BLR 7

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I'm just a bill

A bill is introduced into one chamber of Congress (either the House of Representatives or the Senate). The bill is referred to a committee in that chamber. If the committee is in favor of the bill, it will recommend to the full chamber of Congress that the bill be passed. The bill is then debated by the full chamber and can be amended. The members of that chamber of Congress vote on the bill If the bill is passed, the bill then goes to the other chamber of Congress to begin the same process. If both chambers pass the bill, it goes to the President. The President can then sign the bill into law, allow the bill to become law without a signature, or veto the bill. Congress can override a veto if two-thirds of both the House and the Senate vote to do so.

UPDATING STATUTES IN PRINT

the hardbound volumes in each stat. code set are updated with new information at regular intervals. Each volume is updated using pocket parts or standalone supplements. Pocket parts - Stapled pamphlets found tucked into the inside back cover of a hardbound volume Updates the information in the hardbound volume at regular intervals (usually annually) When a pocket part becomes too thick a standalone supplement is printed. Standalone supplements = Softcover (except U.S.C. stndalone supp's, which are HARD) volumes that are separately bound and placed next to the hardbound volume in the code set

8 always abbrev's

&, ass'n bros., co., corp., inc., ltd.

Updating Statutes Using Print Resources Once you have located a relevant statute or code section, you must always check for updates to that statute or code section.

1) Check for a pocket part (a small pamphlet tucked into the back of the volume), or freestanding supplement volume (shelved next to the volume), to the print volume containing your statute. 2) Check the date of the pocket part or supplement to see how current it is. The date will usually be printed on the title page. If there is no pocket part or supplement, check the title page of the main volume for its date. 3) Changes may have occurred since the date the volume, pocket part or supplement was published. To find these changes you need to use a legislative service. These are pamphlets containing the most recent changes to the law and are available for the federal and Illinois annotated code sets. The legislative service pamphlets are generally shelved at the end of their respective code sets (see below for exceptions). 4) To use a legislative service, go to the back of the most recent booklet in the service and refer to the table at the back (each set has a different name for this table, see below). The table is cumulative through all published pamphlets and is arranged by code section. If there have been any changes to your statute or code section they will be listed in this table. Federal Codes: United States Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.) - unofficial - published by West Legislative service name: United States Code, Congressional & Administrative News Note: the legislative service pamphlets are not shelved after the U.S.C.A. but after the U.S.C.C.A.N. (KF 48 .W47), a set that reprints the full text of federal session laws. Table name: "U.S. Code and U.S. Code Annotated Sections Amended, Repealed, New Etc." United States Code Service (U.S.C.S.) - unofficial - published by Lexis [no longer updated in print at the law library] Legislative service name: Advance Service Table name: "Table of Code Sections Added, Amended, Repealed or Otherwise Affected" Illinois Codes: Smith-Hurd Illinois Compiled Statutes Annotated - unofficial - published by West Legislative service name: West's Illinois Legislative Service Table Name: "Illinois Compiled Statutes Amended, Repealed, Etc." Michie Illinois Compiled Statutes Annotated - unofficial - published by LexisNexis Legislative service name: Advance Legislative Service Table name: "Table of Sections Added, Amended or Repealed" 5) If your statute has been amended -- that is, there is a public law (federal) or public act (Illinois) listed in the table of the legislative service -- **read the text of the amended law in the legislative service.** The text may be published in an earlier legislative service pamphlet than the one containing the table you referenced (only the tables are cumulated; the public laws/acts are merely printed in chronological order as they are enacted).

The three steps to the enactment and publication of an IL statute:

1. Bills - the first version of a law 2. Slip and Session Laws Slip laws - the first printed version of a newly enacted law Session Laws - published chronologically in the order in which they were enacted during a legislative session 3. State Statutory Code The arrangement of state laws by subject. Contain alphabetical subject indexes to help you find statutes on specific subjects May either be annotated or unannotated

The three steps to the enactment and publication of a law include:

1. Bills - the first version of a law 2. Slip and Session Laws Slip laws - the first printed version of a newly enacted law Session Laws - published chronologically in the order in which they were enacted during a legislative session 3. Federal Statutory Code The arrangement of federal laws by subject. Contain alphabetical subject indexes to help you find statutes on specific subjects May either be annotated or unannotated

IL anchor acts

750 ILCS 5/1-106 (2016 State Bar Edition). Chapter 750 Code set (ILCS) Anchor act 5 Section 1-106 year on spine volume 750 ILCS 5/1-106 (West 2017). (Smith-Hurd ILCS) " " " (LexisNexis 2017) (ILCS Annotated)

Citing U.S.C.

8 U.S.C. § 1101 (2016). Title Code set Section Year on spine of volume

Citing USCA/USCS

8 U.S.C.A. § 1101 (West 2016). 8 U.S.C.S. § 1101 (LexisNexis 2016). Title / code set / secn / copyright year of volume

Illinois Legislative Process

A bill is introduced in one chamber of the Illinois General Assembly. The bill gets referred to the Rules Committee and then assigned to the relevant substantive committee from there. Once the bill passes through 3 readings (or debates) in first chamber of the Illinois General Assembly, it moves to the second chamber The bill is referred to the Rules Committee in the second chamber and then referred to the relevant substantive committee from there. Once the bill passes through three readings (debates) in the second chamber, it becomes an "enrolled bill." The "enrolled bill" goes to the Governor of Illinois to sign or veto. The Illinois General Assembly can override the veto with a three-fifths vote of each chamber.

CODES

A subject-based arrangement (compilation) of the enacted laws Include alphabetical subject indexes to assist you in locating statutes by topic Provide an easily identifiable location to the law, e.g.: Federal: 42 U.S.C. §200h (2012) Illinois: 735 ILCS 5/2-1202 (2014 State Bar Edition). Codes are published in two forms: Unannotated codes: Provide the text of the statute Provide a list of the public laws (federal) or public acts (Illinois) associated with the statute. This is referred to as the credit or source credit. The first public act/law listed should be the act that created the code section. Annotated codes: Annotated codes also provide the text of the statute and a list of the public laws/acts (Illinois) associated with the statute. However they contain additional editorial enhancements helpful to the researcher, including: Case annotations (short descriptions of cases which interpret or apply that code section) Historical and statutory notes providing summaries of the changes each public law or public act made to the section References to secondary sources Annotated codes are considered "unofficial."

annotated IL statutes:

Contains the text of Illinois statutes, as well as other references about each statute Arranged by subject Smith-Hurd ILCS (West) ILCS Annotated (formerly Michie's* ILCS) (Lexis) * Important: the Michie (Lexis) version does not always contain complete source credit information for each statute. Either the unannotated code, or the Smith-Hurd annotated code, will provide complete source credit information.

2 Cx's

Created in 1787; ratified in 1788 7 Articles; 27 amendments ------------------------------------- Currently on its fourth version (Constitution of Illinois of 1970) Preamble and 14 articles May not conflict with the U.S. Constitution All IL statutes, IL court opinions, and IL regulations must comply with the Illinois Constitution.

3 br's of state/fed govts' primary authorities

Federal Cases Executive Orders & Federal Agency Regulations/Decisions Federal Statutes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ State Cases Executive Orders & State Agency Regulations/Decisions State Statutes

To find a statute when you only know its name:

Federal: The Popular Names Table in the U.S.C.A. (West). It is available online; in print, it is located with the subject indexes at the end of the set. The Popular Names Table in the U.S.C.S. (Lexis). It is located in one of the Tables volumes at the end of the set. Illinois: The Popular Names Table in the Smith-Hurd (West) annotated set. It is available online; in print, it is located at the end of the last volume of the Subject Index. The Short Titles to ILCS table in the Michie (Lexis) annotated set. It is located near the end of the Tables volume

case law: courts interpret stat's

Like common law, this case law comes from the courts. However, the court's purpose in a case involving a statute is to interpret and/or apply an existing statute. The scope of the decision is only as broad as the statute. some areas of law may be governed by both common law and statutory law. In this situation you will want to look at: the relevant statute the case law interpreting that statute the body of common law related to the issue

citing IL stat's on lexis/west

On Lexis: 750 ILCS 5/1-106 (Lexis through P.A. 100-1114 of the 2018 Legis. Sess.). On Westlaw: 750 ILCS 5/1-106 (West, Westlaw through P.A. 100-1114 of the 2018 Legis. Sess.).

citing a fed stat. "ON LEXIS OR WESTLAW"

On Lexis: 18 U.S.C.S. § 1956 (Lexis through Pub. L. No. 115-223). On Westlaw: 18 U.S.C.A. § 1956 (Westlaw through Pub. L. No. 115-223).

Statutes are fluid in nature.

Once enacted, the legislature may continuously return to the statute to change (amend) it. Because of this fluidity it may be necessary to determine when particular language was added to or removed from a statute. Based on when an action occurred, a client may be governed by statutory language that is not in the current statute.

Session Laws:

Published chronologically in the order in which they were enacted. Federal session laws are called Public Laws and are composed of the number of the Congress plus the law number. Thus Pub. L. 107-412 represents the 412th law enacted during the 107th Congress. Illinois session laws are called Public Acts and are composed of the number of the General Assembly plus the law number. Thus Pub. Act 91-163 represents the 163rd law enacted during the 91st General Assembly. Session laws may contain several sections, each of which may be codified in different parts of the code. Because of this they are not easily searchable by subject.

Concurrent Federal and State Jurisdiction

Sometimes there are state and federal statutes on the same issue (e.g., there are federal environmental laws and Illinois environmental laws). What statutes apply to your case depends on whether a state or federal action is being pursued or whether a state or federal statute is deemed violated.

statutes and jx

Statutes are laws of general force and effect, in that they apply to all persons/entities in the covered jurisdiction.

When researching a topic, begin with the code's index.

The language used by legislators in the text of a statute may not be the language you would use when looking for information on a topic. The index helps bridge the gap between the researcher's "language" and the legislative "language." While codes are organized by topic, relevant information may be found in multiple sections of a code. The index can help to identify all possible sections of the code that may be of interest.

variations for citing both state and fed

These examples provided have been for citing a statute when there is no update to the statute in the pocket part/standalone supplement. There are significant variations in how you cite a federal statute based on whether the law you are citing is Found only in the hardbound volume of the code; or Found both in the hardbound volume of the code and in its pocket part/supplement; or Found only in the pocket part/supplement to be cont'd in BLR II

TWO TYPES OF STATUTORY CODES (state and fed)

Unannotated Codes Contain the text of the statute and a list of public laws/acts associated with the statute United States Code (U.S.C.) (Unannotated) Illinois Compiled Statutes (State Bar Edition) (Unannotated) ------------------------------------------ Annotated Codes Provide not only the text of the statute, but also references to other sources related to the statute such as cases and secondary sources Also have editorial enhancements that further explain the statute, such as case annotations and historical information about the statute United States Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.) (Annotated) (West) United States Code Service (U.S.C.S.) (Annotated) (Lexis) Smith-Hurd Illinois Compiled Statutes Annotated (West) Illinois Compiled Statutes Annotated (Lexis)

updating stat's online

When working with statutes online it is still necessary to go through the update process, because changes are not always integrated into the text of the statute right away. Effective dates, and other legislative events, may affect when changed language is incorporated into a code section. As in print resources, the online version of a statute will provide a source credit: a list of public laws (federal) or public acts (Illinois) creating and amending the code section. However, this may not be the most current version of the law. One way to look for pending legislation that may affect your code section is to use KeyCite (West) or Shepard's (Lexis). Using either of these services will provide you with a report listing amending public laws or public acts to your code section. If the report indicates there is a newer public law or public act, be sure to locate and read the text of the newer law. Even if the Shepard's or KeyCite report does not indicate pending legislation, you may still want to check current Congress or General Assembly activity to determine if any relevant bills are under consideration that may affect your code section. Both Lexis and Westlaw offer bill-tracking, and bill full-text, databases to assist in this process.

ILLINOIS COMPILED STATUTES (ILCS)

published by IL State Bar Assn semi-official Contains only the text of the IL statutes, without reference to other sources Arranged by subject

United States Code (U.S.C.) (Unannotated)

published by the U.S. Government Publishing Office Contains only the text of the statutes Comprised of Titles 1 - 54 Also includes the U.S. Constitution, federal court rules, Arranged by subject 27 titles of the U.S. Code are considered "official." For the other 23 titles, session laws are controlling in language conflicts. Published by the GPO.

USCA / USCS

text of the law (Titles 1 - 54) "extras" like case annotations and references to secondary sources Includes the U.S. Constitution, federal court rules, and international agreements relevant to the United States

To convert citations from the former Illinois Revised Statutes to the current Illinois Compiled Statutes

use: The Disposition Table in the Smith-Hurd (West) annotated set, located in the Tables volume. The Listing of Old Chapter and Paragraph Numbers table in the Michie (Lexis) annotated set, located in the Tables volume. The tables included with the State Bar Edition (unannotated) set.


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