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Basic Legal Skills Finding Cases Jan. 30, 2004
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Cases: terminology Case = decision= opinion Published vs. unpublished Mandatory and persuasive authority
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Court Structure – Federal and State FederalState Court of Last Resort U.S. Supreme Court WA Supreme Court Intermediate Appellate Court ↑ Ninth Circuit* Ninth Circuit* Court of Appeals * = Circuit map WA Court of Appeals Trial Court ↑ U.S. District Court for Western District of WA King County Superior Court
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Reporters “slip opinion” → “advance sheet” → Reporter official vs. unofficial (parallel citations) National Reporter System (West) – All federal and state cases; chronological – 7 Regional Reporters (state cases) – Reporters in the Law Library, http://lib.law.washington.edu/ref/repdig.htm http://lib.law.washington.edu/ref/repdig.htm
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Traditional Case Finding Methods 1. Digests 2. American Law Reports (ALR) and Secondary Sources 3. Electronic databases
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American Digest System (West) What is a Digest? Acts as an index to the National Reporter system – find cases by legal issue or subject A tool that collects and organizes case law by subject (“topic”) and narrow sub-headings (“key numbers”) – over 400 “topics” (e.g., contracts, searches and seizures, wills) Gives brief summaries of cases – headnotes from cases
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Using Digests – 4 steps 1. Select best Digest 2. Locate Topic and Key Number 3. Read case summaries 4. Update (pocket parts etc.)
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Locating the Correct Digest 1.Jurisdiction Federal, State, Regional & Combined 2.Date Cover a set period of time – ie. 10 year blocks 3.Digests in the Law Library, http://lib.law.washington.edu/ref/repdig.htm#digests http://lib.law.washington.edu/ref/repdig.htm#digests
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Law Library has these:
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Topic and Key Number The Topic and Key Number
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Find Topic & Key Number (3 ways) 1. One good case 2. Descriptive Word Index 3. Review Topic outline
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(1) One Good Case Approach 1. You have a case that is on point 2. Find the Topic and Key Number of the relevant issue (looking in headnotes) 3. Go to that Digest volume and search for cases in your jurisdiction
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(2) Use Descriptive Word Index 1.Generate some general Search Terms 2.Look in Descriptive Word Index to narrow down terms and locate correct Topic 3.Use the Key Numbers within the Topic to pinpoint relevant issues
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Generate search terms.
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(3) Use relevant Topic Volume 1.Retrieve the Digest volume containing your Topic (on spine) 2.Scan Topic/Subject & Key Number outline 3.Browse the relevant Key Number sections for cases in your jurisdiction
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The digest topic “Animals” appears in this book
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Scan the “Analysis” table for a relevant key number
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Updating Digest Research 1.Check pocket part of volume you are using --- including Descriptive Word Index 2.Check the Interim pamphlet – updates pocket part 3. Check Mini-Digest in relevant Reporter volumes
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American Law Reports Full-text of important cases from variety of jurisdictions AND “Articles” or “annotations” providing in-depth analysis and overview of legal topic – case citations and summaries – references to other secondary sources
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Research Process for A.L.R.s 1. Look for your search term in the Index 2. Narrow down your issue and go to the appropriate volume. * Read the same as a case citation* 97 A.L.R. 3 rd 688 Volume Series Page
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Update by referring to the pocket part.
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Pocket parts will reference new, related annotations and new case law written since the original annotation.
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Finding Cases using Secondary Sources Annotated Statutes (RCWA, USCS) Citators (KeyCite and Shepard’s) Legal Encyclopedias (AmJur and CJS) Treatises (Nimmer on Copyright) Law Review Articles – Godden, Katherine A. Cartoon criminals: the unclear future of computer animation in the Minnesota criminal courtroom. (State v. Stewart, 643 N.W.2d 281, Minn. 2002.) 30 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 355-577 (2003). Looseleaf Services Words and Phrases (judicial definitions)
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Westlaw Key Number Digest: “Custom Digest”Custom Digest – Topics translated into numbers (Adoption = 17) Key Search – “scripted” searches with Key Numbers and Terms Go to http://lawschool.westlaw.comhttp://lawschool.westlaw.com
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Exercise Question: if I stop using the easement over my neighbor’s property to access my house will I lose my rights to that easement? – ½ class uses Westlaw Key Number Digest – ½ class uses Westlaw Key Search Go to: http://lawschool.westlaw.comhttp://lawschool.westlaw.com
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Lexis: Search Advisor
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Caselaw Research Checklist Preliminary Analysis – jurisdiction, terms, time period Consult Secondary Sources – note Topic/Key Numbers, cases, statutes Annotated Statutes Read cases Use Digest or other secondary sources to find more cases Update (review citators next week)
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