Legal Factors - Civil & Criminal & EU - All The Laws Flashcards
Types of law
Civil law
Criminal law
EU law
Civil law
Law concerned with the rules that govern business relations and people
I.e. employment rights and consumer rights
Have to pay damages (payment to compensate the business or person that’s been damaged for any loss or injury)
No imprisonment, fines, not a criminal
Criminal law
Law defining the actions of the state are wrong and the punishment from these actions
Found guilt as a result can mean a fine or person
EU law
Some laws affecting the UK through EU law I.e from the Social Charter concerned with wages, working conditions, working time directive (not more than 48 hours)
- REGULATIONS = have to be adopted and applied in a certain way
- DIRECTIVE = applied as law but it’s up to the individual member country to decide how to implement it
Law importance
- make employees behave in a responsible way
- stopping unacceptable behaviour
- stops unhealthy and dangerous working conditions leading to injury or death or workers
- not pollute or destroy the environment
- not dismiss employees with no explanation at all
- workers can’t just turn up to work when they want and not following contracts
- stops stealing of work property
- ignore manager instructions about work and their safety etc.
Types of law (the proper name ones)
Laws governing the RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BUSINESSES
Laws governing CONSUMER PROTECTION
Laws governing HOW TO TREAT EMPLOYEES
Laws governing the relationship between businesses
Contract law
Competition and monopoly law
Intellectual property law
Financial conduct law
Company and partnership law
Contract law
Governing business relations
Contract laws set OJ the basic framework of rights and obligations
Can be an offer to supply something at a particular time/in a particular quantities
Binds on both parties so against the law for one party to change the terms of the contract without the other one agreeing
Breaching = breaching civil law so having to pay damages
Monopoly and competition monopoly law
Governing business relations
It’s illegal for businesses to restrict competition in the UK + EU
‘Competition policy’ aims:
- technological innovation which promotes dynamic efficiency
- effective price competition between suppliers
- choice and low prices for customers
CMA to ensure businesses comply with the law since 2014 = MONOPOLY IS ONE OVER 25% MARKET SHARE
2 types: - ANTI-COMPETITIVE AGREEMENTS ( mergers, takeovers, collusion) - ABUSE OF DOMINANT POSITION ( artificially setting a low price or too high a price which threatens suppliers both up and downs the supply chain)
THERE ARE NATURAL MONOPOLIES DUE TO PRIVATISATION (NHS investigating into doing this)
There is also DIRECT REGULATION with gas and electricity markets
Laws governing consumer protection
Consumer protection
Sale of goods act
GDPR act and Data protection law
Weights and measures law
Consumer protection from unfair trading regulation
Unsolicited goods act
Sale of goods act
Consumer protection
- goods must be of sufficient quality, as described and fit for purpose
- if these aren’t met, then the business must provide consumers with a replacement or their money back
Also ensure products are safe to use
Weights and measures act
Consumer protection
No short measures or an incorrect indication of the amount of a product on sale - 1L means it should contain 1L
Unsolicited goods act
Consumer protection
Illegal to demand payment for services that haven’t been ordered = breaking the law
Trading Standards Authority investigates breaches of consumer laws and helps consumers take businesses to court
Consumer protection for, unfair trading regulations and trade descriptions act
(Consumer protection)
Present customers from being intentionally misled when buying goods
Goods descriptions must not be incorrect or misleading
- a ban on unfair practices
- a band on misleading or aggressive practices
- a blacklist on unfair practices
This stops the business from doing this:
- aggressive doorstep selling
- claiming an item is free when it’s not
- persistent cold calling
- time limited offers that aren’t time limited at all
- refusing to take no as an answer
GDPR and data protection
Consumer protection
How personal information on customers and employees is stored and used by a business
Business must use this information for lawful purposes, for a limited time and kept securely
Changes how business process and handle data
RECENTLY UPDATED IN FRIDAY MAY 25th AS A CHANGE TO THEIR PRIVATE POLICY
Due to previous policies from the 90s now being very out of date so they can let you know what they’re doing with your data