LAWS1111 Lecture 5 - Legal Reasoning and Case Analysis
LAWS1111 Lecture 5 - Legal Reasoning and Case Analysis
LAWS1111 Lecture 5 - Legal Reasoning and Case Analysis
Legal reasoning is the process used by judges to justify a conclusion to a legal question.
Lawyers analyse the reasoning in order to advise clients and predict legal outcomes.
University of Queensland
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University of Queensland
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Obiter Dicta Technically everything in a judgment that is not ratio is obiter. Expressions
like I want to make some observations or I want to give an example, if this had occurred
indicate obiter dicta.
Justification
To have confidence in the legal system, judges decisions should be legally justifiable.
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Policy-Based Incrementalism
Justice Kirby tends to look at policy after looking at ratio, using this approach. If Kirby finds
that a previous ratio is not quite on point, he would apply policy.
Policy-based Judicial Method
In Arthur JS Hall v Simons (2000), the House of Lords indicated that the Court of Appeal had
settled the specific matter, but still heard it. There was an argument is that they went way
beyond judicial power, but House of Lords seemed to move straight to competing policy
considerations. The House of Lords treated rules of law as issues of policy and decided that
the immunity should be abolished.
Prospective Overruling is the idea of the court making a decision that does not apply to
any litigants before it, but only applies to future litigants. There is a strong argument that
this goes far beyond legitimate judicial power.
The High Court of Australia rejected prospective overruling in 1997.
University of Queensland
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University of Queensland
www.law-student.org
University of Queensland
www.law-student.org
University of Queensland
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Scott Lang from UQ wrote an excellent piece about the DOrta-Ekenaike v Victoria Legal Aid
(2005) case for the Queensland Law Student Review, which is available at:
http://www.law.uq.edu.au/documents/qlsr/recent-issues/vol4/issue1/Lang-2011-v4-1-QLSR.pdf
University of Queensland
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