Statutory Law is when laws are passed by the government that have been accepted by our society.
Administrative Law consists of rules and procedures established by regulatory agencies.(the FCC)
Common Law is basically when judges use precedence to decide cases.
The US Constitution is the basis of all federal law and rights. So Constitutional law are the laws the federal government needs to follow and uphold in federal territories as well as between states and trade.
From these "rules" there is administrative law they are the laws that govern everyday issues, as long as they are with in the Constitutional guidelines. These laws are known as Statutes.
Now each state has a Constitution and Statutes, but they all follow the same principles.
Example: Can the federal government pass a law that no one can eat peanuts in a public school?
The answer is NO. Why?
Constitutional Law:
The US Constitution states in the 10th amendment last of the "Bill of Rights" it states " The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
The federal government has no jurisdiction over state land or the "state public school" and as such cannot make laws to govern over it.
Administrative Law:
In order to receive federal funding for the school lunch program the school "must" not allow peanuts onto the school property.
You see if you accept the program (it is un-Constitutional unless you accept it) you must agree to their rules.
Judicial law is law that is created when a judge issues an opinion and establishes precedent that is followed by other judges.
Administrative law is law created by the issuance of regulations by administrative agencies as authorized by legislation, or by the decisions and opinions of administrative law judges dealing with challenges to those regulations.
Administrative law is to administer the office, country, etc; but statutory law is to regulate all activities in law.
Yes
A statutory body deals with written law; non-statutory deals with implied law.
goverened by common law
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Fundamental law is the law determining the constitution of the government of a state, while statutory law is the body of laws created by legislative statutes.
common law; ( case law) statutory law Administrative law court rules constitutional law
Statutory would be those mandated by law, voluntary would be those agreed upon between employer and employee.
John H. Reese has written: 'Administrative law' -- subject(s): Cases, Administrative law '1995 Statutory Supplement (Including Recent Cases) to Accompany Administrative Law' 'Administrative Law Desk Reference for Lawyers'
Answer: legal and statutory reserves There is no difference. Both legal and statutory reserves are reserves that must be maintained by law. The previous answer ("Legal reserves are stipulated by law, while statutory reserves are determined in the Articles of Association (the Statute of a company)") is incorrect: the primary meaning of 'statutes' is 'enacted laws'
Statutory Administrative Constitutional Common Law Court Decision
A-law b-statutory c-common law d-administrative law
The four main written sources of American criminal law are constitutional law, statutory law, administrative law, and case law.
AnswerAccording to Black's Law Dictionary, blackletter lawrefers to one or more legal principles that are old, fundamental, and well settled. Many of those principles have been codified in statutory law. Although laws are sometimes stricken as unconstitutional, most statutory law is well settled so blackletter law could be used to refer to statutory law although it has a broader meaning than just statutory law.