Civil vs. Criminal Law
This is the most basic distinction of the Anglo-American legal system. There are two different types of legal case: civil cases and criminal cases. In criminal cases, the conflict is generally between the state1 and a person or persons. In civil cases, the conflict is generally between two or more private parties. In short, criminal cases are "state versus person," while civil cases are generally "person versus person."2 The usual justification for the civil-criminal distinction is that criminal wrongs (such as murder) are offenses against public order or the people as a whole, whereas civil wrongs (such as trespass and breach of contract) are offenses against private individuals.
Civil and criminal cases differ in several important respects, including:
Names of the sides. In criminal trials, the state's side, represented by a district attorney, is called the prosecution. In civil trials, the side making the charge of wrongdoing is called the plaintiff. (The side charged with wrongdoing is called the defendant in both criminal and civil trials.)
Procedural protections. Defendants in criminal cases have certain rights, including some guaranteed by the Constitution, that they do not have civil cases. For instance, a defendant cannot be compelled to testify in his own criminal trial, but he can be so compelled in a civil trial.
Burdens of proof -- see explanation below.
Possible punishments. Only a criminal conviction can lead to prison or capital punishment. A losing defendant in a civil trial will usually have to pay monetary damages, though some other remedies are also available.3
Civil and criminal trials can sometimes occur for the very same act. For instance, killing a person can lead to both a criminal trial for murder and a civil trial for wrongful death. The O.J. Simpson case is probably the best known instance of this.
This is the most basic distinction of the Anglo-American legal system. There are two different types of legal case: civil cases and criminal cases. In criminal cases, the conflict is generally between the state1 and a person or persons. In civil cases, the conflict is generally between two or more private parties. In short, criminal cases are "state versus person," while civil cases are generally "person versus person."2 The usual justification for the civil-criminal distinction is that criminal wrongs (such as murder) are offenses against public order or the people as a whole, whereas civil wrongs (such as trespass and breach of contract) are offenses against private individuals.
Civil and criminal cases differ in several important respects, including:
Names of the sides. In criminal trials, the state's side, represented by a district attorney, is called the prosecution. In civil trials, the side making the charge of wrongdoing is called the plaintiff. (The side charged with wrongdoing is called the defendant in both criminal and civil trials.)
Procedural protections. Defendants in criminal cases have certain rights, including some guaranteed by the Constitution, that they do not have civil cases. For instance, a defendant cannot be compelled to testify in his own criminal trial, but he can be so compelled in a civil trial.
Burdens of proof -- see explanation below.
Possible punishments. Only a criminal conviction can lead to prison or capital punishment. A losing defendant in a civil trial will usually have to pay monetary damages, though some other remedies are also available.3
Civil and criminal trials can sometimes occur for the very same act. For instance, killing a person can lead to both a criminal trial for murder and a civil trial for wrongful death. The O.J. Simpson case is probably the best known instance of this.
Know
About Law - 12 Main Points
|
This
is a list of twelve things (actually, twelve sets of things) that well-informed
debaters should know about law and the legal system. If you know the
items in the list, you won't be a legal expert, but you'll know enough to
survive legal debate rounds. Since I am not a lawyer, I do not claim that
my explanations are definitive or comprehensive. In the interest of
brevity, I have simplified some of the explanations, leaving the minor
exceptions and qualifications for footnotes. Also, constitutional law is
such a large and important area that I've decided to deal with it in a separate
page, as yet unwritten.
1. Civil vs. Criminal Law
This
is the most basic distinction of the Anglo-American legal system. There
are two different types of legal case: civil cases and criminal
cases. In criminal cases, the conflict is generally between the state1 and a person or persons. In civil cases,
the conflict is generally between two or more private parties. In short,
criminal cases are "state versus person," while civil cases are
generally "person versus person."2
The usual justification for the civil-criminal distinction is that criminal
wrongs (such as murder) are offenses against public order or the people as a
whole, whereas civil wrongs (such as trespass and breach of contract) are
offenses against private individuals.
Civil and
criminal cases differ in several important respects, including:
·
Names of the sides. In criminal trials,
the state's side, represented by a district attorney, is called the prosecution.
In civil trials, the side making the charge of wrongdoing is called the plaintiff.
(The side charged with wrongdoing is called the defendant in both criminal and
civil trials.)
·
Procedural protections. Defendants
in criminal cases have certain rights, including some guaranteed by the
Constitution, that they do not have civil cases. For instance, a
defendant cannot be compelled to testify in his own criminal trial, but he can
be so compelled in a civil trial.
·
Burdens of proof -- see explanation below.
·
Possible punishments.
Only a
criminal conviction can lead to prison or capital punishment. A losing
defendant in a civil trial will usually have to pay monetary damages, though
some other remedies are also available.3
Civil
and criminal trials can sometimes occur for the very same act. For
instance, killing a person can lead to both a criminal trial for murder and a
civil trial for wrongful death. The O.J. Simpson case is probably the
best known instance of this.
In
addition to civil and criminal, there is also a third type of case:
administrative adjudication. For more about this, see the section on administrative law below.
2. Burdens of Proof
In
order to win a case in court, the party making the charge of wrongdoing must
meet a burden of proof. The weight of the burden depends on the type of
trial -- civil or criminal -- and sometimes on the specific charge. In
criminal trials, the burden of proof is reasonable doubt, which means
that a normal person should not have any serious doubt about the truth of the
charges. Reasonable doubt is sometimes characterized as 95% certainty
about the verdict. In civil trials, the burden of proof is usually the
much weaker preponderance of the evidence, meaning that a normal person
weighing all of the relevant evidence would consider the charges more likely
true than not. Preponderance of the evidence is sometimes characterized
as 51% certainty. Finally, in a small handful of cases (such as patent
infringement and termination of parental rights) an intermediate burden called clear
and convincing evidence is used. Clear and convincing evidence is
sometimes characterized as 75% certainty.
The
different burdens of proof are loosely reflected in the number of jurors required
to reach a verdict. In the federal system and in almost every State,
unanimity is required in criminal trials. In civil trials, unanimity is
sometimes but not generally required; the exact number of jurors needed to
render a verdict differs among jurisdictions. (The number of members on a
jury also differs substantially among jurisdictions. In criminal trials,
12 is the usual number, but it is sometimes lower. In civil trials,
smaller juries are more common. Juries almost always have at least 6 members.)
3. Divisions of Civil Law
Civil
law is typically divided into three main areas: property, contract, and
tort. Property deals with establishing and enforcing the rights of
possession and ownership. Trespass is one example of a legal wrong in the
law of property. Contract deals with voluntary agreements between
individuals, whether implicit or explicit. Breach of contract is the
primary example of a legal wrong in the law of contract. Tort deals with
a variety of other legal wrongs that involve harm to individuals; examples
include product liability, malpractice, personal injury, and wrongful death.
Of these
three categories, tort is certainly the most controversial. The law of
property and contract have seen little change over the decades, but the law of
tort has gone through many changes. The explosion of litigation in the
latter half of the 20th century has taken place, for the most part, in torts.
4. Liability Rules
In
tort cases, the courts must have a means of deciding whether or not a defendant
should be held liable for damages suffered by the plaintiff. Many
different doctrines have been used, but there are two main streams of thought:
Strict liability. Under a strict liability doctrine,
a defendant will be held liable for any damages to the plaintiff, so long as
conditions of causation are met. For instance, a strict liability
approach to product liability would say that if you were injured by your
lawnmower, the lawnmower manufacturer would have to pay damages regardless of
how much care was taken in the production of the lawnmower. Negligence. Under a negligence doctrine, a defendant will be held liable for damages only if he took less care than he should have taken. The amount of care a defendant should have taken is called "due care," which is defined as the amount of care a reasonable person would have taken under the same circumstances. To take the lawnmower example, a negligence approach might say that if the lawnmower manufacturer had inspectors on the factory floor, did product safety testing, and attached clear safety guidelines for consumers, then it would not have to pay damages for injuries from its lawnmowers.
These doctrines rarely exist in their pure form. Actual legal rules often incorporate elements of both approaches. For instance, strict liability is usually modified with a rule of contributory negligence, which exempts the defendant from liability when the plaintiff failed to take due care. (In the lawnmower example, the manufacturer might avoid liability because the injured consumer did not follow the safety guidelines.) In negligence, some activities (such as failing to abide by a public safety ordinance), are deemed "negligence per se," which means doing them at all creates liability for any harm that might occur. For example, a landlord who failed to maintain his fire escapes would automatically be held liable for damage caused by them.
5. Types of Damages
In
civil trials, a verdict will often require the defendant to pay monetary
damages to the plaintiff. The damages are divided into two types,
compensatory and punitive. The purpose of compensatory damages is
to make the plaintiff "whole," by paying him enough money to make up for
whatever wrong was done to him. Compensatory damages include medical
expenses, lost wages and income, payment for pain and suffering, etc. The
purpose of punitive damages is to punish the defendant, thereby
providing an incentive for others to behave properly.
Some have
argued that punitive damages are unjustified, because compensatory damages are
(in theory) sufficient to make up for whatever the defendant has done
wrong. In response, it should be noted that there is less than 100%
certainty of being held liable for one's harmful acts (because they may never
be discovered, or the victims may choose not to litigate), so an additional
punishment may be needed to provide sufficient incentive not to commit
negligent acts in the first place.
6. Phases of the Legal Process
A
legal case goes through several steps as it winds its way through the legal
system.
In criminal case, the major phases of the process are as
follows:
·
Grand jury. The prosecutor must demonstrate, to
the satisfaction of a jury, that there is enough evidence to justify having a
trial. Most, but not all, States use grand juries. The size of the
grand jury differs substantially from State to State. In the federal
system, a grand jury has from 16 to 23 members.
·
Discovery. The prosecution is required to turn over all
potentially exculpatory evidence to the defense.
·
Pre-trial motions. Lawyers for the two sides attempt
to influence the evidence and arguments that will be allowed in the
trial. The judge has sole discretion in ruling on motions (though his
decisions may be reviewed by higher courts). One kind of pre-trial motion
is a motion to dismiss, which asks the judge to dismiss a case for lack of evidence
or legal merit.
·
Jury selection (a.k.a. voir dire).
The
judge, usually with the participation of the attorneys, questions potential
jurors to find an acceptable jury. Jurors with a likely bias or conflict
of interest are dismissed. When the attorneys participate, each side is
typically allowed a limited number peremptory strikes (dismissing a potential
juror without stating a reason), as well as any number of strikes with cause
(for likely bias or conflict of interest), as approved by the judge.
·
Trial. This
is the part you know about from all those lawyer shows.
·
Verdict. The jury pronounces the defendant
guilty or not guilty on each charge. If the jurors are unable to reach
agreement, there is a "hung jury," and a mistrial is declared.
When a mistrial occurs, the prosecution may choose to try the defendant again
or drop the case.
·
Sentencing. This takes place only after a guilty
verdict has been pronounced. The judge almost always decides the
punishment, even following a jury trial. In some circumstances, a jury
may participate in the sentencing process, such as by recommending a penalty to
the judge. Although judges have discretion in sentencing, their discretion
is often substantially curbed by statutory sentencing guidelines. These
guidelines provide minimum and maximum sentences for persons convicted of
particular crimes, and the judge has discretion only within those
parameters. There are some types of evidence that may be allowed in a
sentencing hearing that would not be allowed in the trial -- for example,
evidence that the defendant had committed previous crimes.
In a civil trial, the phases are somewhat different:
·
Discovery. Each side must turn over relevant
evidence to the other side.
·
Pre-trial motions. See explanation above.
·
Jury selection. See explanation above.
·
Trial. See
explanation above.
·
Verdict. The jury finds for the plaintiff or
the defendant. (The terms guilty and not guilty are not used in civil
trials.) Any damage award is announced at the same time, not in a
separate phase.
7. Plea Bargains and Settlements
The
vast majority of cases, both civil and criminal, never go to trial. I've heard
statistics saying that fewer than 5% make it that far. Instead, the
parties to the dispute arrive at an agreement beforehand.
In
criminal trials, the agreement is called a plea bargain. In a plea
bargain, the defendant pleads guilty to a lesser charge in return for a lower
sentence. Some plea bargains occur because the defendant doesn't want to
risk a guilty verdict on a more serious charge, while the prosecutor doesn't want
to risk getting no conviction at all. Other plea bargains occur as
compensation for testimony in another case. For instance, the prosecutor
may be sure he can convict a defendant on drug dealing, but he might let the
dealer plead down to mere drug possession if he testifies against a drug
lord. Any plea bargain must be approved by a judge, and the judge can
reject a plea bargain he disagrees with. But this rarely happens. In civil trials, the agreement is called a settlement. In a settlement, the defendant makes a payment to the plaintiff for dropping the case. A settlement usually occurs because the defendant doesn't want to risk a large judgment at trial, while the plaintiff doesn't want to risk getting nothing at all. Unlike in a plea bargain, the defendant does not admit to any wrongdoing.
In both plea bargains and settlements, both parties to the agreement are trading uncertainty for certainty. Both parties realize that the trial could lead to a very good or a very bad outcome. Rather than risk getting the bad outcome, each party accepts an intermediate outcome instead. Naturally, a party who thinks the good outcome is more likely will demand more concessions in the plea bargain or settlement, while a party that thinks the bad outcome is more likely will be willing to concede more. Given most people's aversion to risk, it is not surprising that settlements and plea bargains happen as often as they do.
8. Common Law and Statutory Law
There
are two primary sources of laws and legal rules: legislatures and
judges. When the law has been created by legislators, it is called
statutory law. When it has been created by judges, it is called common
law.
Criminal
laws are all statutory. But most of civil law has its origin in common law,
albeit modified by various statutes. The rules of common law are not to
be found in codes written by a single authority, but instead in the case law --
that is, the body of decisions made in previous decisions by judges. The
guiding principle of common law is the notion of precedent. This means
that judges are, in general, expected to make rulings that follow the pattern
established in previous, similar cases. When a new case arises whose
resolution is not clearly dictated by existing precedents, the judge's decision
in the case becomes the precedent for future cases of a similar nature.
In this way, the common law develops over time in response to the cases that
appear before the courts. Common law is a venerable system with roots that precede the existence of the state. The Anglo-American common law can be traced back to the local courts of Anglo-Saxon villages, long before there was an English king. For many centuries, the common law system had authority independent of the king, but eventually the common law system was absorbed into the (previously separate) legal system of the state.
The United States inherited the common law system of the British, and at some point the U.S. Congress even passed a law that adopted the whole of the British case law as the starting point for American courts. However, the law has developed differently in each State, so the current precedents may differ from State to State. Louisiana, which was settled by the French, has a civil code system instead of common law. Civil code is a system in which all civil law is passed by the legislature, as in France and much of continental Europe. In the other States, civil law is now a hybrid of common law and civil code.
9. Administrative Law
In
addition to common and statutory law, there is a third category of law:
administrative. Administrative law is the body of rules and regulations
created by executive agencies and regulatory bodies (such as the EPA, OSHA,
FCC, FTC, etc.). Administrative law has legal force only because of
enabling statutes passed by the legislature. For instance, the EPA
derives its authority to create laws regarding the environment from the Clean
Air Act, Clean Water Act, and several other acts of Congress.
The
significance of administrative law should not be underestimated: In a
typical year, Congress passes around 300 laws, while administrative agencies
write approximately 10,000 regulations. These laws, when violated, are
adjudicated in special administrative courts that are separate from the usual
legal system.4 The rules and
procedures of administrative courts differ substantially from those described
elsewhere on this page, in ways too extensive to describe here.
10. Reasons for Punishment
There
are several distinct justifications for punishing people convicted of
wrongdoing. In policy discussions and debates, it is common for one or
both sides to act as though there is a unitary rationale for all punishment,
but this usually oversimplifies the situation. You will have an edge in
debate rounds if you can show how your position actually serves (or balances)
two or more of the following goals:
·
Retribution. This means "giving someone what they
deserve," or in simpler terms, revenge. By giving victims or their
relatives a sense of closure, punishment can increase the perceived legitimacy
and effectiveness of the system.
·
Restitution. This means paying back the victim for what
they've lost. Restitution is the primary justification for the payment of
compensatory damages in civil cases. It is also a justification for
community service and similar punishments in criminal cases (where the public
at large is considered a victim of the crime).
·
Rehabilitation. This means reforming the criminal so he can
eventually reenter society without posing a danger to others.
Rehabilitative approaches include psychotherapy and job training.
·
Personal (Direct) Deterrence. This means
preventing the criminal himself from committing future crimes by removing him
from society. The argument that capital punishment deters a killer from
ever killing again is an application of personal deterrence.
·
Social (Indirect) Deterrence. This means
punishing wrongdoers as an incentive or threat to other potential
wrongdoers. If potential wrongdoers are made aware that conviction will
lead to severe punishments, they will be less likely to commit bad acts.
Social deterrence is obviously the motivation behind many criminal punishments,
and it also provides the rationale for punitive damages in civil cases.
11. The
"Loser Pays" Rule
In
England, the loser in a civil case must pay the legal fees of the winner.
If the plaintiff wins the case, the monetary damages levied on the defendant
will include legal expenses. If the defendant wins the case, the court
directs the plaintiff to pay the defendant for his legal expenses. This
requirement is called the "loser pays" rule, or sometimes the
"English rule" because of its use in England.
The
rationale behind the loser pays rule is to provide an incentive for litigants
not to launch frivolous cases, which waste legal resources and empty the
wallets of defendants. The litigation explosion in the U.S. in recent
decades has motivated a great deal of interest in adopting the loser pays rule
in this country. The major difficulty with the loser pays rule is that,
although it probably deters frivolous suits, it may deter some suits with merit
as well. It seems especially harsh to punish people for launching suits
in areas of law where the precedents are unclear or nonexistent, so that it's
reasonable to think either side may win. But frivolous lawsuits also
create a heavy burden, so the debate over the loser pays rule turns on the
magnitude of this burden relative to the danger of deterring suits that may
have merit. It is worth pointing out that the American system does have devices similar to the loser pays rule, at least in some jurisdictions. Some States allow defendants to countersue for payment of legal expenses. In other cases, a judge may simply order the losing side to pay the legal expenses of the winner (just like the loser pays rule, but subject to the judge's discretion). In pre-trial motions, the defendant may move to dismiss a case that lacks legal merit. A judge who perceives a case as frivolous can throw it out of court before it even reaches trial. All of these measures serve to reduce (though not eliminate) the burden of frivolous lawsuits.
12. Hierarchy of Authority
Courts
exist in a hierarchical structure. In both State and federal
jurisdictions, there are district courts, appeals courts, and supreme courts.5 District courts are the first courts to
hear cases, and they are the only courts that make use of juries.
District courts are expected to follow the legal precedents set by higher
courts (appeals courts and supreme court), and their
primary role is to make findings of fact.
Appeals
courts are the next level up. They hear a fraction of cases in which the
decision or procedure of the district court was arguably flawed in some
way. Appeals courts rarely, if ever, second-guess the factual findings of
district courts -- their job is to decide questions of law, not fact. If
the fact-finding procedure of the district court was flawed in some way, the
appeals court may order a new trial at the district level. Otherwise, the
appeals court judges will take as given the facts found by the district court
and apply their findings of law to those facts. A supreme court is the highest court of appeals in a jurisdiction. When the decisions of appeals courts are appealed, they go to the supreme court. The judges who sit on the supreme court have discretion to decide which cases they will hear. Typically, some fraction of the judges (in the case of the US Supreme Court, 4 out of 9 Justices) must vote in favor of hearing a case; this is called granting certiorari, or "cert" for short. When a supreme court makes a ruling, its decision is considered a binding precedent for all lower courts in its jurisdiction.
Each State has its own supreme court. The US Supreme Court is the supreme court of the federal court system. It hears appeals from US Circuit Courts of Appeals, as well as some special courts such as the US military courts. In addition, the US Supreme Court may hear appeals from State supreme courts on decisions that rely on the US Constitution or federal law.
Footnotes
I
wish to thank Matthew L. Schwartz for his many helpful comments and suggestions
on this page. Any remaining errors are mine alone.
(1)
Throughout
this page, I will use the word "state" (uncapitalized)
to refer to any government, and I will use "State" (capitalized) to
refer to a member state of the United States of America. (2) Corporations are defined as legal persons. Also, sometimes the state will be a party in a civil dispute, such as when an individual sues the government for civil rights violations, or when a government sues a private entity for damages (e.g., the recent suits lodged by State attorneys general against tobacco companies). Other examples include SEC and IRS violations, custody cases, and civil commitment cases.
(3) Two examples of other remedies are specific performance and injunction. In breach of contract cases, a remedy of specific performance requires the breaching party to perform the contract's promised duties rather than pay damages. An injunction prohibits a party from engaging in a specific behavior.
(4) Administrative courts are considered part of their parent executive agencies, not part of the judicial branch of government.
(5) To confuse matters a bit, the State of New York calls its district level courts "supreme courts." Its highest court (what would elsewhere be called a supreme court) is called the New York Court of Appeals.