U.S. Legal System Directory: Purpose and Scope
The U.S. Legal System Directory on National Accident Authority serves as a structured reference index covering the foundational doctrines, procedural frameworks, and jurisdictional structures that govern civil litigation in the United States. This page defines the scope of that index, the standards applied to determine what belongs in it, how the content is maintained over time, and where its boundaries end. Readers using the U.S. Legal System Listings benefit from understanding these parameters before drawing conclusions from any individual entry.
Standards for inclusion
Entries in this directory are evaluated against a defined set of criteria before publication. The directory is limited to legal topics that meet all of the following conditions:
- National applicability — The concept, doctrine, or procedural rule must be operative in U.S. courts at the federal level, in a majority of state jurisdictions, or both. Topics that apply in fewer than 10 states are flagged as jurisdiction-specific and handled within scoped sub-pages rather than general directory entries.
- Grounding in named public authority — Each topic must be traceable to at least one of the following: a federal statute codified in the U.S. Code, a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C. App.), a published state code, or a body of common law recognized by courts in the relevant jurisdiction. The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (uscourts.gov) and the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School (law.cornell.edu) serve as primary public verification sources across the directory.
- Civil litigation relevance — The directory centers on civil law, with particular density in tort law, personal injury frameworks, and accident-related claims. Topics drawn purely from criminal procedure, family law, or transactional contract law are excluded unless they intersect directly with civil liability doctrine.
- Definitional clarity — Entries must address a concept with a stable, definable legal meaning. Topics where terminology varies substantially between jurisdictions are listed with explicit scope boundaries and cross-references to jurisdiction-specific treatments such as Comparative Fault Rules by State or Statute of Limitations by State.
- Procedural or substantive classification — Every entry is classified as either substantive law (defining rights and duties, e.g., negligence standards, strict liability) or procedural law (governing court process, e.g., discovery, venue, burden of proof). This distinction mirrors the framework used in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and is preserved throughout the directory to prevent category confusion.
Topics that are primarily regulatory — such as workers' compensation administrative schemes — are included only where they interface with civil litigation, as in Workers' Compensation vs. Personal Injury.
How the directory is maintained
The directory follows a structured review process designed to ensure that entries reflect current codified law and published judicial interpretation rather than outdated or overruled doctrine.
Source hierarchy for verification:
- Primary: Federal statutes (U.S. Code), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, state statutes from official legislative portals
- Secondary: Published appellate decisions available through official court databases and the Legal Information Institute
- Tertiary: Restatements of the Law (published by the American Law Institute), which are recognized by courts across jurisdictions as persuasive authority on tort doctrine
Entries are reviewed when a relevant federal statute is amended, when the Supreme Court of the United States issues a decision materially affecting a listed doctrine, or when at least 5 state legislatures have enacted changes to the underlying legal framework within a 24-month window. The U.S. Court System Structure page provides the jurisdictional map that governs how decisional law from the 13 federal circuit courts of appeals is weighted across entries.
Entries referencing state-by-state variation — such as Dram Shop Laws by State or Contributory Negligence States — are cross-referenced against the National Conference of State Legislatures (ncsl.org) and individual state legislative databases to verify current status.
No entry is published based solely on secondary commentary. If a claimed rule cannot be traced to a primary source in the U.S. Code, a state code, or a published court opinion, the entry is either held pending verification or excluded.
What the directory does not cover
The following categories fall outside the scope of this directory by design:
- Criminal law and procedure — Topics such as criminal sentencing, plea agreements, and Fourth Amendment suppression hearings are excluded. The directory does not address criminal liability even where conduct also gives rise to civil claims.
- Family law and probate — Divorce, custody, guardianship, and estate administration are not covered. Wrongful death claims are included only in their civil tort dimension under Wrongful Death Claims — U.S., not in the context of probate administration.
- Transactional and contract law — Pure contract formation, commercial UCC disputes, and business formation are excluded unless they intersect with civil liability (e.g., insurance contract interpretation in Insurance Bad Faith Claims).
- Regulatory enforcement actions — Agency enforcement proceedings before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Federal Trade Commission, or Occupational Safety and Health Administration are outside scope unless they generate private civil rights of action litigated in Article III courts.
- Jurisdiction-specific local court rules — Individual district or county court procedural rules are not indexed. The directory covers rules of general application under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and broadly adopted state equivalents.
- Legal advice or case strategy — The directory provides definitional and structural reference only. It does not analyze, recommend, or evaluate legal strategies for any specific factual scenario.
The contrast between substantive and procedural coverage is a key boundary. For example, Burden of Proof in Civil Cases is included as a procedural doctrine with nationwide application, while specific evidentiary rulings from individual trials are not catalogued.
Relationship to other network resources
This directory functions as one layer within a broader structured reference system covering U.S. civil litigation. The U.S. Legal System Topic Context page provides the conceptual framework situating the directory within the wider body of civil law. Readers beginning with an unfamiliar term are directed first to the U.S. Legal System Glossary, which defines terminology at entry level before linking to full directory treatments.
Procedural topics in the directory connect sequentially. The lifecycle of a civil case — from Filing a Civil Lawsuit through the Pretrial Process, Discovery, Settlement vs. Trial, and the Appeals Process — is covered as an ordered sequence rather than isolated entries. Each entry cross-references adjacent stages to preserve the procedural logic that courts and practitioners follow under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Substantive doctrine entries are grouped by liability theory: negligence-based claims (including Negligence Legal Standard and Vicarious Liability), strict liability frameworks (Strict Liability Doctrine), and premises-specific rules (Premises Liability Law). This grouping reflects the organizational logic used by law schools and courts when categorizing tort doctrine under the American Law Institute's Restatement (Third) of Torts.
The How to Use This U.S. Legal System Resource page provides navigation guidance for readers approaching the directory with a specific research objective — distinguishing, for instance, between a reader researching jurisdictional thresholds under Federal Court Jurisdiction and one focused on damages calculation under Compensatory Damages Explained. The directory is designed to support both entry-level orientation and targeted reference, with each entry scoped to serve one defined legal concept at a time.