Case law is the collection of reported cases from law courts within a certain jurisdiction that form a body of law . The body of law is referred to as the common law.
Common law can either be case law that interprets legislative statutes, or it can be case law that is only based on principles from prior case law.
case law
Case law refers to common law. It is a law that is made by judges through the decision of the court.
Case or Common Law
Yes they are the same.
The rules of law developed by judges are called common law. Common law is derived from judicial decisions and precedent rather than statutes or regulations.
Unknown exactly what phraseology the questioner is seeking. Common law is based on precedent (legal principles developed in earlier case law) instead of statutory (government passed) laws. It is the traditional law of an area or region created by judges when deciding individual disputes or cases. Common law changes over time.
The common law of the past based on judges' decisions is referred to as case law. This forms the basis for legal principles and precedents in common law legal systems.
Common law, also known as case law or precedent, is law developed by judges through decisions of courts and similar tribunals.
Common law and case law is derived from previous decisions. There is no law based simply on common sense.
common law; ( case law) statutory law Administrative law court rules constitutional law
1.legislation 2.common law/case law