Table 6 of the bluebook 20th edition manual#
This Manual supplements general citation and style authorities, providing more detail on New York materials and a more specific focus on judicial opinions. This Edition continues to add and adapt style rules and policies that promote modern practices emphasizing clarity, brevity and use of plain English in judicial decisions it also facilitates broad access to the law by encouraging citation of reliable, official sources that are publicly available online at no cost. Moreover, the Style Manual provides guidance to assist the courts with applying the Unified Court System's policy to protect the personal privacy and safety interests that are implicated in Internet publication of judicial opinions. In addition, it specifies for editors the format and typographical standards for the Reports. The Style Manual provides a guide for opinion writers and editors in five primary areas: citation, abbreviation, capitalization, quotation, and word style and usage. Although not binding on them, many lawyers find the Manual useful in preparing papers for submission to New York courts. It also prescribes the style applied by the Law Reporting Bureau in editing the opinions for publication in the Reports.
On behalf of our Judiciary and the entire legal profession, I extend my appreciation and gratitude to the Law Reporting Bureau for its always competent and diligent work, and for its responsiveness and commitment to excellence in continually updating the phenomenal resource that is the Official Style Manual.įor more than 60 years, the New York Law Reports Style Manual has been issued by the Law Reporting Bureau with the approval of the Court of Appeals as a guide for New York judges and their staffs in the preparation of opinions for publication in the Official Reports.
Finally, this edition reflects the Unified Court System's policy of recognizing privacy and safety concerns, including guidance on redaction of personal identifying and other private information in judicial writings. The Style Manual has been expanded to provide enhanced guidance on citation of electronic materials and Internet sources. Citation formats and examples have been provided for new sources of New York authority, including the Guide to New York Evidence being compiled by the Judicial Advisory Committee on Evidence established last year.
Table 6 of the bluebook 20th edition update#
This year, the Bureau has revised the Style Manual to update citation formats, add citation examples, clarify existing rules and add new rules to keep pace with the rapid growth of electronic materials and legal research technologies.Īmong the many notable additions designed to facilitate precision and clarity in judicial writings are new or amended rules clarifying the mandatory elements of initial citations and omitting unnecessary information in shortened citation to previously cited sources, such as the use of "supra" as an element of a short form citation. Happily, the Bureau's excellent Style Manual achieves all these goals - balancing the need to provide enough information about references so that readers can follow a line of argument to its legal sources with the need to keep the writing as clear and uncluttered as possible. This technical language of "legal citation," which is absolutely essential to legal writing, would be impossible to master without a widely accepted guide that promotes consistency, conciseness and precision. No judge writing an opinion or lawyer drafting a brief can do so properly without citing to pertinent legal authorities - statutes, regulations, prior court decisions, and treatises and secondary materials - to support their conclusions and arguments. Hooks and his excellent staff not only publish the Official Reports, the permanent record of the decisions and proceedings of the New York State courts, but also publish and maintain the Official Style Manual, which has long served as the authoritative reference work on legal citation for the New York courts and the lawyers who practice before them. Hooks, for inviting me to submit this Foreword to the newly revised 2017 Official Style Manual of the New York State Law Reporting Bureau. I want to thank our State Reporter, William J.