The doctrine of stare decisis.
stare decisis
They are called precedents. If the decision was made by a court with jurisdiction over a lower court, they are called binding precedents because the lower court is required to apply the same reasoning in similar cases under the doctrine of stare decisis.
all i know is that it has to do with the judicial branch
Common law is based on precedents (previous court decisions), under the doctrine of Stare decisis (Latin: Stare decisis et non quieta movere), which means "maintain what has been decided."
The decisions are called precedents. Precedents are used as a guide by future court cases with similar fact patterns.
The previously decided cases are called precedents. The US Supreme Court "opinion of the Court" (the official decision in a case) sets a binding precedent, meaning all other courts are supposed to adhere to the Supreme Court's legal or constitutional interpretation (are "bound" by the decision) when deciding future cases.Using a previous court decision to support your case is called citing precedent.The doctrine encouraging the use of precedents is stare decisis (Latin: let the decision stand).
The customs and traditions of the U.S. government are sometimes called the precedents.
the rules and princes announced in court decisions are called
There is no doctrine of non-binding precedents. Non-binding opinions that may be used as guidelines for deciding future cases are called persuasive precedents. Binding precedents are upheld under the doctrine of stare decisis (Latin: Let the decision stand).
They are called "precedents of law" and affect how similar present or future cases are decided.
The main designer of the vehicle known as the Corvette is Larry Shinoda. Larry Shinoda received a lot of inspiration from a previous concept design called the "Q Corvette".
Administrative Adjudication! answer from "We the People" gov II textbook