New York Legal Citations and Research: How to Find Cases, Statutes, and Rules

New York legal research operates across a structured network of primary and secondary sources — court decisions, codified statutes, court rules, and administrative regulations — each carrying distinct citation formats and weight. Locating the correct authority requires understanding how the New York court hierarchy maps onto published reporters, how state statutes are organized within McKinney's Consolidated Laws, and where official digital repositories intersect with commercial databases. This page describes that landscape for legal professionals, researchers, and informed service seekers operating within New York's jurisdiction.

Definition and Scope

Legal citation in New York is the standardized method of referencing binding and persuasive legal authority, enabling courts, practitioners, and researchers to locate and verify source material with precision. The New York Unified Court System is the administrative body overseeing state courts, and it publishes official opinions, rules, and procedural materials through its official platforms.

New York primary legal sources fall into three classification tiers:

Administrative regulations constitute a fourth primary source, codified in the New York Codes, Rules and Regulations (NYCRR), which functions as the state analog to the Code of Federal Regulations.

Scope and coverage: This page addresses legal citation and research practices governed by New York State law and procedure. Federal court opinions from the Southern District of New York, Eastern District of New York, and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals — though physically located in New York — are governed by federal citation standards and fall outside the state citation framework described here. Municipal ordinances, local laws enacted under New York Municipal Home Rule Law, and tribal law are also not covered by these citation conventions.

How It Works

New York legal citation follows conventions outlined in the New York Law Reports Style Manual (colloquially, the "Tan Book"), published by the New York State Law Reporting Bureau. The Law Reporting Bureau, established under New York Judiciary Law §430, is the official body responsible for certifying and publishing state appellate decisions.

A standard New York case citation includes: party names, volume number, reporter abbreviation, first page, pinpoint page (if applicable), court identifier, and year. Example structure: Smith v. Jones, 42 N.Y.3d 100, 105 (2024).

Statutory citations reference the consolidated law chapter abbreviation and section number: N.Y. CPLR §3212 (McKinney 2023) for a summary judgment provision. The New York State Legislature's public bill and law database provides free access to the full text of session laws and consolidated statutes as enrolled and amended.

For administrative rules, NYCRR citations include title number and section: 22 NYCRR §202.8 covers motion practice in Supreme Court. Title 22 of the NYCRR governs court procedure statewide.

The New York State Law Library, operated under the Unified Court System, maintains physical and digital collections accessible to the public, including reporters, digests, and treatises. The library system spans all 62 counties.

Common Scenarios

Legal researchers encounter citation and source-location questions in 4 primary contexts:

Decision Boundaries

Choosing the correct source type determines the weight of authority in any legal argument. The Court of Appeals is the only court whose decisions are binding on all New York state courts; Appellate Division decisions bind trial courts within the same department. Decisions from a different Appellate Division department are persuasive only — a distinction that generates frequent citation strategy questions in multi-jurisdictional matters.

The regulatory context for New York's legal system clarifies the relationship between state administrative authority and judicial review, which affects which source — statute, regulation, or case interpretation — controls in a given dispute.

When a statute has been superseded or amended, the session law record (Laws of New York, by year and chapter) controls over a McKinney's consolidated edition that may not yet reflect the latest amendment. Researchers verifying currency must check the Legislature's bill database for amendments enacted after any given McKinney's pocket part date.

For practitioners, the full landscape of New York legal procedure — including discovery standards, motion practice, and appellate rules — is accessible through the New York Legal Authority index, which maps court structures, procedural frameworks, and subject-matter law resources across the state system.

Unpublished trial court decisions present a separate challenge: New York Supreme Court decisions below the Appellate Division are not systematically reported in official reporters, though they are indexed through the New York Law Journal and NYSCEF docket searches. Such decisions carry no binding precedential value under New York stare decisis doctrine.

References