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  • Common law | Definition, Origins, Development, Examples | Britannica
    Common law, the body of customary law, based on judicial decisions and embodied in reports of decided cases, that has been administered by the courts of England since the Middle Ages From it has evolved the legal systems found in the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries as well
  • Common law - English, American, Commonwealth | Britannica
    Common law - English, American, Commonwealth: The legal systems rooted in the English common law have diverged from their parent system so greatly over time that, in many areas, the legal approaches of common-law countries differ as much from one another as they do from civil-law countries Indeed, England and the United States have so many legal differences that they are sometimes described
  • Common law - Feudal, Land, Law | Britannica
    Common law - Feudal, Land, Law: During the critical formative period of common law, the English economy depended largely on agriculture, and land was the most important form of wealth A money economy was important only in commercial centres such as London, Norwich, and Bristol Political power was rural and based on landownership Land was held under a chain of feudal relations Under the
  • Judicial Precedent, Common Law Doctrine - Britannica
    Stare decisis, (Latin: “let the decision stand”), in Anglo-American law, principle that a question once considered by a court and answered must elicit the same response each time the same issue is brought before the courts The principle is observed more strictly in England than in the United
  • Common law - Early Statute, Legal System, Precedent | Britannica
    Common law - Early Statute, Legal System, Precedent: Edward I (reigned 1272–1307) has been called the English Justinian because his enactments had such an important influence on the law of the Middle Ages Edward’s civil legislation, which amended the unwritten common law, remained for centuries as the basic statute law It was supplemented by masses of specialized statutes that were
  • Trust | Definition, Economics, Types, Facts | Britannica Money
    trust, in Anglo-American law, a relationship between persons in which one has the power to manage property and the other has the privilege of receiving the benefits from that property There is no precise equivalent to the trust in civil-law systems A brief treatment of trusts follows For full treatment, see property law: Trusts
  • Common law - Growth, Statute, Codes | Britannica
    Common law - Growth, Statute, Codes: After the American Revolution, a drive to replace judge-made law with popular legislation was revived In 1811 Bentham proposed a national civil code to President James Madison, but his proposal was premature In the mid-19th century, the legal reformer David Dudley Field presided over the drafting of several codes and campaigned vigorously for the
  • Anglo-Saxon law | Origins, Principles Development | Britannica
    Anglo-Saxon law, the body of legal principles that prevailed in England from the 6th century until the Norman Conquest (1066) In conjunction with Scandinavian law and the so-called barbarian laws (leges barbarorum) of continental Europe, it made up the body of law called Germanic law Anglo-Saxon
  • American law | Britannica
    In Anglo- American law today, deportation is a civil enactment imposed on persons who are neither native-born nor naturalized citizens The alien is ordinarily, but not necessarily, returned to the country from which he came, usually because he has entered the deporting country illegally or without proper…
  • Civil law | History, Systems, Facts | Britannica
    Civil law, also called Romano-Germanic law, the law of continental Europe, much of Latin America, and parts of Asia and Africa, based on an admixture of Roman, Germanic, ecclesiastical, feudal, commercial, and customary law It is distinguished from the common law of the Anglo-American countries





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