Common Law vs Civil Law, Legal Systems explained

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 มิ.ย. 2022
  • Common Law vs Civil Law, Legal Systems explained
    by Hesham Elrafei
    What's the difference between Civil law and common law?
    Legal Systems, Common Law and Civil Law.
    The legal systems most commonly encountered in commercial dispute resolutionو are the Common Law and the Civil Law.
    Common Law is a system based on the idea of binding judicial precedent. It consists of the body of Law that developed over many years in England, based on court decisions and custom, as opposed to written codified Laws.
    Colonists imported England's common Law to America, and other Commonwealth countries.
    The Law originates from the legislative branch of government, and the precedents established by higher courts are binding on lower courts.
    The approach in common Law is adversarial, so parties contest each other to prove their cases before a judge, who moderates the process and gives judgment.
    On the other side, Civil Law system is a body of written laws derived from Roman Law and France's Napoleonic Code. It is based on interpreting a codified set of written laws and is adopted in most state legal systems, like Europe, South America, China, and the middle east.
    Parliament is the primary source of Law, and the judge's role is to establish the facts of the case, and apply the provisions of applicable codes.
    Trials in civil law systems are inquisitorial and fact-finding in nature, as opposed to English common law adversarial trials.
    The Civil Law judge plays an active role during the trial, by questioning parties, lawyers, witnesses, and experts.
    #law #internationallaw #droit #lecture #lawschool
    القانون العام

ความคิดเห็น • 81

  • @lexanimata
    @lexanimata  ปีที่แล้ว +7

    *Common Law vs Civil Law, Legal Systems explained
    b* y Hesham Elrafei
    Legal Systems, Common Law and Civil Law.
    The legal systems most commonly encountered in commercial dispute resolutionو are the Common Law and the Civil Law.
    Common Law is a system based on the idea of binding judicial precedent. It consists of the body of Law that developed over many years in England, based on court decisions and custom, as opposed to written codified Laws.
    Colonists imported England's common Law to America, and other Commonwealth countries.
    The Law originates from the legislative branch of government, and the precedents established by higher courts are binding on lower courts.
    The approach in common Law is adversarial, so parties contest each other to prove their cases before a judge, who moderates the process and gives judgment.
    On the other side, Civil Law system is a body of written laws derived from Roman Law and France's Napoleonic Code. It is based on interpreting a codified set of written laws and is adopted in most state legal systems, like Europe, South America, China, and the middle east.
    Parliament is the primary source of Law, and the judge's role is to establish the facts of the case, and apply the provisions of applicable codes.
    Trials in civil law systems are inquisitorial and fact-finding in nature, as opposed to English common law adversarial trials.
    The Civil Law judge plays an active role during the trial, by questioning parties, lawyers, witnesses, and experts.

    • @deansbrodshaw135
      @deansbrodshaw135 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nice properganda your vomiting out here on "Common Law"
      Common Law is the Law of the Common People, judged by the people and made by the people on a Jury of 12,
      Not by precedent or "court decisions"
      By the people, 12 common people judging the Facts & Law who have the Authority to either uphold the Law or Nullify the law, via "Jury Nullification"
      People are waking,
      We see your bullshit
      And we've had enough
      Power is the common people's

    • @seamushopkins2591
      @seamushopkins2591 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Civil is contract

  • @raakone
    @raakone 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    And some places are hybrids/chimeras, or "bijural", if you want to be more technical. Quebec, Louisiana, and Puerto Rico, where the federal system and criminal law are all based on common law, but private civil law is civil (but they are still adversarial by nature) From what I heard, there are parts of Cameroon that are the reverse, mostly based on the French system, but "civil" cases are handled by Common Law.
    Also of interest, in most civil law jurisdictions (including those that are bijural, there are two types of attorneys. You have advocates, the "lawyers" most people think of when they hear "lawyer", who handle everything "contentious." And then you have notaries, who handle certain branches that are "non-contentious", including divorces that have an agreement, and probate of uncontested wills (in Quebec, the best will to make is the type done by a notary, because it's next to impossible to contest) They're also required for mortgages, and for any buying or selling of real estate. In Quebec, it's illegal for one to be both a lawyer and a notary, but in Louisiana, it's perfectly kosher.

  • @abhasiya3269
    @abhasiya3269 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thnk u for this interesting video

  • @IgnacioRobledoQuinteros
    @IgnacioRobledoQuinteros ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Gran explicación, consisa y al grano.

  • @stormrider1375
    @stormrider1375 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    "No legal system can claim to be a servant of the people if it enables those who harm the people to conceal themselves under the cover of the law and receive advantages that harm the people." - Dr. Hans Frank, "The Impact of National Socialist Thinking on the German Legal System" (1934)

  • @godofwar-mz2bn
    @godofwar-mz2bn 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    das ist gut

  • @CyberSERT
    @CyberSERT ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Why are the adversarial common law cases called civil suits? Is there a link to civil law or is this a coincidence?

    • @pardist
      @pardist ปีที่แล้ว

      They have a civil code in civil cases... oddly... it means even they know common law is nonsense but they love their corruption...

    • @tedcrilly46
      @tedcrilly46 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      coincidence i guess.
      criminality is dealt with separately from 'civil' cases.
      These civil cases are concerned with non-criminal disputes, such as property disputes, contract technicalities, responsibility in accidents. and other such daily disputes which don't involve malice and criminality.
      im not qualified but that is my understanding.

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Civil law has another meaning which means 'not criminal law" , so even under the civil law jurisdiction you have 2 sections" criminal laws and civil laws ( meaning disputes between civilians or individuals)

  • @abhasiya3269
    @abhasiya3269 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Could u plz make videos on human rights too
    It will b of great help

  • @Remyfication
    @Remyfication หลายเดือนก่อน

    When i see the insane justice in the US where you can walk away from crimes just due to lawyer tricks or settling with the other party, I can only praise the civil law system actually chasing accountability and truth at all cost.

  • @jonkline709
    @jonkline709 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How many people now on probation, how many probation officers are there!?
    oh

  • @tutorenglish4739
    @tutorenglish4739 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You show the Union Flag for English Law. This is incorrect. You should show the English flag as the English Common Law system is different from the Scottish system but the Union Flag is for all countries in the United Kingdom. Scotland has always had a separate legal system. It is nothing to do with present day nationalist politics.

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks for your feedback, this is for visualization purposes to make the audience illustrate the content easily

  • @mobiusfugue2582
    @mobiusfugue2582 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    "All the worst ideas in history were French" - David Starkey

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  ปีที่แล้ว +8

      😂😂

    • @anteeko
      @anteeko ปีที่แล้ว +28

      is common law a good idea?
      There is a legal system similar were I live and it make it much harder tu understand what is legal or not?
      A civil law code seems far more clear and reliable.

    • @Tzinacacihuatl
      @Tzinacacihuatl ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @@anteeko the whole world except gringos, snow gringos and island gringos use civil law and there's a reason. Gringos believe they are better than anyone yet their overall quality of life and way of applying justice is pretty mediocre compared to European countries that use civil law, hence why the rest of the world is adopting that system and not the saxon system

    • @anteeko
      @anteeko ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@Tzinacacihuatl The truth is all system are kinda "hybrid".
      I live in a country using "civil law" but lawyer still look at "trials/history" to interpret the law.
      And that's very frustrating: to understand the law you have to ask a lawyer interpretation of a judge interpretation of a legal case. W T F
      Just make clear and simple laws and apply it.

    • @FIYOS
      @FIYOS ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I had thought that the civil law system came from the romans and not the french

  • @Zhohan-
    @Zhohan- 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm not going to listen to an AI

  • @lundove
    @lundove 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    BS

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What exactly is bs?

  • @seamushopkins2591
    @seamushopkins2591 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Common law. NO harm engery are lose to man x women are property ❤Common law. Maritime law contrack commers ❤

  • @causticchameleon7861
    @causticchameleon7861 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    So no presumption of innocence in civil law and the judge, with all his biases, questions, fact finds and rules. Basically, judge, juror and executioner. No thank you. I’ll keep my common law.

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Thanks, I personally think civil law system is more straight forward and easier to apply, it's one clear set of law where you see it's beginning and end in contrast to common law

    • @kj134
      @kj134 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Of course there is praesumptio innocentiae. About judges being biased… he must always justify his decision with the exact article in the law and guilt must be proven beyond reasonable doubt. There is no jury (I can not understand the point of jury, I would not like to be judged by people who have no idea about the law) and there are no precedents.
      There are obviously a lot of differences and our two worlds don’t always understand each other😀. For me personally, civil law makes more sense and is also more just compared to the common law system. Proceedings are not so theatrical as they are in the common law and there is a lot more focus on the procedural law. Procedure is key in civil law and especially in Central Europe Kelsen’s “pure theory of law” has a lot of influence.

    • @causticchameleon7861
      @causticchameleon7861 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@kj134 then you’ve never lived in a common law society. You should be judge by a jury of your peers. The judge is only there to mediate with the lawyers and keep the trial moving forward. I will never understand not having a jury trial. Juries made up of citizens just like me who may have the same or similar life experiences can nullify a miscarriage of Justice. With a lone judge being the jury and executioner, there is most likely no same or similar lived experience and therefore the judges conscious and unconscious bias will creep in. Roman/napoleonic law is anathema to a free society.

    • @kj134
      @kj134 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@causticchameleon7861 I disagree (of course I do). In the civil law there is a clear maxim; “nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege praevia/scripta/certa”. How can the common people know the written law? I would not base my future on a “democratic” decision of individuals, who have not studied law. I don’t really care about similar life experiences… if something is prohibited one should be punished for the crime. All (criminal) laws clearly define the crime and the punishment. For example “if you kill someone, you shall be punished with 1-5 years in prison”. First comes the fact-finding, if it proven beyond reasonable doubt that he is the killer, then comes the condemnation based on his exact case. Does he get one year prison sentence or five years? (Here comes a slight influence of the common law… similar things should be judged similarly.). He is convicted based on the law and the exact article. The judge has very little autonomy, he can not define certain things the way he likes or feels. He is bound only to the constitution and the law. It is much more rational this way and it doesn’t allow the public to influence the decision of the court. Iura novit curia 😉

    • @ronniecortex4936
      @ronniecortex4936 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Concerning criminal branch, I think having a criminal code turns things easier to know which conducts (behaviors) are crimes.

  • @joselutorres9158
    @joselutorres9158 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Common Law much, much better.
    Yeah, LEARN COMMON LAW.
    listen to Karl Lentz.

    • @Tzinacacihuatl
      @Tzinacacihuatl ปีที่แล้ว

      Sure, thats why US prisons are full of innocent people and still do the death sentence which is seen as a barbarian practice by the rest of the world. Y'all might be powerful -because brute force- but you're not the best at applying justice and nobody whats to be like you except the colonies you forced to.

    • @DaniGiac
      @DaniGiac 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Why should common law be better? It depends on the values of our society. Civil law is much better in certain situations due to its clarity, predictability, and efficiency, which means stability and most importanty fairness in legal systems. The choice between civil law and common law depends on historical, cultural, and political factors, but the Romans knew what they were doing!!

    • @lexanimata
      @lexanimata  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I believe common law jurisdictions are more advanced compared to civil law jurisdictions

    • @DaniGiac
      @DaniGiac 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lexanimata the problem is not what we believe, but WHY. We should give the reasons behind our opinions.

  • @jacekszczech9181
    @jacekszczech9181 หลายเดือนก่อน

    hi Brother. My name is Jacek and I come from Poland. Last week, a uniformed corporation called the Police attacked my brother from Poland in Walsall. Ignoring all documents and explanations, they impounded his car and are threatening to lose it. We need your help, friends. The pressure we should put on this corporation should restore the right to live, breathe and use the road as a human traveler. We should act quite efficiently and we are planning a happening this weekend. Will you help?