The University of Texas at Austin

Research tools for finding Supreme Court information

Coverage of the current term, including writs of certiorari granted and opinions issued, can be found here on our website.

Several resources provide access to the workings of the United States Supreme Court. Below are some of the best online and print resources for following Supreme Court litigation.

Finding Recent Orders of the Court

The orders and journal page of the Supreme Court's web site provides a link to the most recent orders issued by the Court. Review the orders of the most recent Supreme Court Term to determine what cases have been accepted by the Court this Term and what orders have been granted in pending cases.

Opinions

The opinions page of the Supreme Court's web site provides the first published version of all Court opinions since the 2001 Term. The most recent opinions can be found by following the link to the "latest slip opinions."

Oral Arguments

Oyez is an excellent resource for listening to oral arguments before the Supreme Court. This collection maintains recordings of selected arguments from 1955 through 1995 and all arguments from 1995 through the end of the last completed Term.

Transcripts of oral arguments starting with the October 2000 Term are available on the argument transcript page of the Supreme Court's web site. Beginning with the October 2006 Term, the Court makes transcripts available on the same day the argument is heard by the Court.

The Lexis/Nexis United States Supreme Court Transcripts database has transcripts of oral arguments from the October 1979 Term to date. The database identifier is USTRAN.

Westlaw SCT-ORALARG database has transcripts of oral arguments from the 1990-91 Term to date.

Selected transcripts of oral arguments are available in the print collection entitled: Landmark Briefs and Arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States: Constitutional Law.
Tarlton call number: KF 101.9 L35

Since the October 1952 Term, transcripts of Supreme Court oral arguments have been available in microfiche in the set entitled The Complete Oral Arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States.
Tarlton call number: Microfiche KF 101.8 C65

Briefs

The database, US Supreme Court Records and Briefs, 1832-1978, is available through Tarlton's Legal Research Databases page, and provides electronic, full text briefs from 1832 to 1978.

Findlaw provides pdf versions of Supreme Court petition and merit briefs since the October 1999 Term.

ABA Preview of Supreme Court Cases maintains merit briefs of the Supreme Court since the October 2003 Term.

Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) publishes pdf versions of all briefs submitted by the United States to the Supreme Court. Briefs are posted soon after they are filed with the Court.

Yale University - Curiae Project publishes pdf versions of briefs of over 1,000 selected Supreme Court cases.

The Lexis/Nexis United States Supreme Court briefs database has merit briefs from the 1979 Term to date and selected petition-related briefs.

Westlaw SCT-BRIEFS database has merit briefs from the 1990 Term to date and Amicus briefs from 1995 to date. The SCT-PETITIONS database has selected petition-related briefs for granted petitions from 1990 to date and denied petiitons from 1995 to date.

ScotusWiki contains links to briefs for Supreme Court cases starting with 2007. 

Selected briefs of the Supreme Court are available in the print collection entitled: Landmark Briefs and Arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States: Constitutional Law.
Tarlton call number: KF 101.9 L35

All Supreme Court briefs are available in microfiche in a set entitled: U. S. Supreme Court Records and Briefs.

Tarlton Microfiche Cabinets 1-6 and Microfilm Cabinets 19-21.

News

The following web sites might be used to research Supreme Court news:

Findlaw provides Supreme Court news and headlines.

SCOTUSblog is a blog maintained by Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP.  It provides extremely timely coverage of Supreme Court developments including certs granted and opinions issued, commentary and analysis, and opinions to watch.  Users can also subscribe to an RSS feed.  See the companion website, ScotusWiki, for more analysis of the cases and links to briefs.

Legal Information Institute Supreme Court Case Updates provides news about pending Supreme Court cases.  Users can subscribe to receive free updates via e-mail. 

United States Supreme Court Monitor, part of American Lawyer Media's Law.com web site, provides news about the Supreme Court.

Willamette Law Online provides same-day summaries of cases accepted by the Court, news about oral arguments, and opinions issued by the Court.

Jurist publishes news about Supreme Court issues.

Duke Law School maintains the Supreme Court Online web site, which provides summaries of pending cases, links to full text opinions and summaries of selected opinions.

On the Docket, published by Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, is a blog providing news on the current and previous Supreme Court term.

Docket Information

Docket information includes notices of the dates of each item filed with the Supreme Court, as well as the names of all parties and lawyers involved with the litigation. Use the docket to learn the status of a pending case. Additionally, a researcher may obtain documents that are not yet available online or in print by contacting the lawyers litigating the specific case. Find the lawyers' contact information by reviewing the docket sheet for the litigation.

Supreme Court docket sheets and other docket information are available on the following web sites:

Supreme Court docket information web site

Findlaw Docket information web site

Other

Supreme Court Database was created by Professor Harold J. Spaeth of the Michigan State University College of Law and supported by the National Science Foundation. The database contains over two hundred pieces of information about each case decided by the Court between the 1953 and 2008 terms. Examples include the identity of the court whose decision the Supreme Court reviewed, the parties to the suit, the legal provisions considered in the case, and the votes of the Justices.  The database is updated each term.