«Bill of Right Transcript». Bill of Rights. National Archives and Records Administration. Consultado em 24 de janeiro de 2011. Arquivado do original em 8 de fevereiro de 2011
Gliatto, Tom (15 de agosto de 1994). «Neverland Meets Graceland». People. Consultado em 1 de maio de 2011. Arquivado do original em 29 de março de 2011
"Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning: 2. Precedent". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. June 20, 2006. "The lower court is ‘strictly’ bound because it has no power to overrule the higher court's decision. Equally, most appeal courts are bound by their own earlier decisions, though they are generally entitled in certain circumstances to overrule those decisions. There is enormous variation in the circumstances that are necessary for a court to overrule one of its own decisions: at a minimum, it must regard the earlier decision as wrongly decided, but generally, more is required than this, e.g. that the decision is ‘clearly’ or ‘plainly’ wrong. Finally, courts are generally not bound by the decisions of lower courts"
Gliatto, Tom (15 de agosto de 1994). «Neverland Meets Graceland». People. Consultado em 1 de maio de 2011. Arquivado do original em 29 de março de 2011
«Bill of Right Transcript». Bill of Rights. National Archives and Records Administration. Consultado em 24 de janeiro de 2011. Arquivado do original em 8 de fevereiro de 2011