Test Bank For Anderson’s Business Law and the Legal Environment: Comprehensive, International Edition
Chapter 1—THE NATURE AND SOURCES OF LAW
TRUE/FALSE
1.The pattern of rules that society uses to control the conduct of individuals in their relationships is called law.
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2.The law works to cause our society to operate in an inefficient manner.
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3.Law is often defined as the body of principles that courts will enforce.
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4.Jane asserts she has a legal right. Jane is really saying she has an obligation to perform or refrain from performing an act.
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5.Rights always stand alone, without any duties.
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6.Rights guaranteed in the United States Constitution are not accompanied by duties.
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7.Court decisions and statutes can take away rights created by the United States Constitution.
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8.One of our most important rights is the right of privacy.
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9.The right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures conducted by the police is guaranteed by state statute.
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10.The United States Constitution provides that we have a right to be free from intrusions by others.
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11.The private life of a nonpublic citizen is subject to public scrutiny.
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12.One advantage of our current legal system is that the growth of technology has not created many new laws.
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13.The right of privacy does not apply to intrusions into our privacy by means of new technology.
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14.Several layers of law are enacted at different levels of government to provide the framework for business and personal rights and duties. At the base of this framework of laws is constitutional law.
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15.A constitution is a body of principles that establishes the structure of a government and the relationship of that government to the people who are governed.
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16.Statutes are the only source of law.
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17.Within each state in the United States, only one constitution is in force.
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18.In addition to state legislatures and the United States Congress, all cities, counties, and other governmental subdivisions have some power to adopt ordinances within their sphere of operation.
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19.State legislatures, not Congress, enact statutory law.
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20.Administrative regulations are a type of law.
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21.Administrative regulations generally do not have the force of a statute.
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22.Courts can create law.
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23.When a court decides a new question or problem, the decision is called a precedent.
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24.The group of time-honored rules that courts have used to solve similar problems for decades is called stare decisis.
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