Law based on precedents, or judge made law, is referred to as common law.
Case or Common Law
the answer is prededents
Case law is based on the precedents and and legal principles applied by other courts in previous cases.
LAw based on court decrees and precedent is
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."
Judicial opinions are written explanations by judges that outline the reasoning behind their decisions in legal cases. These opinions often establish precedents, which are legal principles derived from previous court rulings that guide future cases with similar circumstances. Precedents are crucial because they ensure consistency and predictability in the law, allowing individuals and lawyers to understand how laws are likely to be applied in similar situations. This stability fosters trust in the judicial system and helps maintain the rule of law.
The name for an unwritten law is "custom" or "common law," which is derived from customary practices or judicial decisions rather than written statutes. It is based on traditions, precedents, and established norms within a society.
Law that is formed by a serious of prior court decisions is known as common law or case law.
They are called "precedents of law" and affect how similar present or future cases are decided.
the rules and princes announced in court decisions are called
Everyone has the right to study precedents, including you. All that means is reading the written opinions (decisions) of cases that are considered guidelines for use in deciding similar cases. And yes, the justices study precedents (or make their law clerks do it). Judicial review is an implied constitutional power that allows courts to evaluate a questioned law in a case they're hearing and determine if the law is constitutional. If the justices decide the law is unconstitutional, then it's nullified and becomes unenforceable.