Nov 23, 2021 · Complete coverage of Florida Attorney General Opinions from 1961 to present, as published in the Biennial Report of the Attorney General. Sporadic coverage of opinions back to 1930. To the extent possible, unpublished opinions are included in this collection.
When citing to the exact material as in the preceding footnote, use "id." alone. When the second citation is to the Code but to a differ-ent rule, use "id." followed by the rule number. Include the year if it is different than the preceding footnote. 100. FLA ADmjN. CODE ANN. r. 28-3.031 (1990). 101. Id. at r. 28-3.031(1). 102. Id.
Opinions issued between 1895 and 1981 may be found in the Attorney General Opinion Indexes - 1895 to 1981. Informal Opinions: Copies of informal opinions may be obtained from the Opinions Division of the Attorney General's Office at 850-245-0140. Updating Opinions: The Attorney General’s Office does not routinely update previously issued ...
Citing Judicial Opinions ... in Brief; Citing Constitutional and Statutory Provisions ... in Brief; Citing Agency Material ... in Brief; The Bluebook; ALWD Citation Manual; eBook. PDF; WHAT AND WHY? Introduction; Purposes of Legal Citation
When citing to formal advisory opinions of the attorney general in the footnotes of scholarly articles, the general form is: ► [opinion number] Fla. Op. Att'y Gen [page] (year).
Citing court opinions (also known as "case citations")The abbreviated names of the main parties (the plaintiff or appellant versus the defendant or appellee)a number representing the volume of the "reporter" where the opinion is published.an abbreviation of the name of the "reporter"More items...•Nov 23, 2021
Florida Rules — To cite the various Florida rules, Rule 9.800(i) provides a list of the correct abbreviations, which are to be followed by the rule number. For example, the Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.180 is cited as follows: Fla. R. Civ.Jan 1, 2007
The Template for federal or state statutes is as follows:Reference List: Name of Act, Title Source § Section Number (Year). URL.Parenthetical Citation: (Name of Act, Year)Narrative Citation: Name of Act (Year)Aug 9, 2021
If you are citing a dissent, concurrence, or per curiam opinion, add this information at the end of the citation. Example: Holt v. ... 3d 415, 429 (2013) (Greene, J., dissenting). If you are citing a case that has prior or subsequent history within the past two years, then this should also be included in the citation.
How to Cite Supreme Court CasesName of the case (underlined or italicized);Volume of the United States Reports;Reporter abbreviation ("U.S.");First page where the case can be found in the reporter;Year the case was decided (within parentheses).Nov 15, 2021
(See Rule 9.1 for typeface conventions)....Rules of court.RuleAbbreviationFlorida Rules of Judicial AdministrationFla. R. Jud. Admin.Florida Rules of Worker's Compensation ProcedureFla. R. Work. Comp. P.Florida Probate RulesFla. Prob. R.Florida Rules of Traffic CourtFla. R. Traf. Ct.20 more rows
For a California statute, give the name of the code and the section number. For example, "Code of Civil Procedure, section 1011" or "Family Code, section 3461." For a federal statute, cite to the United States Code (abbreviated U.S.C.). For example, "28 U.S.C. section 351."
They shall be known as the Florida Rules of Juvenile Procedure and may be cited as Fla. R. Juv. P.
Most executive order APA citations have four basic elements:Order number.Volume number and name of the code in which the order appears (e.g., executive orders always in appear in 3 C.F.R.)Page number.Year that the order was promulgated.
Published on February 11, 2021 by Jack Caulfield. To cite federal laws (also commonly referred to as statutes or acts) in APA Style, include the name of the law, “U.S.C.” (short for United States Code), the title and section of the code where the law appears, the year, and optionally the URL.Feb 11, 2021
To cite a court case or decision, list the name of the case, the volume and abbreviated name of the reporter, the page number, the name of the court, the year, and optionally the URL. The case name is italicized in the in-text citation, but not in the reference list.Feb 4, 2021
The Bluebookrecommends using “(Fla. Dist. Ct. App.)” as the parenthetical identifier when citing to a district court of appeal decision.
For opinions not published in the Federal Supplement, cite to Florida Law Weekly Federal: Wasko v. Dugger, 13 Fla. L. Weekly Fed.
The Bluebook dictates that you cite to the Supreme Court Reporter over the United States Supreme Court Reports--Lawyers' Edition (Table 1, p. 233).Dec 1, 2021
To cite a court case or decision, list the name of the case, the volume and abbreviated name of the reporter, the page number, the name of the court, the year, and optionally the URL....How to Cite Court Cases in APA Style | Format & Examples.FormatName v. Name, Volume number Reporter Page number (Court Year). URLIn-text citation(Thorne v. Deas, 1809)1 more row•Feb 4, 2021
Statutes — It is common to see Florida Statutes cited in a variety of different ways, but there is only one correct form of citation: § 350.34, Fla. Stat. (2005).Jan 1, 2007
To cite Florida Rules, Rule 9.800 calls for the abbreviated rules reference followed by the rule number, e.g., Fla. R. Civ. P.Mar 3, 2000
10.3 COURTS Do not capitalize court, unless referring to a specific one. Follow the Bluebook for cases cited to the Southern Reporter. However, when citing to Florida Law Weekly, the style is Fla.
State & Local Government: The Attorney General may issue opinions to a Legislator, another state officer, or an officer of a county, municipality, other unit of local government, or political subdivision. If an Attorney General Opinion is being requested by a member of the Legislature, the member must certify on the Certification form (below) ...
An Attorney General Opinion will not, therefore, be issued when the requesting party is not among the officers specified in section 16.01 (3), Florida Statutes. Non-Official Duties: An opinion request must relate to the requesting officer's own official duties.
Advisory: Issuing legal opinions to governmental agencies has long been a function of the Office of the Attorney General. Attorney General Opinions serve to provide legal advice on questions of statutory interpretation and can provide guidance to public bodies as an alternative to costly litigation. Opinions of the Attorney General, however, are ...
Public Officials: The responsibility of the Attorney General to provide legal opinions is specified in section 16.01 (3), Florida Statutes, which provides that the Attorney General:
Types of Opinions Issued. There are several types of opinions issued by the Attorney General's Office. All legal opinions issued by this office, whether formal or informal, are persuasive authority and not binding. Formal: Formal numbered opinions are signed by the Attorney General and published in the Report of the Attorney General.
Court Matters: In order not to intrude upon the constitutional prerogative of the judicial branch, opinions generally are not rendered on questions pending before the courts or on questions requiring a determination of the constitutionality of an existing statute or ordinance.
questions of a speculative nature; questions from private individuals or entities; questions requiring factual determinations; questions which cannot be resolved due to an irreconcilable conflict in the laws (although the Attorney General may attempt to provide general assistance);
10.2 Unofficial Reporter#N#Cite to the Florida Law Weekly only if the opinion does not yet appear in the Southern Reporter . See Bluebook Table T.1.
10.3 Courts#N#When referring to a court in text, capitalize according to the rules in Rule 1.4 (a).
Cite to the Southern Reporter , Southern Reporter Second, or Southern Reporter Third, if therein. Otherwise, cite to Florida Reports for cases from 1846-1948 not in the Southern Reporter, or cite to the Florida Law Weekly for opinions not yet in an official reporter. Examples are below.
In legal documents or scholarly works, cite to orders issued by Florida courts by giving the title of the order, if titled, along with the location of the material, followed by the case name and case number. Include a parenthetical indicating the name of the court and the date the order was issued.
When a reference is to the uniform law or model code apart from its adoption and interpretation in a particular state , the citation should consist of the name of the uniform law or code (as abbreviated), section number, and the year that law or code (or major subpart) was promulgated or last amended.
Illinois, Louisiana, and Mississippi use the docket number as the case ID rather than generating a new one based on year and decision sequence. In addition, Louisiana uses slip opinion page numbers rather than paragraph numbers for pinpoint citation. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit does the same.
191 All citations of Kentucky Statutes shall be made from the official edition of the Kentucky Revised Statutes and may be abbreviated "KRS.". The citation of Kentucky cases reported after January 1, 1951, shall be in the following form for decisions of the Supreme Court and its predecessor court: Doe v.
On September 10, 1992, Kotis was indicted for (1) murder in the second degree, in violation of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-701.5(1) (1993), (2) kidnapping, in violation of HRS § 707-720(1)(e) (1993), and (3) terroristic threatening in the first degree, in violation of HRS § 707-716(1)(d) (1993).
Because Kotis was involuntarily hospitalized by order of the circuit court, HAR § 11-175- 45(b)(3) applies to his case and authorizes the director's motion for an order of involuntary medication. Administrative rules, like statutes, have the force and effect of law.
Only a court can effectively establish the means for vendor- and medium-neutral citation of its decisions. Courts that leave the association of an enduring, citable identification for each decision and its parts to a commercial publisher, by default, force the use of the dominant publisher's print citation scheme.
Parallel citations to the regional reporter, if available, are required. If the regional reporter citation is not available, then parallel citations to unofficial sources, including unofficial electronic databases, may be provided. Pinpoint citations to specific pages are strongly encouraged.
Three important considerations when citing a government publication: 1 The “author” of any government material is almost always “institutional” — an agency, office, committee, department, etc. — not an individual person. 2 When in doubt, provide the full “hierarchy” of the issuing agency as author. 3 U.S. Federal Government "authors" in citations should begin with "United States" or "U.S."
Again, an agency is almost always the “author” However, the same online document may appear on several different agencies’ Web sites, perhaps, result ing in different authors and/or titles for the same document.