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Introduction to the Topic and Key Number System. Precedents are prior cases in the jurisdiction that are close in fact or legal principles to the case in consideration.
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Precedents are prior cases in the jurisdiction that are close in fact or legal principles to the case in consideration. The doctrine of precedent dictates that decisions reached in previous cases in the jurisdiction dealing with the same or similar issues should be followed, unless there is a good reason to deviate. The Doctrine of Precedent
The doctrine of precedent is founded on a sense of fairness and the belief that decisions should be consistent and not arbitrary so that the legal consequence of conduct can be predicted. This doctrine explains the attorney’s need for access to prior cases in the jurisdiction dealing with the same or similar issues. The Doctrine of Precedent
The National Reporter System is the name given to the entire group of publications that report both state and federal cases decided throughout the country. Some reporters cover specialty topics, such as bankruptcy. National Reporter System, Headnotes, the Key Number System and the Key Number Digests
Headnotes appear before the text of every case in the National Reporter System. A headnote is a paragraph summary of a single point of law discussed in the case. Headnotes appear in the order the points of law are discussed in the case. Headnotes in a Case Headnote 2 Headnote 1
Headnotes (Digest Paragraphs) • Headnotes are prepared by West attorney-editors using • consistent and current legal terminologyinstead of ambiguous, regional or outdated words • descriptive termsinstead of proper names • Language of Opinion Language of Headnote - Mr. Brown or plaintiff - landlord - Tylenol or Bufferin - aspirin - tipsy or inebriated - intoxicated The headnotes help you retrieve many online cases that you would otherwise miss.
Headnote and Key Number The point of law discussed in each headnote is assigned to at least one West topic number and key number.
The headnotes from every reported case in the National Reporter System are organized by topic and key number in West’s Key Number Digests. Headnotes become digest paragraphs. There are federal, state, and regional digests special-subject digests digests that cover specific periods of time West’s Key Number Digests
Using an on-point key number, you can find similar headnotes from other cases in any National Reporter System publication. Each headnote in a digest cites, and on Westlaw® links, to the case in which the headnote appears. West’s Key Number Digests
5. 4. 1. 4 Digests National Reporter System Constitutional Law 3. 2. 3 Headnotes Topic and Key Number System 1. Cases are printed in the National Reporter System reporters. 2. Each point of law discussed in a case is summarized in a headnote. 3. The point of law in each headnote is assigned a key number(s). 4. Digests organize all headnotes (digest paragraphs) by key number. 5. The key number in a digest is used to find other relevant cases.
Question West’s Key Number System integrates • The National Reporter System • The Key Number Digests • Headnotes that precede each National Reporter System case • All of the above
Question West’s Key Number System integrates • The National Reporter System • The Key Number Digests • Headnotes that precede each National Reporter System case • All of the above