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Gratuitous Allusion.
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1. Real World ResearchFebruary 27, 2008Dean C. Rowan & Teresa Stanton, Reference Librarians Are Secondary Sources Merely Second Rate?
Legal Encyclopedias, ALR, and Restatements
2. Gratuitous Allusion It is a maxim, that those to whom everybody allows the second place have an undoubted title to the first.
Jonathan Swift, Tale of a Tub, Dedication (1704)
3. Legal EncyclopediasOnly a fool cites to legal encyclopedia as persuasive authority.* Imposing
Grand attempts to encompass everything
For all of their flaws, [they] have virtues:
Provide useful background
Inform you of the landmark cases
Acquaint you with important jargon
* Robert C. Berring & Elizabeth A. Edinger, Finding the Law, 12th ed. (Thomson West 2005) 314
4. Legal Encyclopedias Corpus Juris Secundum
Westlaw CJS
American Jurisprudence 2d
Lexis
Secondary Legal>Jurisprudences & Encyclopedias>American Jurisprudence 2d
Westlaw AMJUR
California Jurisprudence 3d
Westlaw CALJUR
5. Print versus Online Print
Easy to browse
Clarity of context
Orderly index access
Unwieldy updating
Monumental consumers of space, costly Online
Keyword searching
Integrated, real-time updating
Links to related materials
Potentially costly
Risk of losing focus
6. Quick Tour of AmJur 2d Berring & Edinger: The narrative is often more clearly presented than in CJS.
General Index and volume indices
Alphabetical arrangement, but
Broad topics with detailed, structured organization
See, e.g., Pensions and Retirement Funds, 60A AmJur 2d 1, following
7. AmJur 2d, vol. 60A A detailed table of contents to the volume runs nearly 50 pages
Corresponding text includes references to cases, statutes, West Key Number Digest topics, and related research resources
The index to the volume
Reality check: Compare Wikipedia on ERISA.
8. AmJur 2d Alternatives Corpus Juris Secundum (C.J.S.)
Westlaw CJS
California Jurisprudence (CalJur)
Westlaw CAJUR
A more extensive Witkin Summary
Not a ubiquitous resource, i.e., many states do not have analogous publications
9. Additional AmJur Components ALR and ALR Federal
AmJur Forms
AmJur Pleading and Practice Forms
AmJur Trials
Proof of Facts
Federal Procedure
AmJur Deskbook
New Topic Service
10. American Law Reports (A.L.R.) Annotations An extensive, narrowly focused article (annotation) often paired with a single case illustrative of a point of law
Detailed analysis of the point of law
Substantial discussion of and reference to court holdings, jurisdiction by jurisdiction
Digest to 3d through 6th and Fed
Available on Westlaw (ALR et al.)
11. American Law Reports (cont.) Coverage:
ALR Fed. covers federal cases and topics
ALR 6th, 5th and 4th series cover state cases and topics
ALR 3d, 2d, and ALR cover federal and state cases and topics
An Index covering 2d through 6th and Fed
Mode of updating varies for the series (pocket parts, Later Case Service, Blue Book of Supplemental Decisions)
12. American Law Reports (cont.) Some annotations have been supplemented (esp. early ones), others superseded.
Use the Annotation History Table (located in each volume of the Index), Westlaw, or KeyCite to identify supplemental and superseding annotations.
13. Restatements of the Law
did prove to be quite influential, and were cited by the courts with great frequency, but in the end, they became just another research source.
Berring & Edinger 317.
Drew from case law, not legislation
Distilled the common law, both descriptive and prescriptive
Prepared by lawyers, scholars, and judges expert in the nominal field
14. Restatements of the Law (cont.) Big topics: contract, tort, property
Narrower topics: suretyship and guaranty, unfair competition, restitituion
Available on Lexis, Westlaw, and for the most obsessive fan, HeinOnline (preliminary, council, and tentative drafts)
An elaborate apparatus of pithy statements of the law, commentary, illustrations, and notes
15. Restatements of the Law (cont.) The ALI draftsmen took fields of living law, scalded their flesh, drained off their blood, and reduced them to bones
. They expended their enormous talents on an enterprise which, today, seems singularly fruitless
. Incredibly, the work of restating (and rerestating) is still going on.
Lawrence M. Friedman, A History of American Law 406-07 (2d ed. 1985) (quoted in Andrew Kull, Restitution and Reform, 32 S. Ill. U.L.J. 83 84 (2007)).
16. Wrap-up Keep in mind the distinction between persuasive and binding authority.
Use secondary sources to initiate research by identifying important statutes and cases, or gleaning background information about an unfamiliar area of the law.
Take a few minutes to examine the organization and finding tools of a resource in either its hard copy or online form.
17. Wrapping-up the Wrap-up Similarly, take time to update your information.
As always, ask a Reference Librarian for assistance:
Identifying useful resources
Using new resources