download clinicalexternsspr08.ppt

Download Download ClinicalExternsSpr08.ppt

If you can't read please download the document

Upload: tomwinfrey

Post on 03-Jun-2015

387 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 1. RESEARCH STRATEGY & SECONDARY SOURCES Amy Wright, JD, MLIS Zief Law Library, Fall 2007

2. Common Reaction to First Days on the Job

  • Hunkering Down in Your Workspace:
  • *The Bunker idea originally came from a July 2006 presentation by Terry Psarras, Teaching CALR to Law Students, at AALLs 2006 Annual Meeting.

3. COMMON NEWBIE MISTAKES

  • Jumping on Lexis or Westlaw when you have no good leads for relevant cases, statutes, or regulations.
  • Ignoring secondary sources.
  • Focusing too heavily on case law and ignoring statutes and regulations.
  • Not asking questions when youre stuck!

4. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • GATHER & ANALYZE THE FACTS:
    • Whos involved?
    • What are the parties relationships to each other?
    • What facts do I already know?
    • What facts are missing that I need to know?

5. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • WHAT TYPE OF ANSWER IS REQUIRED?
    • E-mail, conference call, verbal answer, research memo, or client letter?
    • Short summary or exhaustive treatment?
    • Answer given to client or to assigning attorney?

6. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • DEFINE YOUR RESEARCH QUESTIONS:
    • Federal, state, or local law?
    • Tort? Contract? Regulatory or statutory issue?
    • Whats the clients desired result?
    • What terms of art or industry lingo do I need to know to define my research questions?
    • Begin creating a list of search terms.

7. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • GET UP TO SPEED:
    • Review secondary sources .
    • Talk the issues out: Brainstorm with someone else who knows the area well.

8. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • RESIST THE URGE TO JUMP RIGHT IN!
    • Dont waste time getting lost on Lexis & Westlaw!
    • Consult secondary sources first.
    • Find leading cases, statutes, and regs..
    • ..then use Lexis & Westlaw.

9. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • CONSULT FREE INTERNET SOURCES SPARINGLY .
  • Search for 15-30 minutes if youre not finding anything useful, try new resource.
  • Use the Internet to find a good research guide on your topic written by a law librarian or a law professor. Check the date on the guide to make sure its relatively recent.
  • Sample search :
    • Immigration law research guide site:.edu

10. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • NOW.WRITE DOWN A RESEARCH PLAN
    • Budget your time: figure out how much time you can spend on each question.
    • List the resources that you plan to consult for each research question and relevant search terms.
    • If you use Lexis & Westlaw,call the reference attorney hotlineand ask them for help with search creation.Open 24/7.

11. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • UPDATE YOUR RESEARCH
    • Are the cases, statutes, & regulations that you found during research still good law?
    • Use electronic citators such as KeyCite and Shepards,evenif your client wont pay for electronic research.Print citators are not sufficiently up-to-date!
    • Shepardize secondary sources, too!

12. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • Lexis and Westlaw both offer Alert services:emails Shepards & KeyCite updates for your sources; runs your searches regularly for you.
  • Use these services to find:
    • New primary & secondary authority; and
    • Make sure what youve already found remains good law.

13. RESEARCH STRATEGY

  • AM I DONE?
  • Are you running into same info? probably done.
  • Read the most recent article or case on your topic if youre familiar with all of the relevant legal issues & cited authority, thats a good sign.

14. SECONDARY SOURCES

  • WHY SHOULD I USE THEM?

15. SECONDARY SOURCES

  • Reason #1: DONT REINVENT THE WHEEL.
  • Good secondary sources jumpstart your research by giving you citations to major cases, statutes, and regulations about your topic so you dont have to find these citations yourself in multiple locations.
  • Alsowill explain & analyze the law for you.

16. SECONDARY SOURCES

  • Reason #2: LEARN THE JARGON.
  • Every practice area uses special terms of art, acronyms, and lingo.Secondary sources define these terms for you.

17. SECONDARY SOURCES

  • Reason #3: FIND SOME NEW ARGUMENTS OR NEW WAYS TO ANALYZE THE LAW.

18. HOW TO FIND SECONDARY SOURCES

  • Ask a law librarian or your supervisor for recommendations.
  • Browse the Westlaw Directory and the Lexis Find a Source tab.
  • Check out a law library research guide.
  • Review Zimmermans Research Guide online for tips: http://www.lexisnexis.com/infopro/zimmerman

19. NEW SOURCES FROM ZIEF

  • Laurie LevensonsCalifornia Criminal LawandCalifornia Criminal Procedure .
  • John SinksCalifornia Subpoena Handbook .
  • Gregory CaskeysCalifornia Search and Seizure .
  • (all available on Westlaw)

20. COMMONLY-USED SOURCES

  • DONT FORGET THESE SOURCES FROM FIRST-YEAR!
  • AmJur&CalJurare great legal encyclopedias:
    • Perfect for quick overview & citations to statutes and case law.

21. COMMONLY-USED SOURCES

  • ALSO.
  • Witkins treatises on California law:
    • Summary of CA Law;
    • California Evidence;
    • California Procedure ; and
    • California Criminal Law

22. COMMONLY-USED SOURCES

  • Words and Phrases
    • Supplies a summary of federalandstate cases that contain the definitions of certain words and phrases.
    • EXAMPLE : can help you find cases that define legal terms like conspiracy or constructive eviction .

23. COMMONLY USED SOURCES

  • American Law Reports
    • Essays that discussselectedstateorfederal legal topics in detail
    • Includes West Key Numbers and citations to law review articles, practice guides, form books, and more.
    • Case & statute summaries cover all 50 states and federal law as well.

24. PRACTICE GUIDES

  • Practice Guides:
    • Strive to provide a practical but thorough discussion of the law, along with practice tips and citations to relevant primary authority.
    • Some have sample forms and agreements along with commentary.
    • Some focus just on supplying commentaryorproviding forms.

25. FINDING PRACTICE GUIDES

  • Popular Publishers of Practice Guides :
    • Matthew Bender;
    • Rutter Group;
    • CEB (CA Continuing Education of the Bar).
  • Zief Handout has recommendations for most practice areas.

26. FORM BOOKS

  • Use a form book when you need ideas on how to draft any legal document.
  • Exist for both transactional and litigation practices.
  • CAUTION :Its very rare that you can use a form straight from the book without tweaking it!Each form has to be adapted to your facts and your client.

27. FINDING FORM BOOKS

  • California Forms of Pleading and Practicemost popular resource (Bender; on Lexis).
  • Also look for West publications like:
    • Wests Legal Forms;
    • Wests Federal Forms;
    • Wests California Code Forms;
    • AmJur Legal Forms 2d.

28. LITIGATION DOCUMENTS ON WESTLAW & LEXIS

  • Westlaw has a growing collection of trial documents from both federal and state courts.
  • Go to Westlaw DirectoryLitigation
  • Use with caution
    • May be great, but
    • some may be very poorly drafted.

29. 30. .AND ON LEXIS

  • Lexis offers Total Litigator
  • Task-oriented library that includes collections of drafting resources, including actual court filings.

31. 32. 33. COURT FORMS

  • Each jurisdiction has its own required forms for various filings.
  • Check the California courts web page for forms ( http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/forms/ ) as well as your individual court website.
    • Most up-to-date source for forms.
  • LLRXwebsite has a handy online search engine for state & federal court forms, rules, and dockets:http://www.llrx.com/courtrules/

34. CALIFORNIA COURT FORMS 35. COURT FORMS

  • uscourts.gov allows you to find websites of all of the federal courts throughout US.
    • Go to the individual federal courts website to find relevant forms.

36. 37. Northern District of Californias Forms Page 38. JURY INSTRUCTIONS

  • Most states, including CA, develop standardized jury instructions for use in both civil and criminal trials.
  • In California, theBook of Approved Jury Instructions (BAJI) , was the first publication.
  • Now replaced by the Judicial Councils new plain English instructions, known asCACIandCALCRIM .

39. JURY INSTRUCTIONS

  • Can still use BAJI instructions, if accepted by court.
  • Californiacivil & criminal jury instructionson California courts website:http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/
  • Check individual federal court websites (links onwww.uscourts.gov ) for jury instruction information.

40. California Civil Jury Instructions Page 41. COURT RULES

  • Nota secondary source court rules are the laws that govern how courts function, so they are aprimarysource.
  • Annotated versionsare most useful: include summaries of cases interpreting the rules.

42. CALIFORNIA COURT RULES

  • Find them on Californias official court website:http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/rules/
  • Includes both California-wide rules and links to local courts individual rules.
  • Annotated versions available in Deerings annotated statutes under Rules of Court & Wests annotated set under Court Rules.

43. California Court Rules Page 44. FEDERAL COURT RULES

  • Categories include:
    • Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
    • Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
    • Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (governs civil and criminal)
    • Federal Rules of Evidence
    • Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure
    • Individual courts rules.
  • Text available on:http://www.uscourts.gov/

45. 46. FEDERAL COURT RULES

  • Also available in annotated versions in print in both the USCA and the USCS.
  • Use citator services (Shepards & KeyCite) to determine current status and judicial treatment of federal & state court rules.

47. Lexis & Westlaw Password Use

  • Lexis Account Use
    • Students in any judicial externship/clinical internship who arereceiving course creditmay use Lexis student account.

48. Lexis & Westlaw Password Use

  • Westlaw Account Use :
    • OK to use inunpaidclinical internships (incl. those taken for course credit) so long as theyrenotwith federal, state, or local government or courts; and
    • OK to use for pro bono and public service activitiesrequired for graduation .

49. GOOD LUCK!

  • Remember.youre welcome to call Zief librarians for research help during any type of internship (and after you graduate, too)!
  • Contact Info:
    • Reference Desk :415-422-6773
    • Website :www.usfca.edu/law_library

50. 51. LOOSELEAF SERVICES

  • Greatsinglesource for commentary, cases, statutes, regulations, and agency decisions.
  • Common publishers:CCH, BNA, RIA
  • Can be tricky to use for novices best to start with a simpler secondary source, then move to a looseleaf once you have some foundational knowledge.