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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Statutes which reflect English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law are understood always to be interpreted in light of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law tradition, and so may leave a number of things unsaid because they are already understood from the point of view of pre-existing case law and custom. |  | | The opposition between civil law and <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law legal systems has become increasingly blurred, with the growing importance of jurisprudence (almost like case law but in name) in civil law countries, and the growing importance of statute law and codes in <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law countries (for instance, in matters of criminal and commercial law). |  | | Scots <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law differs in that the use of precedents is subject to the courts seeking to discover the principle which justifies a law rather than to search for an example as a precedent and that the principles of natural justice and fairness have always formed a source of Scots Law. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law
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| | Duhaime's Canadian Law Dictionary : C |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law is often contrasted with civil law systems which require all laws to be written in a code or written collection. |  | | It is a matter of legal debate whether or not <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law and equity are now "fused." It is certainly <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> to speak of the "<<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law" to refer to the entire body of English law, including <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law and equity. |  | | The action of conversion is a <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law legal proceeding for damages by an owner of property against a defendant who came across the property and who, rather than return the property, converted that property to his own use or retained possession of the property or otherwise interfered with the property. |
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http://www.duhaime.org/dictionary/dict-c.aspx
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| | <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 |
 | | The term <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is also used to mean the traditional, precedent-based element in the law of any <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>>-law jurisdiction, as opposed to its statutory law or legislation (see statute), and also to signify that part of the legal system that did not develop out of equity, maritime law, or other special branches of practice. |  | | Early <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law was somewhat inflexible; it would not adjudicate a case that did not fall precisely under the purview of a particular writ and had an unwieldy set of procedural rules. |  | | U.S. state statutes usually provide that the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, equity, and statutes in effect in England in 1603, the first year of the reign of James I, shall be deemed part of the law of the jurisdiction. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/co/commonla.html
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law Marriage |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law marriage is a marriage that results from the actions of a couple, despite the fact that they have not obtained a marriage license or fulfilled the requirements of a state's statutory marriage laws. |  | | At the same time, where a couple became married under the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law of a different state or country, their marriage is likely to be recognized even in a state such as Michigan. |  | | You should also recall that if your <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law spouse becomes disabled or dies, it will be up to you to prove the validity of your marriage if your spouse's family excludes you from medical decision-making or tries to exclude you from inheriting property. |
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http://www.expertlaw.com/library/family_law/common_law.html
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| | "<<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law" Defined |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law has no statutory basis; judges establish <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law through written opinions that are binding on future decisions of lower courts in the same jurisdiction. |  | | The area of federal <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is primarily limited to federal issues that have not been addressed by a statute. |  | | These areas of the law are mostly within the jurisdiction of the states and thus state courts are the primary source of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |
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http://www.lectlaw.com/def/c070.htm
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| | An Essay on The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law. |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law comes about at the root levels of society: it is not law that is imposed by some authority from on high. |  | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is a great scientific lab, the resources and results of which are brought to bear on the populations which are fortunate enough to possess an English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law tradition, such as exists, for example, in: Canada, the United States and Australia. |  | | That men should enjoy the fruits of their labour, that the law of property should be known, that the law of marriage should be known, that the whole course of life should be kept in a calculable track, is the summum bonum of early ages, the first desire of semi-civilized mankind. |
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http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Essays/BluePete/LawCom.htm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law states are jurisdictions in which the principles and precedent of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law continue to hold sway, although they have been greatly augmented with many statutory provisions. |  | | William, however, in seeking to add uniformity to the law lent impetus to the development of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law by ordering that judicial decisions be recorded and disseminated. |  | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law crimes and the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law legal tradition were transferred to the English colonies in North America, and today form the basis of much statutory |
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http://cjtoday.com/html/common_law.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law |
 | | When the thirteen American colonies achieved their independence, the English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, as it existed with its legal and equitable features in the year 1607, was universally held by the courts to be the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law of each of the thirteen states which constituted the new confederated republic known as the United States of America. |  | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law of England is not the basis of the jurisprudence of Scotland; that country having adhered to the civil law as it existed at the time of the union with England except so far as it has been modified by subsequent legislation. |  | | Its ecclesiastical courts were recognized by the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law the jus publicum of the kingdom &; and clear recognition was accorded to the right of appeal to the sovereign pontiff; thus practically making the pontiff the supreme judge for England as he was for the remainder of Christendom in all ecclesiastical causes. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09068a.htm
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| | The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law in Cyberspace |
 | | Law and Disorder in Cyberspace mischaracterizes copyright as an agreeable child of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |  | | Huber understands that <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law originates not in the holdings of any court or courts, but rather in the actual practices of those who have to live with the law. |  | | The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law in Cyberspace - tomwbell@tomwbell.com - v. |
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http://www.tomwbell.com/writings/CLnCyb.html
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| | Brief History on Our American <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law |
 | | The Judge in a Court of <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law is an impartial referee of the dispute, and he is bound to protect the Rights of the parties to the dispute, or he will have lost whatever jurisdiction he may have had, or claimed to have had. |  | | The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law was expounded over the years in hundreds of thousands of case decisions as a result of trials in which the <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law jury acted as the Judges, and in which they exercised the authority to hear and decide questions of both Law and fact. |  | | And the <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law of the States may not be modified, limited nor abrogated either by an act of the legislature (Congress or State Legislature) or by a ruling of some judge or by any county board of commissioners or any other servant to the people. |
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http://www.svpvril.com/OACL.html
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| | FAQ - <<b>bb>>COMMON<b>bb>> LAW MARRIAGE |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law marriage is a term used to describe a marriage which has not complied with the statutory requirements most states have enacted as necessary for a ceremonial marriage. |  | | In 1877, the United States Supreme Court stated, in an action which questioned the validity of a nonceremonial marriage, that marriages which were valid under <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law were still valid unless the state passed a statute specifically forbidding them. |  | | The single most important element under <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law was the mutual consent of the couple presently to be husband and wife. |
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http://www.ago.state.co.us/FAQ/CLM_FAQ.cfm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law Marriage, Travis County, Texas |
 | | If you are considering moving to another state, or if you think you may have entered into a <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law marriage in another state because of your actions in that state, you should seek legal counsel from a family law attorney in the state which you are interested in. |  | | A: Once the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law marriage is legally established and in existence, yes. |  | | Your own testimony can be evidence of the existence of a <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law marriage; for example, you can testify that your partner introduced you in social situations as his wife, or that you introduced him as your husband. |
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http://www.co.travis.tx.us/dro/common_law.asp
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law 1 |
 | | We have found that we are not in <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law under the Constitution-- in fact, we're not in Equity under the Constitution-- we are in Maritime Law (the Law of International Commerce -- Law Merchant, Admiralty Law, Military Law, and Prison or Warden Law). |  | | Historically, the <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law came from the Anglo-Saxon <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law in England. |  | | The Roman Civil Law was a derivative of the Maritime Law and is the basis of Civil Law in most European countries. |
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http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/cmlaw1.htm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, as applied in civil cases (as distinct from criminal cases), was devised as a means of compensating someone for wrongful acts known as torts, including both intentional torts and torts caused by negligence and as developing the body of law recognizing and regulating contracts. |  | | Today <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is generally thought of as applying only to civil disputes; originally it encompassed the criminal law before criminal codes were adopted in most <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law jurisdictions in the late 19th century, although many criminal codes reflect legislative attempts to codify the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |  | | In the United States, the Corpus Juris Secundum is a compendium of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law and its variations throughout the various state jurisdictions. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law
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| | <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> |
 | | This <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law, though the Usage, Practice and Decisions of the King's Courts of Justice may expound and evidence it, and be of great Use to illustrate and explain it; yet it cannot be authoritatively altered or changed but by Act of Parliament. |  | | Thirdly, That although those Laws are admitted in some Cases in those Courts, yet they are but Leges sub graviori Lege; and the <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Laws of this Kingdom have ever obtain'd and retain'd the Superintendency over them, and those Signa Superioritatis before-mentioned, for the Honour of the King and the <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Laws of England. |  | | Also, The Civil Law is allowed to be the Rule of their Proceedings, only so far as the same is not contradicted by the Statute of this Kingdom, or by those Maritime Laws and Customs, which in some Points have obtain'd in Derogation of the Civil Law: But by the Statute 28 Hen. |
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http://socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/hale/common
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| | English law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The essence of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is that it is made by judges sitting in courts, applying their <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> sense and knowledge of legal precedent to the fact before them. |  | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law can be amended or repealed by Parliament, for example, murder carries a mandatory life sentence today, but had previously allowed the death penalty. |  | | Actually part of the English legal system has always been considered to be based upon the civil law, (although it has little to do with it), namely the ecclesiastical courts and the courts of admiralty. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_law
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, as applied in civil cases (as distinct from criminal cases), was devised as a means of compensating someone for wrongful acts known as torts, including both intentional torts and torts caused by negligence and as developing the body of law recognizing and regulating contracts. |  | | Today <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is generally thought of as applying only to civil disputes; originally it encompassed the criminal law before criminal codes were adopted in most <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law jurisdictions in the late 19th century, although many criminal codes reflect legislative attempts to codify the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |  | | Statutes which reflect English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law are understood always to be interpreted in light of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law tradition, and so may leave a number of things unsaid because they are already understood from the point of view of pre-existing case law and custom. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law
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| | Learn more about <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law in the online encyclopedia. |
 | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, as applied in civil cases (as distinct from criminal cases), was devised as a means of compensating someone for wrongful acts known as torts, including both intentional torts and torts caused by negligence and as developing the body of law recognizing and regulating contracts. |  | | Statutes which reflect English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law are understood to always be interpreted in light of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law tradition, and so may leave a number of things unsaid because they are already understood from the point of view of pre-existing case law and custom. |  | | Where a tort is grounded in <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, then all damages traditionally recognized historically for that tort may be sued for, whether or not there is mention of those damages in the current statutory law. |
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http://www.onlineencyclopedia.org/c/co/common_law.html
(2006 words)
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| | Supreme Law Library : Reference : White House Constitution : whuscons |
 | | In Suits at <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re- examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |  | | The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State. |  | | No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in Consequence of any Law or Regulation therein, be discharged from such Service or Labour, but shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due. |
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http://www.supremelaw.org/ref/whuscons/whuscons.htm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law |
 | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, as applied in civil cases (as distinct from criminal cases), was devised as a means of compensating someone for wrongful acts known as torts, including both intentional torts and torts caused by negligence and as developing the body of law recognizing and regulating contracts. |  | | Statutes which reflect English <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law are understood to always be interpreted in light of the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law tradition, and so may leave a number of things unsaid because they are already understood from the point of view of pre-existing case law and custom. |  | | The <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law originally developed under the auspices of the adversarial system in historical England from judicial decisions that were based in tradition, custom, and precedent. |
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http://knowallabout.com/c/co/common_law.html
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| | News 8 Austin 24 Hour Local News <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law |
 | | Ellis writes The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law, a weekly, legal column in the Austin Chronicle that addresses practical and everyday legal issues. |  | | The material provided in The <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law is for general informational purposes only. |  | | Luke Ellis is licensed to practice law in Texas and New York. |
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http://www.news8austin.com/content/living/common_law
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| | "<<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law" Defined |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law has no statutory basis; judges establish <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law through written opinions that are binding on future decisions of lower courts in the same jurisdiction. |  | | The area of federal <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is primarily limited to federal issues that have not been addressed by a statute. |  | | These areas of the law are mostly within the jurisdiction of the states and thus state courts are the primary source of <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. |
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http://www.lectlaw.com/def/c070.htm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law 12 |
 | | After many futile attempts with <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law issues and actions, that, just possibly, there may be something more to the law being applied in the courts than we knew about. |  | | Years ago, particularly in the late 1970's many of us were bringing Civil, <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law, actions in State and Federal courts-- based on alleged violations of Constitutional and <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> Law rights under color of law. |  | | Each person born within a State or naturalized in a State was a citizen of that State; and then by the "commonality clause" of the Constitution, a citizen of the other States-- a citizen of the USA. |
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http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/cmlaw13.htm
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>>-law marriage - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Marriages may still be contracted as at <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law in ten states and the District of Columbia. |  | | Moore, 96 U.S. 76 (1877), the United States Supreme Court ruled that marriages are contracts found in <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, and that <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>>-law marriages shall only be invalidated by a state passing a statute expressly forbidding such marriages. |  | | The term "<<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law marriage" is frequently used in England and Wales, however such a "marriage" is not recognised in law, and it does not confer any rights or obligations on the parties. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common-law_marriage
(2144 words)
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| | <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 |
 | | The term <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law is also used to mean the traditional, precedent-based element in the law of any <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>>-law jurisdiction, as opposed to its statutory law or legislation (see statute), and also to signify that part of the legal system that did not develop out of equity, maritime law, or other special branches of practice. |  | | Early <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law was somewhat inflexible; it would not adjudicate a case that did not fall precisely under the purview of a particular writ and had an unwieldy set of procedural rules. |  | | U.S. state statutes usually provide that the <<b>bb>>common<b>bb>> law, equity, and statutes in effect in England in 1603, the first year of the reign of James I, shall be deemed part of the law of the jurisdiction. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/co/commonla.html
(2144 words)
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| | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law copyright - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <<b>bb>>Common<b>bb>> law copyright is the legal doctrine which contends that copyright is a natural right and creators are therefore entitled to the same protections anyone would be in regards to tangible and real property. |  | | In both countries, the courts found that copyright is a limited right created by the legislature under statutes and subject to the conditions and terms the legislature sees fit to impose. |  | | Conversely, while the U.S. legislature is constitutionally bound to set limited terms, the Supreme Court has ruled that limits on copyrights already granted can be extended. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law_copyright
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