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common law

NOUN
  1. a system of jurisprudence based on judicial precedents rather than statutory laws
    common law originated in the unwritten laws of England and was later applied in the United States
  2. (civil law) a law established by following earlier judicial decisions

How To Use common law In A Sentence

  • Incommon law countries such as Canada, thetest of criminalliabilityis expressed by theLatinphrase, actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea, which means that “the act does not make a person guilty unless the mind is also guilty”. Man Not Criminally Responsible for Greyhound Bus Beheading; Victim’s Family Call for Punishment : Law is Cool
  • The common law should sanction injustice no longer. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is likely that the court will accept that this evidence is admissible, since the strict common law rule is generally ignored.
  • The common law should sanction injustice no longer. Times, Sunday Times
  • The "incompetency" of criminal defendants to testify at their own trials was part of the common law of England and then the United States until the Nineteenth Century, during which incompetency gave way to the notion that the basis for disqualification - the defendant's FindLaw Writ - Recent Articles
  • Yes, the common law and equity jurisdiction was extended, was it not?
  • The rule as it has developed in common law jurisdictions is in fact an exception to an exception to a rule of evidence.
  • A material witness statute was enacted in 1984 in a bipartisanship effort to codify common law in this area.
  • I think the common law term would be "maiming" rather than assault. "Ciomu's case is a dangerous precedent for all Romanian doctors."
  • His Honour subsequently dismissed the summons in the Common Law Division and referred the probate proceedings to the Registrar.
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