Title: THE DOCTRINE OF PRECEDENT
1THE DOCTRINE OF PRECEDENT
2Preview
- Common law precedent
- Hierarchy of English courts
- Stare decisis
- Ratio decidendi
- Obiter dicta
- Distinguishing, overruling and reversing
- Law reports
- Legal terms
- Exercises
3Common law
- Consists of substantive law and procedural rules
that are created by the judicial decisions made
in the courts - Although legislation may override such decisions,
the legislation itself is subject to
interpretation and refinement in the courts
4Precedent
- A judgement or decision of a court, normally
recorded in a law report, used as an authority
for reaching the same decision in subsequent cases
5The Hierarchy of English Courts
6Civil cases
- European Court of Justice
- The Supreme Court
- Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
- High Court
- County Court
- (Magistrates Court)
7Criminal Cases
- European Court of Human Rights
- The Supreme Court
- Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
- Crown Court
- Magistrates Court
8Court of Justice of the EU
- Decisions of the Court of Justice of the EU
binding on all other courts in Member States
9The Supreme Court
- Practice Statement (1966) The House of Lords
(since 2005 the Supreme Court) no longer bound
by its past decisions
10Courts of Appeal (Criminal and Civil Divisons)
- Bound by decisions of the Supreme Court
- bound to follow past decisions of their own, with
limited exceptions
11The High Court
- Divisional courts 1. Queens Bench Division
(criminal appeals and judicial review), 2.
Chancery Division and 3. Family Division - Bound by the Court of Appeal and the Supreme
Court - Civil divisional courts bound by their previous
decisions - Queens Bench Division more flexible
12The Crown Court
- Bound by all the courts above it
- Its decisions do not form binding precedents
- Not bound by its own decisions
13Magistrates and county courts
- Inferior courts
- Bound by the High Court, Court of Appeal and the
Supreme Court - Their decisions - not reported and cannot produce
binding precedents, or even persuasive ones - Not bound by their own decisions
14Stare decisis
- Stare decisis (et non quieta movere) stand by
things decided (and do not unsettle the
established) - Supports the idea of fairness and provides
certainty in the law
15Stare decisis
- The principle of binding precedent decision of a
higher court is binding on a lower court, i.e.
the decision must be followed, and in the course
of a trial the judges must refer to existing
precedents
16Stare decisis
- Judges will consider decisions made in a lower
court, but they are not bound to follow them - A rule set by a court must be applied if it is to
the point relevant or pertinent
17Ratio decidendi
- A case involves many facts and issues of evidence
- The decision itself does not actually set the
precedent - The precedent is the legal principle which the
judge relied on in determining the outcome of a
case
18Ratio decidendi the reason for deciding
- The basis for a precedent
- The principle or rule of law on which a courts
decision is founded
19Ratio decidendi
- At the end of a case judgement a speech by the
judge giving the decision and explaining the
reasons for the decision
20Ratio decidendi
- In a judgement, the judge is likely to
- Give a summary of the facts of the case
- Review the arguments given by advocates
- Explain the principles of law he is using to come
to the decision - These principles ratio decidendi
21Ratio decidendi
- Any rule expressly or impliedly treated by the
judge as a necessary step in reaching his
conclusions (Sir Rupert Cross)
22Obiter dictum/dictasomething said in passing
- A judicial comment made while delivering a
judicial opinion, but one that is unnecessary to
the decision in the case and therefore not
precedential (although it may be persuasive)
23Obiter dictum/dicta
- Strictly speaking an obiter dictum is a remark
made or opinion expressed by a judge, in his
decision upon a case, by the way that is,
incidentally or collaterally, and not directly
upon the question before the court or it is any
statement of law enunciated by the judge or court
merely by way of illustration, argument analogy,
or suggestion...
24Obiter dictum/dicta
- In the common speech of lawyers, all such
extrajudicial expressions of legal opinion are
referred to as dicta or obiter dicta, these
two terms being used interchangeably (William M.
Lile et al, Brief Making and the Use of Law Books)
25Ratio/obiter
- A major problem to divide the ratio decidendi
from the obiter dicta, as the judgment is usually
in a continuous form, without any headings
specifying what is meant to be part of the ratio
decidendi and what is not
26Judgements
- There may be more than one speech at the end of a
case, depending on the number of judges - In appeal courts and the Supreme Court cases are
heard by at least 2 judges and up to a maximum of
7 judges
27Judgements
- It is common that one judge gives the judgment
and the other judges say I agree - When there is a complicated point of law, more
than one judge may want to explain his legal
reasoning more than one ratio decidendi
28Original precedent
- If the point of law in a case has never been
decided before, whatever the judge decides will
form a new precedent original precedent - As there are no past cases to base a decision on,
the judge is likely to look at cases which are
the closest in principle and may decide to use
similar rules reasoning by analogy
29Hunter and others v Canary Wharf Ltd and London
Docklands Development Corporation (1995)
- The question whether the interference with
television reception by a large building was
capable of constituting an actionable private
nuisance
30Hunter v Canary WharfFacts of the case
- In 1990 the Canary Wharf Tower , 250 m high and
over 50 m square, was built - The claimant and hundreds of others suing with
her, claimed damages from the defendant for
interference with reception of TV broadcasts in
their homes - The interference was claimed to have been caused
by the tower
31Hunter v Canary WharfExtract from the judgement
- Lord Irving (counsel for the defendants) submits
that interference with television reception by
reason of the presence of a building is properly
to be regarded as analogous to loss of aspect
(view). To obstruct the receipt of television
signals by the erection of a building between the
point of receipt and the source is not in law a
nuisance.
32Hunter v Canary Wharf Extract from the judgement
- In Aldreds Case (1611) Wray CJ what he had said
in Bland v Moseley for prospect, which is a
matter only of delight and not of necessity, no
action lies for stopping thereof, and yet it is a
great recommendation of a house if it has a long
and large prospect But the law does not give an
action for such things of delight.
33Hunter v Canary Wharf Extract from the judgement
- I accept the importance of television in the
lives of very many people. However, in my
judgement the erection or presence of a building
in the line of sight between a television
transmitter and other properties is not
actionable as an interference with the use and
enjoyment of land. The analogy with loss of
prospect is compelling.
34Hunter v Canary WharfExtract from the judgement
- The loss of a view, which may be of the greatest
importance to many householders, is not
actionable and neither is the mere presence of a
building in the sight line to the television
transmitter
35Persuasive precedent
- A precedent that is not binding on the court, but
the judge may decide that it is a correct
principle so he is persuaded that he should
follow it - Sources courts lower in the hierarchy, obiter
dicta, dissenting judgements, decisions of courts
in other countries
36Avoiding precedent
- Distinguishing
- Overruling
- Reversing
37Distinguishing
- The judge finds that facts of the case he is
deciding are sufficiently different to draw a
distinction between the present case and the
previous precedent not bound by the previous case
38Overruling
- A court in a later case states that the legal
rule decided in an earlier case is wrong - A higher court may overrule a decision by a lower
court (The Supreme Court overruling a decision of
the Court of Appeal, or where the highest court
(ECJ or the Supreme Court) overrules its past
decision
39Reversing
- A court higher up in the hierarchy overturns the
decision of a lower court on appeal in the same
case - The Court of Appeal may disagree with the legal
ruling of the High Court in this situation they
reverse the decision of the High Court
40Law Reports
- The development and application of the common law
system pivots upon the existence of a
comprehensive system of reporting cases - The Law Reports the most authoritative and
frequently cited set of reports
41History of Law Reports
- Law reports since 13th c. many early reports
very brief and not always accurate - Reports 1275 to 1535 called Year Books, short
reports of cases, usually written in French - 1535-1865 cases reported by individuals who made
a business out of selling the reports to lawyers
42History of Law Reports
- 1865 the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting
set up controlled by the courts - Reports became accurate, with the judgment noted
down word for word
43Law Reports
- Cases are not always reported in the year that
they are decided so a case citation will refer to
the volume and year in which the case was
published, e.g. Meah v Roberts, 1978 1 All ELR
97
44The structure of a law report
- 1. catchwords indicate what the case is about
- 2. headnote a summary written by the reporter
- 3. majority judgements, dissenting judgements
45Underlying principles
- Law should be stable, secure and predictable
- Similar cases should be decided in the same way
and the decision should rely on the established
tradition
46Advantages of precedent
- Certainty
- Consistency and fairness in the law
- Precision
- Flexibility
- Time-saving
47Certainty
- Because the courts follow past decisions, people
know what the law is and how it is likely to be
applied in their case
48Consistency and fairness
- It is seen as just and fair that similar cases
should be decided in a similar way - The law must be consistent if it is to be credible
49Precision
- As the principles of law are set out in actual
cases the law becomes very precise - It is well illustrated and gradually builds up
through the different variations of facts in the
cases that come before the courts
50Flexibility
- Law can change since the highest courts can
overrule cases - Distinguisting cases also give all courts some
freedom to avoid past decisions and develop the
law
51Time-saving
- Where a principle has been established, cases
with similar facts are unlikely to go through the
lengthy process of litigation
52Disadvantages
- Rigidity
- Complexity
- Illogical distinctions
- Slowness of growth
53Rigidity
- Lower courts must follow decisions of higher
courts bad decisions made in the past may be
perpetuated - Changes in the law will only take place if
parties have the courage, persistence and money
to appeal their case
54Complexity
- Half a million reported cases not easy to find
all the relevant case law even with computerised
databases - Judgements often very long with no clear
distinction between obiter dicta and ratio
decidendi
55Illogical distinctions
- The use of distinguishing to avoid past decisions
can lead to hair-splitting so that some areas
of the law have become very complex - Differences between some cases may be very small
and appear illogical
56Slowness of growth
- Judges may be aware that some areas of law are
unclear or in need of reform, but they cannot
make a decision unless there is a case before the
courts to be decided - Only 50 cases reach the Supreme Court each year
there may be a long wait for a suitable case to
be appealed
57Activity
- Search at least one website address and find a
recent law report - www.lawreports.co.uk gives summaries of
important cases in its Daily Law Notes section - www.bailii.org has cases from the Court of
Appeal and below
58Legal terms
- Binding
- Obvezujuci
- Jurisdiction 1) the power of the court to hear
and decide a case or make a certain order 2) the
territorial limits within which the jurisdiction
of a court may be exercised 3) the territorial
scope of the legislative competence of Parliament - nadležnost
59Legal terms
- Ruling a decision made by someone with official
authority such as a judge, magistrate, arbitrator
or chairman - Presuda, sudska odluka, službeno mišljenje
državnog tijela
60Legal terms
- overrule v. 1) to reject an attorney's objection
to a question of a witness or admission of
evidence. By overruling the objection, the trial
judge allows the question or evidence in court.
If the judge agrees with the objection he/she
"sustains" the objection and does not allow the
question or evidence.
61overrule
- 2) to decide (by a court of appeals) that a prior
decision on a legal issue was not correct, and is
therefore no longer a valid precedent on that
legal question
62overrule
- To annul, to make void. This word is frequently
used to signify that a case has been decided
directly opposite to a former case when this
takes place, the first decided case is said to be
overruled as a precedent, and cannot any longer
be considered as of binding authority
63Exercise
- Replace the underlined words and phrases with the
following - Binding precedent, bound, cite, consider,
distinguish, override, rely on/apply, revised
64Binding precedent, bound, cite, consider,
distinguish, override, rely on/apply, revised
- 1. The courts are compelled to apply the
precedent set by a higher court. - 2. During the court case the judge will evaluate
all the evidence and the legal issues. - 3. Judges are required to follow the ratio, or
reasoning, in relevant previous decided cases
65Binding precedent, bound, cite, consider,
distinguish, override, rely on/apply, revised
- 4. However, the judge may note a case cited as
precedent by counsel as materially different from
the one at trial - 5. It is, however, the role of counsel to refer
to relevant previous case decisions - 6. The principle of following the decisions of
higher courts is fundamental to case law.
66Binding precedent, bound, cite, consider,
distinguish, override, rely on/apply, revised
- 7. The Law Reports series are the most frequently
cited reports because the text is edited by the
trial judge. - 8. New legislation may pay no attention to the
decision of an earlier court judgment.
67Exercise 2
VERB NOUN ADJECTIVE
cite 0
apply
precede
persuasion
bind 0
68Exercise 3
- Complete the sentences with appropriate words
from the table above - 1. Well, that decision of the Appeal Court is
going to be ...........on the case weve got at
trial just now. - 2. We need to convince the judge that the rule in
Meah v Roberts is .......... to this case.
69Exercise 3
- 3. Can you check the case.....?
- I think the years wrong.
- 4. Should we add to our argument that Edwards v
Peck is a .......precedent given the legal
issues, although the judge isnt bound to follow
it?
70Recent UK case reports
- www.courtservice.gov.uk
- www.lawreports.co.uk
71To be remembered
- Definition of precedent
- Hierarchy of courts
- Stare decisis
- Ratio decidendi
- Obiter dicta
- Law Reports
- Advantages and disadvantages of precedent