Robert J Mongeluzzi

Robert J Mongeluzzi

November 03, 2020 | The Legal Intelligencer

Using Themes as an Effective Trial Advocacy Tool

A consistent, unified and cohesive theme allows you to take the theory of your case and make it easy to understand and remember. The perfect theme is one that you will introduce in opening, reinforce through direct and cross examination and then tie together in closing.

By Robert J. Mongeluzzi

8 minute read

August 14, 2020 | The Legal Intelligencer

Winning Your Construction Case: Cross-Examining the Superintendent

In the context of construction cases, depositions, after the exchange of significant requisite written discovery, are the most important tool for winning your case. In reality, whether there is a settlement or a verdict, complex construction cases are won in the deposition room, not the courtroom.

By Robert J. Mongeluzzi, Andrew R. Duffy and Michael A. Budner

8 minute read

November 25, 2014 | The Legal Intelligencer

Should You Be Using a Focus Group?

Should you be using a focus group? That is the question every trial lawyer must answer before trying a catastrophic injury or high-stakes case.

By Robert J. Mongeluzzi, Andrew R. Duffy and Jeffrey P. Goodman

6 minute read

September 19, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Handling Construction Accidents

Construction accident litigation, like the construction process itself, is highly specialized and complex, involving tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of documents.

By Robert J. Mongeluzzi

5 minute read

October 03, 2005 | Law.com

Handling Construction Accidents

Construction accident litigation, like the construction process itself, is highly specialized and complex, involving tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of documents. Most commercial construction projects involve a standard form of contract between the owner and general contractor prepared by the American Institute of Architects. Robert J. Mongeluzzi says these contractual provisions form the theme of a plaintiff's case and provide ammunition for proving liability against the defendants.

By Robert J. Mongeluzzi

5 minute read