Welcome to the
Tennessee Law Times. And may I sug-
gest you consider
the use of a seatbelt.
Law newspapers
since the early 1970s have never been
the darling of
the courts or the established bar associations
even when those
papers did nothing more than print
unreported trial
court decisions. One legal newspaper
raised the ire of
a state’s supreme court, and the chief court
administrator
sent out a formal order to the clerks of the
trial courts
ordering them not to give any memorandum
opinions.
Small potatoes?
Not exactly. How would you like to be
able to read the
full text of Tennessee trial court opinions
from all across
the state, along with having these trial court
decisions indexed
and cross-ref-
erenced? We will
be providing
that service.
Four of those opin-
ions are
contained in this issue,
and many more
will be forthcom-
ing. Some of the
trial court opin-
ions are
scholarly and well writ-
ten and may aid
you in your law
practice. But we
will need your
help. Most trial
court judges will
refuse to give
this newspaper
their memorandum
opinions in
electronic
format. The optical
character
recognition scans of
trial court
opinions turn out to
be a joke: the
results are riddled
with formatting
problems and mistaken letters. It would
greatly assist
the error-free reproduction of trial court opin-
ions to get them
in electronic format, but clear paper
copies are a
second best alternative.
You are looking
at the production model for the
Tennessee
newspaper, and it is labeled Number 0 for that
reason. This
production model will only be distributed in
electronic
format. The full production first run will be
printed on
newspaper and display more typesetting
finesse, as well
as plenty of paid classifieds and display
advertising.
The roll out of
our first issue of The Tennessee Law
Times will be
sent to 3,000 lawyers across the state, all state
legislators, the
governor and his department heads, all of
Tennessee’s
members of congress, numerous county may-
ors, most of the
television stations and other news outlets
in the state,
and many thousands of non-lawyer sub-
scribers.
So, what of
Tennessee? We are one of fifty states. And
with our due
tipping of our respectful hat to TAM, this state
which sees fit
to license and supply income to some 16,000+
attorneys, until
now hasn’t had a true law newspaper.
Now it does.
And, may it please the court [fat chance]
we will open our
pages and columns to the bench and bar
alike on any
occasion they feel we have erred, or to simply
give them equal
“time”.