>> Well, AFAIK it's much easier to argue against earlier decisions.
According to that fount of reliable knowledge ;-) Wikipedia, indeed
germans do tend to consider a form of precedent in a fashion similar to
america, but they also _don't_ consider it binding over what laws
actually say (AFAIK, here and in England, laws ARE what the case law
says, written "laws" are merely "statutes", or something like that.):
pretty much.
The law is binding. precedent is not, although it provides a common
interpretation of law. but every judge is at liberty to decide that
former decisions do not apply. Also every judge can decide that in this
case the applicable law does not apply as it violates the constitution
and then rule by the constitution. likely that kind of thing will then
end up in front of the constitutional court ;-)
cheers
Bernhard
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