Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Ohio Legal Research Website

I'm just now learning how to research case law via the internet. This is a great web site http://www.law.csuohio.edu/lawlibrary/resources/lawpubs/ohio/Courts.html#online

Ohio Court Opinions
-Structure of the Ohio Judiciary -Find an Ohio case in print-FInd an Ohio case online-Reported v. Unreported Ohio Cases -Ohio Supreme Court "Web Cite" Citations-Citation Formats for Ohio
-Find federal cases- Reported v. Unreported Federal Cases -Find cases on a certain topic-Decipher legal citations-Update a case

See Camtasia presentation regarding Ohio Public Domain Cite, Reported v. Unreported Cases, Citation Formats for Ohio
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Structure of the Judiciary in Ohio
An "Ohio case" can be one heard in the State Court System or the Federal Court System.
For an explanation of the hierachy of the Ohio State Court System, look at the Structure of the Ohio Judicial System Chart. A similar diagram is on the U.S. Courts page: Structure of the U.S. Courts

Places to Find an Ohio State Case:
In print:
The Ohio Official Reports:All Ohio Supreme Court decisions are included. The Reporter of Decisions selects certain appellate and municipal cases to publish in the Ohio Official Reports. See Rules for Reporting Opinions.
-Ohio State Reports 3d [Ohio Room KFO45 .A23 ] - Ohio Supreme Court Decisions-Ohio Appellate Reports 3d [Ohio Room KFO48 .A241 ]-Ohio Miscellaneous Reports 2d [Ohio Room KFO48 .A241 ] - Selected common pleas and municipal court decisions, Court of Claims and Federal District Court decisions. Few decisions of these courts are published.
New Officially Reported cases will first appear in the Ohio State Bar Association Report, sometimes called the "green books".
Prior Official Reports, in reverse chronological order:--Ohio State Reports 2d; Ohio Appellate Reports 2d; Ohio Miscellaneous Reports--Ohio State Reports, Ohio Appellate Reports --Ohio Reports
Unofficial print reporters: There are lots of unofficial reporters, many of which are no longer published. Take a look at How to Read a Legal Citation, for a list of common Ohio case reporters and their abbreviations. You can type the name of the case reporter into Scholar to find the call number of the print reporter.
For a list of unofficial reporters, see Ohio Case Law: Where to Find It by the Ohio Supreme Court Law Library. The following articles discuss some of these unofficial case reporters: Ervin H.Pollack and J. Russell Leach, Ohio's Reported Decisions -- An Integrated Survey , 11 Ohio State Law Journal 413 (1950) and Paul Richert, An Update on Judicial Reporting , 41 Ohio State Law Journal 675 (1980).
One unofficial reporter that is still published currently is North Eastern Reporter, now in its second series,KF135.N6 N62 [Second Level Library]. It includes Ohio Supreme Court and appellate decisions for Ohio and other northeast states. Volumes include West headnotes, which can help find more cases dealing with the same legal issue.
The library has some special databases of unreported cases: Ohio Appellate Decisions on Fiche KFO48.O5(Law Library Microform Consortium, 1982- 92) and Anderson's Unreported Ohio Appellate Cases KFO48.A5 (Anderson Publishing Co., 1990).

Places to Find an Ohio State Case:
Online:
Court web sites: The Supreme Court of Ohio has a database of Supreme Court, appellate (both reported and unreported), and reported Court of Claims and municipal court decisions. The dates of coverage vary by court, but in general, there is nothing older than 1992. The web site for each appellate court may have additional cases. Eighth District Cases from 1990-2005 are located on the Cleveland Law Library's website. The Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas posts some of its opinions on its web site. Some common pleas courts have online dockets where the full text of documents, including opinions, are available. To find common pleas court dockets, go to: Butler County Statewide Court Records Search. For more docket links, try: LLRX Court Rules, Forms and Dockets.
Fee databases: Lexis ( OH State Cases Combined ) , Lexis Nexis Academicand Westlaw (OH-CS) have Ohio reported and unreported cases. Lexis and Westlaw passwords are provided to law students. Lexis Academic Universe is accessible via Ohiolink with a valid CSU Id or by visiting a campus library.
Casemaker: Unreported decisions from 1981, Reported Ohio Supreme Court from 1894, Appellate Reports from 1934, Ohio Misc. from 1999. Available at the public access terminals in the law library, or with a Casemaker username and password. OSBA Membership includes Casemaker. OSBA Membership and Casemaker are FREE FOR LAW STUDENTS. Application. Law Student Membership Page.
"Free" Lexis on the web: Lexisone.com has the last ten years of case law, searchable with the Lexis search engine. Free but requires registration.
The Public Library of Law has Ohio appellate and Supreme Court cases from 1997.
Further Reading: How to Find an Ohio Case by the Cleveland Law Library

Reported vs. Unreported Ohio Decisions:
If a decision appears in an official reporter (Ohio Official Reporter or Ohio Reports), it is a "reported" decision. Generally, all Ohio Supreme Court decisions are "reported". The Reporter of Decisions decides which appellate and municipal cases appear in the Ohio Official Reports. See Rules for Reporting Opinions.
In the past, reported decisions were controlling authority in the district, and "unreported" opinions were merely "persuasive", meaning they are controlling only as to the parties. Prior versions of the Supreme Court Rules for Reporting opinions stated that unreported opinions "may be" cited in limited circumstances.
As of May 1, 2002, the Supreme Court abolished the distinction between "controlling" and "persuasive" opinions, based merely upon whether a case appears in the Official Reporter. Opinions for all cases decided on and after May 1, 2002 may be cited as legal authority and "weighted as deemed appropriate by the courts" See Rules for Reporting Opinions, Rule 4and Supreme Court - Revisions to the Manual of Citations at page 6.
(Some interpret this as all appellate opinions since May 1, 2002 are now controlling because all are published on the web and because the comments to Rules for Reporting Opinions, Rule 4 say "The Committee recognized the concern that with the designations abolished, and all appellate opinions are "controlling," there is some burden on the practitioner to sift through the large number of opinions to find those that are the best precendent". However, Rule 4 itself says "All court of appeals opinions issued after the effective date of these rules may be cited as legal authority and weighted as deemed appropriate by the courts. " )
Ohio Revised Code 2503.20 states that, "All such cases shall be reported in accordance with this section before they are recognized by and receive the official sanction of any court." Despite this code section, attorneys and judges frequently cite to cases that are not officially reported. See Ervin H.Pollack and J. Russell Leach, Ohio's Reported Decisions -- An Integrated Survey , 11 Ohio State Law Journal 413 (1950).

Ohio Supreme Court "Web Cite" Citations
For cases as of May 1, 2002, the Ohio Supreme Court posted the following to its website: 1. all Ohio Supreme Court cases, 2. all appellate court cases and 3. common pleas and other trial court opinions reported in Ohio Miscellaneous reports. See Rules for the Reporting of Opinions, Rule 9, 10 .
The cases posted to the web site were assigned a unique citation, known as the "web cite". See Revisions to the Citation Manual, 2002. It is also sometimes called the "public domain cite". Here is an example of a web cite:
2002-Ohio-2220
The first number is the year the case was decided, the last number is a unique number for that case.
Cases decided after May 1, 2002 must cite to the web cite, and to the Official Reporter cite (if any).
Examples:
Bonacorsi v. Wheeling & Lake Erie Ry. Co., 95 Ohio St.3d 314, 2002-Ohio-2220, 767 N.E.2d 707
Brown v. McClain Constr. Co., 3d Dist. No. 16-01-19, 2002-Ohio-2834
When a web cite is not available, and the case is printed in a reporter, use the reporter citation, example:
Mers v. Dispatch Printing Co. (1985), 19 Ohio St.3d 100, 483 N.E.2d 150.
When a web cite is not available and the case was not published in a print reporter use:
Jones v. Brown (Apr. 4, 1998), 8th Dist. No. 18220, or Jones v. Brown (Apr. 4,1998), Cuyahoga App. No. 18220

Citation Formats for Ohio
See Reporter of Decisions site for the Manual of Citations and Revisions to the Manual of Citations. Most attorneys use this format when filing briefs with Ohio state courts.



Federal Court opinions:
District Court: Two district courts try cases in Ohio, the Northern District and the Southern District. Reported cases appear in the Federal Supplement series, KF120 .F42. Reported and unreported cases are available on Lexis; LexisNexis Academic and Westlaw. Recent notable cases can be found at the Northern District of Ohio Web Site and the Southern District of Ohio Web Site. Copies of recent opinions are free on the federal Pacer docket service, but a search by party name has a minimal cost. Also try:
Justia Search for U.S. District Court Opinions - 2004-2008
LexisOne - federal case law for the past ten years.
Casemaker: 2005-current. Available at the public access terminals in the law library, or remotely with a Casemaker username and password.
Appellate Court: The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals hears appeals from Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and Tennessee District Courts. Reported cases appear in the Federal Reporter series, KF110.F42, located on the second floor of the library. Reported and unreported cases are available on Lexis, LexisNexis Academic and Westlaw. Published opinions issued since July 1, 1999 and unpublished opinions issued since October 1, 2004 appear on the Sixth Circuit's Web Site. Findlaw has Sixth Circuit opinions from 1996 to current. Copies of recent opinions are free on the federal Pacer docket service. Searching is not free, but the cost is minimal. Also try:
Appellate Decisions from 1950 to present on: The Public Library of Law ; Justia ; Altlaw;
Casemaker: 1950-present. Available at the public access terminals in the law library, or remotely with a Casemaker username and password. OSBA Membership and Casemaker are FREE to law students- Application. Law Student Membership Page.
For opinions from 1995 to 1999 see Emory School of Law - 6th Circuit Opinions.
LexisOne provides access to federal case law for the past ten years.
Appellate Decisions available via: PreCYdent


Published/Reported v. Unpublished/Unreported Federal Cases
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals now allows citation of all unpublished opinions. See Sixth Circuit Rule 28(g). This was in response to a recent change in the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, mandating that for cases decided on and after Jan. 1, 2007, appellate courts may not restrict the citation of unpublished cases. See Fed. R. App. P. 32.1, also see comments on this rule.
U.S. Supreme Court: The highest court for both state and federal cases. See Where to obtain US Supreme Court Opinions and Legal Research Workstation - Case Law.
Further reading: Zimmerman's Ohio Legal Research Guide: Judiciary


Deciphering Legal Citations:
See Cleveland Marshall Law Library Publications: How to Read a Legal Citation
For more information on the meaning of citation abbreviations, see SIU Law Library's Common Legal Abbreviations and Cardiff's Index to Legal Abbreviations, and Bieber's Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, KF246 .P74 2001


How to Find a Case Concerning a Certain Subject
Use secondary sources to find cases on a particular subject.
Try a keyword search on Lexis, LexisNexis Academic, Casemaker or Westlaw.
The Ohio Supreme Court's web site has a searchable database with a search engine, containing Ohio Supreme Court and Appellate court opinions, with decisions no earlier than 1992.
Try a keyword search on one of the following free Internet databases. Coverage varies.
Lexisone.com has the last ten years of federal and state case law.
Findlaw has search capability for Sixth Circuit (1996-) and U.S. Supreme Court cases (1893-).
The Public Library of Law: Ohio Supreme and Appellate cases 1997-, U.S. Supreme, Federal Appellate 1950-
Justia: U.S. Supreme, Federal Appellate 1950- , Fed District Ct. 2004-current
PreCYdent: U.S. Supreme, some Federal Appellate
Altlaw: U.S. Supreme, Federal Appellate 1950-
If you are researching a statute or court rule, you can consult an annotated copy of the statutes or rules. You can also do a search on Lexis, Westlaw, etc. for the code section number or rule number.
Further reading:"Researching Case Law" by Kyle K. Courtney, North Eastern University of Law.


Updating a Case
Shepard's (Lexis) or Keycite (Westlaw) lists subsequent cases that cited the case in question, and whether the subsequent case overruled or followed the case in question. In order to make sure a case is "still good law", don't stop at Shepard's or Keycite. It is possible the case is no longer good law, but no subsequent case ever cited that case as overruled. Looking at the Table of Authorities in Lexis will help determine whether the underpinning cases cited in a decision have been overturned. Thorough research of a question through electronic searches and/or secondary sources should reveal any changes in the law. Additionally, you should also check the statutes to see if the case was overruled by statute.
Shepards is available electronically to law school students and faculty via Lexis passwords and to other Law Library users at Reference Area workstations. Keycite is available to students and faculty via their Westlaw passwords.
Further reading: Cleveland Marshall's Citation Checking Guide