15 Using Citators to see Judicial Consideration

Always determine whether a case is considered good law. A citator, with its system of flags, symbols, and annotations, will provide extra information about the litigation history of the case, as well as how the case has been treated by subsequent cases.

Check the flag or signal

In the citator record for a case, look for the symbol or flag appearing next to the party names. The symbol will give an indication of the status of the case.

Red

A red flag or symbol indicates the decision has been reversed on appeal, or subsequently disapproved or overruled on at least one point of law.
Yellow

A yellow flag or symbol indicates the decision has subsequently been distinguished, explained, not followed. It may have some negative history but has not been reversed or overruled.
Green

A green symbol indicates the decision has been applied, approved, followed, affirmed or upheld.
Neutral The neutral symbol indicates the decision has been considered or cited.

The flag or signal will give limited information about the status of the case, so always look at the case annotations as well. Annotations are single word descriptors that indicate the litigation history of the case, as well as how the case has been treated in subsequent judgments.

Check the litigation history

The litigation history section of the citator outlines the path of the legal dispute through the appellate hierarchy. This may directly affect the reliability of the case.

Reversed (Red)

Red

Used where the decision has been overturned on appeal.
Varied (Yellow)

Yellow

Used where a case on appeal is only partially affirmed or reversed.
Affirmed (Green)

Green

Used where the decision has been upheld on appeal.

Subsequent judicial consideration

The doctrine of precedent means that judges are not only bound by decisions of higher courts in the same court hierarchy but very often consider decisions of those lower in the same hierarchy, or decisions produced outside of the hierarchy altogether.

A citator record will provide you with an overview of the subsequent judicial consideration of your case:

  • CaseBase — Cases referring to this case
  • KeyCite — Citing references

The most common annotations used to describe the subsequent judicial treatment of a judgment are described below:

Annotation Definition
Disapproved (Red)
Red
Used when both courts are of coordinate jurisdiction, and the latter court has no power to overrule the earlier decision. A court may disapprove or criticise a previous decision and yet be compelled to follow it.
Overruled (Red)
Red
Used when a court refuses to follow the decision of a court that is equally positioned or lower in the court hierarchy.
Distinguished (Yellow)
Yellow
Used when a court decides that it need not follow a previous case by which it would otherwise be bound because there is some salient difference in facts.
Explained (Yellow)
Yellow
Used when a court interprets a previous decision and states what it means.
Not Followed (Yellow)
Yellow
Used in circumstances where both courts are of coordinate jurisdiction, and the latter court has no power to overrule but is also not bound to follow.
Questioned (Yellow)
Yellow
Used when a later decision questions an earlier decision but does not disapprove or overrule it.
Applied (Green)
Green
Used when the court is applying the principle of a previous decision to the present case, the facts of which are materially different from those of the earlier case.
Approved (Green)
Green
Used when a superior court approves an earlier decision by a lower court or court of equivalent jurisdiction.
Followed (Green)
Green
Used when a court is bound by the previous decision of a court of superior jurisdiction in a case where the facts were the same or substantially the same.
Cited Used when the primary case is merely mentioned by the court in the subsequent case, without comment.
 

Considered

 

Used when the court discusses a previous decision but does not actually apply, disapprove, follow etc.

 

Referred

 

Used when a case is merely referred to but not discussed in any detail.

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Legal Research Skills: An Australian Law Guide: 2024 Edition Copyright © 2024 by The University of Queensland, James Cook University, the University of Southern Queensland, Charles Darwin University, Southern Cross University, Queensland University of Technology, Deakin University and University of South Australia is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.