UNIT 1
UNIT 1
Historical Roots of Law
The code law of Hammurabi
Mosiac Law
Greek Law
Roman Law
Categories of law
Public Law - recognizes the relationship between the government and its citizens
Private Law - relationships between individuals and individuals and organizations
Substantive - defines rights, duties, obligations of citizens and governent
Procedural - enforces rights, duties, and responsiblitise of substantive law
Social Evolution of Law - throughout history, law has evolved to reflect changing social, economic, and political conditions that aim to provide justice, maintain order and protect individual rights
Fundamental Principles of Justice
Rule of Law - all treated equally
Rule of Justice Precedent - rules established for future guidance
Habeas Corpus - detained person brough to court in reasonable time
Unit 2
Marriage
Family Law - marriage and common law relationships
Divorce
Oakes Test
A charter Infringement is found:
Candian Charter of Righs and Freedoms
Section 1: Reasonable Limits
Section 2: Protects fundamental freedoms, including:
Section 7: Life, Liberty and Security of the Person
Section 8: Unreasonable Search & Seizure
Ontario Human Rights Code
Equity - a vulnerable group of rights adn procedures to provide fairness, unhampered by the narrow strcitures of tehh old common law or other technical requirements of the law
Equality - the state of being equal, especially in status, rights and opportunities
Reasonableness - lens through which courts examine the constitutionlity or lawfulness of legislation and regulation
Rights
Unit 3
Types of Contracts
Oral contract - verbal agreement between two parties
Written contract - an agreement between two parties recorded on paper
Implied contract - an agreement in which theparties indicate consensus through their conduct
Expressed contract - an agreement in which the terms have been discussed and agreed upon in advance
Enforceability
Meeting of the mind - a clear understanding of the agrement with terms
Offer - a clear proposal to enter into an agreement with terms
Accepteance - clear indication of agreeing to the terms of the contract
Consideration - exchange of benefits
Employment Law - deals with employer- employee relationship
Labour Law - deals with collective bargaining and union
Collective bargaining - process where workers, usually through a union, negotiate with their employer to agree on job conditions like pay, hours, and benefits. This results in a contract called a collective agreement. The goal is to ensure fair treatment for employees and clear terms for both sides.
Class actions - class actions help people collectively address wrongs done to them, especially when individual claims might be too small to pursue on their own.
Court Room Titles
Overview of Civil Action
Unintentional Torts/ Defences to Negligence
Tort = wrong + harm
Assault: Threatening someone with immediate harm, creating a reasonable fear of harmful contact.
Trespass to Land: Entering someone’s property without permission.
False Imprisonment: Restricting a person’s freedom of movement without legal authority or the person's consent.
Unit 4
Court Proceedings and People
Actus Rea -a guilty or prohibited act
Mans Rea - criminal intent (the guilty mind)
Crime Scene Investigations
Police must:
Crime Scene must be preserved
Contamination - loss, destruction, altercation of evidence
Patrol Officer - first member at the scene, responsible for controlling area
Due Dilligence - the defense that the accused party took every action they could to avoid committing the particular offense
Accessory after the fact - someone who knowingly recipes, comforts or assists the perpetrator in escaping the police
Fingerprinting
Visible - formed when blood, dirt, ink, paint is transferred from a finger to surface
Latent - traces of sweat and oil that are not visible to naked eye
Automatism - condtion which a person acts without being aware of what he/she is doing
Battered Woman Syndrome - homicide of significant other to relieve themselves of the abuser
Double Jeopardy - accused person can be used when being indicted for the same crime
Entrapment - defense against police conduct induces the accuse to commit the crime
UNIT 1
Historical Roots of Law
The code law of Hammurabi
Mosiac Law
Greek Law
Roman Law
Categories of law
Public Law - recognizes the relationship between the government and its citizens
Private Law - relationships between individuals and individuals and organizations
Substantive - defines rights, duties, obligations of citizens and governent
Procedural - enforces rights, duties, and responsiblitise of substantive law
Social Evolution of Law - throughout history, law has evolved to reflect changing social, economic, and political conditions that aim to provide justice, maintain order and protect individual rights
Fundamental Principles of Justice
Rule of Law - all treated equally
Rule of Justice Precedent - rules established for future guidance
Habeas Corpus - detained person brough to court in reasonable time
Unit 2
Marriage
Family Law - marriage and common law relationships
Divorce
Oakes Test
A charter Infringement is found:
Candian Charter of Righs and Freedoms
Section 1: Reasonable Limits
Section 2: Protects fundamental freedoms, including:
Section 7: Life, Liberty and Security of the Person
Section 8: Unreasonable Search & Seizure
Ontario Human Rights Code
Equity - a vulnerable group of rights adn procedures to provide fairness, unhampered by the narrow strcitures of tehh old common law or other technical requirements of the law
Equality - the state of being equal, especially in status, rights and opportunities
Reasonableness - lens through which courts examine the constitutionlity or lawfulness of legislation and regulation
Rights
Unit 3
Types of Contracts
Oral contract - verbal agreement between two parties
Written contract - an agreement between two parties recorded on paper
Implied contract - an agreement in which theparties indicate consensus through their conduct
Expressed contract - an agreement in which the terms have been discussed and agreed upon in advance
Enforceability
Meeting of the mind - a clear understanding of the agrement with terms
Offer - a clear proposal to enter into an agreement with terms
Accepteance - clear indication of agreeing to the terms of the contract
Consideration - exchange of benefits
Employment Law - deals with employer- employee relationship
Labour Law - deals with collective bargaining and union
Collective bargaining - process where workers, usually through a union, negotiate with their employer to agree on job conditions like pay, hours, and benefits. This results in a contract called a collective agreement. The goal is to ensure fair treatment for employees and clear terms for both sides.
Class actions - class actions help people collectively address wrongs done to them, especially when individual claims might be too small to pursue on their own.
Court Room Titles
Overview of Civil Action
Unintentional Torts/ Defences to Negligence
Tort = wrong + harm
Assault: Threatening someone with immediate harm, creating a reasonable fear of harmful contact.
Trespass to Land: Entering someone’s property without permission.
False Imprisonment: Restricting a person’s freedom of movement without legal authority or the person's consent.
Unit 4
Court Proceedings and People
Actus Rea -a guilty or prohibited act
Mans Rea - criminal intent (the guilty mind)
Crime Scene Investigations
Police must:
Crime Scene must be preserved
Contamination - loss, destruction, altercation of evidence
Patrol Officer - first member at the scene, responsible for controlling area
Due Dilligence - the defense that the accused party took every action they could to avoid committing the particular offense
Accessory after the fact - someone who knowingly recipes, comforts or assists the perpetrator in escaping the police
Fingerprinting
Visible - formed when blood, dirt, ink, paint is transferred from a finger to surface
Latent - traces of sweat and oil that are not visible to naked eye
Automatism - condtion which a person acts without being aware of what he/she is doing
Battered Woman Syndrome - homicide of significant other to relieve themselves of the abuser
Double Jeopardy - accused person can be used when being indicted for the same crime
Entrapment - defense against police conduct induces the accuse to commit the crime