melsc said:
Basically thats what I want to say (mind my lack of eloquence ) but I think you need a page or parragraph reference and I was using the casebase version, is there anyway to pin point it or have I referenced it sufficiently? Otherwise I could cite the extract I suppose but thats more complicated.
In my experience, how you've referenced it is fine: pinpoint references are only ever used for direct quotes. But, just to cover all your bases, I'd edit the paragraph so Mason's judgement flows right in from the 'far fetched and fanciful' bizo. And I'd save your word/page count by referencing Wyong v Shirt in a footnote.
melsc said:
2. It is ok to footnote your citations is it not? Apparently one teacher expects the citiations in text while the other doesn't care, they mainly say we should be consistant, I just thought it was standard practice to footnote to save on the word limit and to keep it neat.
In law I always use footnotes. The only time I reference in text is for psych following the APA format. I've never seen a citation book, or heard a lecturer ask for an intext reference in law... oh, except open book final exams where you just write "FSA (Wyong v Shirt)". I totally agree that footnotes are so much more appealing and cleaner.
= Jennifer = said:
The worst thing about legal referencing is when u have note 34 for example and then when u fix it up and stuff u have to go and change all the places u have note 34 to the new number
hope that made sense
I doubt it did
Thats why I number all my references, so, in the footnote while I'm writing the draft it will say "ref 4 @ 32". Then, right at the end, I'll go through and insert the correct reference. It saves so much time!... But took me until half way through 2nd year to develop it