Cases and Precedent Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the conventions on case names in criminal cases

A
  • R v Brown
  • R = regina or rex
  • Brown = defendant
  • The Queen/ The crown against Brown or just Brown
  • Appellant and respondent
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2
Q

Describe the conventions on case names in civil cases

A
  • Ahmed v Blacksmith
  • Claimant (plantiff) and defendant
  • V means versus/against but you say and
  • Appellant and respondent
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3
Q

What is the concept of stare decisis

A

Let the decision stand - binding precedent and the more general idea of precedence at least probs

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4
Q

Describe and explain the operation of precedence

A

Precedent - principle or rule established in a case that is followed in subsequent cases by lower courts

  • courts way of keeping consistency
  • precedent binding on all, not just the parties
  • decisions of the higher courts bind the lower courts
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5
Q

In what 3 situations can the Court of Appeal depart from its previous decisions

A
  • a previous CA decision comes into conflict with and SC decision
  • two CA decisions conflict
  • A CA decision was made per incuriam (in ignorance of the law) - Young v Bristol Aeroplane (1944)
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6
Q

What situations can the Supreme Court depart from its decisions?

A

Trick question - Supreme Court can depart from earlier decisions whenever they want - London tramways v London County Council 1898 ac 375 & practice statement 1966

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7
Q

What impact does HRA 1998 have on precedent

A
  • A court must in so far as possible interpret domestic law so as to be compatible with convention rights
  • on any determination concerning a convention right the court must take into account prior decisions of ECtHR
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8
Q

Describe the relationship between precedent and the CJofEU

A
  • pre-brexit - UK courts bound by the CJEU on matters of interpretation of regulations, directives etc.
  • Post-brexit - Supreme Court not bound by CJEU but may have regard to anything they do
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9
Q

What is the ratio decidendi of a case?

A
  • the main necessary step/point/idea employed by the judge in reaching his conclusion

“the ratio decidendi of a case is any rule of law,
expressly or impliedly treated by the judge as a
necessary step in reaching his conclusion, having
regard to the line of reasoning adopted by him.”
Buxton LJ in R (Khadim) v Brent London Borough
Council Housing Benefit Review Board [2001] QB
955 (CA)

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10
Q

What are obiter comments?

A
  • Comments that may be significant but are not directly part of the legal principle(s)
  • ‘that which is said in passing’
  • may be persuasive in future cases but not binding
  • examples: hypothetical discussion, what might have happened if the facts were slightly different, side issues
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11
Q

precedent vs common law - what are the schools of thought on the difference of these

A
  • precedent and common law are interchangeable terms
  • others believe precedent to be the authoritative and binding interpretations of the law meanwhile the common law is the unwritten law that is wider in scope then precedence
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12
Q

Break down this neutral citation - R v Mirza [2004] UKHL 2

A

Crown against Mirza 2004 (case year), House of Lords (court), 2 (case number)

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13
Q

Break down this law report citation - R v Mirza [2004] 1 AC 1118

A

Crown against Mirza, 2004 (case year), 1 (volume), AC (series of report - AC = appeal cases, WLR = Weekly Law Reports, ALL ER = All England Law Reports, Crim LR = Criminal Law Review etc.), 1118 (page number)

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14
Q

information from cases will help you:

A

To argue the legal precedent that you think should be followed.
• To be able to separate out the facts and the law
• To be able to apply the law to a set of facts
• To be able to separate out hierarchy of laws
• To know which precedents were cited and which were
distinguished
• To use obiter comments as persuasive arguments & understand
context and nuance.
• To understand development of law and problematic areas of law
Ratio and Obiter Dictum
Ratio
• Legal reason why one side won
and the other lost.
• The absolute key to deciding the
case.
• It may relate to one point of law or
many, to UK only law or non-UK
law too.
• The part that has precedent value
Obiter dictum
• Additional legal reasoning on
related points of law.
• Think of it as a judge indicating
“by the way, the law on this point
is…”
• Persuasive authority but not
binding.

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