The present invention relates to a system and method of displaying information on a computer screen. A system employing the present invention provides an efficient procedure for researching documents and the interrelationships between documents. The present invention is particularly applicable to research involving documents that extensively cite or refer to other documents.
The nature of many academic and professional writings is such that authors rely upon and cite previously published works, studies, or test results to support arguments or opinions. For example, in the common law system in America, lawyers and judges cite and rely upon previously decided cases (i.e., written judicial opinions) to support their arguments and opinions. The American common law system is particularly reliant upon the precedent established by previous case decision because a judicial court (or judge) will usually consider as very persuasive a previously-decided case in which the same legal issue has been resolved or decided.
However, courts will not always agree with, or be bound by, previously-decided cases. Instead of agreeing with a conclusion reached in a previous case, or “following” it, courts may occasionally, disagree with, criticize, question, reverse, or overrule the previous case. Therefore, beginning with the first time a case is cited in a subsequent case, the earlier case's authoritative value can change. For example, if a persuasive judge is critical of the earlier case, that earlier case will be less authoritative than it was before the judge's critical treatment of the case. On the other hand, if the judge strongly supports the reasoning of the earlier case, the authoritative value of the earlier case will be enhanced. Virtually every time a case is discussed or cited, its authoritativeness or precedential status is affected. The importance or precential status of a case can continue to evolve over many years as a result of interpretations given to it by judges in subsequent cases.
Therefore, when considering a legal issue decided in a court's written opinion or decision, it is critical to consider what subsequent cases have said about it. Lawyers performing legal research consequently have a need to determine which later cases have discussed (and therefore, cited) any given earlier case. For many years, lawyers have been able to find out which later cases have cited any given case by using a tool known as Shepherd's Citations published by McGraw-Hill, Inc. Shepard's Citations is basically an organized index that lists all the cases that have cited a particular case. When a later case is cites an earlier case, there is usually some discussion of the earlier, cited case. Shepard's Citations also sometimes gives a brief indication of how the later case treated the earlier case of interest (e.g., the later case may have “followed,” “criticized,” or “questioned” the earlier case).
In recent years, legal research has been increasingly performed by lawyers using computerized legal research systems. The most popular of these may be the on-line legal research systems, such as Westlaw and LEXIS/NEXIS. However, legal research systems employing local CD-ROM or other databases have become quite popular.
a is a representation of a screen taken from the Westlaw legal research system operated by the West Publishing Company. The screen shows a portion of the text of the Wilson Sporting Goods case shown at 101 in
Also shown in the title bar 102 is the “rank” 104 of the displayed document, which is simply the position or order of the Wilson case with respect to all of the other documents found in the search conducted by the user. In this particular example, the Wilson case is ranked second out of three search documents. Each of the search documents is a document that satisfies a particular query entered by the user, and in the example shown in
The current page number and the number of pages in the document are shown in
As described above, when researching issues that are discussed in the Wilson case, it is very useful to see what subsequently decided cases have said about the analysis in the Wilson case. The Westlaw system provides access to this type of information through a number of services, one of which is the on-line version of Shepard's Citations. In the Westlaw system, the user can access this information by selecting a menu item from a pull-down menu or by selecting (i.e., “clicking on”) an on-screen button. When the user selects the Shepard's Citation service in Westlaw while viewing the Wilson case, a screen similar to that shown in
The top of
The citation 116 at the bottom of
As suggested at 120 of
d also shows an instance in which the Shepard's listing analyzes one of the listed citations. At 122, the Shepard's listing suggests that the case published at 796 F.Supp. 640 (the “citing” case) “followed” the analysis or reasoning of the Wilson case. This means that the citing case (found at 796 F.Supp. 640) applied the same analysis as the court in the Wilson case. The Shepard's Citations listing also will occasionally provide other analysis of citing cases, and may, for example, point out those cases which “explain,” “criticize,” or “reverse” the Wilson case.
As described above, the Westlaw system allows the researcher to see a list of citing cases, such as that provided by Shepard's Citations. However, the Westlaw system requires the user to move to another screen to see these citations, thereby covering the displayed text of the case of interest. This is distracting to the researcher, because once the text of the case is no longer displayed, the researcher cannot refer back to the displayed text without removing the citations from the screen. In addition, because the citations list in Westlaw can often be many screens in length, the user must perform the tedious task of paging through the entire citations list and uncovering those citations that are relevant to the particular portion of the displayed document that the researcher is studying. The Westlaw system and others in the art are therefore relatively unsophisticated in the manner in which they display lists of citing cases. None of the computer-based research systems in the art provide a listing of which citing cases based on the context of the displayed document. Thus, none provide any indication of which citing cases specifically refer to the text displayed on the screen or selected by the user.
The present invention relates to a method of displaying documents in a research system. In one embodiment, the method involves displaying at least a portion of a first document and simultaneously displaying a representation of one or more citing documents. The citing documents cite some portion of the displayed document.
In another embodiment, the method involves displaying at least a portion of a first document, and displaying a representation of one or more citing documents, wherein the citing documents cite the displayed portion of the first document. The citing documents could alternatively cite a highlighted part of the displayed portion of the first document.
Other embodiments are described in the Detailed Description.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and system for efficiently researching interrelated documents.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method and system for analyzing the precedential value of a judicial opinion.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a method and system for effectively conveying to the researcher information concerning the interrelationships of documents.
a to 1d are displays illustrating the operation of the Westlaw research system.
a is a view of a screen on which the text of a document is displayed, and representations of citing documents are also displayed.
b is a view of the screen of
c is a view of the screen after selection of one of the representations of the citing documents.
a is a view of a screen in another embodiment of the present invention.
b illustrates the updating of the citing cases box upon scrolling the text of the displayed document.
c and 5d illustrate further updating of the citing cases box.
e illustrates the change to the display after selection of one of the representations.
f illustrates the selection of another representation.
g illustrates the selection of the previous case representation.
h and 5I illustrate the further selection of representations of citing cases.
a is a view of a screen on which the text of a document is displayed, and representations of citing documents are also displayed.
b illustrates the retention of representations of previous citing cases in the citing cases box.
c further illustrates the retention of representations of previous citing cases in the citing cases box.
d illustrates and points out markers or highlighting that is used to indicate which representations have already been displayed.
a is a view of a screen on which the text of a document is displayed, as well as a citing cases box and a citing cases bin.
b is a view of the screen of
c illustrates the updating of the citing cases box and the citing cases bin when the text of the displayed document is scrolled.
d illustrates the updating of the display upon selection by the user of a representation of a citing case.
a is a view of a screen in another embodiment of the present invention, in which the text of a document is displayed.
b is a window displayed upon selection of button 1008 in
c illustrates the scrolling of the text of the document displayed in
d illustrates how the window of
e illustrates the selection of one of the representations of citing cases in
f illustrates a window that could be employed in alternative embodiment of the present invention.
a is a view of a web page in an internet-based implementation of the present invention.
b illustrates a different portion of the web page of
c illustrates the bottom of the web page of
d is a view of the web page retrieved upon selection of the representation in
e is a view of a different portion of the web page of
f illustrates the bottom of the web page of
The present invention relates to a method of displaying interrelationships of documents on a computer screen. Specifically, the present invention relates to a computerized research system that provides the researcher with information about documents that cite a document that the user is studying.
The physical structure of the database 207 may involve one or more hard disks, CD-ROMs, or any other mass storage devices and may or may not be distributed. The database 207 may also be integrated into the secondary storage device 206. As is well known in the art, the database 207 can be near or local to the CPU 201, or it can be remotely located relative to the CPU 201. Any type of database 207 that is capable of operating according to the present invention is appropriate.
a is a display illustrating one embodiment of the present invention in which the text window 302 shows the text of the first portion of the Graver Tank case that was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1950. The title window 304 contains the brief title of the Graver Tank case, and the box 310 shows a citation to the Graver Tank case. The scroll bar 306 allows the user to scroll through the text of the Graver Tank case by selecting the down arrow button 308 or by moving the scroll button 316 in a manner well known in the art.
a and 3b also show a citing cases box 311 in which representations 312 of a number of cases that cite the Graver Tank case are listed. The citing cases box 311 is simply an area on the screen in which the representations of citing cases can be placed. Scroll bar 314 allows the user to scroll through additional representations of citing cases when there are more representations of citing cases in the box 311 than there is room for on the screen. Preferably, the citing cases box would include a representation of all existing cases that cite the Graver Tank case. However, normally only those cases in the database 207 that cite the Graver Tank case are shown. The database 207 may or may not be up-to-date.
The representations of the cases in the box 311 can be listed in a particular order, such as by date decided, or by jurisdiction, or by some other characteristic. It is also possible to include only a subset of the cases in the database. For example, the user may only be interested in seeing representations of cases that come from a particular court or group of courts, or from a particular period of time.
A representation is herein defined to be any indication, marker, button, menu item, link, or reference associated with another document. A representation could also be labeled with the title, citation, or some other portion of the document. However, the representation need not be labeled as shown in the Figures. Representations may have any other labelling or alternatively, no labelling at all. A representation may correspond to a single document, or it may correspond to more than one document, or a group of documents. For example, instead of having a representation for each document, a representation may be simply a button that corresponds to a plurality of documents, where the representation is labeled to indicate the number of citations the representation corresponds to.
In
The user can display one of these citing cases by selecting a representation shown in the citing cases box 311.
Also as shown in
In the next step 402, the system checks to see if the user has selected one of the representations. Once the user does select one of the representations, step 403 updates the display to show the citing case corresponding to the selected representation and also to show representations of cases that cite the new displayed case.
a to 5i illustrate an alternate embodiment of the present invention in which the citing cases box only lists representations of cases that cite the displayed text. For example, in the text box 302 of
b shows the display after the user has scrolled down by using the scroll bar 306 so that the first line 501 of the 4th paragraph of the Graver Tank case is displayed in the text box 302. (For convenience, the beginning of each paragraph in the text of cases is marked with the characters “[Pn],” where n is the paragraph number.) In
As the user further scrolls through the text of the Graver case, the citing cases box 311 is updated as paragraphs are displayed in the text box 302 and removed from the text box 302. For example, in
Representation 504 in the citing cases box 311 corresponds to the Pennwalt case, which cites the sixth paragraph of the Graver Tank case. This citation to Graver Tank occurs at the nineteenth paragraph of the Pennwalt case, which is reported beginning at page 931 of volume 833 of the F.2d Reporter series. If the user were to select representation 504 in the citing cases box 311, the display would be updated in the embodiment of
At 508 in
As has been described in connection with
e shows an updated citing cases box, this one showing only two representations of citing cases. These cases are the London case and the Wilson case, both of which cite paragraph 19 of the Pennwalt case. When representation 515 is selected, the display is updated to that shown in
The user can backtrack back to the Pennwalt decision by selecting the representation or button 518 shown in
From
Unlike the London case, there are cases that cite the paragraph of the Wilson case which cites the Pennwalt case. Therefore, the citing cases box 311 in
i shows the updated display with the text box showing paragraph 13 of the Conroy decision, and the citation to the Wilson case at 528. However, the doctrine for which the Wilson case is being relied upon is different than the “function-way-result” doctrine that has been traced from the Graver Tank decision. At 532 of
a to 7d show an alternate embodiment of the present invention that is similar to the embodiments shown in connection with
In
Retaining representations of citing cases in the citing cases box 311 allows the user to collect an list of relevant cases by traversing a number of linked cases. This is important because the user may otherwise have to remember or come back to the cases that he or she initially decides not to examine. This situation is illustrated in
c shows the updated display after representation 703 is selected in
The displays of
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in connection with
In
The embodiment of
In another embodiment, a citing cases bin similar to that described in connection with
a to 10f illustrate yet another embodiment of the present invention in which the citing cases box 311 is not displayed on the same screen or simultaneously with the text box 302 that contains the text of the displayed case. In
The citation button 1008 allows the user to bring up a window 1001 such as that shown in
f shows a window 1002 which can be used as an alternative to that shown in
a to 10f describe embodiments in which the text of a case and the representations of citing documents are not displayed simultaneously. Rather when button 1008 is selected, window 1001 (or in an alternative embodiment, window 1002) is shown on the display. The window 1001 may completely displace showing the text of the cited case, or it may only partially obstruct the displayed text of the cited case.
a to 12f illustrate an embodiment of the present invention that has been implemented on the Internet's World Wide Web.
Depending on the user's web browser and hardware, some or all of the web page 1201 will be displayed in the browser display 1202. The scroll bar 1203 allows the user to scroll through the web page.
When the scroll box 1207 is moved to the bottom of the scroll bar, as shown in
The representation 1212 in
e is the web page of
f shows the bottom of the Graver Tank web page, which has at 1221 representations of citing cases. The Graver Tank text displayed in the web page of
In another embodiment, additional representations may be present at the bottom of the web page of
The World Wide Web implementation illustrated in connection with
In other embodiments, where a citation system is used that is different from the system employed by the court, the court's citations must be translated into the citations used by the computerized research system. In other words, if a court cites cases by referencing a page number in a particular volume, and the research system uses a paragraph-based citation system (e.g., as in
Although more tedious translation may be required, it is preferred that smaller units be used for the citation system. For example, a citation to a given page does not unequivocally identify which of the statements of law is being cited on that page. Therefore, not all of the citing cases for a particular page will be helpful to the researcher when he or she is interested in only one of the many statements of law occurring on the page. This problem is illustrated in
A citation system employing an even smaller unit, such as a sentence-based citation system, would virtually eliminate the foregoing problem. However, such a citation system requires a significant amount of tedious translation if citations are not already in a sentence-based form.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the representations in the citing cases box would not necessarily correspond to the displayed text, but would rather correspond to displayed text that is specifically selected (i.e., highlighted) by the user. Such an embodiment would be particularly appropriate for a sentence-based citation system, because the selection of one or more sentences would indicate which citing cases are of interest to the user. In other words, when the user has selected a specific section of the displayed portion of a document, this can be an indication that the user wishes to see only those citing cases that correspond to the selected portion. Thus, in an embodiment of the present invention, the citing cases box could contain representations of only those citing cases that cite the selected portion of the displayed text.
It is contemplated that the present invention will be implemented, in at least some embodiments, on a computer that employs software to carry out the functions described above. The software is stored on a data storage medium that is accessible by the computer in a manner known in the art. The effective implementation of the present invention is obviously not necessarily dependent on the type of storage medium employed, and the data storage medium could therefore be of any type (including, without limitation, optical, magnetic, or hardware-based storage media).
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to preferred embodiments, various changes and modifications that are obvious to a person skilled in the art to which the invention pertains, even if not shown or specifically described herein, are deemed to lie within the spirit and scope of the invention and the following claims. The present invention is not to be limited to any specific database implementation or to any specific network implementation. What is contemplated is any system appropriate for practicing the invention as set forth in the claims. The cases and corresponding citing documents described herein are merely for illustration purposes, and no invention-related significance is to be given to them other than that specifically mentioned herein. In the claims, any means-plus-function clauses are intended to encompass not only structural equivalents but also equivalent structures. Any specific features or aspects of the embodiments or implementations described or illustrated herein, however, are not intended to limit the scope of any claimed invention in a manner not specifically required by the claim directed to that invention.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/652,670, filed Aug. 29, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,302,638 which is a continuation of Ser. No. 09/784,469, filed Feb. 16, 2001, now abandoned which is a continuation of Ser. No. 09/245,183, filed Feb. 5, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,263,351, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 09/014,669, filed Jan. 28, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,870,770, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 08/487,925, filed Jun. 7, 1995, now abandoned. All of these applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 10652670 | Aug 2003 | US |
| Child | 11734784 | US | |
| Parent | 09784469 | Feb 2001 | US |
| Child | 10652670 | US | |
| Parent | 09245183 | Feb 1999 | US |
| Child | 09784469 | US | |
| Parent | 09014669 | Jan 1998 | US |
| Child | 09245183 | US | |
| Parent | 08487925 | Jun 1995 | US |
| Child | 09014669 | US |