Study for the Bar in Your Car

Angela Rutledge, LLM, LLB
Study for the Bar in Your Car

Turn Drive Time into Study Time: The Ultimate Bar Exam Prep Podcast Are you juggling a busy schedule while preparing for the bar exam? Maximize every moment with "Study for the Bar in Your Car," the podcast designed specifically for ambitious law students and graduates who refuse to let a single minute go to waste on their journey to becoming attorneys. Whether you're commuting through traffic, riding public transit, working out, or completing household chores, this podcast transforms your otherwise "lost" time into productive bar exam preparation. Each episode delivers focused, audio-friendly content covering essential MBE and MEE subjects, distilled into clear, memorable lessons you can absorb on the go. I'm Angela, a law student from George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School, and I created this podcast with one primary goal: to help myself pass the bar exam. By transforming my comprehensive study notes into engaging audio content, I've developed a resource that fits seamlessly into busy lifestyles—and now I'm sharing it with you. Join me and my team of knowledgeable assistants as we break down complex legal concepts, review critical cases, and provide strategic approaches to exam questions. We'll cover everything from Constitutional Law and Civil Procedure to Evidence, Criminal Law, and beyond. "Study for the Bar in Your Car" isn't just another passive study aid—it's your mobile companion for the final stretch toward bar exam success. Subscribe now and turn your commute into your competitive advantage for the July bar exam. Because sometimes, the road to becoming an attorney means literally studying on the road.

  1. Evidence - Privilages and Policy Exclusions

    1 DAY AGO

    Evidence - Privilages and Policy Exclusions

    Unlock the secrets of what truly shapes a trial's outcome in our latest podcast episode, "Evidence - Privileges and Policy Exclusions". Beyond basic relevance, discover how evidence is kept out of court to protect vital public policies and confidential relationships. This is crucial for anyone looking to understand evidence law, whether for the bar exam or general curiosity. We dive deep into key privileges that shield sensitive information, from the cornerstone attorney-client privilege, ensuring candid legal advice between a client and their attorney for legal services. Learn how this privilege can be waived, even inadvertently, and about the important crime-fraud exception. We also explore the critical work product doctrine, which protects materials prepared by an attorney in anticipation of litigation. Understand the nuanced spousal privileges: Spousal Immunity: Applies only in federal criminal cases, allowing a witness spouse to refuse to testify against their current spouse. The witness spouse holds this privilege, and it ends with divorce.Confidential Marital Communications: Applies in both civil and criminal cases, protecting confidential communications made during a valid marriage. Both spouses hold this privilege, and it survives divorce or death. Both spousal privileges are subject to a crime-fraud exception.Additionally, we cover healthcare privileges (physician-patient and psychotherapist-patient) that foster trust in medical and mental health treatment, protecting confidential communications made for diagnosis or treatment. We also touch on specific governmental privileges, such as protecting official information and the identity of confidential informants. But the discussion doesn't stop there. We explore crucial policy exclusions that encourage important societal behaviors: Liability Insurance (Rule 411): Generally inadmissible to prove negligence, as the policy is to encourage people to obtain insurance. Exceptions exist, such as proving ownership or witness bias, or when intertwined with an admission of liability.Subsequent Remedial Measures (Rule 407): Evidence of repairs or safety improvements made after an injury is generally inadmissible to prove negligence or fault, to encourage individuals to make things safer without fear of legal repercussion. Exceptions include proving ownership, control, or feasibility.Offers to Pay Medical Expenses (Rule 409): Excludes evidence of offering or paying medical bills to prove liability, encouraging humanitarian aid. Crucially, while the offer to pay is inadmissible, accompanying admissions of fault are not excluded by Rule 409 and are admissible if separable.Plea Negotiations (Rule 410): Generally inadmissible against the defendant, encouraging plea bargaining in criminal cases.Victim's Past Sexual Conduct (Rule 412 - "Rape Shield Laws"): Highly restricted and generally inadmissible in both criminal and civil cases involving alleged sexual misconduct, aiming to protect victims and encourage reporting. This rule has very narrow exceptions in criminal cases and a reversed, higher standard for admissibility in civil cases.Whether you're prepping for the bar exam or simply curious about how the legal system balances truth-finding with broader societal interests, this episode is essential. Mastering these exclusions and privileges is fundamental to case strategy, discovery, and trial presentation. Tune in to "Study for the Bar in Your Car" and elevate your evidence knowledge!

    40 min
  2. Evidence - Relevancy and the Exclusion of Evidence

    2 DAYS AGO

    Evidence - Relevancy and the Exclusion of Evidence

    Ready to unravel the intricacies of evidence law? Tune into "Study for the Bar in Your Car" episode three, "Relevancy and the Exclusion of Evidence", where hosts Ma and Claude, powered by the incredibly detailed notes of LLM law student and former judicial law clerk Angela, guide you through the fundamental principles that determine what information gets heard in court. This deep dive is your essential resource for understanding how the legal system filters information. We dissect the absolute baseline of relevancy—when evidence has any tendency to make a fact more or less probable and that fact is of consequence to the action. While relevant evidence is generally admissible, we explore the crucial balancing act of Rule 403, where even relevant evidence can be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by dangers like unfair prejudice, confusing issues, or misleading the jury. Beyond relevancy, we unpack vital public policy exclusions designed to encourage beneficial behaviors outside the courtroom: The inadmissibility of liability insurance to prove negligence, with key exceptions like proving ownership or witness bias.Rules around offers to pay medical bills, distinguishing the excluded offer from potentially admissible accompanying admissions of fault.The broad protection for settlement offers and negotiations, barring their use to prove liability (unless for purposes like showing bias).Master authentication, proving that evidence is what it claims to be. Learn the methods for everything from witness personal knowledge and handwriting/voice identification to ancient documents and chain of custody for fungible items. Discover self-authenticating documents that require no additional testimony. Gain clarity on expert testimony (Rule 702), including the Daubert standard and its factors (TRAP mnemonic) for ensuring reliability. We also address the major exception in criminal cases: experts cannot state an opinion on a defendant's specific mental state. Finally, conquer the nuances of character evidence, habit, and other acts. Understand the propensity rule (Rule 404) that generally bars using character to prove conduct, and its critical exceptions in criminal cases (e.g., defendant "opening the door" by offering good character, or specific non-propensity uses like MIMIC for motive, intent, identity). Differentiate this from habit evidence (Rule 406), which is admissible due to its specific and regular nature. We also demystify presumptions, those legal shortcuts allowing inference of one fact from another, highlighting the crucial distinction between mandatory and permissive presumptions—especially in criminal cases where due process demands only permissive inferences on elements of a crime. Understanding these "gatekeepers" is crucial, as they fundamentally shape what evidence a judge or jury hears, directly impacting case outcomes. Listen now and subscribe to "Study for the Bar in Your Car" to enhance your legal understanding and ace your exams!

    38 min
  3. Evidence - Presentation of Evidence

    3 DAYS AGO

    Evidence - Presentation of Evidence

    Ready to decode the courtroom? Dive into "Evidence - Presentation of Evidence," episode two of "Study for the Bar in Your Car," where hosts Ma and Claude (powered by Angela’s incredibly detailed notes as an LLM law student and former judicial law clerk) break down the crucial rules governing how information actually makes it before a judge and jury. This essential deep dive illuminates the foundational concepts that dictate witness testimony and evidence handling, offering you a shortcut to understanding the practical mechanics of a trial. You’ll uncover insights into: Witness Competency: The basic requirements for testifying, including personal knowledge and the oath, and who is barred from the witness stand.Refreshing Recollection: How witnesses can jog their memory on the stand and the critical distinction from past recollection recorded.Lay Opinions: When "regular people" can offer their opinions, focusing on observations based on personal perception and helpfulness, and when such opinions cross into expert territory.Judicial Notice: How courts accept facts as true without formal proof, from generally known facts to those readily verifiable from accurate sources. Crucially, understand the mandatory versus permissive jury instructions for judicially noticed facts in civil vs. criminal cases.Roles of Judge and Jury: The judge as the gatekeeper for admissibility (often unbound by rules of evidence for preliminary questions), versus the jury's role in determining credibility and weight of evidence.Objections & Offers of Proof: The necessity of timely and specific objections to preserve issues for appeal, and how an "offer of proof" helps lawyers create a record when evidence is excluded.Limited Admissibility: When evidence is admissible for one purpose but not another, and how limiting instructions (or even outright exclusion under Rule 403) control its use.Mastering these rules isn't just about passing the bar; it's about understanding the control of information flow in litigation. Learn how the legal system balances the search for truth with fairness and reliability. Listen now and subscribe to "Study for the Bar in Your Car" to gain clarity and confidence in navigating the complexities of evidence law!

    17 min
  4. Evidence - Introduction

    4 DAYS AGO

    Evidence - Introduction

    Are you ready to master evidence law? Dive deep into the absolutely fundamental rules that dictate what information makes it into court with "Study for the Bar in Your Car." Your hosts, Ma and Claude, unpack the complexities of evidence using incredibly detailed notes generously provided by Angela, an LLM law student and former judicial law clerk. Angela, a real-life human being and former judicial law clerk who dealt with evidence issues constantly, contributed significantly to the material. This essential podcast acts as your shortcut to understanding the fundamental rules that shape how facts are determined in the legal arena. We cover the entire spectrum, from how evidence is presented and what makes something relevant, to why even relevant information might be excluded. You'll gain insightful knowledge into: The application of the Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE), including exceptions for preliminary questions of fact.The distinct roles of the judge and jury—the judge as a gatekeeper for admissibility, and the jury for credibility and weight.The basics of witness testimony, covering requirements for personal knowledge and oath, limitations on lay opinions, and the crucial Daubert standards (TRAP mnemonic) for expert testimony, including when experts can—and cannot—opine on the ultimate issue.The proper use of refreshing recollection versus the hearsay exception of past recollection recorded.Navigating the major relevancy battlegrounds such as character evidence (including the propensity rule and its MIMIC exceptions for motive, intent, identity, etc.), distinguishing it from habit, and understanding specific exclusions for liability insurance and a victim's sexual behavior.The vital protections offered by privileges, including attorney-client privilege (covering confidential communications for legal advice) and marital privileges (spousal immunity and confidential marital communications), along with the crime-fraud exception and concepts like waiver and work product.Understanding the inadmissibility of settlement talks and offers to pay medical bills for proving liability, while noting key distinctions for accompanying admissions of fault.The intricacies of the best evidence rule for writings, recordings, and photographs, and when originals or duplicates are required.And finally, conquering the notoriously complex world of hearsay, dissecting its definition (out-of-court statement offered for truth), identifying non-hearsay exclusions (like opposing party statements and certain prior statements by testifying witnesses), and navigating the myriad hearsay exceptions (both those where declarant availability doesn't matter, like present sense impression and business records, and those where the declarant must be unavailable, like former testimony and dying declarations). Understand the gatekeepers that fundamentally shape what information a judge or jury gets to hear. This deep dive, powered by Angela's expertise, ensures you're prepared to grasp these core concepts. Listen now and subscribe to "Study for the Bar in Your Car" to unlock this essential knowledge for your legal journey!

    36 min
  5. Contract Law - Wrap Up & Review

    5 DAYS AGO

    Contract Law - Wrap Up & Review

    Join us for the ultimate Contracts review in this final comprehensive episode of Study for the Bar in Your Car: Contract Law - Wrap Up and Review! This episode offers a structured, step-by-step roadmap for analyzing contract problems, covering: Contract Formation: Master the objective standard for mutual assent, dissecting the elements of a valid offer (intent, definite terms, communication) and acceptance (mirror image rule vs. UCC's flexible 2-207 'Battle of the Forms'). We clarify consideration as the essential "bargain for exchange", highlighting the pre-existing duty rule and its vital exceptions, alongside alternative theories like promissory estoppel and restitution that enforce promises without consideration.Defenses to Enforcement: Learn to identify issues that can invalidate a contract, including lack of capacity (minors, mental incapacity), duress and undue influence, mistake (mutual and unilateral), misrepresentation (fraudulent, material, non-disclosure), illegality, unconscionability, and public policy. A critical focus is the Statute of Frauds (SOF), detailing which contracts require a signed writing (MYLEGS) and the crucial exceptions that can save an oral agreement.Contract Content and Meaning: Understand how courts interpret contracts using an objective standard and a clear hierarchy of terms. Demystify the Parol Evidence Rule (PER), learning when extrinsic evidence is admissible to explain, supplement, or show defenses, even for integrated agreements. Performance, Breach, and Discharge: Grasp the difference between a promise and a condition. Understand material vs. minor breach at common law, and the Perfect Tender Rule (UCC) with the seller's critical right to cure.Remedies: Discover the goal of expectation damages (putting the injured party in the expected position). Learn about direct, incidental, and consequential damages, along with their vital limitations (foreseeability, certainty, mitigation). Explore liquidated damages clauses, equitable remedies like specific performance, and alternative recovery based on reliance or restitution.Third Parties: Untangle how individuals outside the original contract can gain rights or take on duties. This includes Third Party Beneficiaries (intended vs. incidental, done vs. creditor, vesting of rights), Assignment of Rights (transferring benefits subject to defenses and notice), and Delegation of Duties (where the delegator generally remains liable unless there's a novation).This episode ties it all together, transforming complex theories into practical insights for your bar exam success. Understanding these foundational principles is crucial for legal practice. Don't just study—study smart. Tune in, subscribe, and supercharge your bar prep with Study for the Bar in Your Car!

    55 min
  6. Contract Law -  Bar Exam Tips

    6 DAYS AGO

    Contract Law - Bar Exam Tips

    Prepare to conquer Contracts on the bar exam with this essential episode of Study for the Bar in Your Car: Bar Exam Tips for Contract Law! This episode guides you through a methodical, step-by-step approach for analyzing any contracts question you face: Governing Law First: Always start by identifying whether it's Common Law (services, real estate) or UCC Article 2 (sale of goods), and master the predominant purpose test for mixed contracts. This initial fork is critical, as rules often differ significantly. Pay attention to whether parties are merchants, as the UCC applies different standards.Contract Formation: Learn to spot a valid offer (clear present contractual intent, definite terms) and acceptance (unequivocal, mirror image rule for common law, UCC 2-207 Battle of the Forms for goods). Understand how offers terminate and master the nuances of the Mailbox Rule and unilateral contract acceptance. We demystify consideration as the bargain for exchange, including its pre-existing duty rule and crucial exceptions, plus the power of promissory estoppel when consideration is absent.Defenses to Enforcement: Systematically check for issues that invalidate a contract:Lack of Capacity (minors, mental incapacity).Assent Problems like Mutual Mistake, Misrepresentation, Duress, Undue Influence.The ever-important Statute of Frauds (MYLEGS) and its specific writing requirements and exceptions for oral agreements.Illegality, Unconscionability, and Public Policy.Contract Interpretation & Terms: Discover how courts determine meaning objectively, leveraging Parol Evidence Rule exceptions (ambiguity, course of dealing/performance, trade usage, subsequent modifications) and UCC gap fillers for missing terms. Remember the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing woven into every contract.Performance & Breach: Navigate conditions (express, implied, concurrent, precedent, subsequent) and their excuses (waiver, impossibility, impracticability, frustration). Understand the critical difference between material and minor breach at common law and the Perfect Tender Rule (with right to cure) under the UCC. Learn how to handle anticipatory repudiation and demands for adequate assurances.Remedies: Focus on the goal: expectation damages, subject to limits of foreseeability, certainty, and mitigation. Explore liquidated damages, specific performance for unique items, and alternative remedies like reliance and restitution.Third Parties: Understand Third Party Beneficiaries (intended vs. incidental, done vs. creditor, vesting), Assignment of Rights (transferring benefits subject to defenses), and Delegation of Duties (delegator remains liable unless novation).Angela's ultimate advice: Practice, practice, practice! Apply these rules repeatedly to diverse fact patterns to internalize them under pressure. Don't just study—study smart. Tune in, subscribe, and supercharge your bar prep with Study for the Bar in Your Car!

    37 min
  7. Contract Law - Third Parties

    10 JUN

    Contract Law - Third Parties

    Prepare to master a crucial area of contract law with our deep dive into Third Parties! In this episode of Study for the Bar in Your Car, we unpack how individuals not initially part of a contract can gain rights, take on duties, or otherwise get involved, drawing directly from Angela's fantastic law school notes. You'll gain clarity on: Third Party Beneficiaries: Discover when someone is an intended beneficiary with legal standing versus an incidental beneficiary who has no rights. Learn the critical difference between done beneficiaries (gift, generally no recourse against the promisee) and creditor beneficiaries (satisfies a debt, can sue the promisee on the original obligation). We'll also explain the vital concept of vesting of rights, the point where a third party's rights become protected from modification by the original parties.Assignment of Rights: Understand how contractual benefits (like the right to payment) can be transferred to a third party. We'll clarify the limits on assignability and the crucial distinction between gratuitous assignments (often revocable) and assignments for consideration (generally irrevocable). A key takeaway is that the assignee steps into the assignor's shoes, taking the right subject to defenses the obligor had against the assignor before notice of the assignment was given.Delegation of Duties: Explore how contractual obligations to perform can be transferred. Crucially, you'll learn why the original obligor (delegator) generally remains liable for performance even after delegating the duty. The only way to achieve full release from liability is through novation, a three-way agreement where all parties, including the obligee, explicitly consent to substitute a new party and release the original one.This episode provides the essential framework for tackling complex bar exam questions. We highlight how to focus on intent for beneficiaries, understand the nuances of assignability and delegability, and always track who had notice of what and when in these tricky scenarios. Don't miss this in-depth, practical guide to third parties in contract law. Tune in, subscribe, and supercharge your bar prep!

    23 min
  8. Contract Law - Statute of Frauds

    9 JUN

    Contract Law - Statute of Frauds

    Struggling to nail down the Statute of Frauds for the bar exam? You're not alone! Angela admits it's a topic that can be "pretty annoying" to remember under pressure. But fear not! Episode 11 of Angela's "Study for the Bar in Your Car" podcast offers a solid roadmap to master this critical area of contract law. This episode, drawing directly from Angela's meticulously organized notes, demystifies the rules requiring certain contracts to be in writing and signed to be legally enforceable, serving as a vital defense against fraudulent claims. You'll explore the six main categories of contracts that fall under the Statute of Frauds, often remembered by the mnemonic "MY LEGS": Marriage: This isn't just a promise to marry, but promises made in consideration of marriage, such as prenuptial agreements involving property.Year (One-Year Rule): Contracts that cannot possibly be performed within one year from their making must be in writing. The key here is "possibly"—even if it's highly unlikely, if completion within a year is theoretically conceivable, it falls outside the statute.Land: Any contract for the sale of an interest in land (including easements, though often not short-term leases) generally requires a writing. However, the episode highlights crucial exceptions like full performance by the seller or sufficient part performance by the buyer (e.g., payment, taking possession, and making improvements).Executor/Administrator: A promise by an estate's executive or administrator to pay the estate's debts from their own personal funds must be in writing.Goods (Sale of Goods): Under UCC Article 2, contracts for the sale of goods priced at $500 or more require a writing. The writing must show a contract was made, identify parties, contain a quantity term (essential), and be signed by the party to be charged. The UCC's definition of "signed" is notably liberal, sometimes even including a company letterhead. The contract is enforceable only up to the quantity stated in the writing. Key exceptions include:When goods have been received and accepted, or payment has been made and accepted.For specially manufactured goods that are custom-made and not easily resalable.If a party admits in court that a contract was made.A merchant's written confirmation to another merchant, if not objected to within 10 days, can satisfy the statute.Suretyship: A promise to answer for the debt or default of another person (a guarantee) typically needs to be in writing. A critical nuance discussed is the timing of consideration: a gratuitous suretyship promise made after the original loan or benefit has been extended may fail for lack of consideration, even if in writing.The podcast emphasizes that if a contract falls under the Statute of Frauds and lacks the required writing (and no exception applies), it is generally unenforceable at the option of the party being sued. It's a defense that must be affirmatively raised. Tune into "Study for the Bar in Your Car" to clarify these intricate rules and avoid common bar exam traps. Angela's notes will help you spot these situations quickly and confidently. Subscribe now and accelerate your legal learning!

    22 min

About

Turn Drive Time into Study Time: The Ultimate Bar Exam Prep Podcast Are you juggling a busy schedule while preparing for the bar exam? Maximize every moment with "Study for the Bar in Your Car," the podcast designed specifically for ambitious law students and graduates who refuse to let a single minute go to waste on their journey to becoming attorneys. Whether you're commuting through traffic, riding public transit, working out, or completing household chores, this podcast transforms your otherwise "lost" time into productive bar exam preparation. Each episode delivers focused, audio-friendly content covering essential MBE and MEE subjects, distilled into clear, memorable lessons you can absorb on the go. I'm Angela, a law student from George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School, and I created this podcast with one primary goal: to help myself pass the bar exam. By transforming my comprehensive study notes into engaging audio content, I've developed a resource that fits seamlessly into busy lifestyles—and now I'm sharing it with you. Join me and my team of knowledgeable assistants as we break down complex legal concepts, review critical cases, and provide strategic approaches to exam questions. We'll cover everything from Constitutional Law and Civil Procedure to Evidence, Criminal Law, and beyond. "Study for the Bar in Your Car" isn't just another passive study aid—it's your mobile companion for the final stretch toward bar exam success. Subscribe now and turn your commute into your competitive advantage for the July bar exam. Because sometimes, the road to becoming an attorney means literally studying on the road.

To listen to explicit episodes, sign in.

Stay up to date with this show

Sign in or sign up to follow shows, save episodes and get the latest updates.

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada