Business law Chapter 1
civil law system
A system of law derived from roman law that is based on codified laws (rather than on case precedents).
Primary source of law
a document that establishes the law on a particular issue, such as a constitution, a statute, an administrative rule, or a court decision.
administrative agency
a federal or state government agency created by the legislature to perform a specific function, such as to make and enforce rules pertaining to the environment
uniform law
a model law developed by the national conference of commissioners on uniform state laws for the states to consider enacting into statute
interpretive rule
a non binding rule or policy statement issued by an administrative agency that explains how it interprets and intends to apply the statutes it enforces.
Secondary source of law
a publication that summarizes or interprets the law, such as a legal encyclopedia, a legal treatise, or an article in a law review
citation
a reference to a publication in which a legal authority such as a statute or a court decision or other source can be found
ordinance
a regulation enacted by a city or county legislative body that becomes part of that states statutory law
legal positivism
a school of legal thought centered on the assumption that there is no law higher than the laws created by a national government. laws must be obeyed even if they are unjust to prevent anarchy
legal realism
a school of legal thought that holds that the law is only one factor to be considered when deciding cases and that social and economic circumstances should also be taken into account
historical school
a school of legal thought that looks to the past to determine what the principles of contemporary law should be.
enabling legislation
a statute enacted by congress that authorizes the creation of an administrative agency and specifies the name composition purpose and powers of the agency being created
legislative rule
an administrative agency rule that carries the same weight as a congressionally enacted statute
cyber law
an informal term used to refer to all laws governing electronic communications and transactions particularly those conducted via the internet.
persuasive authority
any legal authority or source of law that a court may look to for guidance but need not follow when making its decision
binding authority
any source of law that a court must follow when deciding a case
substantive law
law that defines describes regulates and creates legal rights and obligations
procedural law
law that establishes the methods of enforcing the rights established by substantive law
national law
law that pertains to a particular nation (as opposed to international law)
Defendant
one against whom a lawsuit is brought or the accused person in a criminal proceeding.
plaintiff
one who initiates a lawsuit
administrative law judge
one who presides over an administrative agency hearing and has the power to administer oaths, take testimony, rule on questions of evidence and make determinations of facts.
administrative law
the body of law created by administrative agencies in order to carry out their duties and responsibilities
constitutional law
the body of law derived from the U.S constituion and the constitutions of the various states
common law
the body of law developed from custom or judicial decisions in english and U.S courts, not attributable to a legislature
statutory law
the body of law enacted by legislative bodies 9as opposed to constitutional law administrative law or case law.
criminal law
the branch of law that defines and punishes wrongful actions committed against the public
civil law
the branch or law dealing with the definition and enforcement of all private or public rights as opposed to criminal matters
international law
the law that governs relations among nations
natural law
the oldest school of legal thought, based on the belief that the legal system should reflect universal ("higher") moral and ethical principles that are inherent in human nature
administrative process
the procedure used by administrative agencies in administering the law.
rulemaking
the process by which an administrative agency formally adopts a new regulation or amends an old one.
remedy
the relief given to an innocent party to enforce a right or compensate for the violation of a right
case law
the rules of law announced in court decisions. case law interprets statutes, regulations, constitutional provisions, and other case law.
jurisprudence
the science or philosophy of law
Liability
the state of being legally responsible for something, such as a debt or obligation
adjudicate
to render a judicial decision. adjudication is the trial-like proceeding in which an administrative law judge hears and resolves disputes involving an administrative agency's regulation
precedent
a court decision that furnishes an example or authority for deciding subsequent cases involving identical or similar facts
stare decisis
a common law doctrine under which judges are obligated to follow the precedents established in prior decisions.
equitable principles and maxims
general propositions or principles of law that have to do with fairness (equity).