HISTORY OF LAW REPORTING |
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Above: 1938 legislation creating the Law Reporting Bureau |
Right:
Picture from Louis J. Rezzemini article in the Knickerbocker News, Albany, N.Y., June 3, 1938. Used by permission of the Hearst Corp. |
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Official reporting was now centralized in the Law Reporting Bureau under the State Reporter. The Bureau was charged by statute with publishing all the decisions of the Court of Appeals (New York Reports) and the Appellate Division (Appellate Division Reports), and any decision of the lower courts determined by the State Reporter to be worthy of reporting because of its usefulness as precedent or its importance as a matter of public interest (Miscellaneous Reports).
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Above: From left, State Reporter Edward J. Dimock, Deputy State Reporter Frederick Colson, and Assistant State Reporter Leland F. Coss at Mr. Colson's retirement dinner in May 1945. |
Above and right:
1966 retirement party for Adrian Seligman, left, with Deputy State Reporter George W. Greene, center, and future State Reporter John T. Fitzpatrick, right. |
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Left:
1945 Law Reporting Bureau office picture, featuring, seated from left, Deputy State Reporter Frederick Colson, State Reporter Edward J. Dimock, and Assistant State Reporter Leland F. Coss. Standing on the right is John T. Fitzpatrick, future State Reporter. |
Left: 1998 retirement dinner for Law Reporting Assistant Patricia King, left, with Mary Corbett, Secretary to the State Reporter, James M. Flavin. |
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