1 / 11

Sources of law

Sources of law. Judicial Precedent. What you need to know. Stare decisis – stand by what has been decided Ratio decidendi- the rule of law on which a decision is based - e.g. (Cunningham) Obiter dicta- things said by the way – aeroplane scenario in ( Moloney)

kamuzu
Télécharger la présentation

Sources of law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sources of law Judicial Precedent

  2. What you need to know • Stare decisis – stand by what has been decided • Ratio decidendi- the rule of law on which a decision is based - e.g. (Cunningham) • Obiter dicta- things said by the way – aeroplane scenario in (Moloney) • Persuasive precedent - does not have to be followed e.g. decisions of lower or foreign courts ( Thabo Meli) • Binding precedent- has to be followed • Original precedent- law made as there was no precedent or statute to follow (Bland) • Distinguishing two cases as not quite the same so the first one does not have to be followed (Balfour v Balfour, Merritt v Merritt) • Overruling- a previous decision is ruled wrong so can no longer be used as precedent • Reversing-the result of a case changes as it goes through the appeals process.

  3. The Hierarchy of the Courts Courts are usually bound by the courts above them and those on the same level. • European Court of Justice • House of Lords • Court of Appeal • Divisional High Courts • Inferior Courts

  4. House of Lords The Practice Statement • London Street Tramways • 1966 Lord Gardiner • Limitations • When has it been used? • Herrington (1972) • Jones v Secretary of State for Social Services (1972) • Miliangos v George Frank (1976) • Pepper v Hart (1993)

  5. Criminal cases • Shivpuri (1986)overrulingAnderton v Ryan (1985) • R v R (1991) • Rv R & G (2003) overruling Caldwell • Lord Denning’s unsuccessful campaign to allow the Court of Appeal to use the Practice Statement. (Broome v Cassell , Miliangos v George Frank)

  6. Court of Appeal Young v Bristol Aeroplane Co (1944) • Court of Appeal • Usually follow own previous decisions • 3 exceptions – later HL decision, 2 conflicting decisions, per incuriam. (Williams v Fawcett) • Extra exception for criminal cases – “in the interests of justice” Taylor or Gould

  7. How has precedent been used to develop the law • Law reporting • Law of Contract (Carlill vThe Carbolic Smoke Ball Co) • Law of Tort– negligence, (Donoghue v Stevenson)nuisance, trespass • Criminal law – murder, involuntary manslaughter, many defences

  8. Advantages Certainty Consistency and fairness Precision Flexibility Timesaving Disadvantages Rigidity Complexity Illogical distinguishing Slowness of growth Advantages and disadvantages of Binding Precedent

  9. Possible reform • Codes of law – but they have their own problems • Less rigid precedent • Prospective overruling

  10. Common Mistakes • Not answering the questions • Confusing the hierarchy of the courts • Not using the source • Not looking at dates or which court is in application questions • Vagueness • Not using cases • Not knowing the material

  11. How to avoid these mistakes • Read the questions and • Answer the questions asked • Use the source • Use other cases or information • Balance your evaluation - make sure you put both sides of an argument • Revise thoroughly

More Related