Stare Decisis and Common Sense in American Civil and Criminal Jurisprudence
Abstract
Based on various law sources, the American common law is connected by a particular role of prior judicial rulings as a basis of judicial practice. The principle of stare decisis, which exists within its framework, leads to considering decisions of courts of higher instances as binding (settled in a binding manner of a given case type in the convention of res iudicata). However, it does not mean that precedents may not be amended or broken. In such a situation following factors may appear: defective rulings, triggering incoherent or unjust consequences, contraction with other precedents, and change of circumstances, which have led to a precedent decision to be taken.
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Holmes O.W., Jr., The Common Law, Boston 1881.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/sil.2018.27.1.59
Date of publication: 2018-05-02 07:55:21
Date of submission: 2018-02-07 23:34:04
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