What's an Opinion? The Attorney General issues legal opinions to many public officials in South Carolina. When one of these officials presents a legal question in a written request, an Attorney General’s opinion attempts to resolve that legal question as the author believes a court would decide the issue. View.
Mailing Address The Honorable Alan Wilson P.O. Box 11549 Columbia, S.C. 29211
(a) South Carolina Constitution. The South Carolina Constitution should be cited in the following manner: S.C. Const. art. IV, § 4. (b) Statutes and Regulations. (1) Statutes which appear in a hardbound volume of the Code of Laws of South Carolina should be cited in the following form: S.C. Code Ann. § 1-2-345 (1976). Where the statute appears in a replacement hardbound …
--Attorney General Opinions Issued in 1965 through 1999 Citations to opinions issued in 1965 through 1999 shall include an abbreviated reference to the year in which the opinion was issued as part of the opinion number. Pinpoint pages shall be used when citing to particular portions of an opinion. Example: 1998 Op. Att’y Gen. No. 98-055 1985 Op. Att’y Gen. No. 85-024, at 2-94
Under the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Attorney General was authorized to render opinions on questions of law when requested by the President and the heads of Executive Branch departments. This authority is now codified at 28 U.S.C. §§ 511–513. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 510, the Attorney General has delegated to the Office of Legal Counsel ...
The Office's Electronic Reading Room includes certain materials, including legal opinions, that have not been selected for official publication but have nonetheless been released as a matter of discretion and posted publicly because they are the subject of repeated requests or may be of public or historical interest.
As the chief law officer of the state, the California Attorney General provides legal opinions upon request to designated state and local public officials and government agencies on issues arising in the course of their duties. The formal legal opinions of the Attorney General have been accorded "great respect" and "great weight" by the courts.
Quo warranto is a special form of legal action, most often used to resolve a dispute over whether a specific person has the legal right to hold the public office that he or she currently occupies. The statutes relating to quo warranto are in the California Code of Civil Procedure, starting at section 803. Generally speaking, a quo warranto action may not be filed without the approval of the Attorney General. In order to obtain the Attorney General’s approval, a private person or a local agency must file an application pursuant to the rules and regulations issued by the Attorney General. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 11, §§ 1-11.) The application and supporting documents must be prepared by a licensed attorney. More information on preparing an application is available on our Quo Warranto page. To submit a Quo Warranto application, or to ask questions about how to submit an application, please contact: 1 Marc J. Nolan 2 Deputy Attorney General 3 Office of the Attorney General 4 Opinion Unit, Dept. of Justice 5 300 South Spring Street 6 Los Angeles, CA 90013 7 [email protected]
When a case is published in both an ocial and an unocial reporter, some authors choose to include both reporters in the citation of the case. The reference to the regional reporter is called
basic case citation contains the following elements: (1) the case name, (2) the reporter volume number, (3) the abbreviation for the reporter, (4) the page number in the reporter on which the case begins, and (5) the date of the decision.
When a cited authority clearly supports a statement/point that is contrary to the main statement point being made by the author , the italicized introductory signal but see is placed before the cita-tion to the authority.
Full citations should indicate the court that decided the case being cited. This can be achieved a couple of ways. Often, in citations to ocial case reporters, the reporter name clearly conveys the name of the deciding court.
United States Reports—abbreviated “U.S.”—is the ocial reporter of U.S. Supreme Court opin-ions. (Aside: After making a first full reference to “United States Supreme Court,” it is common practice to use “U.S. Supreme Court” or “the Court” (capitalized) in subsequent mentions.) There are several unocial reporters of U.S. Supreme Court cases (each one’s abbreviation, for citation purposes, is in parentheses following the full reporter name): Supreme Court Reporter