Secondary Sources Contents • Introduction • ALR® • Legal Encyclopedias (Am Jur®, C.J.S.®) • Restatements of the Law • Legal Periodicals • Texts • Law Dictionaries • Uniform.

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Transcript Secondary Sources Contents • Introduction • ALR® • Legal Encyclopedias (Am Jur®, C.J.S.®) • Restatements of the Law • Legal Periodicals • Texts • Law Dictionaries • Uniform.

Secondary Sources

Contents

• Introduction

• ALR ®

• Legal Encyclopedias (Am Jur ® , C.J.S.

® )

• Restatements of the Law

• Legal Periodicals

• Texts

• Law Dictionaries

• Uniform Laws

• Digest Paragraphs, Headnotes, and Statutory Annotations

Introduction

Contents

Introduction

Primary and Secondary Law

• Primary law sources: – are statements of law by governmental institutions, such as the courts or legislatures – consists of case law, statutes, constitutions, administrative decisions, rules of court, and regulations – may be binding (mandatory) or persuasive authority • Secondary law sources: – – – – are statements about the law by legal experts explain, interpret, develop, locate, or update primary law are never binding (mandatory) authority may be persuasive authority

Introduction

Binding or mandatory law:

Applies to the current case and must be followed

Persuasive law:

Can be analogized to the current case and may be followed. Persuasive law includes primary law that is • • • law from another jurisdiction dicta a similar but different fact pattern

Secondary law

Introduction

If secondary sources aren’t binding, why use them?

– They often provide an objective overview of an area of the law; therefore they are a good place to start research in an unfamiliar area of the law.

– They may raise issues not previously considered.

– They cite or link to cases, statutes, and other secondary sources that are relevant to the current issue.

– Some secondary sources are sufficiently respected that they can be used as persuasive authority when primary source authority cannot be found.

Introduction The most useful secondary sources are available on Westlaw ® as well as in print:

– – – –

American Law Reports (ALR) American Jurisprudence 2d (Am Jur) Restatements of the Law Law reviews (depth of coverage on Westlaw varies)

– – – –

Bar journals (depth of coverage on Westlaw varies) Black’s Law Dictionary Uniform Model Laws Many treatises ®

Introduction Mr. Smith decides to throw a cocktail party for potential contributors to his favorite charity. He lavishly supplies alcoholic beverage while soliciting donations. The party is a great success. Much money is raised, and the guests show all the signs of completely enjoying themselves. Several of the guests become unruly. Mr. Smith escorts one such guest, Mr. Jones, to his car, helps him into the car, and warns him to “be careful.” Mr. Jones drives off but within a few blocks of the party crashes into another car, causing severe injuries to both himself and the occupants of the other car.

Introduction Mr. Smith’s lawyer knows that the state’s Dram Shop Law imposes liability on commercial sellers of alcohol who illegally sell alcohol to a customer who later causes injuries due to intoxication. In some states this liability extends to social hosts who accept something in return for drinks; in others it does not.

If you are unfamiliar with this area of the law in your state, secondary source materials are an excellent starting point for your research. Secondary sources: – – – provide an objective overview of the topic suggest issues you might not have thought of reference relevant cases and statutes

American Law Reports (ALR)

Contents

ALR

American Law Reports

(ALR)

• ALR editors select and report cases that represent specific legal issues that are emerging, unsettled or changing and that are of interest to to many lawyers.

• A legal scholar writes an annotation, often called an ALR “article”, using the case as the basis of the annotation. • The article explores the law of the jurisdictions that have dealt with this issue.

• The author uses this law to provide an objective analysis of the current state of this area of the law.

ALR

In print,

American Law Reports

consists of six series.

Federal Series (ALR Fed.), 1969 to date, analyzes only federal issues

– – – – –

Fifth Series (ALR5th), 1992 to date, analyzes only state issues Fourth Series (ALR4th), 90 volumes, 1980 – 1992, analyzes only state issues Third Series (ALR3d), 100 volumes, 1965 – 1980. This and the earlier series analyze both state and federal issues.

Second Series

(

ALR2d), 100 volumes, 1948 – 1965 First Series (ALR), 175 volumes, 1919 – 1948

ALR • The print articles include 1 – Total Client-Service Library research sources references • • • • • • legal encyclopedias and texts practice aids law review articles electronic search queries West Key Numbers ALR Digest ® and other – – – Article outline Index to topics included in the annotation Jurisdictional table of cited cases and statutes – Text of the annotation 1 Features vary somewhat by series.

ALR

Features of the ALR in Print

Article Outline and Index Total Client-Service Library and other research sources Table of Jurisdictions Represented

ALR

Finding Aids in Each Volume

Each recent volume includes

Contents (annotations in the volume)

– – –

Subjects Annotated in the volume Table of Cases reported in the volume Some 4th Series and all 5th Series volumes include instructions explaining

how to find an article

how to use an article

a graphic showing how to update an annotation

ALR

Finding Aids - ALR Indexes •

Multivolume

ALR Index

lists articles by subject matter

includes all ALR volumes, except those in the First Series

is updated with annual pocket parts

ALR Federal Quick Index

ALR Quick Index

for ALR 3d, 4th, 5 th and 6th series

ALR

Finding Aids ALR Digest •

ALR Digest

is divided into more than 400 topics arranged alphabetically.

Under each topic are headnotes from cases reported in the entire ALR family along with a list of the articles that deal with the particular subject in question.

ALR has a digest set.

ALR

2

d has a digest set.

ALR3d, ALR4th, ALR5th, ALR6th and ALR Fed are combined in one digest set.

ALR

Updating ALR Articles

• Check the annual supplement in the back of the main volume in the ALR 3d, 4th, and 5th series. • The supplement provides citations to more recent cases relevant to the article topic.

• Digests of cases are keyed to the correct section of each article.

• ALR2d is kept current by a multivolume

ALR2d Later Case Service.

• ALR. (First Series) is kept current by the

ALR Blue Book of Supplemental Decisions

. Each of the eight volumes covers a specific time period.

• Latest Case Service Hotline updates each supplement. The phone number (1-800-225-7488) is printed on the cover of each supplement.

ALR

Superseding and Supplementing Annotations •

The analysis of the law as presented in an early article may be changed by later case law.

Articles in the first and second series were often supplemented by a later article and the original and the supplementing articles had to be read together.

Annotation History Table

in the last volume of the ALR Index gives the history of articles in all the ALR series.

KeyCite History

on Westlaw also shows whether an ALR articles has been superseded or supplemented.

ALR

Superseding Articles

A red KeyCite flag is displayed on the superseded ALR annotations.

Superseded by

ALR

In the print ALR volumes, the lead case precedes the article or in ALR 5 th and 6 th , all cases are printed at the end of the volume.

You can use the

Find

service on Westlaw to retrieve either the ALR lead case or the ALR article.

Find 62 alr4th 1

- retrieves the case

Find 62 alr4th 16

- retrieves the article • The ALR case citation is a parallel citation to the state, regional, or federal reporter citation. •

On Westlaw, the lead case is not in the

ALR

database.

It can be found in the appropriate state, regional, or federal case database(s).

ALR

ALR on Westlaw

• In the ALR database on Westlaw, there are often very current articles that discuss recent issues of interest that have not yet appeared in the print version.

• The Total Client-Service Library and other references are accessed by clicking

Document Outline

on the

Links for

tab in the left frame of the retrieved ALR article. (See next slide.) • The Article (Annotation) Outline is accessed by clicking

Document Outline

on the

Links for

tab in the left frame. (See next slide.) • • You can also link from the Document Outline to the article’s Index and Table of Jurisdictions.

Query:

ti(“social host” /s liab!)

ALR

KeyCite and Using Westlaw as a Citator

• KeyCite Citing References articles.

for case law, statutes, federal regulations, and agency decisions will include links to citing ALR • ALR articles have

KeyCite History

and

KeyCite Citing References

links on the more recent article.

Links for

tab. KeyCite History for an ALR annotation will show if an ALR article has been superseded by a • Use Westlaw as a citator. Enter a search, such as

dram shop “social host” /s liab! /p a.l.r.!

to retrieve references to ALR articles in databases that contain cases, texts, or legal periodicals.

Legal Encyclopedias

American Jurisprudence 2d Corpus Juris Secundum ®

Contents

Encyclopedias

Legal encyclopedias

are arranged alphabetically by topic

– –

divide topics into sections have a fairly short non-analytical narrative in each section

– –

give a general, rather than in-depth, view of the law cross-reference relevant primary law

Legal encyclopedias are a good place –

to start research in an unfamiliar area of the law to get a quick, general, answer to a legal question.

Encyclopedias

American Jurisprudence 2d

Provides a broad overview of a topic

Identifies specialized vocabulary

Provides citations to primary materials and ALR annotations

Cross-references other secondary material

Encyclopedias

American Jurisprudence 2d (

Am Jur 2d

)

• The print version of Am Jur 2d consists of – – 120 volumes 1 more than 430 titles • Each volume contains a – – Table of Contents Table of Parallel References – – Table of Statutes and Rules Cited Index for articles in the volume • Topics are preceded by a detailed scope note, general cross-references, and an outline of the topic.

1 The last volume is numbered 83 because more than one volume may have the same number, for example the volumes 45, 45A, 45B.

Encyclopedias

Am Jur 2d •

The annual four-volume General Index contains definitions of words and phrases.

On Westlaw, the index can be retrieved in the AMJUR databases with a search, such as:

ci(index) ci(index) & dram-shop

There is a separate volume titled

Table of Statutes, Regulations, and Rules Cited.

Encyclopedias

Updating Am Jur 2d •

There are annual pocket supplements.

The

Am Jur Index

is issued each year.

The

New Topic Service,

in looseleaf format, introduces new material before new volumes are issued:

new topics of the law

substantial changes in the law

Bound volumes are periodically revised.

Encyclopedias

Other Am Jur Publications

American Jurisprudence Proof of Facts

– – – A multivolume set a practical guide for lawyers contains • checklists and planning advice • • preparation for trial materials examination of witnesses materials •

American Jurisprudence Trials

is a treatise on litigation practice.

American Jurisprudence Legal Forms

and

American Jurisprudence Pleading and Practice Forms (Revised)

the forms needed in the practice of law.

contain

Encyclopedias

AmJur Publications on Westlaw • American Jurisprudence 2

nd

• American Jurisprudence Proof of Facts • American Jurisprudence Trials

Encyclopedias

Corpus Juris Secundum

(C.J.S.) •

C.J.S. contains 400 broad topics, each divided into subtopics, which are sub divided into sections.

There are 164 volumes.

1 1 The last volume is numbered 101A because more than one volume may have the same number, such as 48A and 48B.

Encyclopedias

Corpus Juris Secundum

(C.J.S.) •

Each section contains a brief, “

blackletter

statement of the law, followed by a short section of text.

Footnotes reference federal and state cases.

C.J.S. cross references the titles and sections to West topics and key numbers and other secondary sources.

Encyclopedias

Corpus Juris Secundum

• There is an annual multivolume

General Index.

• Each volume has its own index.

• There are annual cumulative pocket supplements.

• Replacement volumes are issued periodically.

• Replacement volumes contain a

Table of Corresponding Sections

that cross-references replacement volumes with older volumes.

• Definitions of words and phrases are included with appropriate sections and in the volume indexes.

Portion of a CJS section under Intoxicating Liquor

Restatements of the Law

Contents

Restatements

Restatements of the Law •

Restatements of the Law are written by prominent legal scholars.

Restatements must be formally adopted by the members of the American Law Institute.

Restatements are the attempt of the American Law Institute to clarify the ever-increasing amount and complexity of case law by clear, concise restatements.

More than any other secondary source, Restatements are often accepted by the courts as persuasive authority.

Restatements • Restatements are divided into chapters, then into narrower titles, and then into numbered sections.

• Each section begins with a “ blackletter ” statement of the law.

• The blackletter statement covers a fairly broad issue. • Sub-issues are often discussed in the author’s Comments and Illustrations that follow each statement. These comments and illustrations are often cited by the courts.

Restatements

Current Restatements include

• Agency (Third) • Prudent Investor Rule (Third) • • • • • • • Apportionment of Liability (Third) • • Restitution (First) Security (First) Conflict of Law (Second) Suretyship and Guaranty (Third) Contracts (Second) • Torts (Third) Foreign Relations (Third) • Trusts (Second) Judgments (Second) • Unfair Competition (Third) Law Governing Lawyers (Third) • Wills and Donative Transfers (Third) Products Liability (Third) • Property (Third)

Restatements

Features of the Restatements include 1 – – Appendix volumes • Instead of citing relevant cases, appendix volumes contain summaries of cases that have cited each section of the Restatement.

Indexes • Restatement, First Series, has a one-volume index to all Restatements.

• Restatements, Second and Third Series, do not have a comprehensive index.

– Some have subject index for each volume.

– Recent Restatements have an index in the last volume or in a separate volume.

1 Features vary by series and by volume.

Restatements Features (continued)

Reporter’s Notes are at the end of each section or in the Appendix volumes of the agency, torts, and trust restatements.

Recent volumes have cross-references to the West Key Number System ® and ALR annotations.

Updating Restatements

Drafts of new series are published in soft-cover format

– – –

Cumulative annual supplements Interim case citation pamphlet Pocket parts

Restatements

Restatements on Westlaw

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – Agency Conflict of Laws Contracts Employment Law The Foreign Relations Law of the United States Judgments Law Governing Lawyers Property Restitution Security and Suretyship and Guaranty Torts Trusts Unfair Competition U.S. Law of International Commercial Arbitration

Restatements • Online documents contain the text, comments, and illustrations of the Restatement, Case Citations to Restatements, Reporter’s Notes and Cross References.

• A

Table of Contents

link opens the Table of Contents for the Restatement at the Restatement section being displayed. • Drafts of future series are included in the databases.

Legal Periodicals

Law Reviews and Journals, Bar Journals, and Others Contents

Periodicals Legal periodicals are published by many sources. There are

– – – – –

Law School Reviews and Journals Bar Association Journals Legal Newspapers Topical and Special Interest Periodicals Newsletters

Periodicals

Law Reviews and Journals

• are published by student-editors at law schools • can be general or focus on a specific area of the law • number of issues published per year varies by publication • often solicit lead articles from legal experts, generally law professors, which usually address narrow legal issues • are often heavily footnoted

Periodicals Law Reviews and Journals (continued) • Notes and Comments are written by student members of the law review –

Notes

usually are critical analysis of recent court cases or new statutes.

Comments

are usually critiques on issues of current interest.

• Book reviews are included in some law review and journal publications.

• All law reviews and journals are included in the JLR (Journals and Law Reviews) database on Westlaw. Each publication also has a separate database.

Periodicals

Bar Association Periodicals

• National, state, and local associations publish journals.

• •

ABA Journal

is a leading bar journal.

Bar association publications tend to emphasize more practical aspects of the law and do not crusade to change or criticize the law.

• These publications usually comment on recent legislation and court cases.

Periodicals

Legal Newspapers

• These periodicals can be local, state or national in scope.

• The best-known weekly newspapers are the

National Law Journal

and

Legal Times.

American Lawyer

is published monthly .

Periodicals

Newsletters – – – –

are published mainly by commercial organizations and public interest groups

usually focus on a narrow area of the law • brief reviews of current cases and legislative and agency actions tend to be highly practical and technical are valued because of their currency are often the only publications that discusses a new and narrow topic

Periodicals

Using KeyCite to Locate Periodicals

• KeyCite is Westlaw’s citation research service.

• KeyCite Citing References will list the periodical articles that have cited a case, statute, federal regulation, or federal administrative decision. • You can jump directly to these periodicals from KeyCite.

A portion of the Citing References for a Supreme Court case, showing references to citing periodicals.

Texts

Treatises, Student Texts, Practice Guides, and Others Contents

Texts

Treatises •

Treatises are

written by legal scholars

printed in book form

good resources for discussions of cases and statutes relating to a particular area of the law

can be critical, analytical, explanatory, or practical in nature

Wright and Miller,

Federal Practice and Procedure; Dobbs’ Law of Torts

Texts

Treatises

• Treatises generally contain – – – – – Table of Contents Table of Cases Text Index Supplemental materials in the form of pocket parts or looseleaf service • Sources for locating treatises include – – – Library catalogs

Catalog of Current Law Titles Index to Legal Periodicals,

in 1994 by Ward and Associates which added books to its coverage

Texts

Student Texts: Hornbooks •

are generally prepared for student use

are straightforward, clear, non-analytical presentations of the law

clarify and organize the law in a given area

are very useful as case finders

references to cases limited to landmark cases

Texts

Student Texts: Casebooks •

present seminal cases and subsequent and sometimes seemingly conflicting cases

contain little or no analysis

encourage students to analyze case law and draw their own conclusions

Texts

Student Texts: Nutshells •

Nutshells are paperback books designed to give a quick overview of an area of the law.

There are over 100 titles in the Nutshell Series.

References to primary law are limited.

Nutshells are a good place to start research if you know nothing about an area of the law.

Texts

Practice Guides •

Designed for practitioners

Usually confined to one jurisdiction or area of the law

Practice guides include procedural manuals, judicial desk books, form books, and much more

Law Dictionaries

Contents

Dictionaries

Black’s Law Dictionary

is the most widely used of a number of general and specialized law dictionaries

consists of one volume

identifies words in the context of legal usage

includes citations to court cases and other sources of a legal definition

includes a guide to pronunciation of Latin words

includes a table of abbreviations

Dictionaries

Words and Phrases

Multivolume series

Gives only judicial definitions of words and phrases, therefore is not a complete dictionary

Words and Phrases definitions can be retrieved in any case law database using a wp field search, such as:

wp(“vicarious liability”)

Uniform Laws and Model Acts

Contents

Uniform Acts

Uniform Laws •

The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws drafts Uniform Laws and Model Acts.

The goal is to promote uniformity in state law on subjects where uniformity is desirable and practical.

The National Conference designates as a “Uniform Law” any act that has a reasonable chance of enactment in a substantial number of states.

Uniform Acts •

Uniform Laws

The National Conference has approved more than 200 acts and more than 100 have been adopted by at least one state.

Uniform Commercial Code

has been enacted in every state.

• Approved laws can be found in – – – separate pamphlets the annual

Handbook

of the National Conference

Uniform Laws Annotated,

Master Edition, with annual supplements – ULA database on Westlaw • Contains uniform laws and model acts • • In the Global Search Box begin typing

Uniform Commerical Code

Find

command:

ula ucc 2-201

Uniform Acts

Model Acts

• An act that does not have a reasonable chance of adoption by a substantial number of states is designated a “Model Act.” • The goal is to have some of the sections, but not all, adopted or modified by some of the states.

• Both the National Commission and the American Law Institute draft Model Acts.

• • Model Business Corporation Act, Model Penal Code Model Acts can be located in – –

Handbook

of the National Conference

Directory of Uniform Acts and Codes

– Uniform Laws Annotated database on Westlaw

Digest Paragraphs, Headnotes and Statutory Annotations

Contents

Digest Paragraphs

Headnotes

• Cases as reproduced in the National Reporter System ® combination of primary and secondary authority.

are a • The opinion of the court is primary law.

• The editorial enhancements, such as the synopsis and the headnotes, are secondary law, that are – summaries of the opinion – written by West attorney-editors – written in universally recognized legal terminology in place of outdated, slang, or regional words or proper names • Both headnotes and key numbers are in the digest (di) field in Westlaw case law databases.

• Database: any case law database Search:

di(“social host” /p liab!)

Digest Paragraphs

Digests •

A headnote is assigned to a West Key Number reflecting a specific point of law.

Digest paragraphs are headnotes from cases arranged alphabetically by topic and then numerically by Key Number.

Digests ease the retrieval of cases in any jurisdiction that have addressed the same point of law.

Digest Paragraphs

Statutory Annotations

• Annotations (Notes of Decisions) are summaries of case law that has interpreted, explained, or analyzed the language of a statute.

• They follow the text and research aids in statutory materials.

• West statutory materials use the headnotes from relevant cases to annotate a statute as published by West.

• The annotations are secondary resources.

Do not cite the language of headnotes, digest paragraphs, or annotations as primary law.

They are to be used only as a way to find relevant cases.

Conclusion • Secondary sources can help you unfamiliar area of the law start your research in an – – – – Provide an overview of the law supply correct legal terminology raise related and relevant issues reference relevant cases, statutes, and other authoritative sources – reference finding aids, such as key numbers • Before drawing final conclusions , re-check secondary sources to be certain you haven’t missed – – a relevant primary source of law a relevant legal argument