| Nominative Reporters Prior to the United States Reports
becoming the official reporter of the United States
Supreme Court, court decisions were compiled from notes
and observations of the court clerks. These individual
reporters were named after the official court reporter
and are still cited by their names. These "nominative"
reporters make up the first ninety volumes of the United
States Reports. The individual's ownership of the
nominative reporters ended in 1834 due to a copyright
decision, which is when the United States Reports became
the official reporter.
While it may not happen very
often, you may still need to verify a citation from one
of the nominative reporters. The following is a list of
those reporters, available in the Wirtz Labor Law
Library, that should assist you in this task:
- Vols. 1-4 Dallas (Dall.)
1790-1800 (U.S. Reports vols. 1-4)
- Vols. 1-9 Cranch (Cranch)
1801-1815 (U.S. Reports vols. 5-13)
- Vols. 1-12 Wheaton (Wheat.)
1816-1827 (U.S. Reports vols. 14-25)
- Vols. 1-16 Peters (Pet.)
1828-1842 (U.S. Reports vols. 26-41)
- Vols. 1-24 Howard (How.)
1843-1860 (U.S. Reports vols. 42-65)
- Vols. 1-2 Black (Black) 1862-1862
(U.S. Reports vols. 66-67)
- Vols. 1-23 Wallace (Wall.)
1863-1874 (U.S. Reports vols. 68-90)
You can also search for
historical Supreme Court cases on Westlaw in the U.S.
Supreme Court Cases -before 1945 database (SCT-OLD).
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