Title: Class: Business Law Bus' 02
1WELCOME!
- Class Business Law (Bus. 02)
- Instructor Carolyn Johnson
- Directions
- As you enter, please tell me your name.
- Then pick up a student information form and a
folder from the entrance table. - Write your name on the tab of the folder, (last
name first, then first name). - Complete the student information card while you
wait for class to start.
2Agenda
- Welcome and Instructor Introduction
- Class Administration Office Hours, Folder and
Box System - Student Introductions
- Class Expectations
- Ground Rules
- Small Group Formation
- Study Tips
- QA
- Mini-lecture
- Class Review
- Student Feedback
- Preparation for Next Class
3BUSINESS LAW TODAY Essentials 8th Ed.Roger
LeRoy Miller - Institute for University Studies,
Arlington, TexasGaylord A. Jentz - University of
Texas at Austin, Emeritus
The Historical and Constitutional Foundations
Chapter 1
4Learning Objectives
- What is the common law tradition?
- What is a precedent? When might a court depart
from precedent? - What is the difference between remedies at law
and remedies in equity? - What constitutional clause gives the federal
government the power to regulate commercial
activities among the various states? - What is the Bill of Rights? What freedoms are
guaranteed by the First Amendment?
5Sources of American Law
- Constitutional Law.
- Found in text and cases arising from federal and
state constitutions. - U.S. Constitution is the supreme law of the land.
- Statutory Law.
- Laws enacted by federal and state legislatures.
- Local ordinances.
- Uniform Laws (e.g.,Uniform Commercial Code).
6Sources of American Law
- Administrative Law.
- Rulemaking--Rules, orders and decisions of
administrative agencies, federal, state and
local. - Administrative agencies can be independent
regulatory agency such as the Food and Drug
Administration. - Adjudication--agencies make rules, then
investigate and enforce the rules in
administrative hearings.
7The Common Law Tradition
- Early English Courts of Law.
- Kings courts started after Norman conquest of
1066. - Established the common lawbody of general legal
principles applied throughout the English empire.
- Kings courts used precedent to build the common
law.
8Stare Decisis
- Stare Decisis
- Practice of deciding new cases based on
precedent. - A higher courts decision based on certain facts
and law, is a binding authority on lower courts. - Helps courts stay efficient.
9Equitable Remedies Courts
- Remedy means to enforce a right or compensate
for injury to that right. - Remedy at Law in kings courts, remedies were
restricted to damages in either money or
property. - Equitable Remedy based on justice and fair
dealing a chancery court does what is right
specific performance, injunction, rescission. - Plaintiffs (injured party initiating the
lawsuit), Defendants (allegedly caused injury).
10Exhibit 1-1
11Classifications of Law
- Substantive vs. Procedural Law
- Substantive laws that define and regulate rights
and duties. - Procedural laws that establish methods for
enforcing and protecting rights. - Civil Law and Criminal Law
- Civil private rights and duties between persons
and government. - Criminal public wrongs against society.
12Classifications of Law
- National and International Law
- National laws of a particular nation.
- Civil vs. Common Law Civil law countries based
on Roman code (e.g., Latin America). - International body of written and unwritten laws
observed by nations when dealing with each other.
13Comparision of Legal Systems
14Constitutional Powers of Government
- A Federal Form of Government the federal
constitution was a political compromise between
advocates of state sovereignty and central
government. - Separation of Powers Executive, Legislative and
Judicial. Provides checks and balances. - Legislative enacts laws
- Executive enforces laws
- Judicial declares laws/actions unconstitutional.
15The Commerce Clause
- U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to
- regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and
among the several States, and with the Indian
tribes. (Art. 1 8) - Greatest impact on business than any other
Constitutional provision.
16The Commerce Clause
- Gibbons v. Ogden (1824).
- To Chief Justice Marshall, commerce meant all
business dealings that substantially affected
more than one state. - The national government had the exclusive power
to regulate interstate commerce. - Today commerce clause applies to e-commerce
internet transactions.
17Expansion of National Powers
- Wickard v. Filburn (1942).
- Purely local production, sale and consumption of
wheat was subject to federal regulation. - CASE 2.1 Heart of Atlanta Motel v. U.S. (1964).
- Motel that provided public accommo-dations to
guests from other states was subject to federal
civil rights legislation.
18Commerce Power Today
- Theoretically the federal government has
unlimited control over all business transactions
since any enterprise (in the aggregate) can have
a substantial effect on interstate commerce. - Practical Limits Supreme Court has curbed
federal regulatory powers in U.S. v. Lopez (1995)
and U.S. v. Morrison (2000).
19Regulatory Powers of the States
- Tenth Amendment reserves all powers to the states
that have not been expressly delegated to the
national government. - State have inherent police powers.
- Police powers include right to regulate health,
safety, morals and general welfare. - Includes licensing, building codes, parking
regulations and zoning restrictions. - Dormant Commerce Clause ?
20Dormant Commerce Clause
- U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted commerce
clause to give national government exclusive
power to regulate. - States only have a dormant (negative) power to
regulate interstate commerce. - Dormant power comes into play when courts balance
states interest vs. national interest, e.g.,
internet transactions. - CASE 2.2 Granholm v. Heald (2005).
21The Supremacy Clause
- Supremacy Clause Article VI of the Constitution
provides that Constitution, laws and treaties of
the United States are the supreme law of the
land. - Concurrent in few areas, both states and federal
government share powers. - Preemption when Congress chooses to act in a
concurrent area, federal law preempts state law.
22Taxing and Spending Powers
- Article I Section 8 Congress has the power to
lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and
excises. - Today if federal tax has a reasonable
relationship to revenue production, it will be
held constitutional. - Congress can spend tax revenues on any express or
implied constitutional power.
23Business and the Bill of Rights
- 1791 Ten written guarantees of protection of
individual liberties from government
interference. - Originally Bill of Rights only applied to the
federal government. - Today the Bill of Rights has been
incorporated and applied to the States as well. - Some protections apply to businesses.
24First Amendment Freedom of Speech
- Right to Free Speech is the basis for our
democratic government. - Free speech also includes symbolic speech,
including gestures, movements, articles of
clothing. - Texas v. Johnson (U.S. 1989).
- Hodgkins v. Peterson (7th Cir. 2004).
25Corporate Speech
- Commercial speech (advertising) is given
substantial protection. Government restrictions
must - Seek to implement substantial government
interest, - Directly advance that interest, and
- Must go no further than necessary to accomplish.
- Corporations also have protected political speech
(although not to the degree of a natural person).
26Unprotected Speech
- U.S. Supreme Court has held that certain speech
is NOT protected - Defamatory speech.
- Threatening speech that violates criminal laws.
- Fighting Words.
- Obscene Speech is patently offensive, violates
community standards and has no literary,
artistic, political or scientific merit. - CASE 2.3 Lott v. Levitt (2007).
27Online (Obscene) Speech
- Protected or Unprotected?
- Some of Congress attempts to protect children
from online pornography have been ruled
unconstitutional restriction on free speech. - Communications Decency Act (1996).
- COPA (1998-challenged, in court).
- Childrens Internet Protection Act (2000) which
requires filters for computers in public
libraries and public schools). Challenged, in
court. - What about hate speech on the web?
28Freedom of Religion
- First Amendment guarantees that Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof - Establishment clause no state-sponsored religion
or preference for one religion over another. - Free Exercise person can believe what he wants,
but actions may be unconstitutional. - What about freedom of religion and illegal drug
use?
29Due Process
- Procedural any government decision to take life,
liberty or property must be fair. Requires
Notice and Fair Hearing. - Substantive focuses on the content or the
legislation (the right itself). - Fundamental Right requires compelling state
interest. - Non-Fundamental rational relationship to state
interest.
30Equal Protection
- 14th Amendment A state may not deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws. - Government must treat similarly situated
individuals (or businesses) in the same manner. - Courts apply different tests
- Minimum scrutiny-economic rights.
- Intermediate scrutiny.
- Strict Scrutiny fundamental rights.
31Privacy Rights
- Fourth amendment protects against unreasonable
search and seizures. - Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) found a right to
personal privacy implied in constitution,
expanded in Roe v. Wade (1973). - Website privacy policies. What about private
information on the internet? - What about USA PATRIOT ACT (2001)?
- HIPAA (1996) (healthcare privacy).
32Appendix to Chapter 1
- Finding Statutory Law.
- United States Code (USC).
- State Statutes.
- Finding Administrative Law.
- Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
- Finding Case Law (Case Citations).
33Exhibit 1A-1
34Appendix
- Reading Understanding Case Law
- Legal cases are identified by a legal citation
(or a cite) as the example below - Nunez v. Carabbas Italian Grill, Inc., 448 Mass.
170, 859 N.E.2d 801 (2007).
Title First Party is Plaintiff, second party is
Defendant. The parties are either italicized or
underlined.
35Appendix
- Reading Understanding Case Law
- Legal cases are identified by a legal citation
(or a cite) as the example below - Nunez v. Carabbas Italian Grill, Inc., 448 Mass.
170, 859 N.E.2d 801 (2007).
This is a 2007 State Supreme Court Case found in
volume 448, page 170 of the Massachussets
Reports, OR volume 859, page 801 of the
NorthEastern Reporter 2nd.
36Learning Objectives
- What is the common law tradition?
- What is a precedent? When might a court depart
from precedent? - What is the difference between remedies at law
and remedies in equity? - What constitutional clause gives the federal
government the power to regulate commercial
activities among the various states? - What is the Bill of Rights? What freedoms are
guaranteed by the First Amendment?
37Agenda
- Welcome and Instructor Introduction
- Class Administration Office Hours, Folder and
Box System - Student Introductions
- Class Expectations
- Ground Rules
- Small Group Formation
- Study Tips
- QA
- Mini-lecture
- Class Review
- Student Feedback
- Preparation for Next Class