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Once the appellate court files the record on appeal, you will have to prepare your brief. A brief is a partys written description of the facts in the case, the law that applies, and the partys argument about the issues on appeal.
The appellee must serve and file a brief within 30 days after the appellants brief is served. The appellant may serve and file a reply brief within 21 days after service of the appellees brief but a reply brief must be filed at least 7 days before argument, unless the court, for good cause, allows a later filing.
Tips for Writing a Persuasive Reply Brief Begin with a concise and powerful introduction. Focus on what your adversary did not say. Respond to some of your adversarys arguments. Do not repeat the arguments that you made in your initial brief but briefly remind the court of those arguments.
An appeal brief is a written document where the parties explain to the Supreme Court why the Superior Court made a mistake or decided the case correctly. There are 3 briefs filed during the appeal process: the appellants opening brief. the appellees brief.
You cannot introduce new legal issues that were not discussed in the respondents brief. But you can address new legal issues that the respondent wrote about. That means you can talk about legal issues that are in the respondents brief that are not in the appellants opening brief.
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An appellate brief is a written argument by the appellant or respondent that explains why the superior court acted correctly or incorrectly.
Once all briefs have been filed, they will be sent to a panel of judges for a decision on the merits of the appeal. The majority of cases are decided on briefs only. No new evidence or testimony can be presented in this Court.
The appellant (petitioner) bears the burden of showing that the trial court or administrative agency made a legal error that affected the district courts decision. The court of appeals makes its decision based solely on the trial courts or agencys case record.

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