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IRAC-scaffolded case analysis memo with research gaps flagged — the scaffold, not the analysis. Rule blocks are RESEARCH NEEDED, Application is STUDENT ANALYSIS prompts, Conclusion is blank. Use when a student needs to scaffold a case analysis memo, write up their analysis, or build an IRAC memo for a case.
npx skill4agent add anthropics/claude-for-legal memo~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/CLAUDE.md/legal-clinic:memo~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/CLAUDE.md~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/guides/<practice-area>.mdpedagogy_postureguideassist[STUDENT ANALYSIS][STUDENT CONCLUSION]assistteachguideguide[RESEARCH NEEDED: [State] habitability doctrine — warranty of habitability elements, what conditions qualify, remedies available including rent offset. Start with: [State] landlord-tenant statute, then case law on heater/heat specifically. See /research-start for a roadmap.]
Framework (unverified — confirm for [State]): Most jurisdictions recognize an implied warranty of habitability requiring landlords to maintain conditions fit for human occupation. Breach may give rise to rent withholding, repair-and-deduct, or rent abatement.[VERIFY: [State]'s specific elements and remedies]
`[STUDENT ANALYSIS: Apply the rule to the facts. Key facts to address:
- Heater broken since November — how long is "unreasonable"?
- Client notified landlord [when? how? documented?]
- Landlord's response or lack thereof
- [State]-specific: does client need to have given written notice? deposited rent in escrow? other procedural prerequisites?]`
[STUDENT CONCLUSION: Based on your research and analysis above, what's the likely outcome? How strong is this defense? What are the weaknesses?]
[UNCERTAIN: whether [X] is actually a weakness — depends on [State] rule on [Y]]═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
AI-ASSISTED SCAFFOLD — THE ANALYSIS IS YOURS TO WRITE
Every [RESEARCH NEEDED] and [STUDENT ANALYSIS] block is a prompt, not
a placeholder to delete. The thinking happens when you fill them in.
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# Case Analysis Memo: [Client] — [Matter]
**Date:** [date] | **By:** [student] | **For:** [Professor]
---
## Bottom line
[Take the case / Decline because X / Need more info on Y — next step is Z]
---
## Issues Presented
1. [Issue as question]
2. [Issue as question]
---
## Issue 1: [Issue]
### Rule
[Framework starting point with VERIFY flags, and RESEARCH NEEDED blocks]
### Application
[STUDENT ANALYSIS scaffold with the facts that matter]
### Conclusion
[STUDENT CONCLUSION — blank]
---
[repeat for each issue]
---
## Strengths
[list with caveats]
## Weaknesses
[list with UNCERTAIN flags where applicable]
## Open Questions
**Factual:** [list]
**Legal:** [list — these feed /research-start]
**Strategic:** [list — these are for discussion with Professor]
---
## Research gaps summary
[Every RESEARCH NEEDED block pulled out into one list, so the student can
work through them systematically — and can run /research-start on each]
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## What this memo is NOT
This is a scaffold, not an analysis. The [STUDENT ANALYSIS] blocks are where
the educational value lives — filling them in is the work. A memo where those
blocks are still empty is a memo that hasn't been written yet.
---
**Cite verification — required before use.** Any framework rules, cases, or statutes suggested above were generated by an AI model and have not been verified. Before relying on any citation — or including it in client work — run it through Westlaw, Fastcase, CourtListener, or your clinic's research platform for accuracy and current good-law status. Flag unverified citations to your supervisor.
**Source attribution.** Tag every suggested citation in the scaffold with where it came from: `[Westlaw]`, `[CourtListener]`, `[Fastcase]`, or the MCP tool name for citations retrieved from a legal research connector; `[web search — verify]` for web-search citations; `[model knowledge — verify]` for citations recalled from training data; `[user provided]` for citations the supervising attorney or case file supplied. Citations tagged `verify` carry higher fabrication risk than tool-retrieved citations and should be checked first. Never strip or collapse the tags — they are the supervisor's fastest signal about which citations to verify.
**No silent supplement.** If a query to a configured research tool returns few or no results for a rule the memo needs, say so and stop. Do NOT fill the gap from web search or model knowledge without asking. Say: "The search returned [N] results from [tool]. Coverage appears thin for [rule / issue]. Options: (1) broaden the search query, (2) try a different research tool, (3) search the web — results will be tagged `[web search — verify]` and should be checked against a primary source before relying, or (4) leave `[RULE TO VERIFY]` and stop. Which would you like?" The supervising attorney decides whether to accept lower-confidence sources.## Outputs