation about the issues. - Your tutor will be marking you as you make your submissions so do not be put off by your
tutor writing something based on something you just said – it may be a good comment
about your submission.
12 | Page - Each court (set of four students) will be allocated up to 30 minutes for oral submissions
including questions from the bench. - You should divide your time so that each of you presents for no more than 5 minutes each
and allow the bench to ask questions during that time. - You should be prepared for the bench to ask the other side to respond to a submission
made by one side. In this respect the hearing may turn into a three-way conversation
between the bench, the applicant and respondent on any given issue. - You should be prepared to be interrupted by the bench at any point in time with a question.
- Given the tight time restrictions, you should expect not to get through your submissions
therefore present your most persuasive point early on in your submissions and once again
do not prepare more than 5 minutes of submissions. - Because of time constraints we will not observe the formalities of court rather keep it casual.
There is no need to “dress up” for the oral submissions and you do not need to provide
case citations unless asked to do so.
Important Note: Court -v- Moot
This assessment is a court hearing of an application simulated in the Supreme Court of your
respective state. It is not quite the same as a law school moot where students present their
argument on behalf of their client and answer questions from the bench without interacting with
the other side. This hearing is more like an actual application before a court in that the applicant
may be interrupted by the bench after their first submission and the bench may ask the
respondent to reply to the applicant’s submission and vice versa. From there, the parties engage
in a conversation with the bench going back and forth and being guided by what the bench
considers are the contentious issues before the Court.
So, respondents and applicants, please be aware that the hearing will be a conversation that
resembles a tennis match with the argument going back and forth across the bench as counsel
make their arguments based on the submissions before the Court. Listen carefully and follow
the argument and make sure you address the issue being discussed when called upon to do
so.
Tips for the Court Hearing
Announcing your appearance and the flow of the matter
Don’t forget, to announce your appearance when your matter is called on for hearing, the
conversation will go something like this:
Judge: “The next matter in my calendar is Richardson v Smith. Are there any appearances
please?”
Counsel for the Applicant (1st issue): “Your Honour, if it please the Court, my name is
Ms/Mr/Mx (insert your surname and spell it) and I conditionally appear for the applicant,
Mr Larry Smith along with my learned friend Ms/Mr/Mx (surname of the student
presenting the 2nd issue for the applicant and spell it).”
Counsel for the Respondent (1st issue): “Your Honour, if it please the Court my name is
Ms/Mr/Mx (insert your surname and spell it) and I appear for the respondent, Ms Rachel
Richardson along with my learned friend Ms/Mr/Mx (surname of the student presenting
the 2nd issue for the respondent and spell it).”
The Judge will then ask counsel for the applicant (1st issue) to commence making his/her/their
submission. The bench will interrupt all the advocates to ask questions and will likely invite the
opposing side to comment on any issue raised by any advocate. This back-and-forth style of
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advocacy is common in the hearing of applications prior to and during trial, such as this. Listen
to the questions asked by the judge and answer the question asked without any extraneous or
irrelevant material. It doesn’t matter that the question asked by the bench may be addressed
later in your submission – answer the question asked of you as it is asked.
Don’t be afraid of questions – through questions, the judge is leading you to the most
controversial and disputed points of law within each issue and it is these areas of discussion
that ultimately lead to the Court’s decision. Questions assist an advocate to be able to persuade
the judge on the most controversial points of fact and law in any application. In other words, you
should welcome questions from the bench as they guide you in your submissions!
Use of authorities
You do not need vast numbers of cases to make persuasive submissions in this matter. The
way to do well in this assessment is to use few authorities but use them well. In other words,
cite the relevant legislation and/or sub-ordinate legislation and, where appropriate, a case that
will assist the Court to interpret how the statute should be applied to the facts before the court.
State a proposition of law and its authority (statute and/or case law), then state the relevant
facts of our case and draw a logical conclusion that supports your side of the application (this
approach is called “deductive reasoning” and works well in court). It is the similarity of the
precedent facts (case law) and the proposition of law flowing from the precedent that, used
together with the case facts, will make for a persuasive argument (submissions) that will
persuade the Court to find in your client’s favour.
The worst thing you can do is overburden yourself and the Court with numerous authorities
some of which may not be on-point. You also need to consider that you have very limited time
and hence, do not have the luxury of too many authorities; prepare for no more than 5 minutes
of submissions as you will need to answer questions from the bench.
Drafting your submissions
Try using deductive reasoning to craft your submissions. Deductive reasoning draws
conclusions from the application of rules. It establishes a link between the legal rule and the
facts to arrive at a particular conclusion. Deductive reasoning underpins all legal arguments.
The basic building blocks of deductive legal arguments for this assessment are:
Major premise: All law students must study the compulsory law unit LAWS201.
Minor premise: Sally is studying LAWS201.
Conclusion: Therefore, Sally is a law student.
For this court application (example topic only – not related to the real fact pattern):
Major premise: A valid contract requires consideration (using statute and/or case authority).
Minor premise: The plaintiff paid a deposit on the signing of the contract.
Conclusion: Therefore, the Court should find that valid consideration exists.
Advocacy tips
Notwithstanding that this simulated court hearing is not a moot in the traditional sense, some
general tips on preparing and presenting oral arguments in moots can still be useful and many
can be found on YouTube. You should source some of those videos prior to your appearance
to get a feel for what it will be like on the day. Good court advocacy is the same whether it be a
moot or a simulated court hearing as in our assessment task.
The following extract from “Survive Law Blog”, September 24, 2013 by Ben at
https://www.survivelaw.com/single-post/1520-tips-for-new-mooters may be of assistance to
those that haven’t participated in an assessment like this before. So, if you are new to courts
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and aren’t quite sure what to do, here are some things Ben has learned from participating in his
first few moots …
- Read the Cases
In their entirety. Yes, it sucks and takes a stupidly long time, but when a Judge pulls you up on
why the appellant’s authority should be distinguished from the case at bar, you want to be able
to recite the intricate details of the facts and note how they are dissimilar, or if they asked you
why you used a particularly eloquent quote that was said in obiter and not the ratio, you want to
be able to point to how the High Court got cranky about the intermediate appellate courts
disregarding ‘seriously considered dicta’ of the HCA in Farah Constructions. - Do not read off your notes
Know the material. Know the argument that you want to make and how you would like to make
it. The thing with mooting is that the Judge can interject and ask you questions whenever they
please, and should their questions direct you away from the lovely, linear and logical argument
you had on paper, you need to be able to adapt and still know the main points you want to make.
Plus, it’s a lot less compelling looking down at your notes while you are telling the Judge why
the appellant’s case is rubbish, as opposed to speaking naturally and looking the Judge directly
in the eyes while you make your point. - Practice before your moot
Mooting is like spoken chess. While there is a fair bit of room to move and several variables that
are not completely predictable, you get a general idea as to the line your opponent or the judge
may take. I mean, you can pretty much assume your opponent is going to argue the opposite
of everything you say, and you can pretty much assume the judge is going to poke at all the
weak areas of your argument. Therefore, it is easy to make some general preparations to help
you along, especially when you have your opponent’s submissions!
Also, take turns playing judge with your partner when practising, have one person practice their
submissions while the other interjects with questions whenever they can think of any. It goes a
long way in preparing for the judges’ questions! - List the things you want to talk about
And cross them off as you do. I got told this by the judge after I completely messed up my first
moot and got all confused by the judge’s line of questioning. Knowing the points that you want
to make and crossing them off as you go along gives you the flexibility to address judges
questions, while also helping you to keep track of the general direction you want to go in. - Relax and have fun
Take it seriously enough so that you feel like you gave it a genuinely good crack and don’t let
your team mate down, but don’t be too upset if you don’t get the results you want. At the end of
the day, mooting is seriously fun. So, enjoy it.
Sometimes things won’t happen the way you want it to; you might mess up something that you
have practiced a thousand times and just know that you could have nailed it, you might get a
judge that rocks up absolutely clueless and barely asks you a question. These things happen –
getting good results are always nice but the skills you learn from mooting are the most valuable.
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CRITERIA REFERENCED ASSESSMENT RUBRIC FOR ASSESSMENT TASK 2 – COURT APPLICATION (30% OF FINAL MARK)
Criteria
Standards
FAIL
(<49%)
PASS
(50%-64%)
CREDIT
(65%-74%)
DISTINCTION
(75%-84%)
HIGH DISTINCTION
(85%-100%)
Knowledge
Knowledge and
understanding of civil
procedure.
Ability to think critically
and evidence problem
solving skills.
Synthesises a
persuasive argument
using appropriate
authorities linked to the
questions or legal
problems.
(25 marks)
- Demonstrates an
inadequate
understanding of civil
procedure. - Demonstrates poor
critical thinking. - Demonstrates poor
synthesis and fails to
make a persuasive
argument. - Demonstrates adequate
but limited understanding of
civil procedure. - Demonstrates adequate
critical thinking. - Demonstrates adequate
synthesis and the ability to
make a persuasive
argument. - Demonstrates accurate and
clear understanding of civil
procedure in sufficient
detail. - Demonstrates satisfactory
critical thinking. - Demonstrates satisfactory
synthesis and the ability to
make a persuasive
argument. - Demonstrates a well
developed understanding of
civil procedure. - Demonstrates well
developed critical thinking. - Demonstrates well
developed synthesis and
the ability to make a
persuasive argument. - Demonstrates a
comprehensive,
sophisticated and well-
structured understanding of
civil procedure. - Demonstrates excellent
critical thinking. - Demonstrates excellent
synthesis and the ability to
make a persuasive
argument.
Communication
Effective
communication
(5 marks)
- Demonstrates poor
communication skills
and compliance with
court etiquette. - Demonstrates a lack of
organisation and an
ability to communicate
an understanding of
the issues, facts and
law. - Demonstrates satisfactory
communication skills and
compliance with court
etiquette. - Demonstrates satisfactory
organisation and an ability
to communicate an
understanding of the
issues, facts and law. - Demonstrates good
communication skills and
compliance with court
etiquette. - Demonstrates good
organisation and an ability
to communicate an
understanding of the issues,
facts and law. - Demonstrates very good
communication skills and
compliance with court
etiquette. - Demonstrates very good
organisation and an ability
to communicate an
understanding of the
issues, facts and law. - Demonstrates excellent
communication skills and
compliance with court
etiquette. - Demonstrates excellent
organisation and an ability to
communicate an
understanding of the issues,
facts and law.

