Module One: History, Sources of Law Flashcards

1
Q

Case-base aka Common Law definition

A

Legislature creates broader principles but falls to judges to make case by case decisions that shape the law

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2
Q

Who can create laws?

A

Legislature, judges, administrative agencies

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3
Q

Substantive Law and Procedural Law definitions

A

Substantive Law: addresses merits of the disputes, who has the better argument, what legal rules will determine responsibility
Procedural Law: what court to go to, what state you can litigate in, how many witnesses to call out trial, rules of judge and jury, appeals process, etc.

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4
Q

Stare Decisis

A

In common law a judge makes a judgement, stare decides says once a court decides something they will not return to that decision to overrule it

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5
Q

Precedent

A

a court has decided one issue a particular way, we won’t overrule that decision (stare decisis) - suggests how to solve the next case, but may not match circumstances exactly

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6
Q

U.S. Constitution’s function

A

framework for federal and state legal systems, outlining what government cannot do; determines what is Federal and what is State power; set Bill of Rights and other amendments limiting power

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7
Q

3 branches of government and governing articles

A

Article 1: Legislative
Article 2: Executive
Article 3: Judiciary

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8
Q

Judicial review definition and deciding case

A

Marbury V. Madison US Supreme Court determined they get to look at laws (established by executive, state or congress) and decide if it’s consummate with the Constitution

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9
Q

Bill of Rights structure and intent and incorporation clause

A

first 10 amendments: secure individual liberty via the government; extends to all persons on US soil (except voting); incorporation: applies to state govt behavior as well

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10
Q

Establishment versus free exercise clauses

A

Establishment: gov’t prohibited from establishing religion; free exercise: gov’t prohibited from limiting expressions of religion

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11
Q

Federal Statutes definition and powers of Congress

A

Statutory law, established by the legislature; Federal power limited to regulated powers in Article One

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12
Q

Article 1 Section 8 Commerce Clause

A

gives Congress power to regulate interstate commerce; now loosely interpreted and Congress can regulate an activity that has some sort of effect on interstate commerce

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13
Q

Federalism definition

A

Powers given to Congress are governed by the Supremacy Clause, says the US Constitution, treaties, Constitutional laws, federal statutes override state laws

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14
Q

Federal agencies

A

can adopt rules and make adjudicatory decisions with force of law

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15
Q

Uniform Commercial Code

A

rules to govern sales and contractural relationships to operate across state line

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16
Q

Uniform Laws defintion

A

laws proposed to create uniformity, proposed by group of lawyers/judges, doesn’t fall under Federal powers, suggested to each state to create uniformity

17
Q

Judicial Opinions definition

A

judges making case by case decisions/writing opinions that have the force of law that create precedence

18
Q

Bill of Rights intent

A

First 10 amendments, framed as a set of limitations on governmental power negative liberties what the government cannot do against you

19
Q

First Amendment

A

freedom of religion, speech (except incitement, defamation, intellectual property violations, using someone else’s material), press (gets leeway regarding falsehoods about public figures unless tremendously reckless)

20
Q

Content-based regulations versus content-neutral regulations

A

aka time/place/manner regulation - Content-based speech cannot be regulated (ex: which party is allowed to speak), but content-neutral regulation can be regulated (ex: government could rule when political rallies could be held)

21
Q

Fifth Amendment

A

Due process of law: takings clause (Federal government cannot take your property without providing just compensation), also applies to regulations which cause economic impact

22
Q

Fourteenth Amendment

A

states follow Bill of Rights.
Equal protection clause, after Civil War, courts give heightened scrutiny to any law that limits a fundamental right or employs suspect classification

23
Q

Marbury v. Madison (1803)

A

Marbury was entitled to his appointment, but the congressional statute granting the federal courts the power to compel Madison to deliver his appointment was unconstitutional correct