· Citing legal and government sources. 1. Herring v. New York, U.S. (). Court cases are only cited in notes, not in the bibliography. If your teacher wants a legal source listed in the blbiography, use the above format. In the citation above, Herring is the plaintiff, New York is the defendant. is the volume number, U.S. is the Author: Cathy Rettberg. · The Chicago Manual of Style, like both MLA and APA, defers to The Bluebook for legal citations. Legal publications only need to be cited in the notes, not the bibliography (unless you have a secondary publication, like a book in which the legal publication appears, in Author: Elaine M. Patton. Citation sentences alone are an acceptable form of citation, so long as the document has only a few legal citations (for more information, see The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed., sections and ) Court Decisions and Cases.
Court cases are only cited in notes, not in the bibliography. If your teacher wants a legal source listed in the blbiography, use the above format. In the citation above, Herring is the plaintiff, New York is the defendant. is the volume number, U.S. is the "reporter" (publisher), is the first page of the text. Citing a court case in Chicago style. To cite a court case in Chicago style, you should know basic information such as the case name and number, volume number, abbreviated names of reporter (s), and in parentheses the abbreviated court name and date, case name and number, and the URL (uniform resource locator), but only when you’re consulting an online database with a recommended stable or persistent form noted with the document. Use the following template or our Chicago Manual of Style citation style (16th edition). For help with other source types, like books, PDFs, or websites, check out our other guides.
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