Idaho State Bar Commissioner Voting Opens 4/17

Voting for Idaho State Bar Commissioner will open on Monday, April 17th and conclude at 5:00 p.m. (MT) on Tuesday, May 2. Ballot information will be sent to eligible voters in the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Districts early Monday morning, April 17th. We encourage your participation in this election!

Scam Alert: Phishing Email Targeting Leadership

We have recently been made aware of a phishing email circulating in which the scammer purports to be part of Bar Leadership and asks for an expense to be paid via payment app. See below for a redacted example of the email.

Please remember that Bar Leadership will not send emails of this nature and if you have any questions you should call the officer or the Bar directly.

Judicial Council Opening – Closes April 7th

The Board of Commissioners of the Idaho State Bar is accepting applicants for an attorney member of the Idaho Judicial Council; for a term that commences on July 1, 2023.


In making its selection, the Commission will be guided by the statutory considerations found in Idaho Code Section 1-2101.


Idaho State Bar members interested in the position should submit a letter of interest along with a resume or biographical sketch to the Idaho State Bar office by April 7, 2023. Submissions should include information about the applicant and why he or she is interested in the position.


Letters and questions may be directed to: Diane Minnich, Executive Director, Idaho State Bar, P.O. Box 895, Boise, ID 83701, 208-334-4500, dminnich@isb.idaho.gov.

Notice of Judicial Recruitment Workshop – 3/30

A Judicial Recruitment Workshop will be held Thursday, March 30, 2023 from 12:00 Noon – 1:00 p.m. MDT via Zoom and also in-person at the Ada County Courthouse, Room 510.  This workshop will provide information to attorneys about what it is like to be on the bench, the selection process, the opportunities available, and benefits of judicial service. If you are interested in attending via Zoom, please RSVP to IDCourts@idcourts.net and you will be e-mailed a link to the workshop.

Amendments to Idaho Court Administrative Rule 32 – Effective April 1, 2023

Amendments to the Idaho Court Administrative Rules Related to Jury Service and Jury Trial Procedures – Effective March 9, 2023

Upcoming Honest Conversations and Well Being Presentations – April 4th

The District of Columbia Bar’s Lawyer Assistance Program has invited members of the Idaho State Bar to two virtual programs that are being presented in the new few weeks. 

If you wish to attend either of these programs, please register through the links below.

An Honest Conversation About What Perfectionism is Costing You

Tuesday, March 21 at 12:00 pm MDT/11:00 am PDT

We hope you can Join us for a conversation exploring perfectionism versus striving for excellence – where does one end and the other begin? The Honest Conversation will be recorded and sent out to all registrants after the event. So, if you are unable to attend, please still register if you are interested in receiving the recording.  As a reminder, the program is free and open to anyone with a registration link.

We welcome you to share your thoughts and help shape the program;  please complete this brief survey.

Talking About Suicide: How to Give & Get Help

Tuesday, April 4 at 2:30 pm MDT/1:30 pm PDT

Despite how many law students and lawyers are suffering, most of us are still not comfortable discussing suicide risk or speaking up when we are concerned. Suicide is a danger we cannot ignore– as a profession, or as colleagues, friends, and family members. We welcome all members of the legal profession to break the silence, encourage discussion, answer questions, and share resources in a safe space. Learn how YOU can play a role in suicide awareness and prevention. Attend virtually through Zoom.

Upcoming Honest Conversations and Well-Being Presentations

The District of Columbia Bar’s Lawyer Assistance Program has invited members of the Idaho State Bar to two virtual programs that are being presented in the new few weeks. 

If you wish to attend either of these programs, please register through the links below.

An Honest Conversation About What Perfectionism is Costing You

Tuesday, March 21 at 12:00 pm MDT/11:00 am PDT

We hope you can Join us for a conversation exploring perfectionism versus striving for excellence – where does one end and the other begin? The Honest Conversation will be recorded and sent out to all registrants after the event. So, if you are unable to attend, please still register if you are interested in receiving the recording.  As a reminder, the program is free and open to anyone with a registration link.

We welcome you to share your thoughts and help shape the program;  please complete this brief survey.

Talking About Suicide: How to Give & Get Help

Tuesday, April 4 at 2:30 pm MDT/1:30 pm PDT

Despite how many law students and lawyers are suffering, most of us are still not comfortable discussing suicide risk or speaking up when we are concerned. Suicide is a danger we cannot ignore– as a profession, or as colleagues, friends, and family members. We welcome all members of the legal profession to break the silence, encourage discussion, answer questions, and share resources in a safe space. Learn how YOU can play a role in suicide awareness and prevention. Attend virtually through Zoom.

2023 Board of Commissioners Election – Nominations Due April 4, 2023

Nominations for the 2023 ISB Commissioner Elections are open. Nominations must be in writing and signed by at least five (5) members of the ISB in good standing, and eligible to vote in the districts. The Executive Director must receive nominations no later than the close of business on Tuesday, April 4.  A nominating petition form may be obtained by calling the office of the Executive Director at (208)334-4500 or by visiting https://isb.idaho.gov/about-us/governance/boc/.

Pith and Elegance: Crafting Balanced Paragraphs

Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff

Some of my early essays in this column covered ways to make paragraphs better.[i] But it’s been a while since I returned to the idea of constructing good paragraphs.  If you’ve been a long-time reader of The Advocate, you know tips for making strong paragraphs like sentence length, transitions, cohesion, and unity.

But what about balance? Or style?  How do all these concepts come together?

Legal writing needs to function well, but it doesn’t need to be boring or so utilitarian that the reader can’t enjoy reading at times.  So, let’s look at some way we can balance the need for function but also add occasional panache to our paragraphs.

Size Matters

My favorite analogy that describes the legal reader is that she is a juggler.[ii]  It goes like this: “Most competent jugglers can juggle two and three balls with little effort. Likewise, most legal readers processing a sentence can keep two or three ideas aloft in their minds before the period cues that the sentence has ended and the ideas presented can finally be integrated. But things get risky from there.”[iii]

Trying to juggle too many balls, like trying to process a sentence with too many ideas packed into it, is taxing.[iv]  And eventually both the juggler and the reader will drop something.  Now for jugglers this isn’t bad, but when we are trying to convince our readers that our position is sound, causing them to drop an idea is bad.  Indeed, “the reader will hate you for making her work so hard.”[v]

So, using shorter sentences with fewer ideas packed into them ensures that the reader can comprehend the ideas and still have the brain power to do the critical legal reasoning we are asking of her.[vi]

But Variety Does, Too

Prose sings when it has “variety in sentence length and structure, not adhering to strict medium-length-sentence-only rules.”[vii]  To harken back to a favorite example I shared years ago: “This sentence has five words. Here are five more words. Five-word sentences are fine. But several strung together become monotonous. Listen to what is happening. The writing is getting boring. The sound of it drones. It’s like a stuck record. The ear demands some variety.”[viii]

Did your mind start to drift because the sentences sounded so staccato?  Again, not so critical when perusing this column, but using all short sentences is another sure-fire way to make your legal reader hate you.

So, how do you build paragraphs that allow the reader mental space to do legal reasoning yet keep her interested in the prose?  By creating a balance.

Start Small

First, the best paragraphs start with both a short word and a short sentence.  Changing from heavy, long transitions to short ones “can lighten your writing overnight, almost as if you were oxygenating your style.”[ix]

One-word transitions followed by an easy-to-grasp assertion in the topic sentence help the reader for two reasons.  One-syllable transitions (but, yet, and, nor, so) create a tempo that quickly shows the logical link between the last and current paragraph without creating an overload for the reader.[x]  And short topic sentences quickly give the reader the context that will help her see the logic and reasoning in the paragraph.

Grow Out

While legal readers prefer short sentences, paragraphs can build.[xi]  Longer sentences can add elegance, eloquence, and style to writing.[xii]  That’s not to say that you should strive to simply add words to the sentence in the middle of a paragraph.  In fact, sentences full of excessive adjective and adverbs, clichés, overdeveloped metaphors, or pretentious vocabulary can lead the reader to pay attention to the writing itself instead of the ideas and reasoning the writing needs to convey.[xiii]

So, if extra words don’t help, what does? First, never lose sight of the function of legal writing: to be clear, competent, readable, and precise.[xiv]  When in doubt about whether writing is too much, simply don’t.  Always err on the side of function.  But, some subtle techniques used sparingly can add a touch of style.

Alliteration & Assonance: the repetition of vowel or consonant sounds.[xv]

Cadence: the rhythmic flow, like the beat of music.[xvi]

Parallelism: the use of similar grammatical structures in pairs or series of related words, phrases, or clauses.[xvii]

Onomatopoeia: words that represent sounds (these can make writing pop!).[xviii]

Metaphor & Simile: direct and indirect comparisons (but only if they are fresh or insightful).[xix]

And, occasionally joining two closely related sentences into a single, longer sentence can add some sophistication to your writing.[xx]  When two sentences are about the same person (party or court), shift the one to a dependent clause to add some elegance.

Consider this example from a recent Idaho Supreme Court opinion:[xxi]

On intermediate appeal, the district court affirmed the magistrate court’s valuation of the BSA shares. It concluded that substantial and competent evidence supported the magistrate court’s determinations on valuing the BSA shares.

A simple shift could help the flow and eloquence:

On intermediate appeal, the district court affirmed the magistrate court’s valuation of the BSA shares, concluding substantial and competent evidence supported the magistrate court’s determinations on valuing the BSA shares.

Or look at this possibility:

Concluding substantial and competent evidence supported the magistrate court’s determinations on valuing the BSA shares, the district court affirmed the magistrate court’s valuation of the BSA share on intermediate appeal.

End with Pith

Finally, end the paragraph with another short, easy-to-read sentence.  Not only does this sum up the ideas in the sentence, it allows the reader an opportunity to check her understanding of the content in the paragraph.  And, as an added bonus, you can exploit a position of emphasis with a strong sentence.[xxii]

Connect the Branches

We all want our writing to interest the reader. So perhaps take this image as the parting message.  Make your paragraphs shaped like Idaho’s state tree: The Western White Pine. These trees are small at the top, grow wider as they descend toward the forest floor, then narrow again as the trunk and the ground meet.


Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff is a member of the Idaho State Bar and an Associate Clinical Professor of Law at Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law Arizona State University.


[i] Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Ten Steps to Build Better Briefs Part I, 56-Sep Advoc 58 (2013); Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Ten Steps to Build Better Briefs Part II, 56-Oct Advoc 62 (2013).

[ii] Andrew M. Carter, The Reader’s Limited Capacity, 11 LJALWD 31, 31 (2014).

[iii] Id.

[iv] Id.

[v] Id. at 32.

[vi] Id. at 50.

[vii] Id. at 227.

[viii] Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Robust Writing: Crafting Better Sentences, 58-May Advoc 60, 61 (2015).

[ix] Ross Guberman, Point Made 226 (2d ed. 2014).

[x] Id. at 227.  For more on transitions see Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Connections Count Part I: Generic Transitions, 60-Aug Advoc 46 (2017) and Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Connections Count Part II: Orienting & Substantive Transitions, 60-Sep Advoc 48 (2017). 

[xi] See, Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Robust Writing; Crafting Better Sentences, 58-May Advoc 60, 66 (2015).

[xii] Ross Guberman, Point Made 235 (2d ed. 2014).

[xiii] Ann Enquist & Laurel Currie Oates, Just Writing: Grammar, Punctuation & Style for the Legal Writer 149 (3d ed. 2009).  For tips to help reduce excessive words see Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, 5 Tips to Combat Verbosity, 56-Jan Advoc 48 (2013) and Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Three Tips for Concise Writing 60-Oct Advoc 56 (2017).

[xiv] Ann Enquist & Laurel Currie Oates, Just Writing: Grammar, Punctuation & Style for the Legal Writer 148-49 (3d ed. 2009).

[xv] Id. at 150-51.

[xvi] Id. at 151-52.

[xvii] Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, 5 Tips to Combat Verbosity, 56-Jan Advoc 48, 49 (2013).

[xviii] Ann Enquist & Laurel Currie Oates, Just Writing: Grammar, Punctuation & Style for the Legal Writer 158-59 (3d ed. 2009).

[xix] Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Adding Eloquence to Your Legal Writing with Figures of Speech, 56-May Advoc 48, 48 (2013)

[xx] Want more on joining independent clause correctly? See Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Creating Separation & Emphasis in Your Writing Part I: Joining Independent Clauses, 54-Feb Advoc 44 (2011) and Tenielle Fordyce-Ruff, Creating Separation & Emphasis in Your Writing Part II: Using Punctuation within Sentences, 54-Apr Advoc 43 (2011)

[xxi] Lamm v. Preston, 2023 WL 125250 at *4 (Idaho January 9, 2023).

[xxii] Readers pay more attention to information just before or just after a break in the text.  Mary Beth Beazly, A Practical Guide to Appellate Advocacy 229 (5th ed. 2019).