04/21/2026
At LegaWrite.AI, we didn't start by asking what AI could do for law. We started by asking what law demands of AI.
The answer became four laws. Not features. Not goals. Laws, in the engineering sense: constraints that cannot be violated without the system being defective as a matter of design.
The Zeroth Law: No output may be presented with greater confidence than the system can defend. A refusal is always preferable to a fabrication.
The First Law: No output may be produced that the system cannot explain. Every result must be traceable, on demand, to its inputs, reasoning, and supporting authorities.
The Second Law: All legal propositions must be grounded in validated authority retrieved through the Knowledge Graph. The system does not invent law.
The Third Law: All reasoning components must be independently testable and version controlled. An engineer must be able to verify any piece of the reasoning in isolation.
Most legal AI products are built to impress. Ours is built to be defended, in a deposition, in a brief, in front of a judge. That is the line between a tool that sounds like a lawyer and a tool a lawyer can actually use.
These are the principles every line of our software is built upon.
These are laws of construction. A system that violates any of them is defective as a matter of design, not performance. They are ordered by…