Instructions
Every lawyer briefs cases differently. A case brief generally consists of a series of topic headings with the specific information from the case under each heading. Most case briefs contain similar information but the headings and their sequence may be different. Some professors have a preferred briefing format. You are only required to follow the general format as set forth below.
The following is adapted from A Practical Guide to Legal Writing and Legal Method (Dernbach et al. 2007).
Case name: Include the full citation including the date of the opinion for future reference and citation. An example would be as follows: State v. Holloran 140 NH 563 (1995). Refer to Bluebook to determine the correct name for the case.
Pincites: Include pinpoint cites (cites to a particular page in the case) throughout the case brief so you can find material again quickly within a case.
Procedural History: What happened to the case before it arrived in this court? If it is an appellate case list the decisions made by the lower court(s) and note what decision is being reviewed (e.g. jury verdict summary judgment). You may need to look up procedural phrases with which you are unfamiliar.
Facts: Include only the facts that were relevant to the courts decision. You are unlikely to know what these are until you have read the entire opinion. Many cases may include procedural facts that are relevant to the decision in addition to the facts that happened before litigation.
Issue: The particular question the court had to decide in this case. It usually includes specific facts as well as a legal question. It may be expressed or implied in the decision. Cases may have more than one issue.
Holding/Decision: The legal answer to the issue. If the issue is clearly written then the holding can be expressed as yes or no. (Be careful not to confuse the holding with implicit reasoning. See # 8 below.)
Rule: The general legal principle(s) relevant to the particular factual situation presented in the case.
Reasoning: The logical steps the court takes to arrive at the holding. It can be straightforward and obvious or you may have to extrapolate it from the holding. Some reasoning is based on social policy which tells you why the holding is socially desirable. Understanding the reasoning behind a decision is essential.
Disposition: A statement of what the court actually did in the case (affirmed overruled etc.)
Dissent/Concurrence: Although this part of the opinion is not considered law it may help you better understand some information about the legal reasoning in the case. Not all cases have a dissent or concurrence while some may have more than one.
11. Comments: Include your own responses to the case here. For example does the reasoning make sense? Is the holding consistent with other cases you have read? Is the case relevant to the question you are trying to answer? This is a good place to note connections between the case you are briefing and other cases you have read.
Sample Case Brief
Remember most case briefs contain similar information but the headings and their sequence may be different than what is outlined above. You should include in your brief all elements that you deem necessary whether or not they are included in the sample below.
Name
Luke Records Inc. v. Navarro 960 F.2d 134 (11th Cir. 1992) Procedural History
Appealed from the trial court decision.
Facts
Luke Records Inc. a recording label held a contract with the musical group 2 Live Crew. This group was well known in the genre of Rap music which has repeatedly been accused of incorporating obscene lyrics into the music. Obscene in this sense pertains only to the legal definition of obscenity not what any particular person or moral code may deem obscene. Luke Records Inc. was a Florida Corporation and Nick Navarro was the sheriff of Broward County at the time. The sheriff obtained an ex-parte injunction (this means an injunction without both parties being present at the initial hearing) granting the sheriff an injunction (a court order to stop doing a particular act). This injunction was served on local record stores in an effort to have the music removed from Florida retail sale. After the local Florida Circuit Court in Broward County issued the injunction the decision was appealed to the United States District Court for Southern Florida where the Court ordered the sheriff to stop enforcing the injunction but did in fact rule that the music was obscene especially the song As Nasty As They Wanna Be. The sheriff appealed the case to the United States Court of Appeals 11th Circuit in Atlanta.
Issue
Is this music obscene under Florida state law and/or federal Constitution?
Holding/Decision
No
Rule
Obscenity must meet three part rule. Based on Supreme Court case Miller v. CA. All three parts must be met:
(a) whether the average person applying contemporary community standards would find that the work taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest;
(b) whether the work depicts or describes in a patently offensive way sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and
(c) whethertheworktakenasawholelacksseriousliteraryartisticpoliticalorscientificvalue.
Reasoning
The burden of proof could be clear and convincing or preponderance of the evidence test: however at the time the sheriff was granted the music he offered nothing into evidence except a tape of the music played before the court. There was no additional evidence presented that showed an average person applying contemporary community standards would find the song appealing only to a prurient interest. Further the sheriff failed to prove part (b) and (c) of the test as well simply because he made no attempt to enter any other testimony or evidence into consideration before the court. The sheriff failed to meet his burden although it is well possible that had he submitted all evidence as required he could possibly have met the test.
Comments
Case really determined by the sheriff’s failure of proof. No discussion of nature of music. No discussion of rule. No proper evidence submitted to the court.
WestLaw
To complete the assignment you will need to first locate the case in the WestLaw database through the Saint Leo University Online Library. Follow the steps below and contact the university library directly if you have any technical difficulty (see the syllabus for contact info). Do not contact the eCollege Help Desk. If you have access to a local law library feel free to obtain copies of the assigned cases there instead.
Log on to My Saint Leo at http://my.saintleo.edu.
Click Library at the top of My Saint Leo Home page.
Click Online Databases in the Quick Links menu to the left.
A new browser window will open. Click WestLaw in the list of databases (you may need to scroll
down).
Click WestLaw Login. Note: As long as you are logged in to My Saint Leo you will not need to enter
a separate password for WestLaw.
Search for the case by entering the case name as your search terms. You can use any of the search
tools available though the simplest may be Find a document by title under Shortcuts. This allows you to enter the names of the parties in the case. For example to search for Brown v. Board of Education you would type Brown in the first text box and Board of Education in the second text box.
Click Go after entering the names of the parties.
The case documentation will display once the search completes. If the search is unsuccessful check
that you entered the names of the parties correctly. You are encouraged to print a copy of the case to better assist you in completing the assignment.