唔好意思,想問下如果合約入面加左條penalty clause,咁個條係咪not enforceable in court?
放低包袱2020-07-19 02:16:13
幫手足打官司收幾錢?
有冇諗過移民?
進攻乳房手2020-07-19 02:16:36
讀JD? 想問要求高唔高?
官司纏身2020-07-19 02:17:43
做! double profession 係大趨勢
非常有幫助
天龍之龍2020-07-19 02:17:57
自辯可以容許獨立個體上庭過下律師癮,想問下有冇人上庭自辯可以審返人地律師口啞啞
官司纏身2020-07-19 02:18:26
唔收女 sor
麻甩老鼠食塞米2020-07-19 02:19:57
點睇宜家啲暴動case?
幾大機會告得入?
Lin有頭債有主2020-07-19 02:22:09
Ching 想問下part time pc 會唔會對前路有影響?
迷途的yr2 law student 上
雞仔粒2020-07-19 02:23:15
留名學野
基絲文2020-07-19 02:23:15
Not a practising barrister but as a law graduate I thought I’d offer my two cents.
In your legal studies, you won’t be covering EVERYTHING in law - there certainly isn’t enough time to do so. You cover in your studies the main principles of each area of law, the main cases. When you practise, you’ll certainly face areas of law you’ve never learnt in school (especially if it’s really niche area of the law) - and thats why you will always have to do legal research. Mostly on online database (Lexis, Westlaw), where you find precedents (previous cases) covering those principles or similar facts. Just like you say, cases update, and there might always be new cases. So even if it’s areas of law you’ve covered in your legal studies, you’ll still have to do legal research to see if that’s more updated rulings, or updated legislations.
I think the biggest thing one learns in law school thus is not ‘the law’, ‘厚厚的法律條文’ as some would think, but rather, how to research the law, how to interpret the law, and how to apply the law.