Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT12 S3 P3 Q16 Explanation

Legal Systems

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsInferenceLaw

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Passage

Although the legal systems of England and the United States are superficially similar, they differ profoundly in their approaches to and uses of legal reasons: substantive reasons are more common than formal reasons in the United States, whereas in England the reverse is true. This distinction reflects a difference in the visions of law as an outward expression of the community’s sense of right and justice.

Substantive reasons, as applied to law, are based on moral, economic, political, and other considerations. These reasons are found both “in the law” and “outside the law,” so to speak. Substantive reasons inform the content of a large part of the law: constitutions, statutes, contracts verdicts, and the like. Consider, for example, defendants not guilty because what they did had no adverse effect on park quiet and safety.

Formal reasons are different in that they frequently prevent substantive reasons from coming into play, even when substantive reasons are explicitly incorporated into the law at hand. For example, when a document fails to comply with stipulated requirements, the court may render the document legally ineffective. A will requiring written witness may of that rule precludes from consideration substantive arguments in favor of the will’s validity or enforcement.

Legal scholars in England and the United States have long bemused themselves with extreme examples of formal and substantive reasoning. On the one hand, formal reasoning in England has led to wooden interpretations of statutes and an unwillingness to develop the common law through judicial activism. On the other hand, freewheeling substantive liberal that the texts of some statutes have been ignored altogether.

What this question is testing

Inference

Your task

Find what must be true based on what the passage or stimulus states.

Common trap

Answers that are plausible or likely but not actually guaranteed by the text.

Winning move

Keep only the choice the statements fully support — eliminate anything that requires an extra assumption.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
16.

From the discussion of wills in the third paragraph it can be inferred that substantive arguments as to the validity of a will might be considered under which

Answer choices

  1. Trap14% picked this

    The legal rule requiring that a will be witnessed in writing does not stipulate the

  2. Trap5% picked this

    The legal rule requiring that a will be witnessed stipulates that the will must be witnessed in

  3. Trap5% picked this

    The legal ruling requiring that a will be witnessed in writing stipulates that the witnessing must be done in

  4. Trap9% picked this

    A judge rules that the law requires a will to be witnessed in writing regardless

  5. Correct67% picked this

    A judge rules that the law can be interpreted to allow for a verbal witness to a will in a

    Why this is right

    Answer E is correct.

    Skill tested: Inference · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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