The Duncan case
Reading a case (review)
Selecting a paper topic
Primary and secondary sources
100

What crime was Gary Duncan charged with?

Battery (=intentional infliction of offensive or harmful contact)

100

How do we call the legal question in a case?

The issue

100

You can't select a topic without checking first that they exist.

Sources!

100

A source that is not the law itself but comments or describes the law

A secondary source

200

What was the legal issue in the case?

Whether Duncan had a right to jury trial in a criminal case before a state court.

200

The general principle the cases stand for.

The rule (or rule of law).

200

The thing you need to do if your topic is too broad

Narrow the topic

200

A source that represents the law itself (a case, a statute, the Constitution)

Primary source
300

In general, is there a right to a jury trial in a criminal case?

Yes, although this right does not apply to all crimes.

Note: "it depends" is also a correct answer

300

What the court decided in the specific case.

The holding.

300

Cite at least 2 criteria in the choice of topic

-Personal interest

-Feasibility

-Originality

-Timeliness

-Availability of sources

300

A book written by experts and summarizing the principles of the common law on a legal topic

A Restatement

400

What provision of the Constitution was used by Duncan to argue that he had a right to a jury trial?

6th and 14th amendment

400

An opinion in which the judge agrees with majority, but with a different reasoning.

A concurring opinion.

400

The two types of sources you will to develop your topic

Primary and secondary sources

400

Cite 3 types of secondary sources

-Law review articles

-Restatements

-Law books and manuals

-Treatises

-Legal encyclopedia

500
According the US Supreme court, what crimes do not require a jury trial?

Petty crimes (as opposed to serious crimes).

500

What is "dicta"?

The part of the reasoning that is not necessary to solve the case. Unlike the holding, "dicta" is not binding authority.

500

The technical term to mean that someone already wrote about the topic recently with the same perspective

The topic is "preempted"

500

Another term for the rules issued by government agencies

Administrative regulations

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