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- From: tjc50@ccc.amdahl.com (Terry Carroll)
- Newsgroups: misc.legal,misc.legal.computing,misc.int-property,comp.patents,misc.answers,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Copyright Law FAQ (6/6): Appendix (a note about legal citation form)
- Summary: This article contains frequently asked questions
- (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States.
- Message-ID: <law/Copyright-FAQ-6-757882188@ccc.amdahl.com>
- Date: 6 Jan 94 18:51:46 GMT
- Expires: 7 Feb 94 17:49:48 GMT
- References: <law/Copyright-FAQ-1-757882188@ccc.amdahl.com>
- Sender: tjc50@juts.ccc.amdahl.com
- Reply-To: tjc50@ccc.amdahl.com (Terry Carroll)
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- Posted-By: auto-faq 2.4
- Archive-name: law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
-
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT COPYRIGHT (V. 1.1.2)
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's all this
- '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- Copyright 1994 Terry Carroll
- (c) 1994 Terry Carroll
-
- Last update: January 6, 1994.
-
- This article is the last in a series of six articles that contains
- frequently asked questions (FAQ) with answers relating to copyright law,
- particularly that of the United States. It is posted to the Usenet
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.int-property, comp.patents,
- misc.answers, comp.answers, and news.answers newsgroups monthly, on or
- near the 17th of each month.
-
- This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209],
- in directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ, files part1 -
- part6. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain a copy
- via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following
- lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part3
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part4
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part5
- send usenet/news.answers/law/Copyright-FAQ/part6
- quit
-
-
- DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ.
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Terry Carroll. It may be freely
- redistributed in its entirety provided that this copyright notice is not
- removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial
- documents without the written permission of the copyright holder.
- Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available
- for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file
- transfer on the Internet. Permission is further granted for this
- document to be made available for file transfer in the data libraries of
- associated with the following Compuserve Information Services fora: the
- Legal Forum, the Desktop Publishing Forum, the Show Business Forum, and
- the Ideas, Invention & Innovation Forum. This article is provided as is
- without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this article
- represents the views of Santa Clara University or of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal.
-
- While all information in this article is believed to be correct at the
- time of writing, this article is for educational purposes only and does
- not purport to provide legal advice. If you require legal advice, you
- should consult with a legal practitioner licensed to practice in your
- jurisdiction.
-
- Terry Carroll, the FAQ-maintainer, is a computer professional, and is
- currently (January 1994) a student in his final semester at Santa Clara
- University School of Law, is currently Editor-in-Chief of the Santa Clara
- Computer and High Technology Law Journal, and is seeking employment as an
- attorney.
-
- If you have any additions, corrections, or suggestions for improvement to
- this FAQ, please send them to one of the following addresses, in order of
- preference:
-
- 71550.133@compuserve.com
- tcarroll@scuacc.scu.edu
-
- I will accept suggestions for questions to be added to the FAQ, but
- please be aware that I will be more receptive to questions that are
- accompanied by answers. :-)
-
-
- FAQ ORGANIZATION.
-
- The following table indicates the contents of each of the parts of the
- FAQ.
-
- Part 1 - Introduction (including full table of contents).
- Part 2 - Copyright basics.
- Part 3 - Common miscellaneous questions.
- Part 4 - International aspects.
- Part 5 - Further copyright resources.
- Part 6 - Appendix: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's
- all this '17 U.S.C. 107' and '977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- APPENDIX: A note about legal citation form, or, "What's all this '17
- U.S.C. 107' and.'977 F.2d 1510' stuff?"
-
- Citations to legal materials can be intimidating when first encountered.
- The purpose of this entry is to provide a short description of the legal
- citations used in this article to reduce that intimidation. It's not
- intended as a be-all and end-all to legal research, but just a way of
- letting you find the sources that are cited in this FAQ if you head to a
- law library. If you don't care about looking up any of the legal
- materials cited in this FAQ, you can skip this entry. On the other hand,
- if you find this interesting and would like more information, I recommend
- Mark Eckenwiler's Legal Research FAQ. This FAQ is archived at
- rtfm.mit.edu, directory /pub/usenet/news/answers/law/research, files
- part1 and part2. If you do not have direct access by FTP, you can obtain
- a copy via email: send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
- following lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/research/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/research/part2
- quit
-
- Questions regarding the Legal Research FAQ should be directed to Mark at
- eck@panix.com.
-
- CASES: Cases are reported in books called "reporters." A reporter
- generally consists of a series of bound volumes. Often when the volume
- number becomes too high, the reporter publisher starts over with volume
- 1, designating the new set as a "second series," "third series," etc., as
- appropriate.
-
- Because copyright is almost entirely a matter of federal law, most (if
- not all) cases referenced in this FAQ are federal cases. The most common
- reporters (with their abbreviations shown in parentheses) are:
-
- United States Reports (U.S.) - This is the official reporter for cases
- from the United States Supreme Court. This is the standard reporter
- reference provided when referencing a Supreme Court case. If a case is
- especially recent, it may not yet be published in the U.S. Reports, in
- which case, the proper reference is to one of the unofficial reporters
- (either the Supreme Court Reporter or the Lawyers' Edition).
-
- The unofficial reporters are also cross-indexed by the U.S. Report's
- volume and page numbers, so that given a citation to a case in the U.S.
- Reports, you should be able to also find it in either of the unofficial
- reporters. The converse is not true: if, for example, you have a
- citation to the Supreme Court Reporter, you will not be able to find the
- case in the U.S. Reports. All law libraries carry a set of books called
- Shepard's Citations, which will permit you to cross-reference this way.
- See your law librarian for help using these intimidating-looking books.
-
- Supreme Court Reporter (S.Ct.) - This is an unofficial reporter published
- by West Publishing. It too reports cases from the United States Supreme
- Court. The advantages of this reporter is that it comes out more quickly
- than the official reporter, and also includes West's headnotes and case
- summaries.
-
- United States Supreme Court Reporter, Lawyers' Edition (L.Ed.) - This is
- another unofficial reporter, similar to the Supreme Court Reporter, but
- published by the Lawyers Cooperative Publishing Co. In addition to the
- advantages offered by the Supreme Court Reporter, it often includes short
- essays (called annotations) on points of law dealt with in a case.
-
- Federal Reporter (F.) - This is an unofficial reporter, published by
- West, that reports cases from the various United States Courts of Appeal.
- There is no official reporter for these cases, and the Federal Reporter
- de facto fills that role.
-
- Federal Supplement (F.Supp) - This is an unofficial reporter, published
- by West, that reports cases from the various United States District
- Courts (that is, from the courts of "original jurisdiction," where trials
- are originally held and often appealed to the higher courts). There is
- no official reporter for these cases, and the Federal Supplement de facto
- fills that role.
-
- United States Patent Quarterly (U.S.P.Q.) - This is a topical reporting
- service from the Bureau of National Affairs (BNA). It reports cases from
- various courts, but because it's a "topical reporter," it only reports
- cases dealing with a certain topic, in this case, intellectual property
- (despite its name, it's not limited to patent cases).
-
- This is only a very small subset of the reporters and services that
- report cases. For a more complete list, see "The Bluebook: A Uniform
- System of Citation, 15th Edition," in particular, tables T.1 (United
- States Jurisdictions), T.2 (Foreign Jurisdictions) and T.16 (Services).
-
- The standard way of referencing a case is in the format:
-
- case-name volume-number reporter [series, if applicable] page-number
- (jurisdiction, date)
-
- "Jurisdiction" is omitted for U.S. Supreme Court cases; the fact that the
- reporter is U.S., S.Ct., or L.Ed. is enough to show that it's a U.S.
- Supreme Court case. If two page numbers are included, the first page
- number is the page on which the case begins, and the second is the page
- that contains the particular point being referenced (called a "pinpoint
- cite" or "jump cite").
-
- Here is an example of a case citation:
-
- Sega v. Accolade, 977 F.2d 1510, 1520 (9th Cir., 1993).
-
- From this citation, we know that the parties in the case are Sega and
- Accolade; the case is reported in volume 977 (second series) of the
- Federal Reporter; the case begins on page 1510, but the particular point
- being referenced is on page 1520; the case was decided in the 9th Circuit
- Court of Appeals, in 1993.
-
- STATUTES: A federal statute is generally enacted as a "public law," and
- is assigned a P.L. number. This number indicates the Congress in which
- it was enacted, and the law number within the Congress. For example, the
- Copyright Act of 1976 was the 553rd law enacted by the 94th Congress, and
- so is officially catalogued as P.L. 94-553. If you know the P.L. number
- of a law, you can generally find it in the United States Code
- Congressional and Administrative News (U.S.C.C.A.N.), or in Statutes at
- Large (see below) easily.
-
- Once enacted, Public Laws are catalogued in a official statute list
- called "Statutes At Large." Citations to Statutes at Large ("Stat.") are
- similar to that for cases: volume, service identifier, and page number.
- For example, the Copyright Act of 1976 may be cited as 90 Stat 2541,
- meaning that it is in Statutes At Large, volume 90, page 2541.
-
- However, most statutes, as enacted, are not very useful to read. They're
- generally written in a style saying that a prior act is amended by adding
- certain words or phrases, and deleting others. Without seeing the
- context of the modified portion, you really can't see what the statute
- actually does.
-
- This problem is handled by statutory codifications. In particular, most
- U.S. laws are organized into "titles" of the U.S. Code (U.S.C.). Each
- title governs a particular area of law. For example, Title 17 deals with
- copyright law. These codifications are periodically updated by taking
- the original laws and applying the modifications made by subsequent laws
- so that the result is the text of the law as it is in effect today. In
- practice, almost every citation to law (including the majority of those
- in this FAQ) are to the U.S.C., not to the individual public laws.
-
- A typical citation to the U.S.C. looks like this: 17 U.S.C. 107. This is
- a reference to U.S. Code, Title 17, section 107 (which happens to be the
- fair use provisions of copyright).
-
- While there is an official U.S. Code published by the U.S. government,
- there are two commercially published versions of the code, too. These
- are West Publishing's U.S. Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.) and Lawyers
- Cooperative Publishing Co.'s U.S. Code Service (U.S.C.S.). In practice,
- because of the private versions are frequently updated, and contain
- extras such as cross-references to other statutes, cases, law review
- articles and other resources, they are used far more frequently than the
- official U.S.C.
-
- REGULATIONS: In addition to statutes passed by Congress, law also comes
- in the form of regulations promulgated by the various federal agencies.
- In the case of copyright, the regulations we're most interested in are
- those promulgated by the Copyright Office.
-
- Regulations become effective by publication of the regulation in the
- Federal Register (Fed. Reg.). Like statutes, they are then periodically
- codified, in this case in the Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.).
- Usually, regulations are cited to the C.F.R. for the same reason that
- statutes are usually cited to the U.S.C. However, the promulgation
- documents as published in the Federal Register include not only the
- regulation itself, but usually information justifying or explaining the
- regulation, so occasionally the Fed. Reg. citation is used.
-
- Here are some examples of citations to a regulation, in this case, to a
- regulation preventing registration of a copyright in a blank form:
-
- 45 Fed. Reg. 63297, 63299 (Sep. 24, 1980). (Federal Register volume 45,
- beginning on page 63297, with a pinpoint cite to page 63299.)
-
- 37 C.F.R. 202.1(c) (1992). (the same regulation, as codified in the
- C.F.R.)
-
- TREATIES: Treaties are compiled in several treaty sources. If the U.S.
- is a party, the treaty will generally be found in United States Treaties
- and Other International Agreements (U.S.T.) or Treaties and Other
- International Acts Series (T.I.A.S.). In some cases (especially with
- older treaties signed before the State Department took on their
- publication), they'll be in Statutes at Large; in some case (especially
- with important newer treaties not yet published by the State Department),
- they'll be in the private versions of the U.S. Code.
-
- If the U.S. is not a party, the treaty won't be in the above sources. It
- might be found the United Nations Treaty Series (U.N.T.S.) (or the League
- of Nations Treaty Series (L.N.T.S.) for older treaties), the Pan-American
- Treaty Series (Pan-Am. T.S.) or European Treaty Series (Europ. T.S.).
-
- In addition, treaties may be found in many unofficial compilations, e.g.,
- International Legal Materials (I.L.M.), Basic Documents of International
- Economic Law (B.D.I.E.L.), Bevans, and Kavass (KAV).
-
- This is only a small list of treaty sources. For more sources, see "The
- Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, 15th Edition," in particular,
- table T.4 (Treaty Sources).
-
- Generally, treaties are cited in the standard way: volume number,
- reporter, and page number (e.g., the Berne Convention is 1 B.D.I.E.L.
- 715). A few series (e.g., T.I.A.S. and Europ. T.S.) are cited by treaty
- number within the series, with no volume number specified.
-
- The document "Treaties In Force" lists all the treaties to which the U.S.
- is a party, and it lists all the other nations that are also a party.
- This is a good source to find out if a particular nation is a signatory
- to a particular treaty.
-
- One final note on treaties: In section 4.1, many citations to treaties
- look like typographical errors: "Art. 6bis" and "Art. 11ter," for
- example. Well, these aren't typos. "bis," "ter, and "quater" are
- suffixes derived from the French words for "second," "third," and
- "fourth," respectively These suffixes are used when a treaty has already
- been written, and a revision will insert a new article between already
- existing articles. This avoids the need to renumber the treaty articles,
- and so provides a consistency between multiple revisions of the treaties.
- For example, Article 6bis of the Berne Convention is an article that was
- inserted between Article 6 and Article 7 when the convention text was
- revised. (This is also the reason why some modems are advertised as
- supporting the V.32 protocol, while others support V.32bis, in case
- you've ever wondered.)
-
-