Ark. R. Sup. Ct. & Ct. App. 5-2
Explanatory Note. Rule 5-2 has been completely rewritten to reflect the electronic publication of the official reports of appellate decisions. This comprehensive amendment is effective July 1, 2009.
Subdivision (a) reflects, in part, long-standing practice. All opinions are filed with the Clerk, and the Clerk sends a copy to each party or their lawyer if they have one. The Reporter of Decisions (or our Librarian) has been posting opinions on the Arkansas Judiciary website since 1996. As amended, the rule obligates the Reporter to continue doing so and to maintain a secure and searchable library containing all opinions issued after February 14, 2009, on the website. The rule also authorizes the Administrative Office of the Courts to develop and charge for the use of an advanced search engine. The AOC may also charge for providing the official reports in other formats, such as on CD.
Subdivision (b) has three parts. Section (1) defines what constitutes the official report of a decision of the Arkansas Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. For decisions issued before February 14, 2009, the official report is the opinion printed in a volume of the Arkansas Reports or Arkansas Appellate Reports. For opinions issued after that date, the official report is the electronic file created, authenticated, and maintained by the Reporter on the Arkansas Judiciary website.
Subdivision (b)(2) prescribes the Reporter's responsibilities in releasing and finalizing opinions. The first version of an opinion, the "preliminary report," must be posted on the website after the court announces the decision. The preliminary report is subject to editorial corrections by the Reporter. After the mandate has issued, and any editorial corrections have been made, the "final report" of the decision will be posted on the website in place of the preliminary report. Both the preliminary and final reports are official reports of the decision, which may be cited as otherwise allowed in the rule. All reports will be secure and authenticated.
Subdivision (b)(3) obligates the Reporter to create an official citation, in a new prescribed form, for every appellate decision issued after February 14, 2009. This obligation includes opinions that are not designated for publication between that date and July 1, 2009. The rule contains examples and an explanation of the new citation form, which looks much like a citation to the Arkansas Reports or Arkansas Appellate Reports. The book volume number has been replaced with the year of the decision. And the page number has been replaced with a "sequential appellate decision number for the year." The Reporter assigns this number, starting with 1 for the first opinion issued by each appellate court each calendar year. This is not a global numbering system covering all opinions of both appellate courts. Instead, there will be one annual list for Supreme Court opinions and one annual list for Court of Appeals opinions.
Subdivision (c) eliminates the distinction between unpublished opinions. All opinions issued after July 1, 2009, are precedent and may be cited in any filing or argument in any court.
Subdivision (d) is entirely new. It prescribes a uniform citation form for all appellate decisions. If a decision appears in the Arkansas Reports or Arkansas Appellate Reports, then the familiar citation form must be used. The only new requirement is a parallel citation, if one is available, to the regional reporter. Pinpoint citations are strongly encouraged.
All opinions issued after February 14, 2009, will be in the new electronic database of official reports. These opinions must be cited using the new citation form described earlier: case name, year of decision, abbreviated court name, and sequential appellate decision number. The amended rule abandons parentheticals in almost all citations. With the date and issuing court embedded in the citation itself, the parenthetical is rendered superfluous. Parallel cites to a regional reporter, if available, are required. Parallel cites to other unofficial sources, such as electronic databases, are allowed but not required. Pinpoint citations are strongly encouraged in general. The amended rule also prescribes how to do a pinpoint cite to an electronic report (preliminary or final) of an Arkansas case: cite the page of the electronic file where the matter cited appears. The electronic file will be secure, with the pages locked in place so that they are the same no matter what computer they are viewed on.
Subdivision (d)(3) covers citation of unpublished decisions issued before the effective date of this rule (July 1, 2009). The opinion's date determines the citation form. Pre-February 14, 2009, unpublished opinions are cited by case name and docket number, with the abbreviated court name and full date in the first parenthetical and a second parenthetical denoting the unpublished status. Pinpoint cites should use the "slip opinion" designation. Unpublished opinions issued between February 1, 2009, and July 1, 2009, should be cited using the new citation form, year, abbreviated court name, and sequential appellate opinion number, with one additional element: a parenthetical denoting the opinion's "unpublished" status.
Subdivisions (e) and (f) are carry-overs from the old rule. The former authorizes the Court of Appeals to issue opinions in conventional or memorandum form. In re Memorandum Opinions, 15 Ark. App. 301, 700 S.W.2d 63 (1985) (per curiam). The latter authorizes unemployment appeals from the Board of Review to be affirmed without an opinion.