Supreme Court Strikes Down President’s IEEPA Tariff Authority: What Businesses Need to Know
February 20, 2026
In his article, titled “Screen Time: Strategies for Effective Legal Writing in the Digital Age,” highlighted the significance of focusing on the structure and readability of legal briefs to enhance comprehension and retention. From the article:
For many years, North Carolina’s appellate courts required attorneys to use Courier. For perhaps as long, the Fourth Circuit’s opinions were published in a Courier-type font.
Appellate courts have moved away from monospaced fonts — fonts like Courier — for a reason. “Monospaced” is just a fancy way of saying that each letter or character takes up the same amount of space on a line. Monospaced fonts were designed for typewriters (so, too, was putting two spaces after a period).
We don’t write on typewriters anymore, so we should stop using monospaced fonts. They’re difficult to read. And if you’re in a court with a page limit (rather than a word limit), monospaced fonts take up more space than a proportionally spaced font.
To delve deeper into effective legal writing strategies for the digital age, read the full article by Chris Edwards on the NCBA blog here.
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