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Legal Studies

Case Law

"Case law, also known as precedent or common law, is the body of prior judicial decisions that guide judges deciding issues before them. Depending on the relationship between the deciding court and the precedent, case law may be binding or merely persuasive. For example, a decision by the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit is binding on all federal district courts within the Fifth Circuit, but a court sitting in California (whether a federal or state court) is not strictly bound to follow the Fifth Circuit’s prior decision. Similarly, a decision by one district court in New York is not binding on another district court, but the original court’s reasoning might help guide the second court in reaching its decision. Decisions by the US Supreme Court are binding on all federal and state courts" (Justia, n.d.). 

Finding Cases in HeinOnline

  1. In HeinOnline, under Browse Databases by Category select Case Law
  2. Select Fastcase Premium to search federal and state case law or select U.S. Supreme Court Library to search Supreme Court decisions
  3. In the search box, enter keywords for the subject you are researching.  Example: "search warrant"
    • Search tip: Use quotation marks to tell the database to look for search terms of two or more words as a phrase where they appear right next to one another
  4. Use date and other limiters to make your search more specific
  5. Click Search

Finding Cases and Opinion Summaries on the Open Web

Case Citations