Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management...

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Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c

Transcript of Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management...

Page 1: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Introduction to Legal Information

Jason R. SowardsMassey Law Library

April 25, 2010Management 599c

Page 2: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Legal Information

*The* Law

(jurisdiction determines

mandatory or persuasive)

Judicial: courts publish

case law/judicial

opinions

State & Fed courts

Precedent!

Legislative: legislatures/

Congress publish statutes

Executive: administrative

agencies publish

regulations

Commentary *about* the

Law

Encyclopedias, articles,

treatises/books(always

persuasive)

Primary Authority

Secondary Authority

Page 3: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Top Resources for Legal Information

• Better question, “what do lawyers use when conducting legal research?”– For primary and secondary authority:

• Westlaw ($), LexisNexis($)• Casemaker/Fastcase• Free web (e.g., state legislature sites, Cornell LII,

Google Scholar for case law), and • Books

– Specialized practices may make use of other resources (e.g., CCH or RIA for tax)

– For current awareness, resources such as BNA provide topical newsletters, blogs, journals (e.g., Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law)

Page 4: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Legal Literature

• The Law– Cases

• TOP: Westlaw, LexisNexis, Casemaker/Fastcase; Google Scholar, Court Web Sites (e.g., Delaware Chancery Court Opinions)

– Statutes• TOP: Same as cases; Others are state legislature web pages*

and Cornell’s LII (for United States Code)

– Regulations• TOP federal: same as cases and statutes and FDSys (for both

Federal Register and CFR); for state, regulations online via a search for “[state] administrative code” (usually maintained by state SOS)

Page 5: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Legal Literature

• Commentary About the Law– Types: treatises (books); legal periodicals,

encyclopedias, law-specific titles (ALR, Restatements)– Mainly Westlaw and LexisNexis and books• Published commercially, so not many free on the web

– Law review articles online from the journal itself, but also look at SSRN and Google Scholar

– Online encyclopedias such as Wex and Zimmerman’s Research Guide for cursory overview/context

Page 6: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Secondary Sources

• Legal Periodicals– Different formats• Law reviews, legal newspapers, bar journals

– *Big* journals are usually produced by law schools: law reviews (scholarly focus)• Edited by students = no peer review

– SSRN & bepress for early dissemination and opportunities for peer review

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MERGERS

• When a merger happens legal issues?– Litigation (case law = primary)

• Corporate Law = contracts = state law (Delaware)

– Statutory/regulatory compliance• Statutes and regulations primary authority• Materials that tell you the legal requirements of conducting a

merger secondary authority

– Commentary about the law• Practical vs. Scholarly

– Drafting (transactional work) secondary authority (form books/model agreements)

– News/Current Awareness

Page 8: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Conducting Legal Research

• Advice law librarians give to law students:

START WITH SECONDARY SOURCES• Why?– They explain what the law is!

• Answers questions: federal/state, common law/statute

– They provide references to primary authority– They can provide sample documents and checklists– Example: A book on mergers and acquisitions would

provide references to the pertinent statutes, regulations, and/or case law

• Good lawyering means using secondary sources!

Page 9: Introduction to Legal Information Jason R. Sowards Massey Law Library April 25, 2010 Management 599c.

Mergers: Sample Secondary Authority

• Anatomy of a Merger– Focus is on

negotiations, but contains chapters on issues relevant to mergers from beginning to end

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QUESTIONS?