doi:10.60082/2817-5069.1913HoltWytheOsgoode Hall L.jHOLTE, W. (1984): "Labour Conspiracy Cases in the United States, 1805-1842: Bias and Legitimation in Common Law Adjudication", Osgoode Hall Law Journal, 22(4): 591-663
While judges develop the common law gradually, through the force of their rulings in specific cases, it won't be found in any written form comparable to statutory law. Common law is instead the common consensus of legality and illegality that developed over centuries of individual court ruling...
American judges, like common law judges elsewhere, not only apply the law, they also make the law, to the extent that their decisions in the cases before them become precedent for decisions in future cases. 作为普通法法院,美国法院继承了“遵循先例(stare decisis)”原则。美国的法官,与普通法系...
Common law, or case law, is a body of law that is created by the written decisions of judges instead of by a strict legal code. Thus, common law systems have underlying, unwritten laws that are derived from court decisions in individual cases. Because laws in common law systems stem from...
翻译题The United States is a common law country. Every U.S. state has a legal system based on the common law, except Louisiana. Common law has no statutory basis; judges establish common law by applying previous decisions (precedents) to present cases. Although typically affected by statutory...
and otherwise acting as a married couple. Because common law is open to ambiguity (for example, in the case of common law marriage, if one party denies that the marital relationship exists, it can be difficult for the other to prove that it does), in the United States and other countries...
common law noun :a group of legal practices and traditions originating in judges' decisions in earlier cases and in social customs and having the same force in most of the U.S. as if passed into law by a legislative body Legal Definition ...
图书Digest of the Decisions of the Courts of Common Law and Admiralty in the United States, Volume 3 介绍、书评、论坛及推荐
In subject area: Computer Science 'Common Law Jurisdiction' refers to legal systems, like in England and the United States, where laws are developed through court decisions and precedents rather than through statutes or codes. AI generated definition based on: International Encyclopedia of the Social...
Common Law Introduction to Common Law Common law refers to a legal system that is based on precedents, or judicial decisions made in previous cases. It originated in England during the Middle Ages and over time spread to various countries, including the United States. The common law system is...