Legal Writing Reminders

Honing Legal Writing Skills: Passive Voice and Parentheticals

By Josh Taylor

New series on legal writing skills, including rules, techniques, and simple suggestions, kicks off with a reminder about passive voice.

passive voice

โ€œWrite well. Your career depends on it.โ€ Those words are etched all around our Writing Resource Center offices at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago. The mantra is so simple itโ€™s almost forgettable, especially to those of us long removed from the halls of legal learning and out in a world of constant deadlines, expectations and strife.

Itโ€™s those of us far removed from everyday reminders that arguably need to practice our legal writing skills the most. As legal writing master Bryan A. Garner reminds us, the mindset that โ€œyou shouldnโ€™t fuss about your writing โ€” that good enough is good enoughโ€ is a costly one.  As Garner puts it, if your legal writing is โ€œartless and sloppy, [your audience] may assume your thinking is the same,โ€ and no lawyer can afford that inference.

This post begins a series of #LegalWritingReminders that I hope will help everyday practitioners improve their written work little by little. Professor and legal writing expert Ian Gallacher notes that, just like professional violinists, professional writers (which includes all lawyers) should spend some time each day honing their technical skills. This series will include rules, optional techniques and simple suggestions to remind us that strong writing makes us better lawyers. Practice makes perfect, so letโ€™s get started!

Reminder 1: (Almost) Never Use Passive Voice

 The woman drove the car.

The car was driven by the woman. 

The first sentence above is in active voice and the one below it is in passive voice. Active voice means that the subject or actor begins the sequence, followed by the verb or action, followed by the object or the thing acted upon. Passive voice flips that order around (or eliminates the subject altogether). Notice immediately the difference in sentence length. In a profession consumed with efficiency, why in the world would you make a reader suffer through more words than necessary to say the same thing? Judges and clerks hate that. Relatedly, imagine a more extreme passive example wherein the reader might have to wait a full line of text (or more) to realize the subject or actor of the sentence.

The defendantโ€™s own story was corroborated, after several long hours of interrogation, surveillance and re-interrogation, and despite his own inability to describe important details of the night of the incident, by the defendantโ€™s (drum roll, please!) sister. 

Painful at most, and frustrating at least.

For whatever reason, passive voice has taken hold as a go-to โ€œspace filler,โ€ and lawyers slip into it all the time. Donโ€™t make your reader wait for the most important part of the sentence.  Avoid passive voice 99.9 percent of the time in your legal writing. Your briefs and memos will be shorter, and your readers will be happier.

Exceptions

Writers may use passive voice as a persuasive technique to mindfully accomplish burying, obscuring, or softening certain information.

  • A criminal defense attorney may admit that โ€œthe man was murderedโ€ without implicating anyone by including a sentence subject.
  • A family law attorney may soften the blow of his clientโ€™s actions by putting the client at the end of a less severe sentence. For example, โ€œThe child was taken to Indiana by his father on April 3, 2018โ€ instead of โ€œRespondent took the child to Indiana on April 3, 2019.โ€

Also, note that โ€œvoiceโ€ has nothing to do with โ€œtense.โ€ Past, present, and future tense can all exist within active or passive voice.

Practice

Pull out the last thing of substance you filed in court, and try to spot the first three instances of passive voice.

  • โ€œWasโ€ is a good flag for passive voice โ€” it doesnโ€™t always indicate passive voice was used, but itโ€™s a good starting place.
  • Ask: โ€œDid I intentionally use passive voice here?โ€ If so, jot the reason next to the passive sentence or phrase. If not, rewrite the sentence in active voice

Reminder 2: Case Parenthetical Structure

Full sentences get periods. Incomplete clauses do not. When explaining the contents of a citation, treat information in the parenthetical the same as you would a traditional sentence or clause.

  • Incorrect: Smith v. Jones, 735 F. Supp. 2d 112, 114 (N.D. Ill. 1998) (Holding that IIED claims โ€œcan proceed only where there are physical manifestationsโ€ of emotional distress.).

Beginning a parenthetical with โ€œholdingโ€ or โ€œstatingโ€ or other similar introductory material makes the sentence incomplete so that the period inside the parenthetical is inappropriate. There are a few fixes:

  • Correct: Smith v. Jones, 735 F. Supp. 2d 112, 114 (N.D. Ill. 1998) (IIED claims โ€œcan proceed only where there are physical manifestationsโ€ of emotional distress.).
  • Correct: Smith v. Jones, 735 F. Supp. 2d 112, 114 (N.D. Ill. 1998) (holding that IIED claims โ€œcan proceed only where there are physical manifestationsโ€ of emotional distress).

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Be sure to read “Get to the Point!” by Teddy Snyder for quick tips on clear communications.

Illustration ยฉiStockPhoto.com

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Josh Taylor Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor is a practicing litigator based in Connecticut and the head of legal content strategy at Tracers, an investigative data search software company for law firms. Previously, Josh served on the staff of The John Marshall Law Schoolโ€™s Writing Resource Center and as head of legal content and strategic partnerships at a nationwide legal software company.ย  He has spoken around the country on practice management and legal writing topics. Josh sits on the boards of directors of Beyond Legal Aid and the Chicago Fringe Opera Company. He also writes the Legal Writing Reminders series for Attorney at Work.

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