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I'm working on a genealogy report where an ancestor's divorce made it all the way to the US Supreme court. I'd like to site the case in my report. The case is available online in several formats which include the background and the justice's opinion. Is it acceptable to cite the website or do I need to locate a law library and obtain a citation from a Supreme Court journal? The case citation is shorter than the examples for state supreme court cases noted in "Evidence Explained"--is there a format for citing US Supreme court cases? Am Am I over thinking this because a citation of the lower court's case which created the divorce decree would suffice?
VelvetWood, the short-form…
VelvetWood, the short-form citation you found apparently is the legal style citation. For background here, please read EE 13.1 through 13.3.
Yes, of course, you can cite the case from where ever you found it. Beyond that, this discussion is down to a series of ifs:
I cannot be more specific than this because your query did not give specifics to work with. Situations can vary from one web provider to the other. Without the site's ID and a sample of exactly what you have, the possibility always exists that there are other issues to consider.
Thank you! I actually…
Thank you! I actually appreciate a non-specific answer because it helps more with understanding the process!