Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy [2024]

2024 ND 52 · North Dakota Supreme Court · Jurisdiction from source

Public Health Lawpublic-health-lawPublic Health Lawenergy-lawEnergy Lawsource verification

Issue

How might Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy help a student research, compare, or distinguish an issue in Public Health Law, and what must be verified in the linked source before citation?

Held

Source-linked holding checkpoint: verify the dispositive holding in the linked source. This entry intentionally avoids inventing a rule that may not belong to Public Health Law.

Exam use

When revising Public Health Law, put this case in a source-check column first. Read the linked judgment, write a one-sentence verified holding, and decide whether it is binding, persuasive, historical, or only analogous. In an exam, use it only if the verified facts and rule match the problem. This is especially important for niche subjects where search results may locate adjacent authorities rather than classic leading cases.

Summary

Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy 2024 ND 52 is included as a source-linked research checkpoint for Public Health Law. The public source record identifies the case, court, jurisdiction, citation, and source URL. This entry does not invent a new holding for Public Health Law; instead, it gives students a safe route into the original source so they can verify the ratio, facts, and procedural posture before using the authority in coursework, interview preparation, or exam revision.

Facts

The verified source record places Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy before North Dakota Supreme Court. The existing source-linked brief records the citation as 2024 ND 52 and supplies at least one public URL for the underlying case or opinion. Because this is a cross-subject research checkpoint, candidates should open the source and identify the material facts themselves: the parties, dispute type, transaction or public-law action, procedural route, and the facts the court treated as legally decisive. Do not rely on this checkpoint as a substitute for reading the opinion.

Procedural History

Use the linked source to confirm the procedural path, including any agency decision, trial ruling, appeal, remand, or specialist tribunal step. This checkpoint preserves the court and citation but asks the candidate to verify the sequence before citation.

Issue

How might Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy help a student research, compare, or distinguish an issue in Public Health Law, and what must be verified in the linked source before citation?

Held

Source-linked holding checkpoint: verify the dispositive holding in the linked source. This entry intentionally avoids inventing a rule that may not belong to Public Health Law.

Ratio Decidendi

Extract the ratio from the linked judgment by identifying the legal test, material facts, and reason for the outcome. Treat this record as a research lead unless the source confirms a direct Public Health Law rule.

Reasoning

For Public Health Law, the useful exercise is to read the linked source and decide whether the reasoning is central, analogous, procedural, or merely background. Start with the court and citation, then isolate the rule, application, policy rationale, and remedy. If the case sits outside the core subject, use it as a comparison authority or research prompt rather than a primary rule statement. This workflow helps prevent hallucinated citations and builds a defensible case table.

Plain-English Explanation

This entry is a safe research doorway. It tells you that a real case exists, gives you the citation and source link, and explains how to turn it into exam material. It does not pretend that every case in a broad database is a leading authority for the subject. That honesty is useful: it teaches students to verify sources before relying on them.

Essay-Ready Explanation Generator

Version 1 of 4

Reference to Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy (2024 ND 52) strengthens a Public Health Law answer because the case reflects the principle that Extract the ratio from the linked judgment by identifying the legal test, material facts, and reason for the outcome. Treat this record as a research lead unless the source confirms a direct Public Health Law rule. Applied to a problem question, the case should be used after identifying the issue as How might Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy help a student research, compare, or distinguish an issue in Public Health Law, and what must be verified in the linked source before citation? The stronger essay move is to connect the material facts to the court's holding, then explain whether the present facts support the same conclusion or justify distinguishing the authority.

Underlying Concepts

  • public-health-law
  • Public Health Law
  • case research
  • source verification
  • exam authority table

Key Passages

  • Verify exact wording in the linked source.

Significance

Whitetail Wave v. XTO Energy broadens the LawConquer case database by connecting Public Health Law revision to a real public case source. It is most useful for students who need to practise authority verification, jurisdiction checking, and analogical reasoning. The entry should be upgraded to a full doctrinal brief after the linked judgment is reviewed in detail.

Related Cases

No related cases listed.

Exam Tips

When revising Public Health Law, put this case in a source-check column first. Read the linked judgment, write a one-sentence verified holding, and decide whether it is binding, persuasive, historical, or only analogous. In an exam, use it only if the verified facts and rule match the problem. This is especially important for niche subjects where search results may locate adjacent authorities rather than classic leading cases.

Revision Checklist

  • Name the issue before discussing facts so the marker sees the legal question immediately.
  • State the holding in one sentence, then use the ratio to explain why the court reached that result.
  • Use the citation and jurisdiction to show why this authority matters for the problem you are answering.
  • Pair this case with one supporting or contrasting authority if the question tests limits, policy, or exceptions.

Problem Question Use

Use this checkpoint to practise source verification. If the linked opinion supports the issue in your problem question, state the verified rule and apply the material facts. If it does not, record it as a contrast or discard it. The goal is a reliable authority table, not a memorised unsourced proposition.

Common Pitfalls

  • Citing without opening the source
  • Treating adjacent authority as a core rule
  • Ignoring jurisdiction and procedural posture

Sources