Positive law is a legal term having more than one meaning. In a general legal sense, positive law is man-made law, that is, law established by governmental authority, especially that which has been codified into a written form (statutory law). The term is often used in contrast with natural law and legal realism.
Various philosophers have put forward theories contrasting the value of positive law relative to natural law. The normative theory of law put forth by the Brno school gave pre-eminence to positive law because of its rational nature. Classical liberal and libertarian philosophers usually favor natural law over positive law.
Positive Law to Rousseau was freedom from internal obstacles or laws that limit vice.
In the United States the term "positive law" also has a separate, more restricted meaning when used to refer to codified statutes (see Codification).
Section 204 of title 1 of the United States Code provides (in part):
See .
According to the Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the United States House of Representatives:
In the case of titles that are positive law, the text of the title itself, as published in the United States Code by the United States Government Printing Office, is conclusive evidence of the exact wording and punctuation of the statute. In litigation over a provision of the United States Code, this means that to determine the actual wording of the statute the court generally will not look beyond the text as printed in the Code itself.
The titles of the United States Code that are not positive law are referred to as "non-positive law" (i.e., not "negative law"). The status of a particular provision in a title that is "non-positive" law has no bearing on the "legality" of that provision except to the extent that (due to a typographical or other error) the text of the Code does not exactly match the Act of Congress as published in the United States Statutes at Large (also published by the United States Government Printing Office) that is the source of the provision. In the case of a variance, the text in the United States Statutes at Large is the controlling law.
To make matters somewhat more confusing, certain titles of the United States Code such as title 26 (the Internal Revenue Code), while technically denoted as "non-positive" law, actually represent the currently amended version of "positive" law. That is, title 26 of the United States Code, denominated as the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," as amended, is apparently identical to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended. The Internal Revenue Code of 1954 was enacted as positive law (on August 16, 1954), and was also codified as title 26 of the United States Code.
The designation of a particular title of the Code as "positive" or "non-positive" law usually has little practical significance, as there are very few substantive variances between the texts of statutes as published in the United States Code and the texts of the same statutes in the United States Statutes at Large.
Philosophy of law | Legal terms
Positiv ret | Positives Recht | Positiivne õigus | Derecho positivo | Droit positif | Diritto positivo | 実定法 | Direito positivo
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"Positive law".
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