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Ratio decidendi : guiding principles of judicial decisions. Volume 2, Foreign law /

Hauptbeschreibung Ratio decidendi is a technical legal term of art in Anglo-American jurisprudence, a concept opposed to the idea of obiter dictum. Ratio decidendi is the reason of the judge in coming to a judicial decision in a lawsuit presented to the court by the litigants for an official decisio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Bryson, William Hamilton, 1941-, Dauchy, Serge, Mirow, Matthew C. (Matthew Campbell), 1962-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Berlin : Duncker & Humblot, ©2010.
Colección:Comparative studies in continental and Anglo-American legal history ; Bd. 25/2.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Table of Contents; W. HAMILTON BRYSON: Introduction; KNUT WOLFGANG NÖRR: Iura novit curia: aber auch fremdes Recht? Eine rechtsgeschichtliche Skizze; I. Zur Einführung; II. Positio iuris, positio facti; III. Statuta: die Distinktion des Bartolus; IV. Richterliche Suppletion; V. Ein Erlass Bonifaz' VIII.; VI. Stillstand des Themas am Reichskammergericht; VII. Neues und Altes aus der Historischen Rechtsschule; ALBRECHT CORDES: Acceptance and Rejection of 'Foreign' Legal Doctrine by the Council of Lubeck Around 1500; I.; II.; III.
  • ALAIN WIJFFELS: Orbis exiguus. Foreign Legal Authorities in Paulus Christinaeus's Law ReportsI. The paradoxes of foreign law from a ius commune perspective; II. Christinaeus's Decisiones; III. The ambit of ius commune in Christinaeus's perspective; IV. Customary law; V. Statute law; VI. Case law; VII. Foreign law in ius commune literature before the relative nationalisation of legal scholarship; SERGE DAUCHY and VÉRONIQUE DEMARS-SION: Foreign Law as ratio decidendi. The 'French' Parlement of Flanders in the Late 17th and Early 18th Centuries.
  • I. Assert local identity by refusing to apply 'foreign' French LawII. Integration of the jurisdiction's foreign law: local particularity vs. royal efforts of assimilation and standardization; A. MARK GODFREY: Ratio Decidendi and Foreign Law in the History of Scots Law; Introduction; I. Private International Law; II. Roman Law; III. English Law; Conclusion; JUAN JAVIER DEL GRANADO and ALEJANDRO MAYAGOITIA: Roman Law and ratio decidendi in Spanish Colonial Law 16th through the 19th Centuries; I. The law of Castile (as well as Roman law) were local law in the Americas.
  • II. The law the Indies comprises a highly sophisticated body of caselawJAMES OLDHAM: Foreign Law in the English Common Law of the Late Eighteenth Century; Conclusion; W. HAMILTON BRYSON: The Use of Roman Law in Virginia Courts; JEAN-LOUIS HALPÉRIN: Foreign Law in French Courts from 1804 to 1945, with the Example of the Law of Trusts; I.; II.; GEORGES MARTYN: In Search of Foreign Influences, other than French, in Nineteenth-Century Belgian Court Decisions; Introduction; I. Research on published court decisions; II. References to foreign law, other than French, are non-existent.
  • III. Not only case law, but also general 'legal culture'IV. Change after the Second World War; Conclusion; HEIKKI PIHLAJAMÄKI: "Stick to the Swedish law": The Use of Foreign Law in Early Modern Sweden and Nineteenth-Century Finland; Introduction: A longue durée History of Foreign Law in Sweden-Finland; I. Attitudes towards Foreign Law in Swedish Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Jurisprudence; II. Foreign Law in the Modernizing Finnish Law of the Nineteenth Century; III. Explanations: Why Foreign Law Has Not Been Used.