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Ania Dymarz (Surrey) & Yolanda Koscielski (Burnaby), Liaison Librarians for Criminology January 22 nd and 23 rd, 2015 ysk6@sfu.ca adymarz@sfu.ca
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PART 1 1. Key terminology & concepts 2. Understanding a case citation 3. Noting up a case 4. Secondary legal literature PART 2 4. Experience searching 4 legal databases/legal treasure hunt
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Court SystemsDescription Superior Major civil and criminal cases heard in this court. Most case law found in our in legal databases originates from this court system. Inferior A high volume of cases, including criminal cases Often known as “provincial court” Typical jurisdiction: small claims, traffic offences, criminal offences, family matters Federal Some matters go to federal court: e.g., copyright, industrial design, patents, cases around the legality of federal gov’t actions Note: superior and inferior court structures and names will vary between provinces. Check websites, e.g., Provincial Court of British ColumbiaProvincial Court of British Columbia Note: superior and inferior court structures and names will vary between provinces. Check websites, e.g., Provincial Court of British ColumbiaProvincial Court of British Columbia Table adapted from: Legal Research on the Web, Winter 2012 course material, iSchool Institute, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
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Level of CourtExamples 1 st level: Trial CourtBritish Columbia Supreme Court, Court of Queen’s Bench (Alberta), Ontario Superior Court of Justice 2 nd level: Appellate CourtBritish Columbia Court of Appeal, Alberta Court of Appeal, Ontario Court of appeal 3 rd level: Supreme Court of Canada Supreme Court of Canada Table adapted from: Legal Research on the Web, Winter 2012 course material, iSchool Institute, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
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The terms Case Law, Reasons for Decisions, Judgment (*no ‘e’!) are often used interchangeably Main content of published case law/judgments should be identical, regardless of reporter Case law/judgments available through both free and subscription sources
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Significant overlapping coverage in case law cases covered in various databases Free sources (e.g. CanLii) are easily accessible Subscription sources often include: value-added tools such as summarizing headnotes, subject classification, and research tools such as the Canadian Encyclopedic Digest
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Style of cause = plaintiff and defendant This report can be found in the 69th volume of the Dominion Law Reports on page 433 The "2nd" tells you that the DLR has been published in multiple series; the second series was 1956-68 SCBC indicates this was a Supreme Court of British Columbia decision
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Examples: LeBrun v High-Low Foods Ltd. (1968), 69 D.L.R. (2 nd ) 433 (S.C.B.C.) R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, 26 D.L.R. (4th) 200, 65 N.R. 87 (S.C.C.) Hopp v Lepp, [1980] 2 SCR 192, 112 DLR (3d) 67
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Wells v. Newfoundland (1997), 156 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 271, 483 A.P.R. 271, 5 Admin. L.R. (3d) 113, (N.L.C.A.) Case name = Wells v. Newfoundland Neutral citation example: 73 SCC 2013
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Case name (Appellant + Respondent) Year of decision Volume number of law report Law reporter name (Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island Reporter) Page number in law report volume Other law reporters (aka parallel citations) Series number of law report, as applicable Court the case was heard in 156 Wells v. Newfoundland (1997), 156 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 271, 483 A.P.R. 271, 5 Admin. L.R. (3d) 113, (N.L.C.A.)
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Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation, 7th edition (2010) Also known as the McGill Guide The official source for legal citation in Canada, used by the legal community See Queen’s Legal Citation web page for more guidance on McGill styleQueen’s Legal Citation web page
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Means you are researching a case to see if… › it has been cited, including “followed”, in subsequent cases › the decision has been overturned in a higher court The note up tools have different names, depending on the database you use Process ensures you have found the most recent (i.e., legally relevant) version of a case using the note up tools
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Terminology for noting up a case differs between databases Quicklaw terms for judicial considerations: › Distinguished — cited case is held to be inapplicable due to a difference in fact or law. › Followed —The judge expressly relies on the cited case as a precedent on which to base a decision. › Etc. Example: Wells v Newfoundland
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Searching primary sources directly for case law by keyword is usually not recommended › Keyword = 1000s of unrelated hits › Exception: very unique terminology › Start with secondary legal sources and/or specialized legal research tools, such as: Canadian Encyclopedia Digest Canadian Abridgment Digest
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Examples: articles from academic legal journals, case commentary, newsletters and digests by legal experts Uses of secondary lit: Current awareness of legal issues (e.g., weekly digests) Efficient way to locate case law by topic Provide understanding of legal issues and case law in context
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A legal research tool The CED will point you to major cases which have established the legal points in question. It provides a comprehensive statement of the law (legislation + case law) The CED is available electronically through LawSource.
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I own an animal which is ½ dog & ½ coyote. Is this legal? “An animal which is the result of a cross between a dog and a coyote or prairie wolf must be considered as essentially a wild animal, and a person in charge of it will be responsible for injury it does to a human being.[FN5]”[FN5]
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Use CNTL + F to search the full text of your search results Use quotation marks to search for words as a phrase › Maple leaf foods vs. “maple leaf foods”
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Case Law Law Reports Articles and Journals Canadian Encyclopedic Digest (CED) Canadian Abridgment Digest (CAD)
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Multiple products on one platform that can be browsed/searched separately Browse functions on the left, search on the right Click on LawSource (or CriminalSource) tab to revert to main search screen Quirk: default searching is for ANY of the search terms entered, not ALL of them › Solution: use quotation marks to search as a phrase or add the word “AND” between each search term
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Less is more; re-search the most unique words of your search string if you are not getting results › E.g., Instead of Toward a Proper and Complete Instruction for Photo Lineups: Preserving the Probative Value of Identification Evidence, try, Photo Lineups Relevancy ranking of results is less intuitive
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Case law Canadian criminal legislation Canadian Sentencing Digest Criminal legal commentary and journals
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Busy interface! Note Search Templates for different products/info types on left, including All CriminalSource Content Browse a particular source with left-side option of “other commentary”; an empty search is possible if you’d like to browse commentary sources by date
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Case Law Martin’s Criminal Code Drug Offences in Canada Criminal Law Quarterly Other legal commentary and texts
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Search on the right, browse on the left. Browsing is particularly effective in legal databases Browse individual books/journals (e.g., Drug Offences in Canada) in the Commentary section, left-hand side Martin’s Criminal Code is found under Commentary>Criminal Legislation>Martin’s Criminal Code and Related Legislation Less can be more (in terms of search terms entered). This is the case with most legal databases.
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Case Law Legislation Canadian and international legal journals Other legal commentary and texts
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Tab Searching option › E.g., Commentary, Journals, etc. brings up search templates Need to find a particular book, journal, or other title? › Enter keywords of source title in Find a Source. Be exact! › Beware Terms and Connectors Search › DEMO: Alan Gold’s Criminal Law Netletter Issues
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Legal Information guide Legal Information guide Browse databases by subject area – Law Law
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Yolanda Koscielski, Liaison librarian for Criminology at Burnaby ysk6@sfu.caysk6@sfu.ca Ania Dymarz, Liaison Librarian for Criminology at Surrey adymarz@sfu.caadymarz@sfu.ca General queries: AskUsDesk AskAway TextUs
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