Tarlton Law Library ut austin

Finding a statute in the Tarlton Law Library

  1. Locating a statute with citation
  2. --Federal statutes
  3. --Texas Statutes
  4. Locating a statute with no citation
  5. --Popular name tables
  6. --Indexes

When you have a citation...

Citations to statutes of a particular jurisdiction follow a particular pattern. This uniformity of citation helps researchers find the materials they need more quickly. Different jurisdictions, however, do not necessarily follow the same pattern. For instance, citations to federal statutes differ from those to Texas statutes.

Federal

The elements of a federal statutory citation are:
1. Title
2. Source
3. Section
4. Date

For example, for the statute 42 U.S.C. § 9601 (1994 & Supp. V 1999),

Location for the USC, USCA and USCS: Second floor, Stack 211; Fifth floor, Stack 538 (USCA only)

Texas

The elements of a Texas statutory citation are:
1. Source
2. Section or article
3. Publisher
4. Date

In Texas, you will see two different versions of this same citation pattern. The most common citation will be to the annotated Codes, but another citation will be to the Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated. Both citations are current--the Revised Civil Statutes are simply an older arrangement of the Texas statutes.

For example, for the statute Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 178d-1, § 2 (Vernon Supp. 2003):

Another example is Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 89.043 (Vernon 1993 & Supp. 2003):

Other ways of citing to the Texas statutes that you may encounter are: VTCA (Vernon’s Texas Codes Annotated) and VATS (Vernon’s Annotated Texas Statutes).

Location: KFT 1230.5 V4 - Second floor, Reference Stacks and Reference Office; KFT collection.

When you don't have a citation...

Popular name tables

Both the Texas statutes and the federal statutes have Popular Name Tables that allow a researcher to look up a statute by a commonly known title. For instance, if you know you need to find the text of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, you can use the Popular Name Table in one of the sources for the United States Code (USC, USCA, or USCS) to find where that Act is located in the Code. In both the Texas and federal statutes, the table can be found in the back of the index volumes.

And, speaking of indexes...

Indexes

Both the federal and the Texas statutes have subject matter indexes to facilitate access to the statutes. If you are looking for a federal statute, it is probably best to use the indexes for one of the annotated sources (USCA or USCA), as opposed to the official version of the Code (USC). Generally, the commercial, annotated sources are more extensively indexed and also more up to date. The indexes will provide you with references to those parts of the statutes that are relevant to the subject you looked up.

In Texas, the General Index covers the entire set of Texas statutes-both the Revised Civil Statutes and the Codes.

Revised: November, 2003