Judicial precedent Flashcards

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1
Q

What is an Obiter Dicta?

A

Other things said “by the way”

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2
Q

What is the definition of judicial precedent?

A

Following the rule set by a high level court in a previous case with the same material facts

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3
Q

What is the key principle of judicial precedent?

A

Stare Decisis

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4
Q

What does Stare Decisis mean?

A

To stand by a decision

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5
Q

What happened in the case of “Hunter v Canary Wharf”?

A

A woman couldn’t get TV signal after Canary Wharf was built. The judge used an analogy of a similar case about someone who couldn’t get light through their window. He ruled that the woman couldn’t sue, because the woman in his analogy couldn’t sue and they had the same material facts

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6
Q

When can judges make statutes?

A

When a case covers an area of law where there are no statutes yet

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7
Q

What happened in the case of Donoghue v Stevenson?

A

The law was changed so the consumer had the right to sue the seller instead of just the buyer

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8
Q

What happened in the case of Ross v Canters?

A

A similar case to Donoghue v Stenenson, but involving wills. It incorporated the same ideas where a daughter could sue the solicitor in charge of her father’s will.

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9
Q

Which is binding, Obiter Dicta or Ratio Decidendi?

A

Ratio Decidendi

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10
Q

Which can be used as persuasive precedent, Obiter Dicta or Ratio Decidendi?

A

Obiter Dicta

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11
Q

What are the two types of precedent?

A

+ Binding

+ Persuasive

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12
Q

What is Binding Precedent?

A

This is precedent from a previous case which must be followed in a later case

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13
Q

What is Persuasive Precedent?

A

Not binding, but a respective view that can be taken into account when deciding things in later cases

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14
Q

Precedent is binding if:

A

+ There is a reported Ratio Decidendi to follow
+ The decision is made by a higher or equal court
+ The material facts of the earlier case must be the same

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15
Q

What happened in the case of Howe 1987?

A

Someone was told to murder someone or they were threatened. In court they pleaded duress as a defence against murder. The judge ruled duress wasn’t a good enough reason.

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16
Q

What happened in the case of Gotts 1991?

A

A boy was told by his father to murder his mother or he would be murdered. In court the judge took the ratio Decidendi from the Howe case and said that duress wasn’t a good enough defence against murder.

17
Q

Where does a court go for information on if a decision is binding precedent?

A

Courts above them in the hierarchy or their previous decisions

18
Q

Which court can depart from its previous decisions?

A

The Supreme Court, but only “sparingly”

19
Q

What is the “Ratio Decidendi” of a case?

A

The legal rule used or the reason for a decision