appointed legislatures
statutory law
Statutes are laws, and laws are stautes. The words are synonymous.
The laws are created at all three levels of government- federal, state and local.
Statutory law is created by legislative bodies, such as parliaments or congresses, that enact laws through a formal process. These elected representatives propose, debate, and vote on legislation, which, once passed, becomes statutory law. This contrasts with common law, which is developed through judicial decisions and precedents. Ultimately, statutory laws reflect the will of the legislative body as representatives of the people.
Because the laws are originally from bills that were approved into laws which is a act of statutory the laws are derived from statutory laws. (I law must first be approved before first passed as a law so it's origin is in the regulatory process which deals with statutory laws and veto's)
statutory laws
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.
An example of a non-constitutional law would be statutory law, which is created by legislative bodies such as Congress or state legislatures. Statutory laws are laws that are passed by a legislative body and are not explicitly outlined in the constitution. These laws are created to regulate specific areas of society and can vary from state to state or country to country.
Statutory Laws
The difference between statutory and non statutory rights is that one is supplied by the government and the other one isn't. Statutory rights are bestowed by particular government to governed people and are relative to specific cultures and governments
Statue Laws are Laws made by Parliament.
The similar word is statutes (laws). The adjective is statutory.