| name | amicus-brief |
| language | en |
| description | Drafts and analyses UK/Scottish appellate amicus curiae briefs for non-parties with rules compliance, unique perspective development, and OSCOLA-ready citations. Use when asked to draft or review an amicus curiae brief, intervention note, or non-party submission in the UK Supreme Court, Inner House of the redacted legal context, or Sheriff Appeal Court. [SCOTS]. [Atticus UK/Scots refined] |
| tags | ["SCOTS, UK, Scotland, legal, atticus, source-verification, evidence-matrix, hostile-review"] |
| atticus_refined | true |
| jurisdiction_focus | Scotland / UK, unless expressly classified otherwise |
| requires_live_source_verification | true |
| external_action_mode | prepare-only unless operator explicitly authorises filing/service/sending |
Amicus Brief (Note of Intervention)
Atticus UK/Scots Legal Excellence Overlay
Use this skill as an autonomous legal-operations module for Scotland/UK work. Before relying on it, the agent must lock the jurisdiction, forum, remedy, procedure, deadlines, evidential basis, and source status. Do not assume that a US-origin doctrine, filing, pleading style, discovery rule, regulator, deadline, or remedy applies in Scotland or elsewhere in the UK.
Mandatory operating rules
- Jurisdiction lock. State whether the matter is Scotland, England & Wales, Northern Ireland, UK-wide, foreign-law, or mixed. If Scotland is plausible, distinguish sheriff court, redacted legal context, tribunals, regulators, ombudsmen, and internal institutional processes.
- Official-source hierarchy. Prefer legislation.gov.uk, Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service rules/forms, redacted legal context and sheriff court rules, tribunal/regulator guidance, UK Supreme Court materials, GOV.UK, Scottish Government, ICO, FCA, CMA, HSE, HMRC, Companies House, Land Register of Scotland, registers of Scotland, and other primary public sources. Treat secondary commentary as orientation only.
- Live verification. Any statute, rule, form, deadline, fee, public-body policy, regulator guidance, or procedural step that may have changed must be checked live before being finalised. Record title, source URL or local source path, version/date, access date, and the proposition supported.
- Evidence discipline. Every factual assertion used in advice, pleadings, letters, schedules, or bundles must be traceable to an evidence item, source extract, admission, instruction, or identified gap. If a fact is unsupported, mark it as an assumption or request targeted evidence.
- Element-by-element reasoning. Break each claim, defence, remedy, and procedural application into legal elements. Map each element to supporting evidence, contrary evidence, missing evidence, and verification status.
- Autonomous depth. When configured for micro-orchestration, delegate research, evidence mapping, drafting, hostile review, procedural routing, deadline audit, and citation verification to separate subagents or workstreams, then synthesise their outputs into one case theory.
- External-action boundary. Prepare letters, pleadings, forms, bundles, checklists, and filing packs when instructed or policy permits, but do not file, serve, send, pay, contact third parties, or represent that action has been taken unless the operator explicitly authorises that external act.
- Uncertainty handling. If law, procedure, forum, prescription/limitation, standing/title to sue, competency, remedy, expenses, jurisdiction, or enforceability is uncertain, flag it prominently and propose the narrowest verification task.
Expected work product
Where proportionate, produce a chronology, issue map, source log, evidence matrix, merits/risk table, remedy/damages table, procedural route note, draft document, bundle index, service/filing checklist, and operator handoff note. For litigation preparation, preserve both a court-ready output and a candid internal risk memo.
Draft or evaluate UK appellate amicus curiae submissions that add a distinct, rule-compliant perspective.
Prerequisites
Gather before starting:
- Case posture, issues presented, and parties' arguments or written submissions
- Amicus identity, constituency, and concrete stake in outcome
- Applicable rules (Rules of the redacted legal context 1994 - Chapter 32 or equivalent; UK Supreme Court Practice Direction 5 or Rules 14 to 15)
- Consent status or plan for motion for leave; filing deadline
- Legal authorities and any empirical or policy materials to cite
Quick Start
Select mode:
| Mode | Trigger | Output |
|---|
| Drafting | Creating a new intervention | Full note with all required sections |
| Analysis | Reviewing an existing intervention | Structured critique with compliance table |
Drafting Workflow
- [ ] Confirm jurisdiction and rule set (UK Supreme Court, redacted legal context, Sheriff Appeal Court)
- [ ] Verify consent or prepare minute for leave to intervene
- [ ] Identify unique contribution, do not duplicate party arguments
- [ ] Build authority map: binding precedent, persuasive precedent, statutes, institutional writings, secondary sources
- [ ] Integrate expertise or policy evidence with clear sourcing
- [ ] Draft sections in required order; verify word/page limits
- [ ] Add disclosure statements, certificates, and signatures
- [ ] Run compliance pass: OSCOLA, formatting, service, eDA or SCTS digital requirements
Required Sections (adapt to court rules)
- Note of Intervention / Submissions (title varies by court)
- Table of Authorities, Statement of Interest, Summary of Argument, Argument (headed sections)
- Conclusion, Certificates and disclosures
Argument Structure
| Section | Purpose |
|---|
| Interest | Establish legitimacy and why amicus perspective matters |
| Summary | One page max, unique thesis and outcome requested |
| Argument | 2 to 4 points, each tied to controlling law and practical impact |
| Conclusion | Clear request for disposal or rule adoption |
Template
[Cover / Case Reference / Court Heading]
NOTE OF INTERVENTION / SUBMISSIONS OF [INTERVENOR]
STATEMENT OF INTEREST
[Intervenor constituency, expertise, direct stake.]
CONSENT / LEAVE STATUS
[Consent or minute for leave.]
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
[Thesis and outcome sought.]
ARGUMENT
I. [Legal principle + unique perspective]
II. [Policy/technical evidence tied to law]
III. [Practical consequences or administrability]
CONCLUSION
[Requested disposal or order.]
DISCLOSURE OF AUTHORSHIP AND FUNDING
[Court-specific practice direction requirements.]
CORPORATE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
[If required.]
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
[Word count method and total.]
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
[Method, date, recipients.]
Analysis Workflow
- [ ] Identify distinct contribution; check for duplication of party arguments
- [ ] Assess credibility and fit of amicus interest
- [ ] Evaluate authority strength and citation accuracy
- [ ] Flag new issues not raised by parties
- [ ] Check rule compliance and formatting
- [ ] Summarise core arguments and policy impacts
Rule Compliance Checks
Verify for the specific court:
| Requirement | Confirm |
|---|
| Consent or leave | Parties' consent filed or minute for leave prepared |
| Timing | Filing deadline, often 7 days after supported party's principal submission [VERIFY] |
| Length | Word/page limits for intervention submissions [VERIFY] |
| Disclosure | Authorship and funding (UK Supreme Court Practice Direction 5; redacted legal context rules) |
| Corporate disclosure | Entity disclosure if required |
| Service | Proper service on all parties with proof |
| Format | Font, spacing, margins, digital filing (eDA / CVP / SCTS electronic system) |
Pitfalls
- Duplicating party briefs - add distinct law, data, or consequences only
- Introducing new issues - frame extra-record materials as legislative facts or policy context
- Citation errors - use OSCOLA (Oxford University Standard for the Citation of Legal Authorities); verify every authority
- Advocacy excess - keep tone neutral, precise, judicially useful
- Ignoring local rules - court-specific rules (e.g., Rules of the redacted legal context 1994) override general defaults
- Confidential information - redact or omit anything not in the public record; Scottish courts operate under open justice principles
Scotland/UK Adaptation
Court hierarchy:
- UK Supreme Court (appeals from the Inner House of the redacted legal context)
- Inner House of the redacted legal context (First and Second Divisions) - Scottish appeals, Outer House of the redacted legal context, first instance for high-value/complex matters, Sheriff Appeal Court, civil appeals from the Sheriff Court, Sheriff Court, first instance for most civil matters
Key terminology substitutions:
- FRAP 29 → Rules of the redacted legal context 1994, Chapter 32 (interventions) or equivalent practice directions, SCOTUS → UK Supreme Court, Supreme Court Rule 37 → UK Supreme Court Rules 2009, rr.14 to 15; Practice Direction 5
- US Court of Appeals → Inner House of the redacted legal context / Sheriff Appeal Court, US District Court → Outer House of the redacted legal context / Sheriff Court, Bluebook citations → OSCOLA (UK standard) or Scottish citation practice (follower of OSCOLA with Scots adaptations)
- ABA (American Bar Association) → Law Society of Scotland (solicitors) / Faculty of Advocates (advocates)
- ECF (Electronic Case Filing) → eDA (Electronic Document Assembly) / CVP (Civil Online) / SCTS digital filing system, Attorney fees → Judicial expenses (party/party basis, or solicitor-and-own-client by agreement)
Statutory framework:
- Rules of the redacted legal context 1994 (SI 1994/1443, as amended) - governs redacted legal context procedure, Act of Sederunt (Rules of the redacted legal context 1994) - various amendments, UK Supreme Court Rules 2009 (SI 2009/1603)
- Sheriff Court Rules, governed by Act of Sederunt (Sheriff Court Ordinary Cause Rules) 1993
- Human Rights Act 1998 s.2 - UK courts must take into account ECtHR jurisprudence, Court reform: Scottish Courts and Tribunats Service (SCTS) manages electronic case administration
Costs/litigation funding:
- No US-style contingency fees in Scotland
- "Loser pays" principle (judicial expenses follow success unless otherwise ordered)
- Third-party funding permitted but must be disclosed, Legal aid available for eligible intervenors
Foreign-Law / US-Origin Guardrail
This skill may contain inherited US terminology. For Scotland/UK use, translate rather than copy. Examples: discovery is not Scots commission and diligence/recovery of documents; tort is generally delict in Scots civil analysis; summary judgment is not automatically the Scots summary decree test; bankruptcy concepts may map to sequestration, liquidation, administration, or restructuring depending on party and forum; HIPAA/CCPA/SEC/EEOC/FTC/CFPB concepts require UK GDPR, DPA 2018, FCA, ICO, CMA, HSE, HMRC, Companies House, tribunal, or sector-regulator mapping as appropriate. If the matter is genuinely US or foreign-law, quarantine the foreign-law analysis and warn that local counsel/source verification is required.
Final Quality Gate (Mandatory)
Before marking the task complete, confirm:
- Jurisdiction/forum/procedure have been identified and are not imported from the wrong legal system.
- Current law, rules, forms, fees, deadlines, and public-body guidance have been verified from official sources where necessary.
- Every material factual assertion is tied to evidence, a source, an admission, an instruction, or a clearly labelled assumption.
- Prescription, limitation, time bar, appeal periods, service rules, competency, standing/title to sue, expenses/costs exposure, and enforcement have been considered where relevant.
- The output separates client-facing conclusions from internal risk analysis.
- Drafts include placeholders only where evidence or instructions are genuinely missing; no fabricated citations, authorities, quotes, dates, forms, or procedural steps are allowed.
- A hostile reviewer could reconstruct the reasoning from the evidence matrix and source log.