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Law:

A binding custom or practice of a community : a rule of conduct or action prescribed or formally


recognized as binding or enforced by a controlling authority.

A rule, usually made by the government of a country, that is used to order the way in which the society
has to behave.

The law is a set of rules that are laid down to regulate the government of the state and control the
relationship between the state and its citizens and also to govern the relationship between one citizen
and another which is enforceable by the courts.

Classifications of Law:

 Law may be classified in various different ways but the most important classifications are as
follows:
 Public Law and Private Law
 Criminal Law and Civil Law
 Substantive Law and Procedural Law
 Municipal Law and International Law
 Common Law and equity

Public Law and Private Law:

Public law:

Public law is the law that is concernedwiththerelationship of the citizens and the state. This consists other
different specialist areas as follows:

Constitutional law:

Constitutional law is concerned with the Indian constitution. It covers within its twenty five partsand
twenty schedules the composition and procedures of Parliament, the functioning of central and local
government, citizenship and the fundamental rights and liabilities of the citizens of the country.

Administrative law:

Administrative law is the law that is brought to for better and convenient administration of the
government and the government bodies. There has been a stark increase in the activities of government
over the pastfew years. Many schemes have been introduced by the Government for helping to ensure a
proper standard of living for everyone. A huge number of disputes arise out of the administration of
different schemes and a body of lawhas been developed to deal with the problems of such persons
against the decision of  administrative agency.

Private law:

Private law is the law that is predominantly concerned with the rights and liabilities of individuals towards
each other. The involvement of the states in this area of law is restricted to providing a proper method of
resolving the dispute which has arisen. Therefore, the legal process gets started by the citizen who is
aggrieved and not by the state. Private law is also known as‘civil law’ and often it is in contrast with
criminal laws.

Criminal law and civil law:


Legal law sare classified usually into two different types: criminal and civil law. It is important to note
here that the nature of thisclassification is because there are major differences in the purpose,
procedures and terminology of every branch of law.

Criminal law:

Criminal law is the law that is connected with the act of forbidding particular forms of wrongful conduct
and imposing punishment on those who engage in such acts. Criminal proceedings are usually brought in
the name of the State and are known as ‘prosecutions’. It should be noted that prosecutions may be
assessed by a private individual or other bodies, such as the trading standards department of the local
authority but cannot undertake the case of the prosecution.

In criminal cases there is a prosecutor who prosecutes the defendant for the offence committed. The
consequences of being proved guilty are so extreme that the standard of proof is higher in criminal cases
as compared to civil scenarios.The allegations of a criminal conduct need to be proved beyond reasonable
doubt. If the prosecution successfully proves the guilt of the defendant, hemight be punished by the
court respectively.           

Punishments that are available to be imposed on the convict are imprisonment and fines. If the
prosecution is unsuccessful in proving the guilt of the accused defendant, he is acquitted.[iv]

Civil law:

The civil law deals with the private rights and duties which arise between individuals in a country. The
object of a civil action is to correct the wrongdoing that has been committed. Enforcement of civil law is
the accountability of the individual who has committed the wrong and the state is responsible to provide
for the procedure to resolve the dispute. In case of civil proceedings, the person who claims sues the
defendant in the civil court and asks for a remedy. The claimant will be successful in his claim if he is able
to prove his case. If the claimant is not successful, the defendant will not bemade liable for his actions. 

Substantive and Procedural Law: 

The law which defines rights and liabilities is known as substantive law. It is called so since it lays down a
proper and precise substance of subject matter which is enforceable in the courts. The purpose of a law
that is substantive is to define, create or confer a proper substantive legal right or status or to impose the
nature and extent of any sort of legal duties or obligations.

Substantive law, with regard to a specific subject, defines the legal rights and relationship of people
between themselves or between them and the State. Any wrongdoing of an individual, group of persons
or the state against another will hold him liable to the othersaccordingly. For the purpose of any
substantive law, the wrongs could be either civil or criminal. Substantive law refers to all forms of law
both, public and private including the law of contracts, property, torts and crimes of all kinds. 

The law of procedure is that branch of law thatdeals with the process of litigation. It embodies the rules
and procedures pertaining to the institution and prosecution of any kind of civil or criminal proceeding.
Procedural law consists of a set of rules by which a court hears cases and decides the proceedings.
Historically, the law that many know is substantive law, and procedural law has always been a matter of
concern only to those who preside over as judicial officers or those advocating law. But, over a period of
time, the courts developed a system of evidence and procedure, that fall within the purview of procedural
law relating to the fairness and transparency of such process.

The Indian Evidence Act, the Limitation Act, the Code of Civil Procedure, the Code of Criminal Procedure
are instances of procedural law.

Municipal Law and International Law: 


Municipal or Domestic law is that facet of law that springs from and has an effect on the members of a
particular state. An example of a municipal law is the Constitution of India that applies only in India.

On the other hand,International law is the law that governs laws between different countries. It regulates
the relationship between various independent countries and is usually governed by treaties, international
customs and so on. Examples of International law include the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
African Charter on Human and People’s Rights etc.

Common law and equity:

Law may further be classified as per the nature as to whether they form part of the common law or
equity. The distinction between the systems of common law and equity rises from far long in history and
could be understood properly by an examination of the origins of English law. The common law is the law
followed and gained by the Crown of England. It could be traced back to 1066 when William of
Normandy obtained the crown of England by defeating King Harold in the Battle of Hastings. Before the
Normans arrived there was no such thing known as English law. The Anglo-Saxon system of law was
based on the local community. Each and every area possessed its own system of courts whereinthe local
customs were applied as common law. The Normans were great administrators and they undertook a
process of centralisation that created an accurate climate for the evolution of a uniform system of law for
the entire country which is equally applicable as a rule of law.

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