Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The courts as law
makers: the
doctrine of
precedent
- Australian courts are arranged in a
hierarchy with lower courts dealing
with less serious matters and the
higher courts hear more serious
matters
- Lowest To Highest
Magistrates court
Country court
Supreme court
Court of Appeal
High court
- There are two situations in
which the courts make laws
- 1. Judges make laws on a new issue that
arises in a case before them, on which
there is no previous statute or common
law or the current common law requires
expansion
- 2. Through the interpretation of legislation,
as it applies to a case before them. The
first situation will be the focus of this
chapter and the second situation will be
examined in chapter 9.
- Court-made law is also known as case law,
common law or law or judge-made law.
- LIMITATIONS ON A JUDGE'S
ABILITY TO MAKE LAW.
- Judges can only make law if there is a test before them. That is they
must wait for a case to arise with a legal issue that has not
previously been considered by any court. or which tests the valitidyof
an existing law, or which requires the interpretation of an existing law.
- Either statue or common law
- The position of the court in the hierarchy- only
superior courts in the hierarchy create precedent.
These are the courts of record, where the jugdment
are reported.
- The type of legal case and the mode of trial-
precedent is usually only estasblished in cases
on appeal (where there is know jury) or when
hearing a civil case without a jury.
- The personality of the judges- some see
there role as adjudicators, not law makers,
while other judges are progressives, who
see their role is both adjudicator and law
maker.
- Judges may be bound by exsisting precedent
that has been established by higher court, so they
have to follow it.
- judges may be able to distinguish the
precedent
- DEFINITIONS
- Binding Precedent: Precedent created by courts higher in
the court hierarchy that must be followed by a lower court
when making a judicial decision.
- Persuasive precedent: Precedent that courts are not bound to follow, such as
those made by lower courts or courts of another jurisdiction, but a court may
look to the precedent as being influential on their judicial decision making.
- Obiter dictum (LATIN) Statements said by the way.
These statments of a judges opinion on a legal principle
or law which is not for direction consideration in the case
at issue. it is only ever persuasive precedent.
- Ratio decidendi (LATIN) The reason for the
desicion. this is the statement of legal principle or
law that forms the binding part of a precedent.
- Stare decisis(LATIN) To stand by what has been decided.
- DEVELOPING PRECEDENT
- REVERSING
- A judge in a higher court deciding a case on appeal
may rule that the lower court wrongly decided that
case. The superior court can reverse or change the
previous decision. This creates a new precedent that
is binding on lower courts.
- OVERRULING
- A judge deciding a case in a higher court may not agree with
a precedent set in another case in a lower court. The
superior court may decide not to follow the existing
persuasive precedent and may over rule or change it.
- This creates a new precedent
that is binding on lower courts.
- DISAPPROVING
- A judge may refuse to follow an earlier decision of another judge in the same court.
- Both precedents remain in force until another case on the issue is taken to a
higher court, which can overrule the previous decision and create a new
precedent
- DISTINGUISHING
- A judge may find that there are different material facts
existing between the case currently being decided and the
case in which an earlier binding precedent was set.
- If these differences are important enough then the later
court may coose to distinguish its case from the previous
one and create a new precedent for their particular set of
facts. there will then be two different precedents one for
each of the two fact situations.
- ADVANTAGES OF PRECEDENT
- Creates certainty and consistency as a
case will be decided similarly to a
previous, comparable case.
- Flexibility due to the fact that the methods of avoiding following
precedent (reversing, overruling, distinguishing disapproving) help
prevent the law from becoming to rigid.
- Encourages efficiency as judges can refer to
previous cases when making decisions.
- Allows judges to create new areas of law
in order to uphold the rights of disputing
parties before them.
- DISADVANTAGES OF PRECEDENT
- Inflexible as a court is bound to follow
precedent and may not be able to avoid it,
so common law is limited in responding to
changes in society.
- Some uncertainties as no two cases are ever
the same.
- Restricted by having to wait for a case to
be brought to court- slow an irregular
- Complicates the judicial law making process