当前位置:

2016ACCA考试《F4公司法与商法》辅导要点3

发表时间:2016/8/29 15:57:49 来源:互联网 点击关注微信:关注中大网校微信
关注公众号

Chapter 3 Legal reasoning

Overview

1 Doctrine of judicial precedent

1.1 Common law and equity are a body of judgemade laws contained in decisions of the courts called judgements.

1.2 Judge – made law or case law is whereby judges follow the decisions of other judges. The doctrine of precedent is sometimes referred to as 'stare decisis': let the decision stand.

1.3 For case law to be workable as a source of law it needs to achieve consistency. Various 'rules' have therefore developed to achieve this aim.

1.4 ‘Rules’:

1.4.1 Only statements of law made by judges can form precedent. In turn these statements must be divided up into ratio decidendi (the reason for the decision) and obiter dicta (other comments).

Only the ratio decidendi forms the basis of precedent as it is this reasoning which is vital to his decision. Obiter dicta are statements of general law (or hypothetical situations) which are not necessary for the decision in the case and hence are not binding.

1.4.2 As the ratio decidendi of a case stems from specific facts if a precedent is to be followed in a subsequent case the facts of that case must be sufficiently similar.

1.4.3 The precedent must have been set by a court capable of creating precedent and not have been overruled.

1.5 Hierarchy of the courts:

(a) House of Lords – binds all lower courts but not itself (exceptional cases)

(b) Court of Appeal – binds all lower courts and itself

(c) High Court

Judge sitting alone – binds all lower courts not divisional courts

Judges sitting together – binds all lower courts and divisional courts

(d) Crown

Magistrates – bind no-one at all

County

1.6 A precedent ceases to be binding if:

(i) It has been overruled by statute or EU law or by a higher court.

(ii) It can be distinguished on the facts i.e. if the material facts are not the same.

1.7 Advantages:

(i) Detail.

(ii) Flexibility.

(iii) Consistency.

(iv) Fairness.

1.8 Disadvantages:

(i) Bulk.

(ii) Restricts judicial discretion.

(iii) reactive system.

(iv) Lack of democratic accountability.

1.9 Persuasive authority:

These are decisions (e.g. those of commonwealth countries, inferior courts and obiter dicta) which are not binding but may influence the decisions of judges in future cases.

编辑推荐:

2016年9月ACCA考试时间9月5日-9日

(责任编辑:)

2页,当前第1页  第一页  前一页  下一页
最近更新 考试动态 更多>