--- name: casesim-opposing-counsel-simulator description: Use when an attorney wants to model opposing counsel's strategy, predict their likely motions and tactical moves, understand their settlement posture, and build a playbook to pre-empt attacks. Calibrated by firm reputation, counsel personality, and case type. Covers aggressive, collaborative, and dilatory strategies; likely motions (MTD, MSJ, discovery disputes); forum-shopping and parallel proceedings. Output is a structured opposing-counsel playbook for negotiation leverage, settlement strategy, and hearing preparation. license: MIT metadata: id: casesim.opposing-counsel-simulator category: casesim jurisdictions: [__multi__] priority: P1 intent: [litigation-prep, strategy, opposing-counsel, settlement-leverage] related: [casesim-judge-bench-perspective, casesim-client-q-and-a-prep, casesim-cross-examination-rehearsal, casesim-outcome-probability-estimator, casesim-settlement-vs-trial-ev-calculator] source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal) version: "1.0" --- # Opposing Counsel Simulator — Build the Other Side's Playbook ## When to use this Invoke when: - An attorney needs to anticipate opposing counsel's strategy before a hearing, negotiation, or filing - A litigation team wants to understand what motions the other side will likely bring - A transactional lawyer needs to model the counterparty's negotiating approach - A settlement team wants to understand the other side's likely settlement posture before entering discussions - A client asks "what will they do next?" and the attorney needs a structured answer ## Inputs | Input | Required | Notes | |---|---|---| | Case summary | Yes | Facts, claims, current status | | Opposing party's interests | Yes | What outcome do they actually want? What would they take? | | Opposing firm / counsel identity | Optional | Known firm reputation, counsel personality, past litigation behavior | | Forum and jurisdiction | Yes | Shapes available tactics | | Stage of proceedings | Yes | Pre-filing / discovery / pre-trial / settlement discussions / post-judgment | | Known constraints on opposing side | Optional | Budget, reputational exposure, client instruction limits, insurance involvement | ## Strategic calibration by style Louis builds the simulation around one of three primary strategic styles (or a blend): ### Aggressive / "Scorched Earth" Characteristics: high volume of motions; discovery maximalism; forum-shopping; quick to escalate; uses litigation as a pressure tactic against client resources. Predicts: - Early procedural motions (jurisdiction challenges, service objections, preliminary objections) to create cost and delay - Broad discovery requests targeting privileged material - Motions to dismiss on technical grounds before engaging on merits - Counterclaims calibrated to increase the defendant's exposure and the settlement price - Parallel regulatory complaints or press activity to increase pressure Counter-strategy: procedurally tight filings; early application to narrow discovery scope; clear privilege logs; anticipate and prepare for each early motion now. ### Collaborative / "Problem-Solver" Characteristics: signals willingness to negotiate early; uses correspondence strategically to build a reasonable-person record; co-operates on procedural matters. Predicts: - Early without-prejudice settlement correspondence - Motions only on matters where they have a strong legal basis - Discovery cooperation as a trust-building signal, with selective fights on the issues that matter most - Openness to mediation as a parallel track Counter-strategy: take the co-operative signals at face value while maintaining full litigation readiness; do not mistake collaborative style for weak substantive position. ### Dilatory / "Attrition" Characteristics: maximizes time; frequent extensions; complex discovery; appeals every intermediate order. Predicts: - Applications for extension of time at every step - Discovery disputes calibrated to generate satellite litigation - Appeals of interlocutory orders (procedural harassment) - Leveraging of client's financial constraints Counter-strategy: apply for directions / case management orders early to lock in a timetable; resist extensions unless clearly justified; consider a costs order application at an early stage if dilatory behavior is documented. ## Likely motions map Based on the case facts and forum, Louis generates a map of likely motions by stage: ### Pre-Hearing / Pleadings Stage - Jurisdictional challenge (especially in cross-border MENA matters: UAE court vs. DIFC vs. arbitral tribunal) - Improper service challenge - Preliminary objection to standing - Application to strike / demurrer - Motion to compel arbitration (if arbitral clause present but claimant filed in court) ### Discovery Stage - Broad discovery requests targeting email communications and privilege boundaries - Motion to compel (if your side is slow on production) - Motion for protective order (if your side is too aggressive) - Expert disclosure disputes ### Pre-Trial / Pre-Hearing Stage - Motion for summary judgment / summary disposal - Motion to exclude expert evidence (Daubert / FRE 702 equivalent in applicable forum) - Motion in limine on specific evidence - Procedural motions to delay hearing ### Settlement Stage - Walk-away bluff (final demand framed as "last offer" when it is not) - Conditional settlement offers that restructure rather than resolve - Settlement structured to shift future liability (indemnities, warranties, non-disclosure obligations) ## Likely settlement posture Based on the case analysis and opposing party profile: | Factor | Effect on settlement posture | |---|---| | Strong merit position | Lower motivation to settle; higher opening demand | | Reputational risk | Motivation to settle quietly; will pay a premium for confidentiality | | Insurance coverage | Settlement authority may be with insurer, not client; adjuster has own incentives | | Liquidity constraint | High motivation to settle quickly; may accept a low figure that closes the matter | | Business relationship | Will prioritize relationship-preserving resolution over maximum recovery | | Public company | Sensitive to litigation uncertainty on earnings; motivated to settle before a major disclosure event | | KSA / government-adjacent counterparty | Political and relationship dimensions may outweigh pure legal merits | ## Parallel proceedings / jurisdictional tactics In MENA disputes, jurisdiction shopping is a significant tactical tool: - A party may file in UAE onshore courts, DIFC Courts, and an arbitral tribunal simultaneously, then use the most favorable forum for interim relief - A party may use a Lebanese court injunction to freeze assets before a DIFC arbitration award is obtained - Forum non conveniens arguments are available in DIFC/ADGM but not in civil law forums - Anti-suit injunctions: available in DIFC/ADGM; not available in UAE onshore or KSA courts Louis maps the likely jurisdictional moves and how to respond to each. ## Output 1. **Opposing counsel playbook** (structured by stage: pre-filing → discovery → hearing → settlement) 2. **Predicted motions list** (with likelihood rating and recommended preparation for each) 3. **Settlement posture analysis** (motivation to settle, likely range, tactical levers) 4. **Counter-strategy recommendations** (one-line action for each predicted move) ## Limits - The simulation is based on the facts provided and general patterns; it cannot replicate access to actual legal strategy documents or internal client instructions of the opposing side. - Calibration by firm / counsel personality relies on general reputation; individual counsel may deviate from firm norms. - This is a preparation tool, not a prediction of what opposing counsel will do. ## Related skills - [[casesim-judge-bench-perspective]] - [[casesim-client-q-and-a-prep]] - [[casesim-cross-examination-rehearsal]] - [[casesim-outcome-probability-estimator]] - [[casesim-settlement-vs-trial-ev-calculator]]