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Charleston School of Law Juris Doctor Program Catalog and Student Handbook 2022-2023: J.D. Program Elective Courses

Online Academic Catalog and Student Handbook

Academic Catalog Outline At-a-Glance

Below is a brief outline of the Charleston School of Law Academic Catalog. Click the + sign to see the linked list under each heading. You can also click on the top tabs to see a complete list under each heading tab. A complete list of content under each heading is found in the Detailed Academic Catalog Guide Outline.

J.D. Program Elective Course Descriptions

In addition to taking required courses, upper-level students can choose from a variety of elective courses. Elective course offerings vary from semester to semester and may include courses that are not listed in this Catalog. 

Information Regarding Courses for a Particular Semester or Session

Before registration for any semester or session, students should consult the course information on www.csolaccess.com,  on the Courses by Semester tab, for that particular semester or session. In addition to listing course schedule information, this page will have the most current information on:

  • Prerequisites for particular courses;
  • A notation as to whether a course satisfies the Skills, Drafting, or Upper-Level Writing requirement in that semester or session; and,
  • Whether a course is graded on a Pass/Fail basis.  

Elective Course Descriptions

The courses listed below have been offered in the past two academic years or are being offered in the current academic year. The courses may not be offered every academic year.

If you have questions about course offerings, please contact the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, 843.377.2420, or by email to the Office of Academic Affairs  

 

Elective Course Descriptions A - C

Accounting for Lawyers 700 (3 credits)

This course teaches accounting concepts and skills that lawyers, working in many fields, will need. Accounting is the language of business. If a lawyer’s practice touches business, then he or she will come across accounting concepts.

Administrative Law 705 (3 credits)

A review of the law governing the organization and operation of subsidiary governmental bodies created by Congress or the state legislatures such as agencies, departments, commissions and boards. Included is a review of the authority of such bodies to establish and enforce rules and regulations to carry out legislative policies with regard to regulated industries, such as banking, insurance, public utilities, finance, industry, and the professions, and programs for the general welfare such as social security, occupational safety, and environmental protections, among others.

 

Admiralty 710 (3 credits)

A study of the distinct body o federal law (both substantive and procedural) governing navigation and shipping. Topics associated with this field of study include: shipping, navigation, waters, commerce, seamen, towage, wharves, piers, and docks, insurance, maritime liens, canals, recreation, and piracy.

Admiralty II 7015 (3 credits)

A survey of select maritime topics, including maritime insurance, liens and mortgages, general average, piracy and drug smuggling, oil pollution, sovereign immunity, and forum shopping.

Advanced Constitutional Law-Race and the Supreme Court 718 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in a particular semester's registration materials

This course will examine the Supreme Court’s treatment of race from the earliest days (The Amistad, Dred Scott) through the Court’s docket today (affirmative action, Voting Rights Act). We will see how the Supreme Court’s race cases have shaped and been shaped by surrounding events, and as we read the cases we will learn important lawyer’s skills like making a factual record, using precedent, and interpreting statutes. Some movie excerpts will help the cases come alive. When we are finished you will never again think of the Constitution or the Supreme Court in quite the same way.

Advanced Domestic Relations 661 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This is a skills course for students interested in practicing in the Family Court. The course will emphasize South Carolina Family Court practice and procedure and will require the student to participate in the preparation of a mock family court case from initial client interview to the trial stage. Students will prepare a new client form, a financial declaration, an initial pleading, a motion and motion order, an affidavit, a discovery checklist, written discovery requests, a case plan, an exhibit list, a witness list, a trial notebook, and a final order. Planned class participation exercises include client interviews, motion arguments, depositions, witness interviews, and an abbreviated mock trial. Alternative dispute resolution methods also will be discussed. Students completing this course should be equipped to handle a simple Family Court matter from start to finish.

Prerequisites: Domestic Relations or South Carolina Family Law

Advanced Evidence 7733 (3 credits) or 7734 (2 credits)

 The advanced evidence course is designed to be a bridge between the basic evidence course and the course on trial advocacy. Emphasis is placed on the more problematic evidence rules (character evidence and hearsay, for example), as well as subjects that generally receive only modest coverage in the basic evidence course (such as privileges and presumptions). The course will also deal with cutting-edge developments in evidence law, including admissibility of electronic evidence (e.g., e-mails and web pages), as well as new Federal Evidence Rule 502. The course will emphasize the practical over the theoretical.

Prerequisite: Evidence

Advanced Legal Research 716 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills Requirement

This course is designed to provide students with research skills that are especially helpful to new lawyers, regardless of career choice (e.g., private law firm, nonprofit, criminal law, academic, etc.). Topics covered include the use of primary and secondary sources; statutory/administrative law and legislative history; effective use of Lexis, Westlaw and other electronic databases, including Casemaker; the use of business resources; the role of the Internet in legal research; and nontraditional approaches to finding legal information. Emphasis will be placed on appropriate and effective research strategies and evaluation of sources, both print and electronic. Students will have assignments and a project.

Prerequisites: Legal Research, Analysis & Writing I & II

Advanced Legal Writing 717 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The advanced legal writing course is designed for second, third, and fourth year students who have successfully completed Legal Research, Analysis and Writing (LRAW). The course is designed to apply broadly to many of the writing situations that students will encounter as legal professionals. It emphasizes two elements of good written communication: style - effective editing for clarify the conciseness; and reasoning - critical reading and persuasion. Students will complete several writing assignments throughout the semester.

 

Advanced Property 537 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Advanced Property will focus on the application of fundamental property legal principles, and policies related to the acquisition and ownership of property, and protection of individual property rights. This course will enable students to engage with and analyze central property law concepts and enhance their deeper knowledge of the core legal discipline. Student will develop key lawyering skills such as: investigating and researching, reviewing and analyzing legal documents, statutory analysis, legal reasoning and problem-solving, oral and written communication, simulated client counseling, and policy making and legal reform.

Advanced Torts: Navigating a Typical Negligence Claim 856 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

In this course, students will learn how to present and prepare a proper negligence claim, from a plaintiff’s perspective, to an insurance company and defendant. Students will learn how to represent someone involved in a typical negligence claim (car wreck/slip and fall) from start to finish. Students will do an initial client interview, and will learn how to present a claim package to the insurance company, draft pleadings for a lawsuit, draft interrogatories and requests to produce, conduct depositions in preparation for trial (litigation) and ultimately try a case to verdict, including crafting effective voir dire questions for a jury panel, striking a jury, and presenting the Court with relevant and easy to understand jury charges. Students will be provided with valuable forms which can be used in practice. Real life application of the South Carolina Rules of civil procedure and evidence will be discussed and applied. This course is a must for the law student interested in litigation or a plaintiff's practice. The course is taught and moderated by The Honorable Brian M Gibbons, a circuit judge and former family court judge who, along with several trial practitioners, brings a unique, practical, hands-on perspective to the student of how to practice law.

Prerequisites: Torts I & II

Alternative Dispute Resolution 720 (3 credits) or 720-1 (2 credits)

This course will provide an overview of the law and methods involved in settling disputes outside of the courtroom, including discussing methods such as arbitration, mediation, early neutral evaluation, and conciliation. Students will engage in hands-on exercises throughout the course.

 

Arbitration Practice 641 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Many disputes are resolved outside of our court system through arbitration. This course will cover arbitrator selection, arbitration proceedings, enforcement, conflicts of interest, ethical concerns, and drafting. Touching on the arbitration of commercial, securities, family, and civil disputes, students will learn to evaluate the benefits and pitfalls of alternative dispute resolution forums and learn to advocate thoughtfully and effectively in an arbitration setting. Through this interactive and engaging class, students will benefit from knowledgeable speakers, considering arbitration problems, cases and exercises as well as participating in a final mock arbitration as the class culminates.

Animal Law 743-2 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course will examine a number of topics related to the law of animals, including various issues that arise under the laws of property, contracts, torts, and trusts and estates. It will also examine various criminal law issues and constitutional law questions. The class will consider such issues as the definition of "animal" as applicable to anti-cruelty statutes, the doctrines of strict liability and negligence related to injuries caused by animals, the collection of damages for harm to animals, establishing standing for animal suits, first amendment protections, and the nuances of various federal laws.

Business and Legal Affairs in the Entertainment Industry: From Development to Distribution 858 or 858-1 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The course will expose students to the key business and legal principles required to practice law within the entertainment industry. Students will have an opportunity to learn techniques and tactics essential in negotiating the development, production, and distribution of content for television. Students will gain practical knowledge of the industry by studying the transactional elements involved in television development and production, including: negotiating underlying rights; licensing content to networks; contracting with writers, producers, actors, and directors; facilitating physical production for television; marketing and distributing content domestically and internationally; as well as resolving issues pertaining to piracy and infringement.

Capital Punishment 813 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course examines the rules and procedures that determine who is, and is not, selected for the death penalty. It examines the social, moral, and legal implications of capital punishment, focusing on decisions of the Supreme Court since the early 1970s. Main themes of the course will include: jury selection; the allocation of decisionmaking authority between judges and juries; the role of prosecutorial discretion, the right to counsel in death cases and consequences of ineffective counsel; the role of aggravating and mitigating factors, including race and poverty; efforts to limit the arbitrary or racially discriminatory application of the death penalty; the rules governing juveniles and the mentally ill; the federal death penalty; the influence and relevance of foreign practice; and constitutional challenges to methods of execution.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Children & the Law 823S (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course explores the shifting and balancing relationship between the State, parents, and children while also examining dependency and delinquency issues facing children, their parents, and the State. Particular attention is paid to South Carolina law. 

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Concepts of Alternative Dispute Resolution 7392 (1 credit)

This course will provide an overview of the law and methods involved in resolving disputes outside of the courtroom, particularly focusing on mediation and arbitration.

  • Students who have taken Principles of Alternative Dispute Resolution (739) or Alternative Dispute Resolution (720) are not eligible to take this course.

Conflict of Laws 760 (3 credits)

A review of the legal policies, the rules of law, and the constitutional requirements for resolving disputes which involve multiple states or nations. Included is consideration of the jurisdiction of courts, enforceability of foreign judgments, and choice of the applicable law to determine the issues in dispute. Particular attention will be given to international law, tort, contract, property, succession, family law, and "Conflicts in Cyberspace" because of e-commerce.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II

Contemporary Issues in Freedom of Speech and Press 7730 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will provide an overview of the constitutional principles, laws and regulations regarding free speech and press issues with an emphasis on content-based restrictions on speech (such as defamation and privacy) and the gathering of news (such as access rights, news gathering torts, confidential sources, free press and fair trial issues and developing technologies). The course will also consider cutting edge issues involving free speech and press and address whether the current body of law adequately addresses these issues.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Copyright Law 619 (2 credits)

This course will examine the legal protections afforded to authors and artists by copyright law as it pertains to works of art, motion pictures, music, literature, sculpture, design of useful objects, and software. The course will consider the history and the purposes of copyright law, with a view towards assessing its ability to respond to recent developments in technology. In addition to considering substantive copyright issues, the course will also examine the procedural elements of copyright infringement actions. Technological developments affecting copyright will also be addressed, such as issues related to computer software and the Internet, as well as technical protection measures and anti-circumvention rules.

Prerequisite: Intellectual Property

Corporate Taxation 920 (3 credits)

This course examines the tax considerations involved in the formation and operation of U.S. corporations. Subjects covered include corporate liquidations, dividends, and a detailed examination of the taxation of corporate distributions. Students will also examine the alternatives relating to the sales of corporate businesses. This course is recommended not only for those wishing to pursue a career in tax, but also to those wishing to work in business law.

Prerequisite: Federal Income Taxation

Criminal Practice and Pleading 672 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The course will focus on pre-trial criminal motions practice in federal and state courts. Students will review case files and then be assigned to prepare and argue dispositive pre-trial motions. Any student who is interested in litigation will find this course useful.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II, Criminal Procedure

Criminal Procedure: The Post-Investigative Process 6260 (2 credits)

This course will examine the post-investigation phase of criminal procedure including topics such as identifications, discovery, effective assistance of counsel, plea bargaining and guilty pleas, and sentencing.

Prerequisite: Criminal Procedure

Criminal Trial Practice 758 (3 credits) graded Pass/Fail

Satisfies the Skills Requirement

This skills course will walk students through the entire criminal trial process, starting with case selection and trial preparation and ending with closing arguments, sentencing and verdict motions. The goal of the course is to prepare students who have an interest in pursuing a career either as a criminal defense attorney or as a prosecutor. The course will be part lecture and part practice, with the emphasis on practice. Students will engage in simulations of voir dire and jury selection, opening statements, direct and cross-examinations, objections, as well as learn how to conduct oneself the proper courtroom etiquette expected of an attorney.

Students who have taken Federal Criminal Trial Practice or Trial Advocacy are not eligible to take this course

Prerequisite: Evidence

Current Issues in Sports Law 8150 (1 credit), graded Pass/Fail

This seminar is designed as a capstone course to survey current legal issues in amateur and professional sports and to provide a broad perspective of Sports Law, Litigation, and the Regulation of the Sporting Industry. Readings and class discussions will consider current events, and may examine the following topics: antitrust; labor law; contracts; constitutional law; torts; crimes; Title IX and sex-based discrimination; federal disability discrimination laws; the legal relationships between universities, professional organizations, and athletes; and, the intellectual-property and sports-broadcasting rights related to sports. Additionally, the class discussions may cover the following areas of regulatory compliance: the regulation of interscholastic and intercollegiate leagues, Olympic sports, and private and professional sports associations; athletic agents and their ethical duties; the regulatory authorities of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the U.S. Olympic Committee, high school athletic

Elective Courses D - G

6321 Depositions: Effective Strategies and Techniques 6321 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Depositions are critical to pre-trial civil litigation. Effective depositions may limit the issues for trial or even lead to the resolution of a case through settlement or summary judgment. This experiential course will emphasize basic and sophisticated strategies and techniques in planning, taking and defending depositions in a civil case.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II, Evidence

Drafting Commercial Documents 756 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The purpose of this course is to acquaint law students with the practical aspects of drafting. The preparation of legal documents is a major part of a lawyer's work in the practice of law, whether it is commercial representation, civil and criminal litigation, motion and appellate practice, domestic relations or any of the many other areas of law practice. 

Business Organizations is suggested, but not required.

Prerequisites: Contracts I & II

Drafting Contracts, Loan Agreements and Acquisition Agreements 759 (3 credit hours)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Starting with the basic building blocks of all contracts and their functions, this course will teach the lawyer’s function in the drafting and negotiation of a business transaction, examine specific drafting skills and techniques, discuss issues that arise in reviewing contracts, discuss contract formalities, and discuss specific provisions found in typical financing agreements and acquisition agreements.  Unlike drafting for advocacy, drafting for contracts is about describing with precision the meeting of two minds so that all readers will interpret the language the same way.  We will undertake drafting exercises that will teach students to draft with clarity and precision to assist clients in the business world.  Sample documents will serve to illustrate specific forms utilized by businesses to achieve their objectives in various transactions typical in today’s business environment.

Prerequisites: Contracts I & II

Education Law and Policy 8220 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will examine issues affecting public education at elementary and secondary school levels.  The course will introduce and critically analyze the legal and socio-economic characteristics of the public K-12 education system through topics such as: school safety and discipline, charter schools, special education, tenure, school district liability, reform, among other others.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Elder Law Practicum 712 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

As baby boomers reach retirement age, the United States is experiencing a “grey tsunami,” making elder law a growing practice area. Even if attorneys do not practice elder law, issues related to aging affect all legal practice areas and all families. This experiential learning course will focus on South Carolina and federal laws that affect the elderly. Students will gain practical experience from both the instructor and local experts. Students will learn how to draft estate planning documents and advance directives, probate an estate, and establish a guardianship and conservatorship. They also will hone their interviewing skills by conducting wellness checks on incapacitated adults under guardianship through the Charleston County Probate Court Visitor Program. The course also will cover elder abuse, funeral planning, housing, and funding long-term care, through private sources as well as government programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.

Wills, Trusts & Estates suggested but not required

Elements of Pretrial Litigation 953 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course focuses on the fundamental elements of civil pretrial litigation according to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. Students will learn the basic rules, procedures, tactics, and skills necessary to prepare a civil lawsuit for trial and settlement from the initial point of contact with a potential client through to mediation. The goal of this course is to provide students with a realistic pretrial experience through the use of readings, class discussions, and skills exercises.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II, Evidence

Students who have taken Pleadings & Practice (789) are not eligible to take this course.

684 Eminent Domain and Takings Law 684 (1 credit)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will introduce students to “takings”, a sovereign’s power of eminent domain, and the balance between that power and the protection of the right of private property ownership. This course will focus on the history, policy, and, to some extent, the politics of property rights, eminent domain law, and related legal topics. We will examine how the right of private property was developed in common and constitutional law, the relationship of property rights to other civil rights and the sovereign’s power to take land, the role of federal and state courts in protection of property rights, and the proper “place” of property rights in the modern administrative state.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Employment Discrimination Law 769 (3 credits)

This course examines the federal laws that prohibit employment-related discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex (gender), national origin, age, and disability. While primarily focusing on Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, this course also covers and considers, inter alia, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). In examining discrimination cases under these various federal laws, this course will explore applicable claim procedures, methods of proof and defenses, exceptions, remedies, and litigation strategies.

Prerequisites: all first-year courses

Employment Law 768 (3 credits)

This course surveys common law, statutory, and constitutional regulation of the employment relationship. It examines many facets of the employment relationship including: employment at will; employment contracts; individual and collective job security; employer and employee interests in trade secrets, competition, and privacy; prohibitions against discrimination and harassment; wage and hour laws; health and pension plans; health and safety; and the resolution of workplace disputes.

Prerequisites: Contracts I & II

Environmental Law 770 (3 credits)

This course covers the Resource Conservation Recovery Act, CERLCA (Superfund), the Clean Water Act including wetlands regulation, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the Endangered Species Act, as well as certain key general concepts pertinent to environmental law.

Estate Planning Survey 6953 (2 credits)

This course is for students who are interested in practicing in the estate planning field.  It will involve an analysis of the foundations of the estate planning practice, provide students with an introduction into more advanced estate planning topics and techniques, and introduce students to the intersection estate planning has with other areas of law. Numerous attorneys focusing their practice on each of these topics will serve as guest lecturers. Students will have a unique opportunity to learn what these practitioners wish they had known when they started working in the estate planning field.

Prerequisites: Wills, Trusts, and Estates

Exercise of Remedies in Admiralty: Mortgage Foreclosure and Maritime Attachment 7746 (1 credit)

This course will focus on the process of vessel arrests and foreclosure sales of vessels and will also cover the use of Rule B of the Supplemental Rules of Civil Procedure as means of enforcing claims of a maritime nature. The core of the course will take students through the mortgage foreclosure process from arrest through the interlocutory sale of vessel and ultimate adjudication of claims.

Exercise of Remedies in Admiralty (Part II): Maritime Liens and Vessel Arrest 7747 (1 credit)

This course focuses on the peculiar admiralty law of maritime liens for purposes of in rem proceedings in federal court. Such liens include personal injury, ship mortgages, salvage, and necessaries. Students will be offered a practical look at drafting pleadings for maritime liens that qualify for in rem actions; how a vessel arrest works in federal court; how to navigate and interact with the various parties involved in making such decisions; and how to negotiate and / or litigate the release of a ship under arrest.

Federal Courts and Immigration Law 868 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

The news is replete with high profile federal lawsuits challenging immigration laws and policies.  However, current immigration law significantly restricts federal court jurisdiction over immigration lawsuits.  This course will focus on this tension.  The course will focus equally on federal procedure, practice, and doctrine and immigration law and policy.  We will study and analyze the different strategies and theories that private litigants and government attorneys are using in federal courts to argue for and against executive amnesty, family detention, asylum, citizenship, and more.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Federal Criminal Trial Practice 947 (2 credits), graded pass/fail

Satisfies the Skills Requirement

The goal of this skills-based course is to prepare students who have an interest in pursuing a career in federal court, either as a criminal defense attorney or as a prosecutor. Through lectures and simulation exercises, the course will focus on preparing a federal criminal case from start to finish. Students will learn about and engage in simulations of case preparation, pre-trial motions, voir dire, and jury selection. Students will also engage in simulations of a trial, including opening statements, direct and cross-examination, objections, and closing arguments.

Prerequisite: Evidence

*Students who have taken Criminal Trial Practice are not eligible to take this course.

Federal Income Taxation 773 (3 credits)

A study of the basic principles of federal income tax, concentrating upon individual taxpayers, business taxpayers, and investors as taxpayers. Particular emphasis is placed on the use of the Internal Revenue Code and the regulations thereunder.

Prerequisites: Property I & II

Federal Workers Compensation 8303 (2 credits)

This course will examine the federal workers compensation scheme covering longshore and harbor workers, defense contractors, nonappropriated funds workers, and individuals working on the outer continental shelf. The course will review, among other topics, jurisdiction, including concurrent jurisdiction; notice; statutes of limitation; employer-employee relationships; types of disability and loss of wage-earning capacity; dependency; third-party liability; and, subrogation rights of the employer and carrier.

Freedom of Speech in the Modern World 7736 (2 credits)

This course will address the history, theory, and case law of the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of expression.  The course will cover the history and origin of the First Amendment’s Speech Clause and the various freedom of expression doctrines developed in the case law, including (but not limited to) prior restraints, vagueness and overbreadth, political speech, symbolic speech, “time, place, and manner” restrictions on speech, the distinction between content-based and content-neutral restrictions on speech, and categories of “unprotected” or “less-protected” speech including obscenity and offensive, hate, and commercial speech.

Gender Issues in the Law 829 (3 credits) 

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course is a study of historical and contemporary laws, doctrines, and theories related to sex, gender, and sexuality.  The rights of females and the impact of laws on their lives will be reviewed in the context of privacy, employment, marriage, education, family, and politics.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Guardian Ad Litem Practice 7842 (2 credits) 

Satisfies Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course focuses on the duties and functions of Guardian ad Litem’s in the court system.  The course will examine the statutory obligations of Guardians including how to conduct an investigation, prepare a report for the Court, file Motions, and participate in trial. Students will gain practical experience by drafting motions and orders, and preparing letters, along with other drafting assignments. Students will also develop essential practical skills needed for every practice area including effective interviewing, factual development through investigative practices, and presenting information learned (both orally and by way of written product).

Elective Courses H - L

Healthcare Compliance 7737 (3 credits)

This course provides an overview of healthcare compliance from conceptual, substantive, and operational perspectives. Students will explore the need for compliance programs within healthcare organizations. The course will provide an overview of the federal laws that generate the most significant compliance obligations, including False Claims Act, Anti-Kickback Statute, Stark Law, HIPAA, HITECH, antitrust laws, EMTALA, and tax laws. Students will also examine legal and practical issues related to the operation of a compliance program.

Higher Education Compliance 882 (2 credits) graded Pass/Fail

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course focuses on civil rights compliance in institutions of higher education. We will examine compliance obligations in areas such as the prohibition of discrimination on the basis of sex under Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972, and other civil rights statutes that protect individuals on the basis of race, color, religion, and disability, among others. We will also explore significant campus privacy and safety requirements. Students will gain practical experience by drafting advisory opinions, brief internal memorandums, along with other drafting assignments. Students will also develop essential practical skills needed for every practice area including effective interviewing, factual development through investigative practices, and presenting information learned (both orally and by way of written product). This is an interactive course that will include extensive class discussion and exercises.

It is recommended, but not required, that students have successfully completed Higher Education Law.

Higher Education Law 821 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

An examination of cases, legislation, and administrative decisions related to higher education. Topics to be explored include campus safety, peer harassment and mistreatment, threatening activity in the aftermath of Columbine and 9/11, Internet-related issues and concerns, and the implications of legal controversies in the areas of curriculum, religion and values.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Human Trafficking 936 (1 credit)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course offers a broad overview of human trafficking law and policy as well as practical strategies for criminal prosecutions and civil litigation. Among the topics covered will be human trafficking in various forms such as labor trafficking; sex trafficking of minors; and, sex trafficking by force, fraud, and coercion. The course will examine various human trafficking statutes, both state and federal, in discussing litigation strategies.

Immigration and Citizenship Law 637 (2 credits)

As our world shrinks, immigration and citizenship laws grow more pervasive and more complex. This course is designed to give students a critical overview of today’s immigration and citizenship laws and prepare them to identify potential immigration issues in all aspects of life and law. Specifically, this course will review the historical underpinnings and practical aspects of the current law regulating citizenship, the admission of non-citizens to the United States, removal of non-citizens from the United States, and judicial review of all such decisions.

Insurance Law 680 (3 credits)

A study of the theory of insurance and basic insurance law including an overview of the kinds of insurance and insurance contracts in society. An introduction to the relationship of premiums, insurable risk, risks insured against, and allocation of risks, the regulatory regime which governs the insurance industry, the rights, duties, and liabilities of insurer and insured, representations and warranties, payment of losses, contribution and subrogation, reinsurance, and actions on policies.

Prerequisites: Contracts I & II, Torts I & II

Intellectual Property 780 (3 credits)

This course focuses on the basic legal principles of copyright, patent, trademark, trade secrets, and other intangible property rights protected under federal and state law. This course is designed to serve as a foundation for students interested in focusing on intellectual property law as a career, or for the student that is interested in getting a basic understanding of the key legal principles of intellectual property.

Prerequisites: Property I; Co-requisite: Property II

Intellectual Property Transactions 682 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course will provide students with the framework of intellectual property practice areas (trademark, copyright, patent, and trade secrets) and the processes used to secure an owner's rights in the property and how to transfer those right. The course will focus mainly on practical applications, as students will learn how to file registrations as well as draft assignment and licensing agreements for each relevant practice area in intellectual property.

Prerequisite: Intellectual Property 

Intermodal/Container Transportation Law 8104 (3 credits)

This course will cover the history and development of the ocean container industry, focusing on relevant case law and legal regimes governing the international carriage of containerized cargo, including both current and prospective statutory regimes. As part of the course, students will have the unique opportunity to observe first-hand the operational side of the intermodal transport industry, including visits to a working container terminal, and presentations by representatives of major container shipping lines and others involved in the intermodal transport industry.

International Business Transactions 642 (3 credits) [previously 7642]

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course addresses U.S. domestic, foreign and international law applicable to private cross-border transactions. These cross-border transactions include the sale of goods, project finance, cross-border distribution and franchising, cross-border technology licensing, formation of foreign branches and subsidiaries, and cross-border joint ventures and acquisitions. This course benefits those who wish to practice business law, since the course introduces students to the range of transactional issues which business lawyers handle.

Prerequisites: Contracts I & II, Property I & II

Introduction to Construction Law 7632 (1 credit)

The Construction Law course provides an overview of the legal concepts integral to practicing construction law. Students will learn key provisions included in typical construction contracts and the effect of those provisions as they relate to risk transfer, insurance obligations, time and cost claims, damages exposure, and dispute resolution. The course also will discuss construction litigation topics such as discovery techniques, construction defect claims and pre-notice requirements, among others. With a focus on South Carolina law and regulations, the course will also examine the mechanic’s lien process and the regulatory requirements for contractors, architects, and engineers, among other topics.

Jurisprudence 885 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

Jurisprudence is the study of theories underlying and explaining the origins and validity of legal rules. At the most basic level, jurisprudence asks what is justice, and why and when is it just to enforce particular rules of law. While jurisprudence involves questions of great interest to philosophers, it is also of enormous practical use for law reformers and appellate advocates who regularly confront the task of explaining to legislators, judges, and democratically engaged citizens why law should remain as it is or change. Subjects covered in the course may include constitutional theory, theories of punishment, theories of tort liability, theories of contractual obligation, theories of property, theories of just war, theories of international law, and critical race theory and feminist jurisprudence.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Land Use Controls 7850 (2 credits)

In this course, students examine basic land use regulations generally, and not solely South Carolina-specific laws. The course goals and objectives are to teach basic methods of legal analysis required for the students to learn the four pillars of land use controls: nuisance, servitudes, zoning, and takings (all four of which are bar-tested topics). I think students will benefit from the material in this course because the students will learn the rights and obligations that arise from these land-use, property laws. For example, the content of nuisance law is set down, essentially but not entirely, by common law courts. Servitudes are defined primarily by private law arrangements. Zoning is largely legislative, requiring a good understanding of politics and statutory analysis. And, takings law, including eminent domain and inverse condemnation, requires constitutional analysis. All of these methods of land use controls are alive and well, and (as I mentioned above) are bar-tested, as such this course will provide a useful survey of several substantive, doctrinal, and lawyering skills that our students should master, and serve as a capstone course prior to graduation and in prep for the bar exam.

Prerequisites: Property I & II

Law and Poverty 958 (2 credits) Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course focuses on “poverty” and how the law interacts with those considered poor. The class discusses a broad range of poverty law issues and is broken down into three rough sections. First, we will examine different views of poverty along with how and why the United States and the international community have chosen to combat poverty. Next, we will examine how courts have interpreted the Constitution as it relates to the poor and the relationship of the poor to courts and the law in general. The third section focuses on a number of specific issues: welfare, housing, work, health, and education.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Law of the Sea 711 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

A survey of the Law of the Sea and national, particularly United States, ocean policies. The Law of the Sea covers a range of highly diverse but related legal disciplines: admiralty and maritime law, international law, crime (including "white collar" crime, terrorism, and piracy) on the high seas, environmental law, and commercial trade. Starting with the historical development of the law of the sea, the course will deal with such topics as maritime boundaries, high seas freedoms, terrorism and crime on the high seas, piracy, nationality of vessels, sovereignty over internal waters and ports, territorial seas, management of ocean fisheries, protection of marine species and marine environmental protection, mineral exploitation of the seabed, and, time permitting, shipwrecks and underwater cultural resources. We will also examine the modern law of the sea as reflected in the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea. Students will have the opportunity to develop knowledge of the subject matter by doing a research paper and presenting their topic to the class. Final papers are due by the end of exam period. An exam in lieu of a paper is permitted. Students who do an exam will have to do a brief class presentation on a LOS topic. Topics for papers and class presentation will be approved by the Professor.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Law Practice Management and Economics 802 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This upper level comprehensive seminar course is devoted to the economics of practicing law, with a special emphasis on how to start and build a law practice. Students will be organized into firm management teams and each team will prepare a written business plan. The daily work of a practicing attorney will be thoroughly analyzed. Class discussion will involve practical approaches to real-world situations that attorneys face daily in their busy practices. There is no final examination.

Prerequisite: Professional Responsibility

Lawyers and the Media 702 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Lawyers need an understanding of media law, whether they represent clients on media law matters or find themselves involved in a high-profile case or issue. The course will focus on defamation, invasion of privacy, information gathering (including state and federal FOIA and open meetings acts), protection of news sources, and free press and fair trial issues. Other topics will include obscenity, broadcasting, and commercial speech with a focus on attorney speech. Students will gain practical experience by drafting pleadings, memoranda and letters and learning how to effectively work with the press.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours. Co-requisite: Professional Responsibility

Legal Technology for Practice 7280 (2 credits) [previously 872]

 Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

Technology (AI, bots, blockchain, etc.) and innovation are transforming the role of lawyers and the delivery of legal services. Even basic competency in the technology used in a legal office today is a must for the modern lawyer. Students will explore both the current trends and future possibilities of technology use in the law. After an introduction to the fundamentals of technological innovation and legal system design, the course will provide students with the theoretical and practical background for different legal technologies that are in everyday use in the profession today. This course will introduce students to legal technology in a hands-on, experiential setting, focusing on the practical application and implementation of legal technology tools in practice. Prior experience with technology is not a prerequisite for this class.

Litigating a Transaction 8692 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course is designed to have students negotiate, structure, and draft a commercial contract from the practitioner’s point of view and then create specific litigation documents to address boilerplate and negotiated contract issues after a negotiation. Teams of students will be expected to draft transactional and litigation documents capable of achieving their client’s goals from the formation of a contract through breach to the commencement and eventual decision of the trier of fact.

Elective Courses M - P

Marine Insurance 8004 (3 credits)

This course covers contracts for insurance covering vessels involved in maritime activities such as carriage of goods or passengers, or in recreational vessel use (hull insurance), insurance on cargo carried by a vessel (cargo insurance), and liability of maritime parties to others (Protection and Indemnity Insurance). Coverage and liability issues and governing law are covered in depth.

Maritime Personal Injury 9402 (3 credits)

This course is an advanced survey of the substantive law and procedure applicable to maritime injury and death cases, with a focus on claims involving seamen, longshoremen, and other maritime employees.

Maritime Salvage 7748 (1 credit)

This two-day course will cover the elements of "pure" and "contract" salvage. The difference between the two has enormous financial implications for plaintiffs, defendants, and insurance carriers. Interpreting salvage rights has a significant impact on the maritime lien analysis, the framework for which will be studied as to various parties' rights. We will also examine the methodology of determining awards for pure salvage cases and study the differences between the various interpretations around the country under the general maritime law.

Medical Malpractice 7751 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course will introduce students to the law and practice of civil medical professional liability cases through exercises and simulations. Students will engage in pre-trial proceedings such as pleadings, interviewing clients and witnesses, and conducting discovery. Students will prepare for and participate in mock pre-trial conferences which will include witness examination, negotiation, and arguing pre-trial motions.

National Security Law 900 or 900-S (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course examines the legal framework for national and homeland security, especially in light of the evolution in this area of law following the events of September 11, 2001. The course includes detailed analysis and discussion of the separation of war and security powers among the three branches of government and current issues surrounding the role of each branch. After exploring domestic law and its impact on national security policies, the course will introduce principles of international law and the interplay between these principles and this country’s domestic laws. Topics covered will include separation of powers, the role of international law on national security, the exercise of war powers in specific military conflicts, including Vietnam, Korea and the Persian Gulf and Iraq Wars, the detention of enemy combatants, an overview of U.S. intelligence agencies, a review of relevant statutes including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the USA PATRIOT Act, the Classified Information Procedures Act, and the Espionage Act, and discussion of various national security legal issues raised by events that occur during the semester.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Personal Income Tax 933 (3 credits)

The course is meant as an introduction to the basic concepts contained in the Internal Revenue Code. The emphasis is on the taxation of human beings but there are significant portions of the course that apply to business entities as well as individuals. One important goal of the course is to introduce students to work with regulations and statutes. Please note: Students who have taken Federal Income Tax are not eligible to take this course.

Pleadings and Practice 789 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The course will familiarize the student with pre-trial practices and procedures through a combination of lectures, guest lectures, reading assignments and pre-trial activities. Students will become familiar with the relevant Rules of Civil Procedure and other pre-trial techniques, including client interviewing and counseling, witness interviewing, informal discovery techniques, litigation planning, expert development and discovery, pleadings, interrogatories, depositions, requests for production of documents and things, requests for admission, pre-trial motion practice, settlement strategies, settlement brochures, settlement conferences, pre-trial conferences, and settlement agreements. Please note: students who have taken Elements of Pretrial Litigation are not eligible to take this course.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II, co-requisite: Evidence

Presidential Scholars Seminar 852 (1 credit) graded Pass/Fail

Students who have earned the distinction of Presidential Honors are eligible to take this seminar which will typically take place during the members’ third-year spring semester.

Principles of E-Discovery 632 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The discovery phase of litigation is crucial and increasingly dispositive as fewer and fewer cases go to trial. At the same time, discovery itself – seeking of relevant information from an adversary – is now overwhelmingly focused on electronic information like computer documents, email, and social media. This course will provide hands-on, practice-based training in the legal, technological, and ethical issues that are raised by e-discovery. Students will become familiar with the federal rules that apply to e-discovery as well as the growing body of case law focusing on document retention, cost allocation, spoliation, computer forensics and other discovery issues as they apply in the electronic context. Students will become conversant with the growing e-discovery lexicon and the importance of negotiating search terms, maintaining regular information management systems, ordering litigation holds, navigating metadata, and avoiding judicial sanctions. Students will gain practical experience through simulated discovery conferences, drafting, and negotiation relating to the preservation and production of electronically stored information.

Privacy Law Seminar 9702 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will consider the history of the right to privacy looking at the implied Constitutional right to privacy and landmark U.S. Supreme Court privacy cases as well as current cases and issues regarding the right to privacy that might reach the U.S. Supreme Court.  The course also will consider the state privacy torts of appropriation, intrusion, publication of private facts, and false light. Rounding out the course will be a discussion of current and pending legislation involving the right to privacy.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Products Liability 795 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Skills Requirement

This course is an introduction to the basic concepts of products liability law including the theories and scope of liability arising from the manufacture and distribution of defective products. Focus is placed on the concept of defectiveness and defenses based on plaintiff's conduct and limitations on the liability of manufacturers and sellers. The course will also consider mandatory safety standards by administrative agencies as mechanisms for improving product safety levels.

Prerequisites: Torts I & II

Professional Liability 793 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will explore how the law has affixed civil and, at time, even criminal liability to various professions in our society. Particular emphasis will be paid to the liability of the legal, medical, and accounting professions for various acts of omission and commission. Additionally, the course will examine the interrelationship of ethical and legal standards of behavior in these professions.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Prosecutorial Ethics and Strategy 7222 (1 credit)

This intensive course will explore the additional professional responsibilities of prosecutors in the exercise of their duty to seek justice. Utilizing simulations and problems, students will learn about the rules and considerations that govern prosecutors’ decisions in investigations, charging decisions, discovery, plea bargaining, trial preparation, sentencing, and post-conviction matters, such as the investigation of wrongful conviction matters. The course will also consider how prosecutors are increasingly playing a key role in criminal reform efforts. Students will be assessed on the basis of class participation, breakout group activities, and a take-home response to a fact pattern.

Psychiatry and the Law: Criminal and Civil Issues 752 (2 credits)

This course is designed to provide a detailed overview of selected criminal and civil topics prominent in the interface between psychiatry and the law. These topics are not limited to, but will include the following: Criminal Competencies, including Competency to Stand Trial, Competency to be Executed, Competency to Testify, and Competency to Waive Miranda Rights; Mental State Defenses, including Insanity Defense, Diminished Capacity, and other psychiatric defenses; the Guilty But Mentally Ill plea; Civil Commitment Law and Procedure; Informed Consent; Confidentiality and Privilege; Sexually Violent Predator Law; Conservatorship / Guardianship Issues; and Testamentary Capacity.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II; Legal, Research Analysis and Writing I & II

Public Companies and Securities Regulation 8105 (3 credits)

The objective of this course is to acquire an understanding of the structure and characteristics of the public corporation and its regulation, focusing upon the public securities markets. The course will examine the basics of the securities markets, materiality of information, the definition of a “security,” disclosure of information required of public companies, antifraud provisions and insider trading.  The course will also examine registration of public offerings and exemptions from registration and federal regulation of shareholder information requirements and proxy voting.  The course will also include a survey of SEC investigations and enforcement proceedings.

Public International Law 624 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

A basic introductory course, designed to introduce students to the substance and nature of international law. Beginning with the creation and the development of international law and the use of custom and treaties, the course may cover the role of international law in U.S. courts, state responsibility, international criminal law; human rights; jurisdiction and immunities; act of state doctrine, the role of the United Nations and other international organizations; and decisions of the International Court of Justice and other international tribunals.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Public Policy and Legislative Advocacy 9761  (2 credits)

This course will examine how bills are introduced, amended and moved through state legislatures. The course will also examine strategies, concepts and tools to connect elected officials with their constituents and promote government transparency.  Students will work on a legal framework with which to analyze these issues, work on draft model legislation, and public messaging.

Elective Courses R - Z

Real Estate Development and Zoning Law 8011 (1 credit)

This 1 credit course provides students with an overview of governmental controls over real estate, including real estate development and planning, eminent domain, and zoning.  This course will cover the basics: Euclidean zoning, special use permits, variances, vested rights and preexisting uses, exactions, exclusionary and inclusionary zoning, environmental controls, historic preservation laws, accessibility planning, and legal challenges to zoning decisions.  This course also will look at more recent trends and issues in real estate development and zoning law, such as smart growth and transit-oriented development, form-based zoning, marijuana regulations, short-term rentals, climate change resilience, and increased federal control of local land use.  Finally, the course will examine the constitutional limits to governmental controls over real estate.  The course will cover general zoning principles applicable nationally.

Prerequisites: Property I & II

Real Estate Transactions 8016 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course addresses issues such as: what role a lawyer should play in a real estate closing; what modifications should be made to most Real Estate Listing Agreements to make those document fairer to the Seller; how do Real Estate Brokers arguably earn a real estate commission even after the listing agreement has expired; when is the seller’s title unmarketable; what duties does a seller have to disclose problems with the property to the buyer; and, how a lawyer avoids a court concluding that a deed is really to be construed as an equitable mortgage. There are countless real world questions dealing with the purchase/sale/and financing of real estate home or a real estate commercial transaction. This course covers a lot of the basic doctrine, and some practical applications, of these issues, and many others connected with the buying and selling of real estate.

Re-examining the Constitution 7242 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This seminar course focuses on the history surrounding the creation of the U.S. Constitution to identify potential disconnects between what we believe the Constitution was intended to do and what it was designed to achieve. The class will consider what form of government the Constitution created and whether the reasons for these government structures have changed over the years. This class will also consider if the Constitution is obsolete by today’s standards by comparing it to other constitutions around the world (foreign and domestic) and by considering how other nations have been influenced by the U.S. Constitution.

Prerequisites: Constitutional Law I & II; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Remedies 669 (3 credits)

Remedies explores the forms and limits of judicial relief in civil actions. It considers the question of what plaintiffs are entitled to when they win a case and why. It will cover compensatory damages, punitive damages, restitution, unjust enrichment, and injunctive relief. While we will consider public remedies in constitutional cases, the majority of the course will focus on remedies in private law civil actions.

Prerequisites: All First-Year Courses

Remedies in Contracts 5152 (2 credits)

This course goes beyond first year Contracts coverage with a deep examination of the monetary and non-monetary remedies available to aggrieved parties in breach of contract actions pursuant to both the common law and Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code.  This course is highly recommended for students who struggled with damages in their first year Contracts class.

Reproduction Rights and Justice 8293 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course includes examination and discussion surrounding reproductive health including abortion and contraception law and policy, as well as regulation of individual’s actions during pregnancy. The course will also focus on the legal and ethical questions surrounding assisted reproductive technologies, sexuality, adoption, and parenting. The course will approach these issues with an interdisciplinary framework using various bodies of law, historical analysis, and current events.

Prerequisites: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Selected Topics in Property Law: Contemporary Issues 6352 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This seminar will provide an in-depth examination of several of today’s most pressing issues in Property Law. Each student, after consulting with the professor, will select an issue about which he or she will become the “class expert.” Each student will then prepare materials for and will lead a class session on the legal issue he or she has chosen. In addition, students will write a substantial paper on that topic. A wide variety of topics are available to students, including, for example, environmental/conservation efforts, elder law, accessibility issues, beach access, and more.

Prerequisites: Property I & II; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

South Carolina Family Law 662 (3 credits)

This course is an introductory course to South Carolina Family Law. We will discuss the broad jurisdiction of the Family Court in South Carolina and the various types of cases that are routinely litigated there. We will cover South Carolina statutory law on issues such as marriage, divorce, parental right and termination of parental rights. There will be an emphasis on the issues presented in typical divorce cases, such as divorce, alimony (or spousal support), child custody and child support, and equitable apportionment of property and debts. Mediation and other forms of alternative dispute resolution will be addressed, briefly. The primary objective of this course is to provide the student with a broad overview of South Carolina Family Law.

South Carolina Insurance Law 679 (2 credits)

This course will assist the law student in acquiring a working knowledge of insurance law. We will begin with an overview of South Carolina Insurance Law and what is unique about South Carolina’s schemes of insurance. We will then review the various techniques in dealing with the selection and control of risks, the impact of intentional conduct on the carrier’s obligation to pay claims and the duties of the policyholder and insurer after loss. Finally, we will look at various types of insurance including automobile coverage, life insurance, property insurance and how these policies shift the risk of loss from the insured to the insurer, how they operate and remedies, including bad faith claims of the insured for failure of the insurer to pay.

Prerequisites: All first year courses.

Specialized Legal Research: Intellectual Property 956-2 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course builds on fundamental research skills by providing an overview on drafting and skills techniques used for researching Intellectual Property topics in various legal settings. Note this course is not limited to legal research as IP research often requires practical, non-legal research to identify existing intellectual property owners, licensees, and assignees. In-class research exercises and database searching in fee and free platforms will be an integral component of the course. Students will complete IP research in the topical areas of patents, trademarks, copyright, trade secrets, and international IP. Students will also have the opportunity to draft documents in the areas of IP licensing as well as rights applications. Students will also learn how to develop a research plan for different types of questions and identify the best and most cost-effective research sources based on the “clients” situation.

This course assumes a basic understanding of intellectual property law and vocabulary. 

Prerequisites: LRAW I & II

Specialized Legal Research: Prepare to Practice 956-3 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This upper-level course will start with a refresher of research fundamentals and then will explore in detail legal research resources. The course will also concentrate on fine-tuning researching skills for efficiency and accuracy, and drafting research-related documents for practice.  Through skills and drafting exercises this course will focus on, among others, topics such as: drafting research journals and legal practice materials; cost-effective research and purchasing resources; docket searching; researching North and South Carolina laws and cases; and researching for better contract drafting.

Specialized Legal Research: South Carolina Law 956-1 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course is designed for students interested in a practice in South Carolina. This course builds on fundamental research skills by providing an overview on techniques  used for researching South Carolina topics in various legal settings. In-class and out-of-class research exercises and database searching in fee and free platforms will be an integral component of the course. Emphasis will be placed on developing cost-effective,  appropriate research strategies, and evaluating  South Carolina sources. Throughout the semester, students will complete readings that will allow them to complete several practice-based assignments  involving legal skills such as research, document drafting, organization, collaboration, and presentations.

Prerequisites: LRAW I & II

Specialized Legal Research: The Federal Executive Branch 956 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

The goal of this course is to give students an understanding of the sophisticated research skills required for analyzing and creating law in the Executive Branch of our Federal government, covering in greater depth various Federal research topics introduced in the first-year LRAW classes.. During the course students will gain strategies for finding and using various legal and interpretive materials produced by the President and government agencies. The course addresses traditional and electronic research methods. Students will be required to complete a series of in-class and out- of -class assignments culminating in a final project where students will research and draft a Federal Regulation. A textbook is not required for this course, instead students will use the 2017 Document Drafting Handbook and Incorporation by Reference Handbook available for free from the National Archives Administration and applicable United States Statues.

Sports Law 815 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will survey a range of legal issues presented by sports in America. Students should be prepared to learn and apply basic principles of antitrust law and labor law. Constitutional law, administrative law, contract law and tort law will also be applied. Topics will include the regulation of the professional sports labor market, drawing from contracts, and antitrust and labor law. The course will also treat the regulation of agent representation of athletes, the regulation of sports franchises and sports leagues, including the powers of commissioners' offices in major sports leagues and the regulation of intercollegiate sports.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Sports Employment Law 714 (2 credits)

This course will review the employment law aspects of sports. In every professional sport and for many amateur sports, employment legal issues govern the relationships between the athletes and their employer. Students in this course will study pertinent provisions of the collective bargaining agreements for Major League Baseball, the National Football League, and the National Basketball Association. The course will involve some practical exercises in negotiations. Students will also study the recent attempts made to convert student athletes into employees for purposes of the Fair Labor Standards Act and the National Labor Relations Act. Finally, students will analyze recent cases on the prospects of compensating student athletes for their likenesses on video games or publicity material.

State and Local Tax 8250 (2 credits)

A review of South Carolina’s state and local tax systems with a focus on sales and use taxes and property taxes. We will examine the ability of state and local governments to enact taxes. We will also review South Carolina tax policy and compare and contrast some South Carolina tax laws to tax laws of other states.

        Introduction to State and Local Tax 8251 (1 credit)

This course introduces the basic principles of state and local taxation, focusing primarily on select industries operating in a multi-jurisdictional environment. The emphasis of the course is on major principles as opposed to exceptions to general rules. Among the areas to be discussed, on a comparative law basis include state unemployment taxes, sales and use tax, income and franchise tax. Unlike federal taxes, where one law applies to all taxpayers, state tax laws vary. Therefore, rather than focusing on a single body of law, the course will examine general rules that apply in many states and will consider some common differences. In addition, because application of a particular principle may produce favorable results to one taxpayer but not another, the course will encourage students to approach an issue with an open mind, disregarding the traditional federal tax notions of “taxpayer position” and “government position.”

Strategies and Tactics for Law and Negotiation 6593 (2 credits)

Strategy is about learning to assess situations in practical terms of available resources, interactions, behaviors, and time, to better achieve one’s goals. In this course students will learn the tools to analyze some common challenges that arise in the practice of law, and to prepare strategies and tactics to tackle those challenges. By the end of the course students will have a toolkit of skills in analysis, planning and implementation that should provide a solid foundation for any challenge they may face as lawyers.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II

Survey of International Ship Finance 7749 (1 credit)

This course will address the issues practitioners routinely confront in international vessel finance transactions. Strategies for developing optimal transaction structures will be examined, in addition to coping with the differences between maritime law and land based commercial law. Conflicts of law issues inherent to an intrinsically cross-border industry will be discussed, as will the peculiar nature of maritime liens and ship mortgages. Finally, the class will explore the ramifications of recent United States Supreme Court decisions that impact maritime financial transactions.

Prerequisites: Civil Procedure I & II; Contracts I & II

The U.S. Supreme Court’s Recent Term 928 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This seminar will focus on a collection of decisions from the most recent U.S. Supreme Court term. The decisions will be studied and analyzed along several dimensions. First, the course will consider what the decisions tell us about the Court's approach to methods of constitutional and statutory interpretation. Second, the course will consider what the decisions tell us about substantive legal areas of interest, including federal courts, administrative law, executive power, the Bill of Rights, the Fourteenth Amendment, and precedent. Third, the course will consider what the decisions tell us about the ever-changing role of the Court in the American system of government.

Prerequisites: Constitutional I & II; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

This course has also been offered as a 1-credit course: Review of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Recent Term 9281

Trademark Law 7981 (2 credits) or 798 (3 credits)

This is the introductory course in the law of trademark. This course covers the law that governs how a distinctive marketplace identity can be legally protected. It will focus on the creation, maintenance, and enforcement of exclusive rights in trademark. Topics include: federal and state protection of trademarks, the common law of unfair competition, the federal remedy for unfair competition under section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, coverage of internet-related and international treaties relating to trademarks.

Prerequisite: Intellectual Property

Trademark Practice 905 (2 credits)

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This course is designed to introduce students to the day-to-day practice of a Trademark Lawyer. Students will learn the practical skills that are a critical part of being able to successfully help clients identify, use, and maintain trademarks. Trademark law will be explored through practical exercises and writing assignments, including conducting searches and writing opinion letters on the availability of a trademark; prosecuting trademarks before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), including responding to USPTO Office Actions, handling ex partes and inter partes proceedings, and the international filing systems; and exploring post-registration and enforcement issues, both domestically and abroad. If time permits, trademark licensing, U.S. Customs, and domain name issues may also be explored.

Prerequisite: Trademark Law

Trial Advocacy 690 (3 credits) graded Pass/Fail

Satisfies the Skills Requirement

The study of the skills of advocacy in civil and criminal cases with primary emphasis on jury selection, opening and closing arguments, direct and cross examinations, and objections.

Prerequisite: Evidence

U.S. Constitutional History 724 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This upper level writing course examines the history of constitutional development and change in the United States from the founding period to the present day. The course focuses on a series of major constitutional moments and crises including the drafting of the Constitution and Bill of Rights, sectional divisions over slavery and the coming of the Civil War, Reconstruction, the rise of the modern administrative state, and the struggle for equal rights. Students are urged to situate constitutional text and doctrine in dynamic political, social, economic, and cultural contexts, and thereby gain a broader and more critical understanding of tensions and forces that shape constitutional law. In the process, students interrogate pre-existing assumptions about constitutional legitimacy and immutability. In particular, students acquire skills necessary to apply or critique intelligently now dominant originalist methods of constitutional argumentation.

Prerequisites: Constitutional Law I & II; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Understanding Criminal Sentencing: A Study of Incarceration and Alternatives 707 (3 credits)

This course will familiarize students with the history, structure, and performance of the American system of sentencing and corrections. Sentencing is the process by which criminal sanctions are imposed in individual cases following criminal convictions; the corrections system implements and evaluates these sentences after they have been imposed. The course will examine sentencing theories and their application; the nature, scope and function of the corrections system; the impact of incarceration on crime and communities; the effectiveness of rehabilitation; the relationship between sanctions and crime; and, the consequences of prisoner reentry into society. There will be significant emphasis on alternatives to incarceration, looking at the local, state, and national level, and how these alternatives are best utilized to encompass all the goals of criminal sanctions. Guest lectures may include presentations by legal professionals, victims, offenders, and correctional leaders. We also plan to visit a correctional facility.

Prerequisite: Criminal Law

Upper-Level Writing Workshop 5550 (0 credit)

The Upper-Level Writing Workshop highlights basic rhetorical strategies, emphasizes the writing process, and seeks to eliminate global (content/organization) errors and local (grammar, punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and style) errors common to Legal Writing (and any other writing).

This Workshop does not satisfy the Upper-Level Writing Requirement and carries no credit. The Workshop must be taken in conjunction with courses that satisfy the Upper-Level Writing Requirement.

Victims and the Court System 924 (3 credits)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course will examine how victims are treated in the court system, both in civil and criminal cases. The course will discuss the growing field of victimology and the policies and procedures that impact victims.

Prerequisite: Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

War Crimes & Courts-Martial 848 (2 credit hours)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This course examines the law surrounding the treatment of military service members, agents, and civilians under the control of the U.S. government after they have been charged with a war crime. The class will explore what constitutes a war crime and discuss the constraints of the rules of engagement. The course will discuss the Laws of War, the Military Commissions Act, the Manual for Courts-Martial, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the War Crimes Act, as well as other relevant statutes and cases. Historical cases of war crimes, as well as recent events will provide numerous case studies with which to examine the actions of the U.S. government when it disciplines its own representatives.

Prerequisite; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

White Collar/Corporate Crime 915 (3 credit hours)

Satisfies the Upper-Level Writing Requirement when so designated in the registration material for a particular semester

This class provides an overview of the theory, substance and practice of white collar litigation in the criminal arena. It begins with a survey of the basic principles and theories underlying this area of law, including the principles that allow corporate criminal liability for the actions of individuals and individual liability for corporate actions. It addresses substantive areas of white collar criminal liability, examining the elements and issues of the most common regulatory schemes encountered in the interface between corporations and criminal law. Criminal offenses addressed include mail and wire fraud, money laundering, bribery, perjury, tax evasion, securities fraud, and other regulatory offenses. Throughout the course we will always take note of the actual practice of white collar defense and prosecution, looking at discovery, plea negotiation and trial challenges unique to allegations of corporate criminal activity. We will examine federal laws, sentencing regulations, and Supreme Court rulings that control punishment for common white collar offenses. Finally, the course considers overarching policy questions, looking at the role of federal courts in the imposition of criminal liability, and the consequences of overlapping state and federal jurisdiction.

Prerequisites: Criminal Law; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

Workers Compensation 830 (3 credit hours)

A review of South Carolina’s scheme of workers compensation including total and permanent disability, loss of wage earning capacity, dependency, notice and claim, employer-employee relationship, and third-party liability and subrogation rights of the employer and carrier.

Prerequisites: Torts I & II; Satisfactory completion of 27 credit hours

8301 Workers Compensation Practice, 2 credits

Satisfies the Skills or Drafting Requirement

This is a skills course for students interested in practicing the field of workers’ compensation. The course will emphasize South Carolina Workers’ Compensation practice and procedure and will require the student to participate in the preparation of a mock workers’ compensation claim from initial client intake and interview to the trial stage. Students will prepare a new client intake form, a deposition checklist, an initial pleading, a motion, an affidavit, a discovery checklist, written discovery requests, an exhibit list, a witness list, a trial notebook, and a final order. Planned class participation exercises include client interviews, depositions, witness interviews, and an abbreviated mock trial. Alternative dispute resolution methods also will be discussed. Students completing this course should be equipped to handle a simple workers’ compensation claim from start to finish.

 

Elective Courses Mini-Outline

J.D. Elective course descriptions are included on this page: