Litigation before the MSPB and EEOC involves parties competing to convince the trier of fact that their client should prevail. Motions of various kinds can play an integral role in persuading the judge or courts to rule in your favor and can dictate the success or failure of a case. The uses of motions are many, restricted only by the creativity of the litigants and the limits of applicable administrative law or procedure. In each forum, the authors address matters that arise before, during and after the hearing.
Ernest Hadley and Sarah Tuck provide guidance in motions practice before both the MSPB and the EEOC. Augmenting the information found in the Guide to MSPB Law and Practice, the Guide to Federal Sector EEO Law and Practice, and the Discovery Practice before the MSPB book, Motions Practice is useful to federal agencies, labor unions, attorneys, arbitrators, and adjudicators. Scattered throughout this book are samples and forms. Of particular interest for those practicing before the EEOC is the section concerning summary judgment, a useful tool for disposing of a case without a hearing.
The book is printed in a handy 8 1/2" x 11" format, and forms may be photocopied or scanned to save time; with the CD-ROM version of this title, these forms may simply be printed. Any attorney, union representative, or agency representative who handles matters before the MSPB and EEOC will want this compendium.
280 pages.
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