Title: West Regional Reporters
1West Regional Reporters
2Finding Cases using a Digest
- A Digest is basically a subject index to case
law. - West Group created the Digest system in the late
1800s to locate all the cases in its National
Reporter System addressing particular points of
law - (or legal issues.)
3Regional Digests
- Regional Digests cover the states in the Regional
Reporters. - But only four regional digests are published
Atlantic, North Western, Pacific, and South
Eastern. - No North Eastern, Southern or South Western
Digests are published. - West publishes individual state digests for all
states, except Delaware, Nevada and Utah. States
with no regional digests use state digests.
4State Digests
- Includes cases which originate in a federal
district court (federal trial courts) within that
state, and it also includes cases from the
federal appellate courts. - Regional Digests
- Do not include cases from the federal courts.
- i.e., Cases from the federal courts within
Georgia will be cited in the Georgia Digest, but
not in the South Eastern Digest.
5- In the state digests, federal appellate court
cases appear first. Example C.A. stands for
Court of Appeals. C.A. 11 means the Court of
Appeals for the 11th Circuit. - Federal district court cases follow. D. stands
for District. Example, E.D. Tenn means Eastern
District of Tennessee N.D. Ga. means the
Northern District of Georgia. - State court cases follow the federal cases. If
you are looking for state court cases only,
bypass the federal appellate and federal district
court cases mentioned in the state digest.
6How to Use the Digest Topic Key Numbers
- West created seven categories of the law
Contracts, Property, Persons, Torts, Crimes,
Remedies Government - These seven categories are further subdivided
into 414 Topics, some of which are very broad,
such as constitutional, and some of which are
very narrow, such as cemeteries. - Topics are further subdivided into subtopics and
assigned a key number addressing a specific point
of law under that topic. There are currently over
20 million key numbers West is adding to these
daily!
73 Approaches to Finding Relevant Topic and Key
numbers
- Best to always start with the Descriptive Word
Index to find relevant topics and key numbers - You may start with a known topic and use the
Topic Analysis to find relevant key numbers under
that topic. - Start with a known case (from another source) or
one good case and use that cases topic and key
numbers to locate other cases in a digest with
the same topic and key numbers.
8Descriptive-Word Index
- Start by finding the book that says
Descriptive-Word Index on the spine, usually at
the end of the Digest set. Then look up words
that are relevant to your issue. Following each
entry is a Topic and Key Number. - Use the Topic and Key Number(s) from the index
to locate the topics in the main digest volumes.
Under a particular topic key number are all
the summaries of cases that contain the issue in
question. - Then go to the reporter to read the full text of
the case.
9The Known Case or One Good Case Method
- Finding just one relevant or good case from
another jurisdiction or within your jurisdiction
may lead you to other relevant cases! - HOW?
- By using Wests Topic Key Numbering System.
- If you have located a case that appears
relevant to your issue from another source, i.e.,
a legal encyclopedia, then the next step is to
locate that case in the reporter and jot down the
cases relevant topic and key numbers for your
issue. Next, select the appropriate digest for
your jurisdiction and use the same same topic and
key numbers to find other cases discussing
similar points of law.
10If there are no cases under a particular topic
and key number in your jurisdiction, consider
using the same topic and key number to find
persuasive decisions from other jurisdictions.
11Additional Features of A Digest
- Table of Cases use when you only have a case
name and no citation to the reporter. Table of
cases will provide the citation and any parallel
cites. - Words and Phrases use to determine if a court
has defined a particular term.
12Finding the most recent cases under same topic
and key number
- Check Closing Table (closing with cases
reported in.) in bound digest volume if there
is no pocket part or supplemental pamphlet. The
Closing Table tells you which reporter volume was
the last one covered by the digest. If there is a
pocket part, check its closing table. If there
is a supplemental pamphlet, check its closing
table. - Then go to the remaining bound volumes of the
reporter on the shelf which were not covered in
the digest, and look for the same topic and key
number in the digest indexes in the back of each
bound volume. - Then go to each advance sheet accompanying the
reporter and look for the same topic and key
number in the digest indexes in the front of each
advance sheet. - To further update, use Westlaws Topic and Key
numbering system.
13HeadnotesA Review
- Before the West Company publishes a court
opinion, its editors read the case to determine
the legal issues or points of law that the case
covers. - Editors then write a small paragraph summarizing
a point of law discussed in the court opinion,
and assign to it a headnote number (a note at
the head of a case.) The editor then consults
the list of over 414 digest topics and assigns
the headnote to a specific topic. Next, the
editor examines a detailed outline of
subdivisions under that specific topic and
assigns a key number. - Some points of law are assigned more than one
topic and key number. - There may be many points of law addressed in a
court opinion. These sequential headnote numbers
serve as a kind of table of contents - you can
determine quickly where in the opinion particular
points of law are being discussed! - Since headnotes are editorial enhancements, they
are not considered part of the opinion, are not
the law, and cannot be cited.
14Example of an editors mistakeState v.
Bankhead514 P.2d 800 (Utah 1973).
- In headnote 8 which had been assigned the topic
Drugs and Narcotics, key 117, the West editors
wrote - . . . dominion and control either means that
drug be found on person of accused or that
accused must have had sole and exclusive
possession of narcotic.
15State v. Bankhead514 P.2d 800, 803 (Utah 1973).
- What the court actually said
- Dominion and control neither means that the drug
be found on the person of the accused nor that
the accused must have had sole and exclusive
possession of the narcotic.
16Elements of the Published Decision