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Supreme Court Report Annotated is the name of the bound series of legal decisions of the Philippines Supreme Court.You didn't specify whether you were looking for official documentation for the Philippines or the United States. In the United States, the comparable, annotated volumes of Supreme Court decisions is called US Supreme Court Reports, Lawyers' Edition.Annotated cases are available in print.
You are probably referring to Oyez.org.See Related Links to access their site.
The US Supreme Court Term begins the first Monday in October and ends in the latter part of June or early July. During these months, the Court alternates two-week sittings, when the justices hear oral arguments, with two week recesses, when they write opinions and tend to the administrative business of the Court. The Supreme Court maintains a calendar on their official site that shows which dates the Court is sitting and which it is recessed (see home page). For more information, see Related Links, below.
The site FCC gov is the official site of the Federal Communications Commission. The Federal Communications Commission is the organization that regulates interstate and international communications.
Certain judicial opinions are published by the government, such as the Supreme Court Reports. However, more cases are published by companies such as Westlaw and LexisNexis. For instance Westlaw publishes Federal Reports Annotated which contains many United States Circuit Court decisions. The cases are published by date. The advantage of using the reporters published by private companies is that they include, what is called key numbers that assist a legal researcher in finding additional material on specific topics addressed by a case.
The Old Capital Prison, used during the Civil War, was located at the site of the current US Supreme Court building.
A number of law schools publish US Supreme Court cases; however, Cornell University Law School has an exceptional resource in its online database. Not only do they publish recent cases, but US Code, the Annotated Constitution, Supreme Court rules, transcripts of select oral arguments, and other legal materials.You can access their site via Related Links, below.
I appoligize for the last answer, there are alot of trolls on this site. The fifth amendment of the U.S. Constitution and Articles of Confederation gaurentees due process.
"The Constitution of the United States," Amendment 18.
Absolutely not. You may hire any attorney you wish, so long as they are licensed to practice before the specific court in question. If you are referring to the US Supreme Court, then the attorney needs to be licensed to practice before the US Supreme Court, as well as in a federal court within the circuit they may need to file. I'm not certain, but that attorney may also need to be licensed to practice within the state in which the federal circuit lies. If you are referring to your State Supreme Court, then that attorney needs to be licensed to practice in that particular state. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult with an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation.
Start with the requirements of The Joint Commission (formally the Joint Commission for Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations). Web site is www.jointcommission.com.
There are two excellent sources for locating the US Supreme Court's opinions and decisions. Justia Beta has a searchable database of all cases, by year or by volume, from 1791 to the present. The Supreme Court maintains updated records on slip opinions for the current Term that may be too new for Justia's database.Other sites, such as FindLaw and Oyez are also excellent resources, but I prefer Justia because they have logged the concurring and dissenting opinions for most cases, along with the Court decision, which helps the reader understand both sides of a case.Despite criticism often directed at it, Wikipedia is also a good site for information on cases from the Supreme Court. The articles for most cases are quite detailed, and include the details of the case, background, decision and opinions of the Court, related cases, and several other areas of importance.