COMMON LAW

system of law that prevails in England and in countries colonized by England. The name is derived from the medieval theory that the law administered by the king's courts represented the common custom of the realm, as opposed to the custom of local jurisdiction that was applied in local or manorial courts. In its early development common law was largely a product of three English courts—King's Bench, Exchequer, and the Court of Common Pleas—which competed successfully against other courts for jurisdiction and developed a distinctive body of doctrine. The term "common law" is also used to mean the traditional, precedent-based element in the law of any common-law jurisdiction, as opposed to its statutory law or legislation (see statute), and also to signify that part of the legal system that did not develop out of equity, maritime law, or other special branches of practice.

All Canada except Quebec and all of the United States except Louisiana follow common law. U.S. state statutes usually provide that the common law, equity, and statutes in effect in England in 1603, the first year of the reign of James I, shall be deemed part of the law of the jurisdiction. Later decisions of English courts have only persuasive authority.

Characteristic Features of Common Law

The distinctive feature of common law is that it represents the law of the courts as expressed in judicial decisions. The grounds for deciding cases are found in precedents provided by past decisions, as contrasted to the civil law system, which is based on statutes and prescribed texts. Besides the system of judicial precedents, other characteristics of common law are trial by jury and the doctrine of the supremacy of the law. Originally, supremacy of the law meant that not even the king was above the law; today it means that acts of governmental agencies are subject to scrutiny in ordinary legal proceedings.

Judicial precedents derive their force from the doctrine of stare decisis [Lat.,=stand by the decided matter], i.e., that the previous decisions of the highest court in the jurisdiction are binding on all other courts in the jurisdiction. Changing conditions, however, soon make most decisions inapplicable except as a basis for analogy, and a court must therefore often look to the judicial experience of the rest of the English-speaking world. This gives the system flexibility, while general acceptance of certain authoritative materials provides a degree of stability. Nevertheless, in many instances, the courts have failed to keep pace with social developments and it has become necessary to enact statutes to bring about needed changes; indeed, in recent years statutes have superseded much of common law, notably in the fields of commercial, administrative, and criminal law. Typically, however, in statutory interpretation the courts have recourse to the doctrines of common law. Thus increased legislation has limited but has not ended judicial supremacy.

Development of Common Law

Early common law was somewhat inflexible; it would not adjudicate a case that did not fall precisely under the purview of a particular writ and had an unwieldy set of procedural rules. Except for a few types of lawsuits in which the object was to recover real or personal property, the only remedy provided was money damages; the body of legal principles known as equity evolved partly to overcome these deficiencies. Until comparatively recent times there was a sharp division between common law (or legal jurisprudence) and equity (or equitable jurisprudence). In 1848 the state of New York enacted a code of civil procedure (drafted by David Dudley Field) that merged law and equity into one jurisdiction. Thenceforth, actions at law and suits in equity were to be administered in the same courts and under the same procedure. The Field code reforms were adopted by most states of the United States, by the federal government, and by the United Kingdom (in the Judicature Act of 1873).

Bibliography

See O. W. Holmes, The Common Law (1881; new ed., ed. by M. DeWolfe Howe, 1963, repr. 1968); T. F. Plucknett, Concise History of the Common Law (5th ed. 1956); H. Potter, Historical Introduction to English Law and Its Institutions (4th ed. 1958); A. R. Hogue, Origins of the Common Law (1966); R. C. van Caenegem, The Birth of the English Common Law (1973); J. H. Baker, The Legal Profession and the Common Law (1986); R. L. Abel and P. S. C. Lewis, ed., The Common Law World (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Common Law  - 72163 results

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...Southern Cross Civil Law and Common Law in South Africa REINHARD ZIMMERMANN...Southern cross : civil law and common law in South Africa Reinhard Zimmermann...law -- South Africa -- History. 2. Common law -- South Africa -- History. I...
...Foundation SEASON OF 1921 THE SPIRIT OF THE COMMON LAW THE SPIRIT OF THE COMMON LAW BY ROSCOE POUND CARTER PROFESSOR OF JURISPRUDENCE...all of these this book on, " The Spirit of the Common Law " from the hands of Dean Pound will be of major...
Common Law and Feudal Society in Medieval Scotland Common Law and Feudal Society in Medieval Scotland...thirteenth century, as well as to the common law of the realm. 6 Although this latter...
LEADING CASES IN THE COMMON LAW Leading Cases in the Common Law A. W. BRIAN SIMPSON OXFORD UNIVERSITY...Alfred William Brian Leading cases in the common law / A. W. Brian Simpson. p. cm. Includes bibliographical...
A NATURAL HISTORY OF THE COMMON LAW JAMES S. CARPENTIER LECTURES A NATURAL HISTORY OF THE COMMON LAW S.F.G. MILSOM COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY...1923- A natural history of the common law / S.F.C. Milsom. p. cm. Includes...
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...Discourse: a Study of the Contentious Politics of Common Law Courts by Timothy Buzzell Events in the flow...current literature is the challenge constructed by the "common law court." Common law courts take the form of court filings used as a tactic...
...Economic Relations at Australian Common Law by Marcia Langton , Odette Mazel...Aboriginal economic rights at Australian common law Appadurai, in The Social Life of...pronouncements of the Australian common law system on the right to trade and...
Common law, common ground, and Jeffersons principle...consists of precedents that have evolved in a common-law-like way, with a life and a logic of their...practices of constitutional interpretation. The common law and common ground justifications make sense...
Governing through contract: common law marriage in the nineteenth century...the legitimacy of the doctrine of common law marriage, the doctrine by which courts...quarter of the nineteenth century, a common law marriage was a valid contract between...
...written: transformation in the British common-law constitution. by David Jenkins...constitutional model has basis in the common law and the orthodox theories of Blackstone...represent shifting norms through common-law adjudication. Furthermore, the Author...
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Common Sense and Common Law. by Robert F. Nagel COMMON-LAW LIBERTY : RETHINKING AMERICAN CONSITITIONALISM. By JAMES...Kansas. 208 pp. $29.95. FOR MOST PEOPLE the term "common law" summons up quaint images of wigged British judges and...
...Colonial Experience under British Common Law and Other Historic Traditions...element, however, was the English common law tradition and its use by English...court decisions interpreting the common law. The men of Massachusetts wrote to...
British Common Law under Attack. The recent upsurge in violent crime suffered by citizens...outright, rights and guarantees cherished for centuries under British common law. On July 17th, British Home Secretary David Blunkett, whose office...
...overzealous law enforcement officers. Common law, common sense In 1763, the Chief...18th-century work on the English common law of liberty to the American Law Institutes...confirm the conclusion that under common law, an arrest, even though made without...
...world than ever before. The English common law has tried to keep up. It rarely leads...litmus paper. All of this applies to common law -- the law made by judges. It does...so well to statutes. The English common law is a system for producing bespoke...
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`Courts of common law punish with phony paper: `Patriot movement...legal system known as the "courts of common law." Known as the judicial wing of the...They live in a mythical world of common law, which only they can interpret," said...
...Colorado Loophole Lets Teens Marry; Common Law Trumps Statute. Byline: Valerie...Twelve-year-old girls are free to enter into a common-law marriage with 14-year-old boys or...alike Thursday when it ruled that common law trumps state statute when it comes...
...Out-of-Touch Government Has Taken Away Our Common Law Rights. MARK BYRNE and Sue Higginson...overrides decades, even centuries, of common law rights which normally govern our...an expired mandate take away all common law rights whenever it wants to ride...
Common-Law Wife Wins Share of Ex-Lovers House. Byline: PATRICK SAWER A WOMAN...running the household. Ms Oxley, 51, said: "The law doesnt recognise the term common-law wife when it comes to money. My case will prevent other women enduring...
My Victory for the Common-Law Wives Left with Nothing; Landmark Ruling...sale of the house she shared with her common law husband for ten years. Elayne Oxley...it falls apart. Until now, courts commonly judged such cases on the basis of how...
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encyclopedia articles on: Common Law  - 248 results

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COMMON LAW system of law that prevails in England...manorial courts. In its early development common law was largely a product of three English courts...distinctive body of doctrine. The term "common law" is also used to mean the traditional, precedent-based...
COMMON-LAW MARRIAGE see under husband and wife . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Roman law , as distinguished from common law . Civil law is based on written legal...legislation, edicts, and the like; common law is based on the precedents created...by England and apply the system of common law prevailing there. In general usage...
...contrast with customary law (including common law ), which is susceptible of various...largely unsuccessful in countries where common law prevails, such as the United States...the argument that the principles of common law are sometimes uncertain and often...
...legislature has made such violations misdemeanors. A common-law crime is one punishable under common law, as distinguished from crimes specified by statute...comprehensive criminal statutes have been enacted, the common law in relation to crimes and criminal procedure...
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