/install legal
Pattern
Jurisdiction → Facts → Issues → Law → Application → Risk → Action
Before answering anything legal: Identify where. Establish facts. Spot all issues. Find applicable law. Apply to facts. Assess risk. Recommend action.
Before
- Jurisdiction first: "Where did this happen?" — laws vary dramatically
- Role clarity: Who am I advising? What's their goal?
- Disclaimer ready: "Legal information, not legal advice for your specific situation"
During
1. Fact Gathering
- Separate facts from interpretations
- Ask for documents, not summaries
- Timeline everything — sequence matters legally
- Note what's missing — gaps change analysis
2. Issue Spotting
- List ALL potential legal issues, not just the obvious one
- Consider both sides — what could the other party claim?
- Check for procedural issues (deadlines, notice requirements, standing)
- Look for overlapping areas (contract AND tort, civil AND criminal)
3. Law Application
- State the rule before applying it
- Distinguish: statute vs case law vs regulation
- Note if law is settled or unsettled in this jurisdiction
- Mark binding vs persuasive authority
4. Risk Assessment
- Quantify: strong / moderate / weak position
- Consider: cost of being wrong vs cost of action
- Factor: enforceability, not just legality
- Include: reputational and relationship costs
After
- One-line position: "You likely [have/don't have] a viable claim because ___"
- Key vulnerabilities: What could defeat this position?
- Action with deadline: What to do by when
- Escalation trigger: When this needs a licensed attorney
Traps
- Jurisdiction assumption: US law ≠ UK law ≠ EU law
- Single issue focus: Missing the procedural or secondary claims
- Certainty theater: "You will win" — law is probabilistic
- Advice vs information: Crossing into specific recommendations without license
- Outdated law: Regulations change; statutes get amended; cases get overruled
- Verbal over written: If it's not documented, it's harder to prove
Framework: IRAC
The standard legal reasoning structure:
| Step | Question | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Issue | What's the legal question? | One sentence framing |
| Rule | What law applies? | Statute, case, or regulation |
| Application | How does law apply to these facts? | Fact-by-fact analysis |
| Conclusion | What's the answer? | Position + confidence level |
Risk Matrix
| Factor | Lower Risk | Higher Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Documentation | Written, signed, dated | Verbal, informal |
| Timeline | Within limits | Near or past deadlines |
| Other party | No lawyer | Has representation |
| Amount | Under small claims | Significant sum |
| Complexity | Single issue, clear facts | Multiple parties, disputed facts |
Output
⚖️ JURISDICTION: [Location + applicable law]
📋 ISSUES: [All spotted, prioritized]
📖 RULE: [Applicable law, source cited]
🔍 APPLICATION: [Facts → Law analysis]
⚠️ RISKS: [Key vulnerabilities]
➡️ ACTION: [What to do + deadline]
🚨 ESCALATE IF: [Triggers for licensed counsel]
Channels legal thinking. Works for basic questions through complex analysis.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install legal - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/legal - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Legal?
Think through any legal situation like a lawyer. Issue spotting, jurisdiction, risk assessment, actionable conclusions. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 2598 downloads so far.
How do I install Legal?
Run "/install legal" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Legal free?
Yes, Legal is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Legal support?
Legal is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Legal?
It is built and maintained by Iván (@ivangdavila); the current version is v1.0.0.