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 Location:  Home » Books » General AAS » Civil ProcedureJanuary 9, 2009  
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Civil Procedure
Civil Procedure
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Author: Stephen C. Yeazell
Publisher: Aspen Publishers, Inc.
Category: Book

List Price: $140.00
Buy New: $90.00
You Save: $50.00 (36%)
Buy New/Used from $90.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars(8 reviews)
Sales Rank: 12372

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 7
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 912
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.5
Dimensions (in): 10.2 x 7.3 x 1.8

ISBN: 0735569258
Dewey Decimal Number: 347.735
EAN: 9780735569256
ASIN: 0735569258

Publication Date: June 25, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Statutes 2008: With Selected Statutes and Other Materials
  • Property
  • Civil Procedure: Examples & Explanations 5th edition
  • Basic Legal Research: Tools And Strategies
  • Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: With Selected Statutes, Cases, and Other Materials - 2007 (Statutory Supplement)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The famously teachable casebook, Civil Procedure, by Stephen C. Yeazell, features a flexible organization, expertly selected and edited cases, a manageable length, and eminently readable introductions and notes.


The leading casebook for Civil Procedure features:

a clear and straightforward writing style

a helpful overview of the procedural system

techniques for statutory analysis explained in plain English

a manageable overall length

a flexible organization that adapts to a variety of teaching approaches

a comprehensive Teacher s Manual with detailed teaching guidance, case analyses, and sample syllabi

a companion CD with complete text of all of the cases in the book

an Annual Statutory and Case
Supplement available for adoption
a Companion Website with additional teaching materials, including the full text of every case discussed in the book

Updated throughout, the Seventh Edition incorporates the restyled rules from the December 2007 Amendments to the FRCP, as well as material on recent developments, including:

contemporary pleading systems and problems, incorporating recent Supreme Court pleading cases

discovery: spoliation of evidence, E-discovery, sanctions

resolution without trial: emerging trends in judicial regulation of arbitration

former adjudication: preclusion & arbitration

Always a pleasure to teach from, Civil Procedure gives you perfect teaching flexibility, even providing a complimentary CD with the complete text of the cases. At the same time, you know you are totally supported by a Teacher s Manual that provides day-to-day guidance for structuring each class, instructions and analyses of every case, and a selection of sample syllabi to choose among.



Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Do not 12(b)6 my advice.   December 23, 2008
If you remotely understood the humor in my header than this book is fine for you. The truth is Civil Procedure is not exactly the stuff that made us want to be lawyers, but when we finish law school, who is going to forget Asahi, or Erie!, or World-Wide Volkswagen, or hmm... Gibbs! Yeazell has all the cases you need in here. I do think Semtek in the Erie section is odd because preclusion has not been introduced. And I think it is the odd placement, if you read the book linearly rather than jumped around, that makes some of the reviewers here hate this book. But this is one of the better books. Couple this sucker with Glannon and presto you will be screaming "There ain't no subject matter jurisdiction under 1331--it is all a lie!" In no time. Also, do yourself a favor and remember Kroger v. Owens Electric--it will come to bite you in the you know what if you don't.


4 out of 5 stars Easy read   October 4, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I had to get this book for civil proceedure class at law school. I had a copy of the 6th edition form a buddy but it was too different form the required 7th edition so I dropped the $90. School was selling them for $140 so get it here instead. I really wanted to save the $90 and use an older edition as I am doing in torts but the books were just too different and it was not worth it. If you need this book for next year or next semester you might want to wait and get a used copy.
The book is very easy to read and the most similar to my undergrad textbooks.



3 out of 5 stars Civil Procedure   September 23, 2008
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

It's just about as thrilling as a book on Civil Procedure can be.

That being said, it was a better deal than at the campus book store, so that's something!



1 out of 5 stars Get a hornbook to learn Civ Pro!   May 3, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This was the most confusing subject I've ever endured in my life. Unfortunately, this case book only added to it. There are cases after cases that are supposed to help you understand civil procedure, but there is little discussion of the law itself or about why the court decided the first case the way it did but did the polar opposite in a second, similar case. The questions that are provided after the cases are designed to help you analyze the law, but they are of little help when you have no foundation. Most people will probably need to consult at least one other source to understand civil procedure. If your law library provides a hornbook, make it your best friend. It is too late for me.


2 out of 5 stars Pretty much worthless   January 4, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I actually liked my Civil Procedure class, but I hated doing the reading for it because it meant I'd have to use this book. The layout is thus: You read a case, and then you are presented with a series of questions that apparently you're expected to be able to answer on your own - in effect, you have to teach yourself Civil Procedure as you read. Interspersed with the meaningless (at least to the confused 1L reader) questions are little facts and tidbits related to Civil Procedure which aren't that important, but since they're the only information in the discussion section not presented in question form, you glom onto them in the hope that knowing said facts and tidbits will help to clarify Civil Procedure for you. All in all, easily one of the worst textbooks I've ever had.


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