法律英语课后习题大全_第1页
法律英语课后习题大全_第2页
法律英语课后习题大全_第3页
法律英语课后习题大全_第4页
法律英语课后习题大全_第5页
已阅读5页,还剩19页未读 继续免费阅读

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上重点的课文:(1AB 2A 3B 4A 5B 6B)Unit1A1. How was common law established?Answer: the common law tradition originated in England. a new legal order was established as early as 1066 by the Norman conquest, but the common law did not exist in 1066.William the conqueror did not abolish the local c

2、ustoms and the local courts. Local courts continued to apply local customs. There was no law common to the whole kingdom. The king did however establish some royal courts at Westminster. Their jurisdiction was at first very limited but eventually expanded to the point where the local courts fell int

3、o disuse. The decisions of the royal courts became the law common to the whole kingdom, the common law.1. What does the common law tradition include according to the text?Answer: according to the text, the common law tradition includes law and equity.2. How different is the legal system of Louisiana

4、 from the rest of the United States?Answer: the common law was "received" in many countries such as United States, but the Louisiana excepted, because where the civil law was in place before the United States gained jurisdiction.4What does “civil law ”mean?Answer: The expression “civil law

5、 ”,in Latin jus civilis, literally means the law of the citizens of Rome. It is the law of the city of Rome, the law applied to a citizen (in Latin, civis) of Rome as opposed to the law applied to a non-citizen.5. What is the main difference between the civil law system and common law system?Answer:

6、 First and foremost, cases are usually considered to be the primary source of law in common law countries, but in civil law countries, cases are simply not a source of law-at least in theory. Civil law jurist will consider the civil code as an all encompassing document, but in common law jurisdictio

7、ns legislation tends to be considered as an exception to the case law.6. What different attitudes do the civil law system and the common law system hold towards case law? Answer: Cases are usually considered to be the primary source of law in common law countries, but in civil law countries, cases a

8、re simply not a source of law-at least in theory, but cases are becoming more and more relevant in civil law countries, but the attitudes of civilians and common lawyers toward legislation and cases differ greatly.7. What is significant about the American legal education? How is law school teaching

9、different from ours?Answer: American legal education is very original and in many respects unique. Legal education tends to be longer than other common law countries; law is a postgraduate degree in the U.S.The teaching style is magisterial-the professor exposes the law to his or her students, who t

10、ake notes and do not intervene in class.8. Is law degree an undergraduate degree in the U.S.? How do people get a law degree in the U.S.?Answer: no, the law degree is a master degree in the U.S., the students must have at least a bachelor's degree in some area of study, and then to study the law

11、 and get the law degree.9. Can you compare the legal method employed in the American legal education and the legal method used in other countries?Answer: American legal education is a very original and in many respects unique. The case method or Socratic method is peculiar to this country .it must b

12、e clear to you by now that the "case" method could not have been thought of in a civil law country. In those countries (as in the case in England) law is an undergraduate degree. Legal education tends to be longer than in the United States. The teaching style is magisterial-the professor e

13、xposes the law to his or her students, who take notes and do not intervene in class.10. Who play an important role in defining the law in civil law system, law professors or judges? What about the common law system?Answer: law professors, because Civil law students will read "law doctrine"

14、 more than cases. The "doctrine" is the cumulated writings of law professors on what the law is or should be. In civil law the "doctrine" is considered to be a source of law and a highly respected one. You have to remember that the university, not the courts, reintroduced the civ

15、il law in Continental Europe. It is therefore not surprising that law professors still have an import role in defining the law. Common law professors generally do not enjoy a similar prestige within their own jurisdiction. Here the judges get most of the prestige.Unit 1 B1. How is case law created?T

16、he decisions of judges, or of other officials empowered by the constitution or laws of a political entity to hear and decide controversies, create case law. 2. What dose a particular decision mean to the parties to a lawsuit? To the lawyers, judges, and law students?1) From the point of view of part

17、ies to a lawsuit or other contested controversy, what matters is the immediate outcome, the result the tribunal reaches in their case. It means wether the aggrieved party or damaged party will obtain a remedy.2) In the view of judges, lawyers and law students, however, the decision takes on broader

18、perspective. The decision becomes a possible source of general applicable case law.3. According to Professor Llwellyn, what creates a legal system of precedent? Why and when?1) Those generalizations contained in, or built upon, past decisions create a legal system of precedent.2) Because as rules of

19、 action arise out of the solution of particular problems, in any judicial system rules of law arise sooner or later out of such decisions of cases, weather or not such formulations are desired, intended or consciously recognized.3) When those generalizations are taken as normative for future dispute

20、, a legal system of precedent created.4. What might happen if a court follows the precedents mechanically?A court that follows precedent mechanically or too strictly will at times perpetuate legal rules and concepts 5. What is the problem remaining in the legal system recognizing past decisions as a

21、uthoritative sources of law for future cases? The continuing problem in a legal system that recognizes past decisions as authoritative sources of law for future cases is how to maintain an acceptable accommodation of the competing values of stability in a law, served by adherence to precedent, and r

22、esponsiveness to social change, which may call for the abandonment of an outworn legal doctrine. 6. Explain these two Latin terms: “stare decisis” and “res judicata”?“Stare decisis” is an important principle in common law. It reflects the effect of a final decision of an appellate as precedent, or p

23、otential precedent for future cases, and it addresses the impact on the legal norm of conduct.“res judicata” is another important principle in common law. It reflects the effect of a final decision of an appellate as an authoritative settlement of a particular controversy then before the court. In o

24、ther words, it addresses a decisions impact in the individual case.7. What doctrine bars a person from ever suing on the same claim again?The doctrine “res judicata” bars a person from ever suing on the same claim again.8. Why does the case law process in American courts thus have a considerable com

25、parative-law ingredient?A judicial decision is a precedent in the full sense only within the same jurisdiction. However, American appellate courts frequently cite and draw upon decisions from other jurisdictions. Such outstate decisions are not full-fledged precedents, but they are accorded the stat

26、us and weight of persuasive authority and especially in cases where there is no local precedent or the local precedents are conflicting or unclear.9. How does a court of last resort in one state usually make use of outstate decisions?A court of last resort in one state does not consider itself bound

27、 to follow another states case law rules , but it will carefully consider the outstate decisions and ,if it finds their reasoning persuasive , make use of them as sources of guidance and justification. 10. Can you explain the difference between the binding precedents and persuasive precedents?The ma

28、jor difference between the binding precedents and persuasive precedents may be the authority to the case.The binding precedents are fully authoritative and generally binding, but persuasive precedents just persuasive authority.Because of the difference in degree of influence, persuasive precedents a

29、re not as authoritative and should not be assigned the same force as the binding precedents.UNIT 2A1. What kinds of cases do the inferior courts deals with? What are some of the limits that are imposed on them?Every state has its inferior trial courts with jurisdiction limited to civil suits involvi

30、ng relatively small amounts of money and to minor violations of the criminal law. The civil jurisdiction of an inferior court is usually defined in terms of the amount of money in dispute: the jurisdiction of an “inferior” criminal court is likely to be defined in terms of the maximum jail sentence.

31、2. What kinds of cases are the trial courts of general jurisdiction empowered to try?If a civil claim or criminal prosecution involves an amount of money, or a potential criminal sentence, beyond the jurisdiction of an “inferior” trial court , it must be filed and heard om a “trial court of general

32、jurisdiction .” that is , a court empowered to try all kinds of cases, without monetary or subject matter limitation. 3. What is the function of the “court of last resort” of each state?Every state has its “court of last resort,” the appellate court at the top of the judicial hierarchy and the one w

33、hich determines with finality what particular states law is and should be . The function is to review the action of the lower judicial tribunals of the state.4. Why are appeals to the courts of last resort limited? What does the “screening out” function refer to?Answer: Because a vast increase in ap

34、pellate litigation, particularly in the more populous states, led to hopeless congestion of the dockets of the state courts of last resort The “screening out” function refers to that intermediate appellate courts could empower to strain out and finally dispose of the bulk of appellate litigation, so

35、 that the court of the last resort can give its full attention to novel and socially important controversies. 5. What is the significance of the statute passed by the first Congress on September 24, 1789, according to the author?In the evolution of the federal judicial system, the statute was a land

36、mark. The statute embodied the first Congresss decision on the issue whether there should be federal trial courts as well as a Supreme Court or whether the interpretation and enforcement of federal law should be left entirely to the existing state trial and appellate courts, subject to review by the

37、 Supreme Court of the United States.6. What is the number of judges presiding over the trials in a District Court?In a District Court, trials are presided over normally by a single judge, but in a few situations, chiefly cases in which injunctions are sought on federal constitutional grounds against

38、 the enforcement of state or federal statute, three-judge court must be convened.7. What must be the jurisdiction of a District Court based upon? What does the workload of the District Court make up?The jurisdiction of a District Court of the US must be based either on the character of the controver

39、sy (for example, that it is a case “arising under this Constitution or the laws of the US”) or on the character of parties to the controversy (for example, that it is a controversy“to which the US shall be a party”or one “between citizens of different States”). Most of the cases which make up the wo

40、rkload of the District Court are within one or another of three categories: (1) cases to which the United States is a party, which includes both civil cases and all prosecutions for violation of federal criminal statutes; (2) cases involving a “federal question, ” which means a question involving th

41、e interpretation or effect of a provision of the Constitution or of a federal statute or regulation; and(3) cases involving “diversity of citizenship,” that is, suits between citizens of different states of the United States.8. Which court has jurisdiction over “diversity of citizenship” cases, a fe

42、deral court, or a state court? Why? Generally speaking, a federal District Court has jurisdiction over such cases, according to Article , Section 2 of the Constitution and Judiciary Act of 1789. However, existing federal legislation impose a further limitation on District Court jurisdiction in some

43、“federal question” and all “diversity of citizenship” case: “the matter in controversy must exceed50,000”.Thats because the District Court will be swamped if very small matters in controversy are able to be accepted by the District Court. 9. How can people get their appeals reviewed by the U.S. Supr

44、eme Court? A disappointed litigant cannot secure Supreme Court review merely by contending that the decision handed down against him was wrong. He must first persuade the Supreme Court that the issue presented by his case is important enough, as issues of general law, to justify Supreme Court consid

45、eration. Second, almost all the reviewing of judgments of federal and state appellate courts are secured by a petition for “a writ of certiorari”.10. What is the policy underlying the discretionary nature of the Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction? The policy is, if appeal to the SC were available

46、in all cases, the C would be swamped with ordinary appeals and unable to give full and deliberate consideration to the great cases it must decide.Unit3 B1. Who has the authority to determine how the constitution is interpreted and applied to a particular case? Among those who are entitled to such au

47、thority; which one has the final say?The Court has the final say on what the Constitution means and how it applies in a particular case, every court, federal and state, has the responsibility and the authority to render decisions on constitutional issues, but all of those other decisions can ultimat

48、ely be reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court.2. Does the Constitution vest judicial review on the Supreme Court? How to interpret Article of the Constitution? The power of judicial review is not given to the Supreme Court in the Constitution itself .Although Article states that “The judicial power of t

49、he United States , shall be vested in one Supreme Court , and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish, ” and it extends that power to “all cases , in Law and Equity , arising under this Constitution” and to other categories .But the “Supreme ”means only “hi

50、ghest,” designating a place in the hierarchy but not the courts authority . The power to hear cases arising under the Constitution is likewise a grant of jurisdiction to hear certain kinds of cases, but not a grant of authority to exercise constitutional review in hearing them.3. In which case was t

51、he power of judicial review established? Marbury VS Madison4. Why does Chief Justice Marshall think that the court had the power to review the constitutionality of legislation? What is his syllogism?The Constitution is law. Courts interpret law. Therefore courts interpret the Constitution.5. What is

52、 the supremacy clause?(需要老师解答) The Supreme Court is the only authority to interpret Constitution. The interpretation and mandate made by the Supreme Court are superior to any other judicial power.Unit 4 A1. List some of the typical forms of punishment mentioned in the text. Do you know any other for

53、ms of punishment used in the U.S.?Typical forms of punishment include death, imprisonment, fine, removal from public office or disqualification from holding public office, probation, and restitution.For example, jail sentences and execution.2. What are the differences between civil law and criminal

54、law? Civil violations are often referred to as torts. There are four distinctions between crimes and torts. Firstly, a crime is considered to be a wrong against all of society, whereas a tort is considered to be a private matter between the parties directly involved. Secondly, the persons who actual

55、ly prosecute the case differ. A specially designated state prosecutor of federal official directs the proceedings when crimes are involved .However, in tort actions the individual against whom the wrong has been committed generally hires an attorney to process the claim. Third, when one commits a cr

56、ime, punishments such as probation, jail sentences, removal from public office and even execution are readily available. However, these remedies are not available in tort law. Tort restitution relies primarily on monetary compensation. Finally, compensation paid individuals who have sued others in c

57、ivil courts is called damages.3. How are civil damages categorized? When do they apply? Civil damages are categorized as general, special, and punitive. General damages compensate for any specific and demonstrable harm that has been caused .Special damages involve compensation for “conscious pain an

58、d suffering.” Punitive damages are awarded at the discretion of the jury, or as required by statute, if it is found that the behavior of the actor was the result of an intentional disregard for the safety or well-being of others.4: What are the differences between substantive law and procedural law?

59、The two broad areas of law are readily distinguished as substantive law and procedural law.Substantive criminal law defines crimes and establishes punishments. These laws are commonly found in statutes and ordinances that are written by local, state, or federal legislature. Criminal procedural law outlines the procedures that must be followed during the investigation of crimes, in the apprehension of offende

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论