Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Common Law. What is it? It refers to law and to the legal system developed through decisions of courts and similar tribunals (case law). It is law created.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Common Law. What is it? It refers to law and to the legal system developed through decisions of courts and similar tribunals (case law). It is law created."— Presentation transcript:

1 Common Law

2 What is it? It refers to law and to the legal system developed through decisions of courts and similar tribunals (case law). It is law created and refined by judges

3 Where is it used now a day? England Wales Ireland Federal law in USA and in Canada Australia and New Zealand India Africa And every country which has been colonised by Great Britain

4 Primary Connotations: 1.Common Law as opposed to statutory law and regulatory law 2.Common law legal systems as opposed to civil law legal systems 3.Law as opposed to equity

5 Common law as opposed to statutory law and regulatory law Common law : Decisions issued by courts Statutory law: enacted by a legislature Regulatory law: promulgated by executive branch agencies pursuant to a delegation of rule – making authority from legislature

6 Common law legal systems as opposed to civil law legal systems Common law: systems place great weight on court decisions. They are considered "law“ with the same force of law as statutes. Civil law: judicial precedent is given relatively less weight, and scholarly literature is given relatively more

7 Law as opposed to equity Courts of law: could only award money damages and recognized only the legal owner of property Courts of equity: could issue injunctive relief and recognized trusts of property.

8 Where was important the distinction between law and equity? Categorizing and prioritizing rights to property The remedies available and rules of procedure to be applied The standard of review and degree of deference given by an appellate tribunal to the decision of the lower tribunal under review.

9 History of the common law It was the law that the whole country had in common The form of reasoning used was known as casuistry or case-based reasoning It was devised as a means of compensating someone for wrongful acts known as torts The type of procedure practiced was known as the adversarial system

10 Common law legal system now a day The main alternative to it is the civil system. The opposition between it and the civil system has become blurred, with the growing importance of jurisprudence civil law countries and of statute law and codes in common law countries. An example of this is the United States, where matters of criminal law, commercial law and procedure have been codified

11 Common law and civil system : Scotland It usess the civil law system but in fact it has a unique system that combines elements of an uncodified civil law dating back to the Corpus Juris Civilis with an element of common law long predating the Treaty of Union with England in 1707.

12 It has a mixed system of common law and civil law. Israeli law is undergoing codification but its basic principles resemble those of British and American law Common law and civil system : Israel (the role of courts in creating the body of law and the authority of the supreme court in overturning legislative and executive decisions)

13 Common law and civil system: The USA federal governement It has a variant on a common law system: USA federal courts only act as interpreters of statutes and the constitution but, unlike state courts, do not act as an independent source of common law.

14 Basic principes of Common Law

15 Common law adjudication Several stages of analysis determinate what “the law is” in a given situation:  To aschertain the facts  To locate any relevant statutes and cases  To extract principles, analogies and statments  To integrate all the lines drawn  To determine what “the law is”  To apply the law to facts

16 Evolution The common law courts can revise a law to adapt it to new trends The common law evolves through gradual steps and the evolution is in the hands of judges

17 Interaction of constitutional, statutory and Common low In England, Wales and most states of the USA the basic law of contracts, torts and property do not exist in statute but only in Common law You have to locate precedential decisions on a topic to find out what the precise law is Some statutes displace Common law by contrast to statutory codification of Common law to create a new cause of action that did not exist in the Common law

18 Contrasting role of treatises and academic writings in common law and in civil law sistem In common law jurisdictions, legal treatises compile common law decisions and state overarching principles that explain the result of the cases In civil law jurisdictions the writings og law professors are given significant weight by courts

19 Common law as a foundation for commercial economies The reliance on judicial opinion is a strength of common law systems It is a significant contributor to the robust commercial system in the UK and USA In non-common-law countries and jurisdiction fine questions of law are redetermined anew each time they arise In jurisdiction that do not have a strong allegiance to a large body of precedents, parties have less a priori guidance and a bigger “safety margin” of unexploited opportunities


Download ppt "Common Law. What is it? It refers to law and to the legal system developed through decisions of courts and similar tribunals (case law). It is law created."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google