Preserving Error for Appellate Review
In litigation, “wait and see” is not a strategy. Should a trial judge enter an erroneous adverse ruling that prejudicially affects your client, you should have a ready plan and be prepared to implement it immediately to preserve an appellate challenge. This need for quick action arises because, with limited exceptions, appellate courts will not consider issues raised for the first time on appeal. We will tackle the steps required to preserve state court error for appellate review and identify some contexts that call for attention and scrutiny at the trial level. Audio versions of Beverly Hills Bar Association programs are eligible for Self-Study CLE credit in California. Visit www.bhba.org/podcasts for more information.

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Social Media on Trial: Unpacking the Landmark 2026 Decisions

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Family Law Transfers . . . All Good Maybe Not – Clawback Litigation in Bankruptcy

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Nuts and Bolts of Non-Competes in California (2026 Edition)

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Don’t Assume the Worst: Why Conversation Still Matters in Litigation

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Billionaire's WARNING: I'm SELLING. The Crash Is Already Here!

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After The Court Judgment. Invoke Your Due Process Right To Know Why. Your Right To Ask Why.

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Real Trial Lawyer Rates Suits Scenes For Realism

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Watch Ukrainian Drones OBLITERATE a Russian Jet

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She Asks if I Know Coldplay and This Singer Shocks The Street

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Mullin, Sec. of Homeland Security v. Doe (2026): Supreme Court Oral Argument on TPS Terminations

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Sovereign Citizen Comes to Court Pissed Off — Accuses Judge of Fraud Demands Dismissal!

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Ames Moot Court Competition 2006

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Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

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What Every Construction Lawyer Should Know about Mandatory Mediation Under SB440

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How Proctor’s texts in Karen Read lawsuit could free dangerous criminals

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Japan – Schweden Highlights | Gruppe F, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

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Stop Rambling: The 3-2-1 Speaking Trick That Makes You Sound Like A CEO

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I Spent 20 Days Building the Cheapest Forest House Alone to Live: Solo Bushcraft (Full)

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Last Lecture: Robert Sitkoff on resolving disputes through law, not ‘baseball bat’

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