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CIVIL LAW (LEGAL
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Civil law (or civilian
law) is a legal system inspired by English law,
the primary feature of which is that laws are written into a
collection, codified, and not (as in common law) determined
by judges. Conceptually, it is the group of legal ideas and
systems ultimately derived from the Code of Justinian, but
heavily overlaid by Germanic, ecclesiastical, feudal, and
local practices, as well as doctrinal strains such as
natural law, codification, and legislative positivism.
Materially, civil law proceeds from abstractions, formulates
general principles, and distinguishes substantive rules from
procedural rules. It holds legislation as the primary source
of law, and the court system is usually inquisitorial,
unbound by precedent, and composed of specially trained
judicial officers with a limited ability to interpret law. |
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The principle of civil law is to provide all
citizens with an accessible and written collection of the
laws which apply to them and which judges must follow. It is
the most prevalent and oldest surviving legal system in the
world. Colonial expansion spread the civil law system and
European civil law has been adopted in much of Latin America
as well as in parts of Asia and Africa. The primary source
of law is the legal code, which is a compendium of statutes,
arranged by subject matter in some pre-specified order; a
code may also be described as "a systematic collection of
interrelated articles written in a terse, staccato style."
Law codes are usually created by a legislature's enactment
of a new statute that embodies all the old statutes relating
to the subject and including changes necessitated by court
decisions. In some cases, the change results in a new
statutory concept. The two other major legal systems in the
world are common law and Islamic law. |
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CIVIL LAW SYSTEMS MAY BE SUBDIVIDED
INTO FURTHER CATEGORIES :
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Countries where Roman law in some form is still living law
and there has been no attempt to create a civil code:
Andorra and San Marino
Countries with mixed systems in which
Roman law is an academic source of authority but common
law is also influential: Scotland and the Roman-Dutch law
countries (South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka and
Guyana)
Countries with codes intended to be
comprehensive, such as France: it is this last category
that is normally regarded as typical of "civil law"
systems, and is discussed in the rest of this article.
The Scandinavian systems
are of an intermediate character, as they have a
background of Roman and customary law together with
partial codification. The laws of Louisiana and Quebec may
also be considered as hybrid systems, in that a
French-type civil code coexists with pre-revolutionary
French customary law and considerable common law
influence.
A prominent example of
civil law would be the Napoleonic Code (1804), named after
French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. The Code comprises
three components: the law of persons, property law, and
commercial law. Rather than a catalog of judicial
decisions, the Code consists of abstractly written
principles as rules of law.
Civil law is sometimes
referred to as neo-Roman law, Romano-Germanic law or
Continental law. The expression civil law is a translation
of Latin jus civile, or "citizens' law", which was the
Late Imperial term for its legal system, as opposed to the
laws governing conquered peoples (jus gentium).
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CIVIL LAW (AREA)
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Civil law
in continental law (civil law in broader sense) is a
branch (body) of law which is the general part of private
law.
The basis for civil law
lies in a civil code. Before enacting of codes, civil law
could not be distinguished from private law. After that
some special areas of private law began to develop, such
as commercial law (in 17th century) and labour law (in
19th century).
Civil law itself has the
general part. It consists of capacity and status.
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COMPARISON WITH COMMON LAW
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Civil law corresponds
of these areas of Common Law:Civil law corresponds of
these areas of Common Law: |
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1. Family
2. Property
3. Wills
4. Contracts
5. Torts
There are usually no trusts in the civil
law.
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SPECIAL AREAS OF PRIVATE LAW WHICH ARE NOT
THE PARTS OF CIVIL LAW
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Commercial law
Labour law
Conflict of laws
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CIVIL LAW (COMMON LAW)
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Civil law, as opposed to
criminal law, is the branch of law dealing with disputes
between individuals and/or organizations, in which
compensation may be awarded to the victim. For instance, if
a car crash victim claims damages against the driver for
loss or injury sustained in an accident, this will be a
civil law case. |
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CIVIL LAW IN CONTRAST
TO CRIMINAL LAW, MARTIAL LAW, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AND
INTERNATIONAL LAW |
In the common law, civil
law is the area of laws and justice that affect the legal
status of individuals. Civil law, in this sense, is
usually referred to in comparison to criminal law, which
is that body of law involving the state against
individuals (including incorporated organizations) where
the state relies on the power given it by statutory law.
Civil law may also be compared to military law,
administrative law and constitutional law (the laws
governing the political and law making process), and
international law. Where there are legal options for
causes of action by individuals within any of these areas
of law, it is thereby civil law.
Civil law courts provide a
forum for deciding disputes involving torts (such as
accidents, negligence, and libel), contract disputes, the
probate of wills, trusts, property disputes,
administrative law, commercial law, and any other private
matters that involve private parties and organizations
including government departments. An action by an
individual (or legal equivalent) against the attorney
general is a civil matter, but when the state, being
represented by the prosecutor for the attorney general, or
some other agent for the state, takes action against an
individual (or legal equivalent including a government
department), this is public law, not civil law.
The objectives of civil law
are different from other types of law. In civil law there
is the attempt to right a wrong, honor an agreement, or
settle a dispute. If there is a victim, they get
compensation, and the person who is the cause of the wrong
pays, this being a civilized form of, or legal alternative
to, revenge. If it is an equity matter, there is often a
pie for division and it gets allocated by a process of
civil law, possibly invoking the doctrines of equity. In
public law the objective is usually deterrence, and
retribution.
An action in criminal law
does not necessarily preclude an action in civil law in
common law countries, and may provide a mechanism for
compensation to the victims of crime. Such a situation
occurred when O.J. Simpson was ordered to pay damages for
wrongful death after being acquitted of the criminal
charge of murder.
Civil law in common law
countries usually refers to both common law and the law of
equity, which while now merged in administration, have
different traditions, and have historically operated to
different doctrines, although this dualism is increasingly
being set aside so there is one coherent body of law
rationalized around common principles of law.
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