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Legal Research Review. How Cases are Published Court makes decision ◦ Will either be published or not (oral reasons) May go directly to an OFFICIAL reporter.

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Presentation on theme: "Legal Research Review. How Cases are Published Court makes decision ◦ Will either be published or not (oral reasons) May go directly to an OFFICIAL reporter."— Presentation transcript:

1 Legal Research Review

2 How Cases are Published Court makes decision ◦ Will either be published or not (oral reasons) May go directly to an OFFICIAL reporter automatically ◦ Supreme Court Reports, Ontario Appeal Cases ◦ May be given a “neutral citation” (numbered decision) May get picked up by an UN-OFFICIAL reporter ◦ Canadian Criminal Cases, Motor Vehicle Reports May get picked up by an electronic service ◦ Quicklaw or Westlaw Canada (LawSource) ◦ Given an electronic citation (resembles a neutral citation) ◦ Called “unreported decision” if not published elsewhere

3 Reported Decisions (print reporters) style of cause, (year of decision), [year of reporter] Volumereporter (series) if any page R. v. Askov,[1990]2S.C.R.1199. R. v. Askov(1990),59C.C.C.(3d)449.

4 Reporter Abbreviations http://www.library.brocku.ca/research/poli tic/lrchart.htm http://www.library.brocku.ca/research/poli tic/lrchart.htm

5 Neutral Citation Canadian Judicial Council standard Elements ◦ Style of cause ◦ Year of decision ◦ Court or tribunal identifier ◦ Ordinal number Unique, complete, immediately available and permanent Example: Smith v. Leblanc, 1998 BCCA 21

6 Jurisprudence: Neutral Citation style of cause, core of neutral citation yeartribunal/court identifier ordinal number of decision. R. v. Law,2002SCC10.

7 Electronic Citations Citation assigned by electronic service ◦ Each service has their own numbering system Examples: ◦ Bank of Nova Scotia v. Visentin, [1996] O.J. No. 4563 (Gen. Div.) (QL) ◦ Harris v. Beck Estate, 2007 CarswellPEI 11 (S.C.(T.D.)).

8 Jurisprudence: Electronic Citation style of cause, identifier given Pinpoint (optional) (electronic service). R. v. Ling, 2002 CarswellBC 2752 at para. 14 (Westlaw Canada).

9 Jurisprudence: Examples Mugesera v. Canada, 2005 SCC 40 (Westlaw Canada). Nisbett v. Manitoba (Human Rights Commission), 101 D.L.R. (4th) 744. R. v. C.I.P. inc., 135 N.R. 90. R. v. Raponi, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 35 (LexUM).

10 Excellent Website Describing Legal Citation http://library.queensu.ca/law/lederman/leg alcit.htm http://library.queensu.ca/law/lederman/leg alcit.htm

11 Parallel Citations Citations that refer to the EXACT SAME case Same parties Same hearing Reported by different sources Just like one event happens, several newspapers may report on it. Stories cover the same situation, but publish in different places.

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13 R. v. Tessling, 244 D.L.R. (4 th ) 541

14 Reading Citations – what type? 2009 ONCA 846 133 D.L.R. (3d) 546 2009 SCC 56 40 N.R. 255, 7 W.C.B. 177 65 C.C.C. (2d) 193 1999 CanLII 3822 (ON C.A.) [2009] O.J. No. 3909

15 Reading Citations 2009 ONCA 846 ◦ NEUTRAL 133 D.L.R. (3d) 546 ◦ PRINT 2009 SCC 56 ◦ NEUTRAL 40 N.R. 255, 7 W.C.B. 177 ◦ PARALLEL, EACH IS PRINT 65 C.C.C. (2d) 193 ◦ PRINT 1999 CanLII 3822 (ON C.A.) ◦ ELECTRONIC [2009] O.J. No. 3909 ◦ NEUTRAL

16 Looking up Cases by Citation Use shortest possible route Citation is the UNIQUE identifier for the case ◦ Note that we include years in SQUARE brackets, but not those in ROUND brackets! Name is helpful, but could be applied to more than one case ◦ If you have the citation, use it without the name Many databases offer shortcuts ◦ E.g. don’t need to enter punctuation or spaces

17 Locating by citation – what do you type?? R. v. Harper, [1982] A.C.S. no 108 R. v. Harper, 133 D.L.R. (3d) 546 R. v. Harper, (1982), 40 N.R. 255 R. v. Harper, 65 C.C.C. (2d) 193 R. v. Harper, 7 W.C.B. 177 (SCC)

18 Locating by citation – answers 1982acsno108 133dlr3d546 40nr255 65ccc2d193 7wcb177 And, incidentally, 5 D.L.R. (4 th ) 255 would be: 5dlr4th255

19 Relationships Between Cases A story….

20 On the basis of the FLIR readings, and other tips, the RCMP get a search warrant and find both marijuana and guns in Walt’s house – he is charged with various drug and weapons offences. Walt has a grow-op in his house. Acting on a tip, the RCMP fly over his house in an airplane equipped with a Forward Looking Infra-Red ("FLIR") camera to detect the heat emanating from the house.

21 Trial A: Walt is found guilty and convicted. Ontario Superior Court, Thomson J (oral reasons only – no case report)

22 Trial B: Walt appeals Fly-over with FLIR camera violated his right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure guaranteed by s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The court agrees and Walt is released. R. v. Tessling, 63 O.R. (3d) 1.

23 Trial C: The Crown isn’t going to give up Case moves to Supreme Court. Walt’s right to privacy does not extend to patterns of heat distribution on the external surfaces of his house. FLIR heat profile did not expose any intimate details of Walt’s life, information about his core biographical data, and therefore his constitutional rights were not violated, and he is guilty as originally charged. R. v. Tessling, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432.

24 Consider… What is the relationship between these two cases? ◦ R. v. Tessling, 63 O.R. (3d) 1. ◦ R. v. Tessling, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432.

25 Judicial History First step in “Noting Up” Tells the “story” of how the case proceeded through the court system Each decision is UNIQUE and represents a DIFFERENT HEARING but includes the same parties If you don’t find out judicial history, the “story” of your case is incomplete!

26 Judicial Consideration Second step in “Noting Up” Tells how courts have treated your judge’s decision Often referred to as ◦ Citing references (n) ◦ Cases citing (n) Some sources will offer not only a list of cases, but HOW each case treated your decision

27 Let’s Note up Together… Use Quicklaw, LawSource or CanLii (your choice) Find this case: ◦ R. v. Tessling, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432 Note it up ◦ KeyCite (LawSource) ◦ QuickCite (Quicklaw) ◦ “Cited by” (CanLii)

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35 Analyzing the Law Case Brief Legal Memorandum

36 Legal Memorandum, Case Brief Legal Memo ◦ Identify facts, issues of client situation ◦ Find relevant law ◦ Apply law and determine conclusion Case Brief ◦ Identify key elements of a case ◦ Succinct ◦ All information comes from the case itself

37 Situation to follow through

38 Case Situation First thing we do: ◦ Facts – relevant ones ◦ Issues – question or “whether” statement Second thing we do: ◦ Background – secondary sources  Textbooks  Journal Articles  Commentary  Words and Phrases, Dictionaries

39 Next, we look for Statutes Statutes take precedence Cases interpret statutes Parliamentary authority

40 Then, we look for Cases How law has been interpreted Look for similar fact patters Look for similar legal issues

41 How do we find what Statute applies? Legal Encyclopedia ◦ Canadian Encyclopedic Digest ◦ Halsbury’s Laws of Canada (Quicklaw) Secondary sources may supply this! Indexes in Statutes volumes Last resort is to keyword search  CanLII, E-laws, Justice Canada, Quicklaw

42 Statutes Sources Revised Statutes of Canada Revised Statutes of Ontario Statutes of Canada Statutes of Ontario Online Consolidated Law ◦ Quicklaw ◦ CanLII ◦ Justice Canada ◦ E-laws Annotated Acts or Looseleafs

43 What is it? R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14. R.S.C. 1985, c. E-2. S.O. 1991, c. 17. O. Reg. 45/91

44 Other types of citations R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14 ◦ Revised Statute (Ontario) R.S.C. 1985, c. E-2 ◦ Revised Statute (Canada) S.O. 1991, c. 17 ◦ Annual Statute (Ontario) O. Reg. 45/91 ◦ Regulation (Ontario)

45 Updating Law Table of Public Statutes ◦ In print volumes ◦ Online – E-laws, Justice Canada Canada Statute Citator Ontario Statute Citator Quicklaw ◦ Point in time legislation search ◦ See “all versions” of a statute section

46 Finding Cases Find a specific case ◦ Quicklaw or online (covered previously) ◦ Use print reporters Find cases that cite a law Find cases that cite another case Find digests of cases Search for cases ◦ By keyword ◦ By subject ◦ By field searching

47 Judicial Consideration In their decisions, judges will “consider” a variety of “authorities” ◦ Statutes (or sections of statutes) ◦ Cases ◦ Regulations ◦ Rules ◦ Books of authority ◦ Words and phrases

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51 Citator Sources Track all the cases that have considered a particular case, law, section of a law, word/phrase, etc. So, now for a particular primary source or particular word/phrase, we can find cases where it has been “considered”.

52 Citator Sources (Print) Canada and Ontario Statute Citators ◦ Cases that cite statutes Canadian Statute Citations (Abridgement) ◦ Cases that cite statutes Annotated Acts ◦ Cases that cite statutes Canadian Case Citations (Abridgement) ◦ Cases that cite other cases

53 Electronic Databases CanLII Noteup feature ◦ Cases that cite other cases Quicklaw “Quickcite” feature ◦ Cases that cite statutes, or cases depending on when it’s used ◦ Cases that interpret Words and phrases Westlaw Canada “Keycite” feature ◦ Cases that cite statutes, or cases depending on when it’s used ◦ Cases that interpret Words and phrases

54 What are digests? Short summary of case with respect to a particular point of law May be more than one digest for a case Gives the outcome and a citation for the case Often grouped by subject area and can be browsed Sources: ◦ Canadian Abridgement Case Digests ◦ The Canada Digest (Quicklaw) Advantages ◦ Shorter than whole case ◦ Include only relevant information ◦ Often grouped so that it’s easy to find similar cases

55 Electronic Database Searching

56 Finding Case Reports Keyword searching vs. summary searching “Search by area of law” in Quicklaw Field searching ◦ Dates ◦ Jurisdictions ◦ Summaries/Headnotes ◦ Judges LawSource CED and Abridgement browsing (Tables of Contents)

57 Quicklaw Creating searches using “operators” ◦ & ◦ OR ◦ AND NOT ◦ ! ◦ /s ◦ /p ◦ /n

58 Quicklaw – answers Creating searches using “operators” ◦ & -- two words in same document ◦ OR – one or the other word (synonyms) ◦ AND NOT – no documents with this word ◦ ! – truncator: any possible ending on root ◦ /s – two words in same sentence ◦ /p – two words in same paragraph ◦ /n – two words close together (specify a number for “n”)

59 Example Client was impaired but found behind the wheel of a parked car with its engine running impaired or drunk /p car or vehicle /5 park!

60 Quicklaw Noting up ◦ History of case  Path the case followed through the court system ◦ Judicial Treatment = Citing Cases = Citing References  All cases that have referred to this one. Treatment ◦ How each citing reference treated this case  Followed, distinguished, questioned, etc.  This is an EDITORIAL decision, not a GIVEN

61 Westlaw Canada LawSource

62 ANYTHING ELSE??


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