30614 - INTRODUCTION TO PRIVATE LAW - MODULE 2 (COMMON LAW)
Department of Law
HAO JIANG
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
1.History and Institutions of Common Law 2.Legal Reasoning 3. Common law contracts ( the bargain principle, battle of forms, pre-contractual liabilities, mistake, fairness, impossibility, change of circumstances, remedies)
4. Common law torts (scope of rights protected including pure economic loss, insults, privacy, liability bases including intention, negligence and strict liability)
5. Common law unjust enrichment |
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
Analyze given factual scenarios and spot the correct doctrinal issues. Apply the doctrinal rules to the facts and predict case outcomes. Critically evaluate the inconsistencies between the cases and the tension between doctrines. |
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
Evaluate the practical differences between common law and civil law. Draft memos predicting the outcome of cases governed by common law. Advise clients on some fundamental issues in common law contract law and torts based on facts. |
Teaching methods
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Individual works / Assignments
DETAILS
Students are given the opportunity to write a research-focused writing assignment based on either a doctrinal research question or a factual scenario. This should be a paper that is logically coherent, supported by scientific sources and, preferably, challenges the prevailing views.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
---|---|---|---|
|
x |
ATTENDING STUDENTS
There is one open-book general exam at the end of the semester. There will be four open-ended questions each worth 6 points and seven multiple choice questions each worth 1 point. Students can bring in any books and notes but will not have access to internet during the exam.
In addition, students may earn up to 3 points for a writing assignment and up to 3 points for actively participating in class discussions. |
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
There is one open-book general exam at the end of the semester. There will be four open-ended questions each worth 6 points and seven multiple choice questions each worth 1 point. Students can bring in any books and notes but will not have access to internet during the exam.
In addition, students may earn up to 3 points for a writing assignment and up to 3 points for actively participating in class discussions. |
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Law of obligations part of J. GORDLEY, H. JIANG, A.T. VON MEHREN, An Introduction to the Comparative Study of Private Law: Readings, cases, materials (2nd edn, CUP 2021). Excerpts from Lon Fuller, Melvin Eisenberg, Mark Gergen, Basic Contract Law (10th edition, West 2018) |
Additional materials will be uploaded to the blackboard