Court opinions are published in sets of books called reporters. Reporters include all court opinions in chronological order.
Case citations always use the case name (parties), volume, reporter, page, and year:
Example: Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 318, 322 (1993).
- Reno v. Flores = Names of the parties
- 507 = Volume that contains the cited case
- U.S. = Abbreviation for the reporter
- 318 = Starting page number for this case
- 322 = Specific page referenced
- 1993 = Year of the court decision
For lower courts, we also add the name of the court:
Example: Curry v. State, 228 S.W.3d 292 (Tex. App.—Waco 2007).
- Curry v. State = Names of the parties
- 228 = Volume that contains the cited case
- S.W.3d = Abbreviation for the reporter
- 292 = Starting page number for this case
- Tex. App.-Waco = Name of the court
- 2007 = Year of the court decision
Note that many cases have several "parallel citations," i.e., cases from a particular court may appear in 2 or 3 separate reporters. You only need one citation to find a case. If you don't have the reporter being cited, use the case name index in any parallel reporter to find the pages for your case. Databases like LexisNexis and Westlaw will find the case no matter which reporter was originally cited.