Rule against Perpetuities: Before you dive into Barbri and lose way
Book Details
Author(s)Yoshiko Ikeda
ISBN / ASINB00X2F4DRQ
ISBN-13978B00X2F4DR4
Sales Rank2,215,683
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Rule Against Perpetuities
Before you dive into Barbri and lose way….
Hello. Thank you for coming to my kindle page!!!
This is an article for bar students who are tackling with Estate law, especially “rule against perpetuities,” RAP so called, one of the biggest notorious, rigorous issues when you plan to sit for the bar exam.
You know RAP is really rigorous….
If you start studying this rule via Barbri or Kaplan first time, I can count on that you may lose your way. That’s really normal. They are too difficult and not beginner friendly.
You don’t need to worry about that anymore.
Honestly, when I opened barbri’s Estate law first time, I was spaced out in no time.
Then re-read, re-read, and went to question sets…. You know what happened to pitty me. I just lost my confidence. It was hopeless.
Join the club, this article is students just like me.
Let’s escape from deep, dark RAP forest….
I could finally get out from the pitfall, thanks for some websites. I want to share them and add some super-kind commentary for beginners.
I am a Japanese lawyer for more than 12 years and fresh out of American law school, preparing for the bar exam now.
In Japan, there is only fee simple absolute in our civil law. No fee simple determinable, no fee simple subject to condition precedent, no fee simple subject to executory interest, no life estate. It’s quite simple to convey estates in Japan. There is no RAP which is time consuming and one of the biggest causes of malpractice. This huge difference between the US and Japan made me sick. Such a serious RAP patient could overcome the issue. Even I could. So you can, absolutely, of course, no doubt!!!
I hope this article will be helpful to you. God bless you!!!
Yoshiko Ikeda
Japanese attorney, registered since 2002
Registration number 29756, JFBA & DTBA
Graduated from Chiba Univ. in 1993
Passed the Japanese Bar in 2000
Graduated from Judicial Research and Training Institute in 2002
Graduated from Temple University Beasley School of Law in 2012. (LLM)
MPRE score 113 in 20113
I wanted to sit for the CA bar in 2014 or 2015, but my dad-in-law and loving gran-ma passed away, so I could not. Because of my hectic schedule, I don’t think I could go back to the US by 2016. I’ll be back anyway!!!
1 First Step
Beginner Friendly Questions with Elvis!
2 Second Step
Easy Reading with an excellent bar student
3 Third Step
Step up with Unique but a bit tough questions
4 Fourth Step
Use Wiki or not
5 Fifth Step
Go to your textbooks, such as barbri or Kaplan
Before you dive into Barbri and lose way….
Hello. Thank you for coming to my kindle page!!!
This is an article for bar students who are tackling with Estate law, especially “rule against perpetuities,” RAP so called, one of the biggest notorious, rigorous issues when you plan to sit for the bar exam.
You know RAP is really rigorous….
If you start studying this rule via Barbri or Kaplan first time, I can count on that you may lose your way. That’s really normal. They are too difficult and not beginner friendly.
You don’t need to worry about that anymore.
Honestly, when I opened barbri’s Estate law first time, I was spaced out in no time.
Then re-read, re-read, and went to question sets…. You know what happened to pitty me. I just lost my confidence. It was hopeless.
Join the club, this article is students just like me.
Let’s escape from deep, dark RAP forest….
I could finally get out from the pitfall, thanks for some websites. I want to share them and add some super-kind commentary for beginners.
I am a Japanese lawyer for more than 12 years and fresh out of American law school, preparing for the bar exam now.
In Japan, there is only fee simple absolute in our civil law. No fee simple determinable, no fee simple subject to condition precedent, no fee simple subject to executory interest, no life estate. It’s quite simple to convey estates in Japan. There is no RAP which is time consuming and one of the biggest causes of malpractice. This huge difference between the US and Japan made me sick. Such a serious RAP patient could overcome the issue. Even I could. So you can, absolutely, of course, no doubt!!!
I hope this article will be helpful to you. God bless you!!!
Yoshiko Ikeda
Japanese attorney, registered since 2002
Registration number 29756, JFBA & DTBA
Graduated from Chiba Univ. in 1993
Passed the Japanese Bar in 2000
Graduated from Judicial Research and Training Institute in 2002
Graduated from Temple University Beasley School of Law in 2012. (LLM)
MPRE score 113 in 20113
I wanted to sit for the CA bar in 2014 or 2015, but my dad-in-law and loving gran-ma passed away, so I could not. Because of my hectic schedule, I don’t think I could go back to the US by 2016. I’ll be back anyway!!!
1 First Step
Beginner Friendly Questions with Elvis!
2 Second Step
Easy Reading with an excellent bar student
3 Third Step
Step up with Unique but a bit tough questions
4 Fourth Step
Use Wiki or not
5 Fifth Step
Go to your textbooks, such as barbri or Kaplan
