introduction to legal research for librarians

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Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians Mark Podvia September 17, 2010

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Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians. Mark Podvia September 17, 2010. Sources of Law. Legislative Branch: Statutory Law (Legislation) Executive Branch: Administrative Law (Rules and Regulations/Decisions and Orders) Judicial Branch: Case Law (Common Law). Types of Authority. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians

Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians

Mark Podvia

September 17, 2010

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Sources of Law

• Legislative Branch: Statutory Law (Legislation)

• Executive Branch: Administrative Law (Rules and Regulations/Decisions and Orders)

• Judicial Branch: Case Law (Common Law)

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Types of Authority

• Primary Authority: Constitutions, Statutes, Administrative Rules and Regulations, Administrative Decisions and Orders, Case Law, Local Ordinances

• Secondary Authority: Treatises, Law Reviews, American Law Reports, Encyclopedias, Restatements

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Case Law

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Federal Reporters

• US Supreme Court: United States Reports, United States Supreme Court Reports Lawyers’ Edition, Supreme Court Reporter

• US Courts of Appeals: Federal Reporter

• US District Courts: Federal Supplement

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Federal Case Citation

Clinton v. New York, 524 U.S. 417 (1998).

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Regions

• Atlantic• North Eastern• North Western• South Eastern• South Western• Southern• Pacific• California Reporter• New York Supplement

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Pennsylvania Case Citation

Comm. v. Gosselin, 861 A.2d 996 (Pa. Super. 2004).

Comm. v. Gosselin, 2004 PA Super 426.

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Where do we find Cases?

• Printed Reporters

• Commercial Sources (Lexis, Westlaw)

• Internet Sources

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Legislation

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Legislative Process• A Law begins its life as a bill, a legislative

proposal offered for debate before its enactment. Bills can be introduced in either chamber.

• After it is introduced, a bill is sent to committee where hearings are held. If a bill is reported favorably it goes to the floor for a vote. If passed it is sent to the other chamber where the process starts over.

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• If the bill is passed by both houses, it may need to go to a conference committee to work out differences between the two versions.

• The bill goes to the President/Governor for signature. If the bill is vetoed the legislature may be able to override the veto by a ¾ vote.

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Where are Statutes published?

Slip Laws—Individual law printed after passage of a law.

Session Laws—Laws adopted during a specified session arranged in chronological order.

Codified Laws—Laws compiled into an order code arranged by topic.

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Federal Session Laws

• United States Statutes at Large—official

• United States Code, Congressional and Administrative News--unofficial

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Codified Federal Statutes

• United States Code (USC)—official

• United States Code Annotated (USCA)—unofficial (West)

• United States Code Service (USCS)—unofficial (Lexis)

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Pennsylvania Session Laws

Laws of Pennsylvania

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Codified Pennsylvania Statutes

• Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes—Pa. Cons. Stat.—official

• Purdon’s Pennsylvania Statutes Annotated—P.S.—unofficial

• Purdon’s Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes Annotated—Pa.C.S.A.—unofficial

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Administrative Law

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Federal Administrative Register

Federal Register:

Issued each business day

Includes proposed rules, final rules, notices, Presidential proclamations,

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Federal Administrative Compilation

Code of Federal Regulations

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Pennsylvania Administrative Register

Pennsylvania Bulletin:

Issued weekly

Includes proposed rules, final rules, notices, local rules of court

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Pennsylvania Administrative Compilation

Pennsylvania Code