Lesson 8 min 20 XP
Courtroom Etiquette
The unwritten rules of mock trial — how to address the judge, handle objections, and maintain professionalism.
Professionalism in the Courtroom
Mock trial judges score professionalism. Here are the rules:
Addressing the Court
- Always say 'Your Honor' when addressing the judge
- Stand when speaking to the judge, examining witnesses, or making objections
- Ask permission: 'May it please the court, the prosecution is ready to proceed'
- Never argue with the judge's ruling — say 'Thank you, Your Honor' and move on
Objections
- Stand and state: 'Objection, Your Honor — [grounds]'
- Common grounds: hearsay, leading (on direct), speculation, relevance, foundation
- If the judge asks for a response, the other attorney explains why it's admissible
- Ruling: 'Sustained' (objection wins) or 'Overruled' (question is allowed)
- Don't object to everything — judges penalize frivolous objections
General Conduct
- Dress professionally (business formal)
- Never speak out of turn
- Don't visibly react to testimony or rulings (no eye-rolling, sighing, or whispering)
- Address opposing counsel respectfully
- Thank each witness after examination: 'No further questions, Your Honor'