LexisNexis Canada Adds Quicklaw iPhone App

Posted in Apps, Canada, Case Law, iPhone, LexisNexis | Tagged

Update:  The following review was done using an iPod Touch 2G.  LexisNexis Canada has confirmed that it was designed for Apple 3G and 4G products, which explains some of the results outlined below.

Legal publishers continue to lag in getting mobile apps to their users.  Fastcase.com was first out the door over a year ago with an iPhone app which has garnered a lot of praise from users.  WestlawNext has an iPad app but otherwise the Thomson Reuters approach seems to be mobile Web sites, rather than apps, although their presentation of mobile offerings doesn’t appear to actually show all of their options.  Apparently, you can still rock it old school with Westlaw’s Palm OS clipping tool!  Blackberry and Android users are still relying on mobile Web sites.

This is the environment into which LexisNexis Canada releases its brand new iPhone app for its legal research service Quicklaw.  It follows the lead of the US LexisNexis app, which offers case name and citation look up. I was able to log in with my personalized LexisNexis profile as well as with a typical LexisNexis username and password.

As an app goes, it is pretty straight forward.  You can either select to search by a case name or search by a citation.  When you type in your search, it retrieves a document.  Wait, did I say A?  That was the odd thing.  I tried a couple of searches based on a single party name (try Strother, for example) and retrieved one document.  The case was formatted cleanly but I know that there are more results.  In fact, when I received an error message that the document I requested was too large and I should retry my search on Quicklaw, I did retry the search at the full Web site.  I retrieved 30+ hits using the same search-by-name form.

Once you have retrieved a document, you can share it (e-mail, etc.) or you can run it through LexisNexis’ citator, Quickcite.  The screen automatically rotates to landscape mode and the results are displayed in a clean version of the full Quickcite screen.

LexisNexis Canada Quicklaw iPhone App Quickcite Results

LexisNexis Canada Quicklaw iPhone App Quickcite Results

And that’s it.  It is a very basic app and, based on the single document retrieval, not a very useful one.  The citation search may be more useful if you are pulling up a case and you know the cite, but I don’t see any value in the case name search.

It also seems to have time out issues.  I was testing the app on an iPod Touch with a WiFi connection and expected it to come along pretty quickly.  But I had a half dozen error messages, most of which seemed to be time out errors rather than the reasons included in the error (document too big, etc.).  If I reran the search, I often was able to get the final result.

LexisNexis Canada Qucklaw iPhone App Error Message

LexisNexis Canada Qucklaw iPhone App Error Message

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Find How Frequently Your Cases are Cited

Posted in Canada, CanLII, Case Law, Google, U.S., Westlaw | Tagged , ,

Google Scholar provides information about how often an article is cited by other articles in the Scholar universe.  Type in a query like feasibility and viability of the digital library in the private law firm and you will see that the article was cited by 14 others.  (Yes, I know, shameless self promotion!)

Now you can see the same information on Google Scholar’s case law search.  An advanced search on Arkansas cases using the word accretion resulted in a half dozen cases.  Clicking on the first one shows the case, but a new tab is there, called How Cited.  Click it to see the other cases in the Google database that refer to the case.

Arkansas case on Google Scholar

Search result on Google Scholar showing Arkansas case on accretion with citation results

This is a popular feature.  Westlaw Canada just announced that it had citation frequency for its cases, and CanLII has offered a similar function on its cases for some time.  You can run a search on Canadian case law and then sort by most cited.

My favorite of the citation frequency tools remains Fastcase’s Interactive Timeline, which gives you a visual of where your case sits within the entire universe of Fastcase’s database.

Interactive Timeline shows legal research case law citation frequency

Interactive Timeline shows legal research case law citation frequency

[ Google Scholar via Slaw.ca ]

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New Free United Kingdom Primary Law Legal Research Tool

Posted in Case Law, Government, Legislation, U.K. | Tagged ,

The UK FreeLegalWeb.org is now in beta and is an interesting looking alternative to BAILII, the current go to source for free UK case law.  As their About page states, the problem is that the law just isn’t practically accessible.

FreeLegalWeb works like a library discovery tool.  It is not hosting the content.  It is aggregating links to the resources, so a single search will retrieve information about content from multiple sources but you will eventually link to the primary document on that source.  This means you still need to know something about the sources and what their scope is.

This resource has a lot of nice features in place already – a retrieved result has links to the full text and supplemental tools, like a citator to note up cases – and the development of subject classification through crowd sourcing will make the content aggregated that much richer.

The case law search on FreeLegalWeb relies on BAILII for case law and LawCite for its citator service.  This is a huge improvement, since you can now view both the BAILII text and run the link through LawCite, something which is not possible if you start your search directly on BAILII.

It will be interesting to watch this site develop and move from beta to a full online product.  It will be a huge time saver for legal researchers looking for UK primary legal information.

[thanks to the Legal Informatics blog ]

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