Title: Secondary Sources
1Secondary Sources
2What are Secondary Sources?
- Secondary sources are not the law
- They are anything else that helps you learn
about, find, or present the law
- Commentary on the law
3Why Use Secondary Sources?
- Persuasive authority
- Depends on the reputation of the author
- Learning about the law
- Finding the law
- Some tools meet some needs better than others
- Background
- Explains the law
4ALR (American Law Reports)
- Annotations are objective essays
- They help you accomplish the necessary objective
step to understanding the law
- Annotations describe the law
- Provides descriptions of both sides of an issue
or when something is found or not found
5ALR
- Never cite to an ALR Annotation
6ALR
- ALR will provide you with citations to statues
and representative cases
- If you find a case on point, look it up in the
West reporter, note the Topic and Key Number, run
that through the digest that covers the
jurisdiction that concerns you
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8Annotation Finding
- ALR Index (dont forget the pocket part)
- Annotation titles are very descriptive
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10Annotation History Table
- After you have identified and Annotation, but
before you read it, make sure that it has not
been supplemented or superceded by a later
Annotation - Check the Annotation History Table, after z in
the ALR Index
11Parts of an Annotation
- The first section is usually a Scope Note read
it
- The second section usually details related
Annotations, see if any other Annotations look
interesting
12Updating
- Update your Annotation in the Pocket Part
- Further updating through an 800 number
13ALR Online
- Once exclusively on Lexis, is moving to West
- Automatically updated
- No Index
- Limit your search to the title field
14Treatises
- Scholarly books about an area of the law
- Can be one or several volumes
- Manner of updating varies
- Looseleaf
- Pocket Part
- New Edition
15Wright and Miller
16Other Monographs
- Other books are found in the same manner as are
scholarly treatises
- Can be very practical
- Lists
- Forms
17How Will You Use Them?
- Scholarly treatises can be very persuasive
- Treatises, generally, are very good for learning
about the law
- They are generally good law finders
- Practical tools can have many useful extras
18How to Find Treatises
- Library Catalogs
- Multi-Institution Databases (WCAT, RLIN)
- Law Books and Serials in Print
- Books in Print
19Catalog Searching Terms
- Controlled vocabulary
- Library of Congress Subject Headings
- Find several books on point and see what headings
were assigned to describe them
20Quest searching
- Prefer Keyword (if you know the subject used, use
it as a part of the keyword search)
- Can conduct Boolean searches
- Can limit searches to parts of the bibliographic
record
- Can limit searches to particular library at B.C.
- kcovenants and compete and ll.puc.
- Also try scovenants not
21Law Review Articles
- Most scholarly discourse in American law takes
place in the pages of law reviews
- Most are published by law schools
22What Purposes?
- If the author is eminent, can be persuasive
- Generally good law finders
- Some are good at describing the law, especially
student case notes
- Articles tend to be on hot topics
- Dont look for an exposition of a settled concept
23B.C. Law Review, a general scholarly journal
24B.C. International and Comparative
Law Review, a topical scholarly journal
25B.C. Environmental Affairs Law Review,
a topical scholarly journal
26Magazine focussing on the legal profession
27Local bar journal
28Topical legal magazine
29Finding periodical articles
- Index v. Full-Text
- Prefer an index
- More years covered by an index
- More titles covered by an index
- Full text, get items that mention a concept
- Index. Get items about the concept
30Indexes
- Index to Legal Periodicals
- Over 500 journals, including most scholarly
journals covered
- Current Law Index
- Over 850 journals, almost the same list as ILP,
but some bar journals and legal newspapers
31Index to Legal Periodicals Coverage
32Index to Legal Periodicals
33Current Law Index
34Current Law Index Coverage
35Subject Headings
- ILP uses their own
- Look at the front of a recent issue
- CLI uses LCSH for the first heading
- Their own for subheadings
- For either, run a search, identify on-point
articles, run a new search using the subject
headings assigned to the on-point articles
36Online search example
- Use ILP on Westlaw and the web to find articles
about covenants not to compete
37Updating
- You dont really update a law review article
- Look for a more recent article about the topic
38Looseleafs
- Pull together most primary material on a topic
- Also good finding tools, practice hints, and
explanations
- If there is one on your subject, you will use it
- Only exist for topics that generate
39How do you find out if a looseleaf exists on a
topic?
- Legal Looseleafs in Print
CCH Standard Federal Tax Reporter
40Legal Newspapers
- Use to keep track of what is happening in the
legal community
- Local legal newspapers print descriptions of
recent cases from trial and appellate courts
- They may have a case retrieval service (for a fee)
41Local legal newspaper
42National legal newspaper
43Legal Newsletters
- Very specific topical coverage
- Great sources of news
- How do you find out if a newsletter exists on
your subject?
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45Legal Encyclopedias - National
- An attempt to describe the state of the law on a
topic for the entire nation
- Not extremely useful unless
- The law IS the same everywhere
- No other research starting tool is working for you
46American Jurisprudence (AmJur)
47Corpus Juris Secundum (CJS)
48Legal Encyclopedias - State
- More useful than national encyclopedias
- Describes the state of the law on a topic for the
state
- Frequently includes practice tips and forms
49Massachusetts Practice
50Restatements
- Can be extremely persuasive
- Eminent legal scholars got together and initially
restated what the law was
- Now the frequently state what the law should be
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