Judicial Precedent Flashcards

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1
Q

stare decisis

A

stand by what has been decided

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2
Q

elements of a judgement:

A

finding, decision, statement of law

——> ratio decidendi & obiter dicta

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3
Q

Ratio decidendi

A

reasons for decision reached
binding precedent
multiple if different reasons
Sir rupert cross: any rule expressly or impliedly treated by the judge as a necessary step in reaching their decision

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4
Q

Obiter dicta

A
other things said 
not binding (persuasive precedent) 
statements made by dissenting judges
R v Howe - obiter was duress not defence for attempted murder/murder
R v Gotts - ratio was duress not defence
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5
Q

types of precedent

A

ORIGINAL- if area of law hasn’t been decided before, e.g hunter and others v canary wharf
BINDING- decisions made in courts binding on all lower, must be followed, Donoghue v Stevenson
PERSUASIVE- not binding, higher courts can use this instead of binding precedent such as obiter, lower courts, R v R(marital rape)

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6
Q

civil court hierarchy

A
supreme 
court of appeal 
divisional courts 
high court 
county court
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7
Q

criminal courts hierarchy

A
supreme 
court of appeal 
high - QBD
crown 
magistrates
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8
Q

practice statement

A

used to overrule past decisions in house
issued by lord chancellor in 1966
used when it appears right to do so
first major use: Herrington v British railways board
pepper v hart

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9
Q

departing from precedent

A

overruling - not following precedent because it was wrong, old case stays same (Pepper v Hart)
reversing - undo decision made by lower court (Sweet v Parsley)
distinguishing - material facts are different so precedent technically doesn’t exist (Balfour v Balfour & Merritt v Merritt)

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10
Q

evaluation of precedent

A
\+ certainty 
consistency and fairness 
time saving
flexibility 
- complexity 
need for law reform 
rigidity
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