justinian-outline-builder

Category: Design Risk: Unknown ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

Rating is derived from the repo's GitHub stars and shown for reference.


name: justinian-outline-builder
description: Use when a law student needs a comprehensive course outline for exam preparation, bar revision, or self-study. Produces a structured topic hierarchy with black-letter rules, leading cases (1–3 per topic), common exam patterns, issue interactions, and memorization aids (mnemonics, comparison charts). Calibrated to specific law-school courses (Contracts, Torts, Civ Pro, Con Law, Crim Law, Evidence, Property, Corporate, and more) and to the applicable jurisdiction. Particularly strong for MENA civil-law courses (Lebanon, UAE, KSA, Egypt) and common-law courses (DIFC, UK, US).
license: MIT
metadata:
id: justinian.outline-builder
category: justinian
jurisdictions: [multi]
priority: P2
intent: [education, exam prep, course outline, bar revision]
related: [justinian-irac-coach, justinian-legal-essay-grader, justinian-law-school-brief-summarizer, justinian-flashcards-from-statute, justinian-exam-time-management-coach]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Justinian — Course Outline Builder

When to use this

Use this skill when:

  • A student is beginning exam preparation and needs a structured framework for a course
  • A bar candidate needs a jurisdiction-calibrated rule summary for a tested subject
  • A trainee lawyer needs to build a working knowledge of a new practice area quickly
  • A professor wants a skeleton outline to share with students as a course reference

Inputs

Input Required? Default
Course name Yes
Jurisdiction Yes Ask if not specified
Level No 2L/3L
Format preference No Markdown + flashcard-ready
Depth No Standard (3-level hierarchy)

Supported courses (non-exhaustive): Contracts / Law of Obligations, Torts / Civil Liability, Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Evidence, Property / Real Rights, Corporate Law, Administrative Law, International Law, Employment Law, IP, Banking Law, Family Law, Arbitration, Tax.

Supported jurisdictions: US, UK, France (code-based), Lebanon (Code of Obligations and Contracts; French-influenced), UAE onshore (Civil Code; Civil Transactions Law), DIFC (common-law), ADGM (common-law), KSA (Sharia + Royal Decrees), Egypt (Civil Code Law 131/1948).

Output structure

Every outline follows this pattern:

# [Course Name] — [Jurisdiction] Outline

## [Topic 1 Name]

### Black-letter rule
[The complete, element-by-element statement of the rule]

### Leading cases / instruments
- [Case or statute 1] — [one-line significance]
- [Case or statute 2] — [one-line significance]
- [Case or statute 3 if applicable]

### Common exam patterns
- [Scenario type 1]: [what to spot + what to argue]
- [Scenario type 2]: ...

### Tested issue interactions
- This topic often appears with [Topic X] because [reason]

### Memorization aid
[Mnemonic, acronym, comparison chart, or rule-decision tree]

---
## [Topic 2 Name]
...

Standard topic sets by course

Contracts / Law of Obligations

  1. Formation — offer, acceptance, consideration / cause
  2. Capacity
  3. Defects in consent — mistake, duress, fraud, undue influence
  4. Illegality + public policy
  5. Interpretation — plain meaning, contra proferentem, ejusdem generis
  6. Implied terms
  7. Conditions, representations, and warranties
  8. Performance + discharge
  9. Breach — material vs minor; anticipatory
  10. Remedies — damages (direct, consequential, punitive), specific performance, rescission
  11. Third-party rights / stipulation pour autrui
  12. Force majeure + hardship

Jurisdiction callouts:

  • Lebanon: Code of Obligations and Contracts (COC) governs; French doctrine influential; civil-law cause doctrine rather than common-law consideration
  • UAE onshore: Civil Transactions Law (Federal Law 5/1985 as amended); Art. 246 good-faith obligation; Art. 390 liquidated damages subject to court reduction
  • DIFC: DIFC Contract Law 2004 (UNIDROIT-influenced); common-law approach to consideration; penalty clause discussion ongoing
  • KSA: general contractual freedom under Sharia; specific rules for Islamic finance instruments

Torts / Civil Liability

  1. Negligence — duty, breach, causation, damage
  2. Occupier's liability
  3. Defamation
  4. Product liability
  5. Nuisance
  6. Strict liability
  7. Vicarious liability
  8. Contributory negligence + comparative fault
  9. Damages — general, special, non-pecuniary

Jurisdiction callouts:

  • Lebanon: Arts. 122–134 COC — fault (khata'), damage, and causation
  • UAE: Civil Transactions Law Arts. 282–298 — general civil liability
  • DIFC: common-law tort principles applicable as received English law

Criminal Law

  1. Actus reus elements
  2. Mens rea — intent, recklessness, negligence, strict liability
  3. Inchoate offences
  4. Complicity
  5. Defences — necessity, duress, self-defence, insanity
  6. Homicide hierarchy
  7. Property offences
  8. Financial crimes (fraud, embezzlement, AML)

Jurisdiction callouts:

  • KSA: Islamic criminal law (hudud, qisas, ta'zir categories); no codified penal code historically; Criminal Procedure Law (Royal Decree M/39)
  • UAE: Penal Code (Federal Law 3/1987 as amended); plus special laws (cybercrime, AML, economic crimes)
  • Lebanon: Penal Code 1943 (French-influenced)

Evidence

  1. Relevance + probative/prejudicial balancing
  2. Hearsay + exceptions
  3. Character evidence
  4. Expert witnesses
  5. Privileges — attorney-client, work product, spousal
  6. Authentication + chain of custody
  7. Best evidence rule
  8. Burden of proof standards

Corporate Law

  1. Entity types + formation
  2. Directors' duties — care, loyalty, disclosure
  3. Shareholder rights + remedies
  4. Capital maintenance
  5. M&A — due diligence, representations, conditions, closing
  6. Insolvency basics
  7. Listed company obligations

Jurisdiction callouts: See [[kb-corporate-law-uae]], [[kb-corporate-law-lb]], [[kb-corporate-law-ksa]] for jurisdiction-specific frameworks.

Exam-pattern section — how to write it

For each topic, identify:

  1. The classic test scenario — what fact pattern reliably tests this rule?
  2. The trap — what do students commonly miss (hidden sub-issue, element they skip)?
  3. The counter-argument — what's the strongest opposing argument?

Example (Contracts — Formation):

Classic test: Offer + attempted acceptance by conduct + cross in the mail. Tests mailbox rule, mirror-image, and whether conduct constitutes acceptance.

Trap: Students miss that the offer was revoked before acceptance — revocation timing matters.

Counter-argument: Even if mailbox rule doesn't apply, conduct may create estoppel.

Memorization aids

Where appropriate, include:

  • Acronyms: IRAC, DEEDS (Duress, Error, Exclusions, Damages, Statute) etc.
  • Decision trees: binary flowchart from facts to conclusion for complex elements (e.g., negligence tree: duty → breach → factual cause → proximate cause → damages)
  • Comparison tables: side-by-side of two similar concepts (e.g., condition vs warranty, material breach vs minor breach)
  • Element checklists: box-check format for complex offences or tests

Flashcard-ready format

Append a flashcard block at the end of each topic:

FLASHCARD: [Topic]
Q: What are the elements of [rule]?
A: (1) [element 1]; (2) [element 2]; (3) [element 3].
Source: [statute/case]

These can be imported directly into Anki or similar spaced-repetition tools.

Quality checks

  • Every rule statement is complete (no shortcuts)
  • Every case cited is real and the one-line significance is accurate
  • Every exam pattern is genuinely tested, not hypothetical
  • Memorization aids are accurate (a wrong mnemonic is worse than none)
  • Jurisdiction callouts are present whenever the rule varies across jurisdictions

Do not

  • Do not fabricate case citations or statute numbers — flag gaps as "verify current version"
  • Do not include rules from a different jurisdiction than specified without clearly labeling them
  • Do not pad topics with academic debate that never appears on exams (unless the user specifically wants a research-oriented outline)
  • [[justinian-irac-coach]] — practice applying rules from this outline to fact patterns
  • [[justinian-legal-essay-grader]] — assess how well the student has internalized the outline
  • [[justinian-law-school-brief-summarizer]] — brief the leading cases listed in each topic
  • [[justinian-flashcards-from-statute]] — convert element lists into flashcard format
  • [[justinian-exam-time-management-coach]] — plan exam timing given the number of topics