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Introduction to the Law

Introduction to the Law. Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law. Sources of Law. Constitutional Law Statutory Law Case Law Administrative Law Other. Constitutional Law. Federal (U.S.) Constitution With a “capital C” Provides framework for government

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Introduction to the Law

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  1. Introduction to the Law Jody Blanke, Professor Computer Information Systems and Law BA 619 Legal Environment of Business

  2. Sources of Law • Constitutional Law • Statutory Law • Case Law • Administrative Law • Other

  3. Constitutional Law • Federal (U.S.) Constitution • With a “capital C” • Provides framework for government • Article I – Legislative Branch • Article II – Executive Branch • Article III – Judiciary Branch • Provides for individual rights • Bill of Rights (first 10 amendments) • State Constitutions

  4. Statutory Law • Congress • Senate • House of Representatives • Authorized by Constitution • Enumerated Powers Clause • State Legislatures • Mostly bicameral • Codification of common law

  5. Case Law • Federal Courts • Supreme Court • Circuit Courts of Appeal • 11 geographic, plus D.C. and Federal circuits • District Courts • 94, at least 1 in each state • State Courts • 50 different systems

  6. Administrative Law • Federal Agencies • Authority from Constitution • Enabled by Congress • Provide needed manpower and expertise • Legislative, executive and judiciary power • “Fourth Branch” – “We the People”? • State Agencies • Similar to federal

  7. Other • Treaties • Proclamations • Orders

  8. The Law Evolves • Laws must change as society changes • Ex.Plessy v. Ferguson (1897) – Brown v. Board of Education (1954) • Ex. Assisted Suicide • Washington v. Glucksberg and Quill v. Vacco (1997) • Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act

  9. The Law (Usually) Makes Sense • McDonald’s and the Hot Cup of Coffee

  10. Federal Court System

  11. Federal Court System (cont.) • Supreme Court • appellate and original jurisdiction • Courts of Appeal • 11 geographically divided courts (plus 2 specialty courts) • appellate jurisdiction only • District Courts • 94 courts (1 to 4 per state) • original jurisdiction only

  12. Federal District Court • Criminal Cases • Civil Cases • Federal Question Jurisdiction • Diversity Jurisdiction • complete diversity of the parties • amount in controversy greater than $75,000

  13. State Court Systems • 50 different systems • Similar to federal • “triangular” in shape • many courts with limited jurisdiction

  14. Jurisdiction • Original (trial) jurisdiction • Appellate jurisdiction • Subject matter jurisdiction • Personal jurisdiction

  15. Personal Jurisdiction • Physical presence in state • International Shoe (1945) • Required sufficient “minimum contacts” • Such that jurisdiction would not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice” • State “Long arm” statutes • Transaction of business in the state • Commission of a tortious act in the state • Ownership of real property in the state

  16. Personal Jurisdiction and the Internet • CompuServe v. Patterson (1996) • Jurisdiction proper – “purposeful availment” • Bensusan Restaurant v. King (1997) • No jurisdiction – tortious act requires physical presence • Zippo Manuf. V. Zippo Dot Com (1997) • Adopted “sliding scale” test with three points • Clearly does business over Internet, e.g.,CompuServe • “Passive” Web sites, e.g., Bensusan • Middle ground – must determine level of activity

  17. Motion for Summary Judgment • Can be made by either party • Made during discovery, i.e., after pleadings and before trial • Will be granted if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and … the moving part is entitled to judgment as a matter of law” • “Legal TKO”

  18. Appeals • Generally, questions of law are appealed, questions of fact are not • U.S. Supreme Court • Must petition for a writ of certiorari • “Rule of Four” • 7,000 requests per year – 100 granted

  19. Burden of Proof • Criminal case • “beyond a reasonable doubt” • burden on prosecution, i.e., state • Civil case • “by a preponderance of the evidence”, i.e., more likely than not • burden on party making the claim, usually the plaintiff • Ex. O.J. Simpson; Hans Kraus

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