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CJUS/POLS 102 Chapter 1: Introduction to Law
Law and Society CJUS/POLS 102 Chapter 1: Introduction to Law
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Functions of Law Five primary functions 1. Bestows benefits on people
2. Reflects society’s values 3. Creates new programs 4. Proscribes certain activities 5. Provides predictability
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Sources of Law Natural law - considered a higher law
- laws of God or nature - “mala in se” Positive law - reflect the will of the people - “mala prohibita” Sociological law - values / mores / culture of a society
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Laws of Society Laws: divided into different concepts:
Constitutional law - supreme law of the land - all others subordinate - US Supreme Court - limits government Criminal law - federal / state / local - felony / gross misdemeanor / misdemeanor
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Laws of Society Civil law - relates to torts committed
- personal injury - physical / mental / monetary - action between two or more parties Administrative law - powers of administrative agencies - elected officials enact laws - government agencies carry out - enact policies / procedures
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Laws of Society Statutory law - written laws passed by governments
- federal / state statutes - county / city ordinances Common law - originated in Medieval England - adopted during American Revolution - opinions / judgments of courts - judge-made law - “unwritten law”
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Laws of Society Case law - reported judicial decisions
- judge interprets the law - meaning of Constitution / statutes / other - criminal trials / civil trials / appeals Public law - concerned with public rights / obligations - constitutional / international / criminal / etc. Private law
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Laws of Society Modern Sources of Law
- regulates the rights and duties - exist between private persons - individuals / companies / associations - contract law / business law / etc. Modern Sources of Law Constant state of change - society changes / laws must adapt - old laws dropped / new laws added - others modified
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Modern Sources Constitutional form of government
- ultimate source of law - all branches of government - by the people a. Legislative branch - federal / state / local - written law - “referendum” (1) Laws have jurisdiction
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Modern Sources - geographic area - power / authority to enforce
(a) Federal law - entire country / territories - relates to federal authority / power (b) State law - entire state - county / city alike - health / taxes / wildlife / licenses
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Modern Sources (c) County law - only to that county
- can include cities within - juvenile / civil / property taxes / etc (d) City law - only to that city - police / fire / water / licenses / etc (2) Doctrine of Supremacy - cannot supersede state law
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Modern Sources - cannot supersede federal law
(3) Challenging a legislated law - courts do not interfere - until someone challenges - appeals conviction / judgment - must be a case / controversy b. Executive branch - veto makes law - executive order / administrative law
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Modern Sources (1) Veto - bill signed by president / governor
- can override by 2/3’s majority (2) Executive order - protecting environmental areas - excusing from prosecution (3) Administrative law - agencies impose policy / procedures - agency head reports to executive
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Modern Sources c. Judicial branch - all levels make law
(1) State courts - Grays Harbor Superior Court - State Court of Appeals (2nd circuit) - State Supreme Court (2) Federal courts - US District Court (Tacoma) - US Court of Appeals (9th circuit)
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Modern Sources - US Supreme Court d. Lawmaking by the people
(1) How we vote (2) Initiative Classification of Law - all levels of government - federal / state / local
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Classification a. Civil / Criminal law
- referred to as private law / public law b. International / domestic law (1) International - between two or more countries - civil or criminal (2) Domestic - handled in US courts
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Classification c. Procedural / substantive law (1) Procedural law
- establishes procedures to be followed - by police / courts / corrections - 5th Amendment (a) Police - use of force - advice to rights - collection of evidence
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Classification (b) Courts - filing of charges
- notification for defense - presentation of evidence (c) Corrections - offender rights - parole hearings - personal safety (2) Substantive law
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Washington State Government
Classification - content / substance of the law (a) Perform a certain action - act in a certain way (b) Prohibits criminal acts - certain actions a crime Washington State Government – 1853: part of Oregon Territory
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Washington State - Oregon / Washington / Idaho
- territorial representatives - Territorial Supreme Court (3 justices) a – 1889: Washington Territory - north of Columbia River - west of Continental Divide - territorial governor / representatives - supreme court (4 justices) - territorial prison (Walla Walla)
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Washington State b. October 1, 1889: state constitution
- elected public officials (1) November 11, 1889: 42nd state - Act of Congress - laws of California - 3 branches of government - supreme court (5 justices) (2) 39 counties - county commissioners
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Washington State - county agencies (roads / health / etc)
Branches of government a. Executive - Governor / Lt. Governor - 189 administrative agencies/commissions b. Legislative - Senate / House of Representatives - 49 senators / 98 representatives
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Washington State (c) Judicial - state supreme court (9 justices)
- state court of appeals (I / II / III) - superior courts (population) - district courts / municipal courts Washington law - Washington Administrative Code (WAC) - Revised Code of Washington (RCW)
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