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3
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84928798335
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223 F.3d 898 (8th Cir.), vacated as moot, 235 F.3d 1054 (8th Cir. 2000) (en banc)
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223 F.3d 898 (8th Cir.), vacated as moot, 235 F.3d 1054 (8th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
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4
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84928804720
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The case involved the filing deadline for a refund of federal income taxes. The Eighth Circuit followed an unpublished case accepting the position of the Internal Revenue Service Weisbart v. United States Dep't of Treasury, 2000 WL 1041231 (2d Cir. July 28, 2000). With a petition for rehearing en banc pending in Anastasoff, the Internal Revenue Service acceded to the Second Circuit's position, thus conceding Ms. Anastasoff's claim and mooting her case - and leaving the constitutionality of the rule banning citation of unpublished opinions an "open question" in the Eighth Circuit. 235 F.3d 1054
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The case involved the filing deadline for a refund of federal income taxes. The Eighth Circuit followed an unpublished case accepting the position of the Internal Revenue Service. Meanwhile the Second Circuit Court of Appeals came out the other way. Weisbart v. United States Dep't of Treasury, 2000 WL 1041231 (2d Cir. July 28, 2000). With a petition for rehearing en banc pending in Anastasoff, the Internal Revenue Service acceded to the Second Circuit's position, thus conceding Ms. Anastasoff's claim and mooting her case - and leaving the constitutionality of the rule banning citation of unpublished opinions an "open question" in the Eighth Circuit. 235 F.3d 1054.
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Meanwhile the Second Circuit Court of Appeals Came Out the Other Way
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5
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0034356601
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Judicature, Sept. - Oct. 2000, p. 90; Deborah Jones Merritt and James J. Brudney, "Stalking Secret Law: What Predicts Publication in the United States Courts of Appeals", 54 Vand. L.Rev. (2001) 71; Brian Endter, "Death, Taxes and Unpublished Opinions", 33 Ariz. State L.J. (2001) 613; Charles E. Carpenter, Jr., "The No-Citation Rule for Unpublished Opinions", 50 South Carolina L.Rev. (1998) 235; Martha J. Dragich, "Will the Federal Courts of Appeals Perish If They Publish?", 44.4m. U.L.Rev. (1995) 757; Richard S. Arnold, "Unpublished Opinions: A Comment", 1 J. App. Prac. & Proc. (1999) 219; Case Note, 114 Harv. L. Rev. (2001) 940; K. Shuldberg, "Digital Influence: Technology and Unpublished Opinions in the Federal Courts of Appeal", 85 Calif. L. Rev. (1997) 541; Stephen R. Barnett, "Silent Stare Decisis", L.A. Daily J., April 13,2000, p. 4.
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E.g., Jerome I. Braun, "Eighth Circuit decision intensifies debate over publication and citation of appellate opinions", Judicature, Sept. - Oct. 2000, p. 90; Deborah Jones Merritt and James J. Brudney, "Stalking Secret Law: What Predicts Publication in the United States Courts of Appeals", 54 Vand. L.Rev. (2001) 71; Brian Endter, "Death, Taxes and Unpublished Opinions", 33 Ariz. State L.J. (2001) 613; Charles E. Carpenter, Jr., "The No-Citation Rule for Unpublished Opinions", 50 South Carolina L.Rev. (1998) 235; Martha J. Dragich, "Will the Federal Courts of Appeals Perish If They Publish?", 44.4m. U.L.Rev. (1995) 757; Richard S. Arnold, "Unpublished Opinions: A Comment", 1 J. App. Prac. & Proc. (1999) 219; Case Note, 114 Harv. L. Rev. (2001) 940; K. Shuldberg, "Digital Influence: Technology and Unpublished Opinions in the Federal Courts of Appeal", 85 Calif. L. Rev. (1997) 541; Stephen R. Barnett, "Silent Stare Decisis", L.A. Daily J., April 13,2000, p. 4. See also, e.g., Richard H. Fallon, Jr., "Stare Decisis and the Constitution: An Essay on Constitutional Methodology", 76 N.Y.U.LRev. (2001) 570, 596 n. 115.
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Eighth Circuit Decision Intensifies Debate over Publication and Citation of Appellate Opinions
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Jerome, I.1
Braun2
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6
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4344643411
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Unpublished Opinions & the Nature of Precedent
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E.g., Danny J. Boggs and Brian P. Brooks, "Unpublished Opinions & the Nature of Precedent", 4 Green Bag 2d 17 (2000); Alex Kozinski and Stephen Reinhardt, "Please Don't Cite This!", California Lawyer, June 2000, p. 44; Boyce F. Martin, Jr., "In Defense of Unpublished Opinions", 60 Ohio St.L.J. (1999) 177.
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(2000)
4 Green Bag
, vol.2
, pp. 17
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Boggs, D.J.1
Brooks, B.P.2
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8
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84928812558
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Appellate Process Task Force March 2001 (recommending that unpublished opinions be posted on the judicial Web site "for a reasonable period of time (e.g., 60 days)", but that the rule prohibiting citation of unpublished opinions be retained without change)
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Appellate Process Task Force, A White Paper on Unpublished Opinions of the Court of Appeal, March 2001 (recommending that unpublished opinions be posted on the judicial Web site "for a reasonable period of time (e.g., 60 days)", but that the rule prohibiting citation of unpublished opinions be retained without change).
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A White Paper on Unpublished Opinions of the Court of Appeal
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9
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84928787502
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Legal Shortcuts Run into Some Dead Ends
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Oct. 8
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E.g., William Glaberson, "Legal Shortcuts Run Into Some Dead Ends", N.Y.Times, Oct. 8, 2000, p.4.
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(2000)
N.Y.Times
, pp. 4
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Glaberson, W.1
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10
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84928794563
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Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 233 F.3d at 903
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Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 233 F.3d at 903.
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11
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84928809139
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Id. ("judges and lawyers of the day recognized the authority of unpublished decisions even when they were established only by memory or by a lawyer's unpublished memorandum")
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Id. ("judges and lawyers of the day recognized the authority of unpublished decisions even when they were established only by memory or by a lawyer's unpublished memorandum").
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13
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84928805173
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n. 2 supra
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See n. 2 supra.
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15
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84928816673
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n. 1 supra
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See n. 1 supra.
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16
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84928788475
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Rule 977 (a). As in every other jurisdiction, this is subject to ex- ceptions for citations that refer to the case as a fact, not a precedent - such as "when the opinion is relevant under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, or collateral estoppel. See ibid., Rule 977 (b). For a case rebuffing an attorney's attempt to cite an unpublished case to show the "fact" that her opponent's position lacked legal precedent, see Sorchini v. City ofCovina, 9th Circuit, May 4, 2001, 2001 DJDAR 4343
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California Rules of Court, Rule 977 (a). As in every other jurisdiction, this is subject to ex- ceptions for citations that refer to the case as a fact, not a precedent - such as "when the opinion is relevant under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, or collateral estoppel. See ibid., Rule 977 (b). For a case rebuffing an attorney's attempt to cite an unpublished case to show the "fact" that her opponent's position lacked legal precedent, see Sorchini v. City ofCovina, 9th Circuit, May 4, 2001, 2001 DJDAR 4343.
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California Rules of Court
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17
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84928786952
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Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 223 F.3d at 904. A committee has recently recommended that the California court of appeal do this. See note 8 supra
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See Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 223 F.3d at 904. A committee has recently recommended that the California court of appeal do this. See note 8 supra.
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18
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84928813197
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L.A. Daily J., April 13, 2001 (reporting that advocates of movie director Francis Ford Coppola, whose $80 million jury verdict against Warner Bros. in a dispute over the movie "Pinocchio" was set aside by the court of appeal in an unpublished opinion, "are trying to have the court officially publish its March 20 decision. Official publication would make the decision easily available over the Internet, and therefore more open to criticism. Copies of the unpublished opinion can be obtained only by going to the Court or by knowing somebody who has a copy")
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See "'Pinocchio' Grudge Match Continues", L.A.Daily J., April 13, 2001 (reporting that advocates of movie director Francis Ford Coppola, whose $80 million jury verdict against Warner Bros. in a dispute over the movie "Pinocchio" was set aside by the court of appeal in an unpublished opinion, "are trying to have the court officially publish its March 20 decision. Official publication would make the decision easily available over the Internet, and therefore more open to criticism. Copies of the unpublished opinion can be obtained only by going to the Court or by knowing somebody who has a copy").
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'Pinocchio' Grudge Match Continues
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19
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84928789817
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Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 223 F.3d at 904
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Anastasoff, supra n. 3, 223 F.3d at 904.
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20
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84928781312
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Ibid. As an example, consider In re Kamiyama, California Court of Appeal, 4th App. Dist., Division 3, May 29, 1998. Petitioner Michiko Kamiyama was convicted by a jury of misdemeanor child abuse for leaving her eight-year-old daughter home alone one evening, at a private residence in a gated community, while petitioner, who had been unable to find a baby-sitter, went out to audition for a job. The court, in an unpublished opinion, threw out the conviction, finding the evidence insufficient as a matter of law. A dissenter accused the majority of substituting its judgment for the jury's and departing from established precedent: "[t]he temptation to decide a case based on our own agendas or public opinion can be intoxicating..." The dissenter also criticized the majority for not publishing the opinions in the case. Under California's no-citation rule, a mother (or father) accused of child abuse on similar facts may not tell the court about the Kamiyama decision
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Ibid. As an example, consider In re Kamiyama, California Court of Appeal, 4th App. Dist., Division 3, May 29, 1998. Petitioner Michiko Kamiyama was convicted by a jury of misdemeanor child abuse for leaving her eight-year-old daughter home alone one evening, at a private residence in a gated community, while petitioner, who had been unable to find a baby-sitter, went out to audition for a job. The court, in an unpublished opinion, threw out the conviction, finding the evidence insufficient as a matter of law. A dissenter accused the majority of substituting its judgment for the jury's and departing from established precedent: "[t]he temptation to decide a case based on our own agendas or public opinion can be intoxicating..." The dissenter also criticized the majority for not publishing the opinions in the case. Under California's no-citation rule, a mother (or father) accused of child abuse on similar facts may not tell the court about the Kamiyama decision.
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21
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84928800372
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Editorial
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New Jersey Lawyer, Sept. 25, 2000; Merritt & Brudney, "Stalking Secret Law....", supra n. 5
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See, e.g., Editorial, "Secret Law", New Jersey Lawyer, Sept. 25, 2000; Merritt & Brudney, "Stalking Secret Law....", supra n. 5.
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Secret Law
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22
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84928805293
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Unpublished opinions may be reviewed on appeal; but an opinion's unpublished status is considered a substantial handicap in seeking supreme court review
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Unpublished opinions may be reviewed on appeal; but an opinion's unpublished status is considered a substantial handicap in seeking supreme court review.
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23
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84928809812
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L.A. Daily J., Aug. 30, 1994, p. 4 (complaining that recent decision by the Ninth Circuit affirming convictions (of writers' clients) "not only mischaracterized, but completely whitewashed, substantial misconduct and bias" by the trial judge, and that "it was done in an unpublished decision that hides the judge's conduct from the public, preventing the legal community from subjecting the decision to a healthy scrutiny I don't believe the opinion could withstand")
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" See Stanley I. Greenberg, "Prosecutor's Pal", L.A. Daily J., Aug. 30, 1994, p. 4 (complaining that recent decision by the Ninth Circuit affirming convictions (of writers' clients) "not only mischaracterized, but completely whitewashed, substantial misconduct and bias" by the trial judge, and that "it was done in an unpublished decision that hides the judge's conduct from the public, preventing the legal community from subjecting the decision to a healthy scrutiny I don't believe the opinion could withstand").
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Prosecutor's Pal
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Stanley, I.1
Greenberg2
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25
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84928786923
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Arnold, supra n. 5, 1
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Arnold, supra n. 5, 1 J.App. Prac. & Process, at 225.
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J.App. Prac. & Process
, pp. 225
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26
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84928817979
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"The litigant who garners ideas and arguments from unpublished opinions but does not cite to them... need never reveal the paper trail. This is a weakness in the use of unpublished opinions that no-citation rules will not eradicate." Martin, supra n. 6, 60 Ohio St.L.J., at 197 (concluding, however, that this problem "is [not] sufficient to warrant the elimination of unpublished opinions")
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"The litigant who garners ideas and arguments from unpublished opinions but does not cite to them... need never reveal the paper trail. This is a weakness in the use of unpublished opinions that no-citation rules will not eradicate." Martin, supra n. 6, 60 Ohio St.L.J., at 197 (concluding, however, that this problem "is [not] sufficient to warrant the elimination of unpublished opinions").
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27
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84928776610
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Anastasoff, 223 F.3d at 899
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Anastasoff, 223 F.3d at 899.
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28
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84928783064
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Ibid., at 903
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Ibid., at 903.
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29
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84906890735
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Case Note, supra n. 5, 114 Fallon, supra n. 5, 76 N.Y.U.L.Rev., at 596 n. 115
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See Case Note, supra n. 5, 114 Harv. L. Rev., at 943-944; Fallon, supra n. 5, 76 N.Y.U.L.Rev., at 596 n. 115.
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Harv. L. Rev.
, pp. 943-944
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-
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30
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84928783752
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As Judge Arnold put it in Anastasoff, courts are asserting that they have the power "to choose for themselves, from among all the cases they decide, those that they will follow in the future, and those that they need not". Anastasoff, 233 F.3d at 904
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As Judge Arnold put it in Anastasoff, courts are asserting that they have the power "to choose for themselves, from among all the cases they decide, those that they will follow in the future, and those that they need not". Anastasoff, 233 F.3d at 904.
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-
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32
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84928819186
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supra n. 7, 78 Cal.App. 4th 703. Actually, the rule provides only that an opinion may not be published "unless" it meets one of the listed criteria. California Rule of Court, Rule 976 (b). The court appears to have strengthened the rule in order to defend it
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Schmier v. Supreme Court of California, supra n. 7, 78 Cal.App. 4th 703. Actually, the rule provides only that an opinion may not be published "unless" it meets one of the listed criteria. California Rule of Court, Rule 976 (b). The court appears to have strengthened the rule in order to defend it.
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Schmier V. Supreme Court of California
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34
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84928802259
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June 8, 2001, < http://www.law.com > (reporting two opinions of Third Circuit Court of Appeals that are "chock-full of important holdings on a variety of thorny issues that often arise during fee disputes"; "[n]onetheless, both decisions are labeled: 'Unreported - Not Precedential'")
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See, e.g., "3d Circuit Gives Lessons on Attorneys' Fees", June 8, 2001, < http://www.law.com > (reporting two opinions of Third Circuit Court of Appeals that are "chock-full of important holdings on a variety of thorny issues that often arise during fee disputes"; "[n]onetheless, both decisions are labeled: 'Unreported - Not Precedential'").
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3d Circuit Gives Lessons on Attorneys' Fees
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-
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35
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84928783315
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supra n. 6,4 Green Bag 2d at 21
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See Boggs and Brooks, supra n. 6,4 Green Bag 2d at 21.
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Boggs and Brooks
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36
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84928784256
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n. 36 supra
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See n. 36 supra.
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37
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84928811021
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n. 8 supra
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See n. 8 supra.
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38
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84928779978
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Boggs and Brooks, supra n. 6, at 22
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" Boggs and Brooks, supra n. 6, at 22.
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-
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40
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84928789611
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Eighth Circuit, Rule 28(a)(i); Tenth Circuit, Rule 36.3; Eleventh Circuit, Rule 36-2
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Fifth Circuit, Rule 47.5.4; Eighth Circuit, Rule 28(a)(i); Tenth Circuit, Rule 36.3; Eleventh Circuit, Rule 36-2.
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Fifth Circuit, Rule 47.5.4
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42
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84928806516
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As of 1994, only two circuits allowed citation of unpublished opinions. See Barnett, supra n. 5, L.A. Daily J., April 13, 2000 under pressure to relax its no-citation rule, last year adopted a compromise experiment (for two and a half years) that allows citation of unpublished opinions, but only in petitions for rehearing and requests for publication - not in ordinary appeals - and only for the purpose of showing a conflict between opinions or orders of the court. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Rule 36-3
-
As of 1994, only two circuits allowed citation of unpublished opinions. See Barnett, supra n. 5, L.A. Daily J., April 13, 2000. The Ninth Circuit, under pressure to relax its no-citation rule, last year adopted a compromise experiment (for two and a half years) that allows citation of unpublished opinions, but only in petitions for rehearing and requests for publication - not in ordinary appeals - and only for the purpose of showing a conflict between opinions or orders of the court. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Rule 36-3.
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The Ninth Circuit
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-
|