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Home > Second Department Panel Set to Visit St. John's Law

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Second Department Panel Set to Visit St. John's Law

By Andrew Keshner Contact All Articles 

New York Law Journal

March 7, 2013

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A four-judge appeals panel of St. John's University School of Law alumni will hear oral arguments next month at their alma mater. Presiding Justice Randall Eng (See Profile) and Justices Reinaldo Rivera (See Profile), Daniel Angiolillo (See Profile) and Ruth Balkin (See Profile) will hear arguments on April 4 at the law school's Belson Moot Courtroom, the Appellate Division, Second Department, announced yesterday. It will mark the first time the court has conducted official business at a law school.

"I cannot tell you how proud I am to have the Appellate Division, Second Department, hold court at my alma mater," Eng said in a statement. Eng is a 1972 graduate who has served as a director of St. John's Law's alumni association, an adjunct professor at the school, and a judge for several moot court competitions. He said he would like the court to hold oral arguments in the future at other law schools within the Second Judicial District. "It is a real privilege for St. John's to be the first law school in the Second Department to host a session of the appellate court on campus," Dean Michael Simons said in the press release.



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Reader Comments

  • Ravi Batra

    March 06, 2013 07:59 PM

    What a fabulous idea Mr. Presiding Justice Eng! It is worthy of emulation across the country. Every law school ought to want it.



    This will elevate classroom learning to actual courtroom standard of advocacy - teaching young fertile minds about “real law.” Just brilliant - the adversarial system will teach beyond Socrates. That it may also help make better lawyers out of law students is an added bonus to society, which relies most on the Third Branch of government to deliver on Lincoln’s promise of “...government for the people.”



    I can tell you that it’s a real treat to be in an Appellate Division courtroom to listen to other lawyers arguing their cases, even after I have finished arguing my case; it’s a nuance-learning experience. It also drives home the point of how hard our judges work, across the legal waterfront of issues, when they prepare for so many appeals in one sitting - a matter worthy of enhanced respect for the bench.



    Dated: 3/6/13

    /s/

    Ravi Batra

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