Introduction: what is Case Law?

Basically, there are two types of law, and both carry equal weight in the courts (unless they contradict each other).

Case Law or Common Law is based on previous judgments in the ‘higher’ courts (courts of appeal). These previous judgments are called ‘precedents’, and you can quote them in court just like quoting from an act of Parliament.

Statute Law is just another name for the laws passed by Parliament (‘acts’). Statute Law takes priority over Case Law if there’s a conflict between the two.

To be able to use Case Law in court, the case has to come from the right court to be classed as official ‘precedent’—basically, that means a court of appeal or the House of Lords. A court case heard before a jury in the Crown Court won’t count in the Magistrates’ Court (though it may still be worth referring to).

Also, you need to know the name and ‘reference’ for the relevant judgment. Each judgment has a short name, based on the ‘parties’ in the court case: usually one party is “DPP” for “Director of Public Prosecutions,” or “R” for “Rex”/“Regina” (King/Queen in Latin), and the other party is the original defendant (eg activist). But each judgment is also reported in one of the standard law journals, and it’s the reference to this report that you’re supposed to quote in court.

The reference will be something like “[1995] 3 All E.R. 124,” which means “year 1995, volume 3, All England Reports, page 124.” Every reference has this general form: you just quote the reference in court. You don’t have to know what the abbreviations like “All E.R.” stand for, although the notes on cases that are linked from this page will tell you.

There are more notes on these legal principles and language at the following webpages:

http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/tpwiki/wiki.pl?LegalPrinciples: basic legal ideas, like which courts overrule which and how to interpret judgments.

http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/tpwiki/wiki.pl?LegalLanguage: various pedantic conventions which will help you gain credibility if you’re representing yourself (like how to pronounce judges’ titles or to read out the names of cases).

Both pages include contributions by River~~, including a note that English court judgments should never be spelt “judgement”—I have therefore corrected all the briefings below! They belong to a collaborative website for legal discussions, to which anyone is encouraged to contribute.

Notes on particular cases

I have written notes on various cases that may be of use to TPers. I have subdivided the cases according to the ‘offence’ charged or (for a few cases) the variety of general ‘legal defence’ used. Copies of the judgments themselves are not on this website (but see below). Some time, I will add in a page of links to various resources on the internet, where you may be able to find more information, including full-text copies of judgments.

Please let me know if you have any comments, queries, corrections, ideas or additions for these notes. I also have copies of the full judgments in most of the cases mentioned here (plus some others), if needed.


COMMON LAW, STATUTE LAW and CUSTOM IN COMMON LAW

INTRODUCTION

There are three legal systems in the UK: English law, which covers Wales as well, Scottish law, and Northern Ireland law.

In practice, there is little difference between English and Northern Ireland law but Scotland is different — the courts have different names and follow different procedures. Some English laws do not apply to Scotland and vice versa.

Law consists of common law (decisions made by judges over the years) and statute law (decisions made by parliament). Statute law is usually more helpful for consumers, because most consumer laws extend the rights people have in common law by laying down specific conditions.

Consumer law has its roots in laws regulating trade, that date back centuries. But virtually all law that matters to consumers today has been introduced in the last 30 years.

There are about a dozen significant Acts and many more regulations, but fortunately most of these can be safely left to solicitors. In fact, it is questionable whether consumers actually need to know any law at all.

It is a pretty useful strategy to use your common sense to judge whether or not a trader is in the right or wrong.

When something is not right, simply ask yourself (or better ask your family or friends) what it is reasonable to expect and do. Most consumer law and its interpretation in the courts is based on a 'reasonableness' test. So most of the time you will be absolutely right, but not always. Consumer law in Britain does sometimes give us more rights than our common sense might lead us to believe — and that is worth knowing about.

 

 

Custom in Common Law
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As we have seen the basis of Common Law was custom.  The itinerant justices set out by William the Conqueror examined the different local practises of dealing with disputes and crime, filtered our the less practical and reasonable ones, and ended up with a set of laws which were to be applied uniformly throughout the country.  As Sir Henry Maine, a nineteenth-century scholar who studied the evolution of the legal systems has pointed out, this did not mean that the custom itself was ever law – the law was created by the decisions of judges in recognising some customs and not others. 

When can Custom be a source of Law?

To be regarded as conferring legally enforceable rights, a custom must fulfil certain criteria.

Time immemorial:

It must have existed since ‘time immemorial’.  This was fixed by a statute in 1275 as meaning since at least 1189.  In practise today claimants usually seek to prove the custom has existed as far back as living memory can go, often as calling the oldest inhabitant as a witness.  However, this may not always be sufficient.  In a dispute over the right to use local land in some way, for example, if the other side could prove that the land was under water until the seventeenth or eighteenth century the right could not have therefore existed before 1189.

Reasonableness:  

A legally enforceable custom cannot conflict with fundamental principles of right and wrong, so a customary right to commit a crime, for example, could never be accepted.

Certainty and clarity:

It must be certain and clear.  The locality in which the custom operates must be defined, along with the people to whom rights are granted and the extent of those rights.  In Wilson v Willes (1806) the tenants of a manor claimed the customary right to take as much turf as they needed for their lawns from the manorial commons.  This was held to be too vague, since there appeared to be no limit to the amount of turf which could be taken.

Locality.

It must be specific to a particular geographical area.  When a custom is recognised as granting a right, it grants that right only to those specified.  Custom is only ever a source of local law.

Continuity.

It must have existed continuously.  The rights granted by custom do not have to be exercised continuously since 1189, but it must have been possible to exercise then since then.

Exercised as of right:

It must have been exercised peaceably, openly and as of right.  Customs cannot create legal rights if they are only exercised by permission of someone else.  In Mills v Corporation of Colchester (1867) it was held that a customary right to fish had no legal force where the right had always depended on the granting of a licence, even though such licences had traditionally been granted to local people on request.

Consistency:

It must be consistent with other local customs.  For example, if a custom is alleged to give the inhabitants of one farm the right to fish in a lake it cannot give another farm the right to drain the lake.  The usual course where conflict arises is to deny that the custom has any force, though this is not possible if it has already been recognized by a court. 

Obligatory:

Where a custom imposes a specific duty, that duty must be obligatory – a custom cannot provide that the Lord of the Manor grants villagers a right of way over his land only if he likes them, or happens not to mind people on his land that day.

Conformity with a statute:

A custom which is in conflict with a statute will not be held to give rise to law.

Other Notes in this Category

  1. A.V Dicey’s comment on the rule of law
  2. Custom in Common Law

INTRODUCTION

There are three legal systems in the UK: English law, which covers Wales as well, Scottish law, and Northern Ireland law.

In practice, there is little difference between English and Northern Ireland law but Scotland is different — the courts have different names and follow different procedures. Some English laws do not apply to Scotland and vice versa.

Law consists of common law (decisions made by judges over the years) and statute law (decisions made by parliament). Statute law is usually more helpful for consumers, because most consumer laws extend the rights people have in common law by laying down specific conditions.

Consumer law has its roots in laws regulating trade, that date back centuries. But virtually all law that matters to consumers today has been introduced in the last 30 years.

There are about a dozen significant Acts and many more regulations, but fortunately most of these can be safely left to solicitors. In fact, it is questionable whether consumers actually need to know any law at all.

It is a pretty useful strategy to use your common sense to judge whether or not a trader is in the right or wrong.

When something is not right, simply ask yourself (or better ask your family or friends) what it is reasonable to expect and do. Most consumer law and its interpretation in the courts is based on a 'reasonableness' test. So most of the time you will be absolutely right, but not always. Consumer law in Britain does sometimes give us more rights than our common sense might lead us to believe — and that is worth knowing about.