Question
Supplemental - Not MEE July 2026 | Substance vs Procedure | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
...lly be analyzed? The correct answer captures the nuanced treatment of burdens of proof. Conflict-of-laws principles, Erie doctrine principles
Citations: Conflict-of-laws principles, Erie doctrine principles
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. Another actor changed position after relying on the relevant statement, document, or official action. Which analysis best protects the...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The decision maker must choose between a categorical shortcut and a fact-sensitive standard. Which statement is most consistent with b...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The disputed action was partly authorized but exceeded an important limitation. Which statement best explains the consequence? Correct...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The facts support the doctrine in part, but a timing problem may limit the requested remedy. What is the strongest reason for the like...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. A party invokes an equitable or discretionary remedy after contributing to the problem. What is the best analysis? Correct. Relevant e...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | ESSAY
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. A party relied on common practice, but the record includes facts suggesting that practice was unreasonable or incomplete in this setti...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | ESSAY
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. After an initial agreement or ruling, later conduct created ambiguity about whether the required legal element was satisfied. The oppo...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. One argument was preserved, while another was raised only later. Which result best accounts for preservation and merits? Correct. Rele...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. One side relies on notice and practical reliance; the other side points to an omitted formal step. Which statement is most accurate? C...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The facts are close, and both sides can cite a rule that appears favorable. What should a strong answer do first? Correct. Relevant ev...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | ESSAY
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The key event occurred after warnings, partial performance, and a written objection by the affected party. The opponent argues that th...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The moving party has the burden on a contested element, and the opponent identifies a plausible exception. How should the issue most l...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The record contains both written proof and disputed oral testimony. Which answer gives the best treatment of the proof and governing r...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | ESSAY
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. The requested remedy would protect one party but impose a substantial burden on another party who had notice of the risk. The opponent...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Evidence | Relevance and Character | ESSAY
Hard
A party offered graphic proof with modest probative value and serious prejudice risk. Two legally significant facts point in different directions and the decision maker must determine which fact controls. The opponent ar...
Citations: FRE 401, FRE 402, FRE 403
Question
Torts | Negligence | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
One party acted after receiving notice of a legal risk tied to Negligence. The record contains both written proof and disputed oral testimony. Which answer gives the best treatment of the proof and governing rule? Correc...
Citations: Common law tort doctrine, Restatement tort principles
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | ESSAY
Hard
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. After an initial agreement or ruling, later conduct created ambiguity about whether the required legal elemen...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | ESSAY
Medium
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. A party relied on common practice, but the record includes facts suggesting that practice was unreasonable or...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Hard
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. A party invokes an equitable or discretionary remedy after contributing to the problem. What is the best anal...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. Another actor changed position after relying on the relevant statement, document, or official action. Which a...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. One argument was preserved, while another was raised only later. Which result best accounts for preservation...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. One side relies on notice and practical reliance; the other side points to an omitted formal step. Which stat...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine
Question
Criminal Law and Procedure | Substantive Crimes | MULTIPLE_CHOICE
Medium
The prosecution charged an offense after disputed facts raised questions about intent, causation, and grading. The decision maker must choose between a categorical shortcut and a fact-sensitive standard. Which statement...
Citations: Common law criminal doctrine, Model Penal Code offense principles, Due process proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt doctrine