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Moot court cases were argued as part of the Harvard Law School curriculum from the 1820’s until 1897. Professor Stearns instituted the practice in the first years of the Law School, when the student body averaged only a dozen students. During the mid-1820’s the students generally held over 30 moots over the course of the school year, with each case lasting two to three hours. Under Professors Story, Ashmun and Greenleaf, the moot courts became even more central to the curriculum. Moots were held once a week, usually on Friday afternoons; in later years, as the number of students at the Law School grew, the frequency increased to two or three times each week. The professor wrote a statement of facts the week before a case was to be heard, and two counsel were assigned to each side, one from the Senior class and one from the Junior class. Each student at the school was assigned to a case in rotation according to class standing. Every student present, regardless of his role, took detailed notes on the proceedings, often transcribing in full the statement of facts, the briefs and the judge’s opinion. Professor Story presided over many of the moots. Many of the cases he gave out had been or were to be argued before him in the U.S. Circuit or Supreme Court. Professor Greenleaf also presided over moots, and he often gave out cases that arose before him in the Massachusetts Supreme Court. Cases given out by Story generally focused on subjects like commercial law, agency, and equity, while those given out by Greenleaf were more varied. During the 1850’s, moots continued to be of great importance at the Law School. They were generally held twice each week, and the cases were often actual ones that were pending or had been recently decided. Lawyers from Boston would often attend these sessions to take notes on the proceedings. However, in the years immediately preceding the Civil War interest in the moots decreased, as did their frequency. Under the leadership of Christopher Columbus Langdell, the utility of the moot court system was questioned. With the extension of the program of study to three years, professors were already overburdened, and in November 1879 the Law School faculty voted to suspend the moots for the rest of the year. In 1880, rather than abolishing them completely, the faculty made the moots a voluntary exercise, and began to hold only four per year. Interest in the faculty-sponsored moots continued to wane, while participation in moot courts held by various student law clubs increased. This pattern continued until the faculty decided to discontinue the moot court system. The last moot was held on March 10, 1897.

From the guide to the Moot Court Records, 1825-1873, (Harvard Law School Library, Harvard University.)

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creatorOf Harvard Law School. Harvard Law School Moot Court Records. 1825-1873. Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138
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Relation Name
associatedWith Allen, Frederick Hunt person
associatedWith Ashmun, John Hooker, 1800-1833 person
associatedWith Bradley, Charles Smith person
associatedWith Cushing, Luther Stearns, 1803-1856 person
associatedWith Franklin, Dexter, 1793-1857 person
associatedWith Greenleaf, Simon, 1783-1853 person
associatedWith Green, Nicholas St. John, 1830-1876 person
associatedWith Holmes, Nathaniel, 1815-1901 person
associatedWith Langdell, C. C. (Christopher Columbus), 1826-1906 person
associatedWith Loring, Edward Greely, 1802-1890 person
associatedWith Parker, Joel, 1795-1875 person
associatedWith Parsons, Theophilus, 1797-1882 person
associatedWith Stearns, Asahel, 1774-1839 person
associatedWith Story, Joseph, 1779-1845 person
associatedWith Sumner, Charles, 1811-1874 person
associatedWith Washburn, Emory, 1800-1877 person
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Law
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