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Flashcards in this deck (5)

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  • What is the topic titled in this section?


    • Business activities and the legal environment
    business law
  • How does the text define laws?


    • Laws are enforceable rules governing relationships among individuals and between individuals and their society.
    definition law
  • Can multiple laws affect a single business transaction?


    • Yes. Many different laws may affect a single business transaction.
    business law
  • What are the six functional fields of business linked to business law?


    • Corporate management
    • Production and transportation
    • Marketing
    • Research and development
    • Accounting and finance
    • Human resource management
    business functions
  • How many functional fields of business are listed as linked to business law?


    • Six
    business overview
Ghi chú học tập

BUSINESS AND ITS LEGAL ENVIRONMENT — Chapter 1

Learning objectives

  • Understand the four primary sources of U.S. law and the common law tradition.
  • Define precedent and when courts may depart from it.
  • Distinguish remedies at law from remedies in equity.
  • Compare civil law and criminal law.
  • See how law connects to major business functions.

What is law?

  • Law: enforceable rules that govern relationships among people and between people and society.
  • Purpose: provide order, resolve disputes, protect rights, and create standards for conduct.
  • In business, multiple laws often affect a single transaction (contracts, torts, regulations, tax, etc.).

Four primary sources of U.S. law

  • Constitutions: federal and state constitutions set fundamental principles and limits on government power.
  • Statutes: laws passed by legislatures (Congress or state legislatures).
  • Administrative regulations: rules created by government agencies under statutory authority.
  • Case law (judicial decisions): court opinions that interpret statutes, regulations, and constitutions.

The common law tradition

  • Common law: a legal system where judges decide cases and those decisions form binding law for later cases.
  • Emphasis on judicial reasoning, interpretation, and development of legal doctrines over time.

Precedent and stare decisis

  • Precedent: prior court decisions used as authority in later, similar cases.
  • Stare decisis: the principle that courts should follow earlier rulings to ensure predictability and fairness.
  • Courts may depart from precedent when it is clearly wrong, outdated by social or technological change, or unworkable.

Remedies: at law vs in equity

  • Remedies at law: typically monetary damages paid to the injured party.
  • Remedies in equity: non‑monetary relief such as injunctions (orders to stop), specific performance (order to perform a contract), rescission, or reformation.
  • Distinction matters because equitable relief may require showing that money is inadequate and often involves more flexible, discretionary remedies.

Civil law vs criminal law — key differences

  • Purpose: civil law resolves private disputes and compensates victims; criminal law punishes wrongdoing and protects public order.
  • Parties: civil cases are between private parties (plaintiff v. defendant); criminal cases are brought by the government (prosecutor v. defendant).
  • Burden of proof: civil cases generally require a preponderance of the evidence; criminal cases require beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • Remedies: civil remedies often monetary or equitable relief; criminal penalties include imprisonment, fines, probation.

How law affects business functions

  • Corporate management: governance, fiduciary duties, corporate structure.
  • Production and transportation: safety standards, liability, environmental regulation.
  • Marketing: advertising law, consumer protection, intellectual property.
  • Research and development: patents, trade secrets, licensing.
  • Accounting and finance: securities law, tax compliance, reporting standards.
  • Human resources: employment law, discrimination, benefits, labor relations.
  • For each function, legal rules shape strategy, risk, and daily operations.

Study tips and focus points

  • Memorize the four sources of law and examples of each.
  • Understand stare decisis and reasons courts may overturn precedent.
  • Be able to give examples of legal vs equitable remedies and when each applies.
  • Practice distinguishing civil and criminal cases by parties, purpose, burden, and remedies.
  • Relate legal rules to specific business activities for practical understanding.