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Published byPercival Lee Modified over 9 years ago
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History of Law
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Enforceable rules of conduct in society Reflect the culture and circumstances of the times Created in this country by elected officials Statutes- Written laws by elected officials Ordinances- Local Statutes
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Common LawRoman Civil Law From England Based on people’s decisions (Common man decides your fate) Trial by jury of your peers Attorneys Ability to adapt Story to tell From Roman Empire Based on legally trained people’s decisions Trial in front of justices Usually no attorneys Strict interpretation of the law Punishment set based on act
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Roman Civil law is the most widely practiced form of law in the world today English Common law practiced in 49 of 50 US states (Louisiana only civil law based state) and at the federal level Positive law is based on King, queen or dictator and is NOT widely practiced anymore
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Precedent is an idea that prior court rulings are used as a guide for future cases Allows law to build over time Stare Decisis is a Latin term that tells lower courts to follow established case law Allows courts to use prior court judge decisions to follow
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Criminal- Against society Civil (Or Tort law)- Against a person or business Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)- Business based regulations None of these are federal statutes, but rather they are codes (Grouped laws)
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The Federal Constitution sets the framework for what laws can and cannot be passed The US Supreme court is always the final interpreter of the constitution If a law conflict with the constitution, it is said to be……. UNCONSTITUTIONAL
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Administrative Laws- Executive branch (President, governor, mayor) Statutory Laws- Legislative Branch (Congress, senators, local boards) Case Laws- Judicial Branch (Judges or justices) Shamus, stop talking!
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Procedural and Substantive rights are a part of both criminal and civil (tort) law There are “4” distinct stages in the growth of every legal system, with the goal being order Police will NOT investigate a civil (Tort) matter, only criminal
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Substantive RightsProcedural Rights “Defines” legal rights and duties Is the definition of the statute itself Determines the severity of the punishment or restitution the defendant will pay Protects a persons legal rights Miranda Rights Right to an attorney (Criminal) Right to a defense (Civil and criminal) Objections Evidence
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Defined as the power to decide a case Gives local governments more power and separates power between federal levels, state levels and local levels Case must be tried in the area it took place Local judges given authority over case
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Against Society Based on punishment Jail, fines or death Police involved Guaranteed a lawyer Burden of proof on the government
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Against a person or business Based on restitution (Money) Property or personal rights Police NOT involved NOT Guaranteed a lawyer Burden of proof on the plaintiff (Person bringing the case Also known as tort law
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By both elected officials (Statutes) ad in court trials (Case law) Laws can be passed by elected officials and tested in courts to determine if they are constitutional or valid Courts test laws to also determine if they are fair Courts interpret the statutes as well Set precedent
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A legal idea where prior case rulings are used as a “guide” for future cases Created during court trials Based on what happens during the trial Can be overturned “if” strong proof is used to prove it cannot be followed Strengthens our legal system and creates rules to follow
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A Latin term meaning “To adhere to decided cases” This means that established case law is used to decide future cases Different than precedent because “entire case” is looked at, rather than something within trial
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