Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Not a statement

      • May it please the Court is not a statement, a real question or even a rhetorical question. It is not intended to obtain information or communicate the intent of the speaker; or if it is, then it frequently is hard to discern in what follows any thought of the speaker about actually pleasing the court.
      www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-judges-really-think-phrase-may-please-court-tigran-martinian
  1. People also ask

  2. It has long been tradition to begin oral arguments with some variation of the phrase, “May it please the Court.” But Bryan A. Garner, editor-in-chief of Black’s Law Dictionary, recently asked active judges whether they felt the phrase was an outdated formalism or a welcome sign of professionalism.

  3. Pragmatically, May it please the court is an archaic formula expressing the speaker's deference to a presiding judge: an acknowledgment that strictly speaking nothing may occur (and nothing may be omitted) in the courtroom without the judge's permission.

  4. Oct 12, 2023 · It’s one of the great truisms in life: You always remember your first time. Especially when you’re standing in front of nine U.S. Supreme Court justices saying, “May it please the court.”

  5. Sep 25, 2019 · The "may" makes the greeting sound optional, but Supreme Court practitioners use it with near uniformity. Whether you use that traditional greeting in the Tenth Circuit or other courts is up to you. Judges who have addressed the issue say it doesn't hurt, and it may be a useful icebreaker.

  6. Sep 15, 2020 · Is there ever a scenario where a Judge could respond with the following: No, it does not please the court." was the question. If the lawyer speaks out of order, then that would not please the court (independent as to whether the lawyer uses that phrase or not).

  7. May 7, 2014 · May It Please the Court. In a real federal appeals court, in real time, four students endure judges’ withering questions but introduce novel concepts and argue masterfully on behalf of their immigrant clients. By Jeri Zeder. Summer 2014. Illustration by Harry Campbell; Photographs by Suzi Camarata.

  1. People also search for