Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2025
Scholarship on the role of precedents and precedential reasoning in law has tended to focus on questions concerning a commitment to stare decisis and the nature of analogy and justification. This chapter, by contrast, examines the use of rhetorical and formal techniques to convey an opinion’s precedential status. Lord Mansfield, Chief Justice of the Court of King’s Bench from 1756 to 1788, used a range of such techniques to indicate that he was changing the law and to signal that a given decision should govern future cases. His law reporter, James Burrow, credited as the creator of the headnote, complemented these efforts through his use of typography and page layout. Burrow’s ideas about clearer, fuller, and more focused reporting of legal decisions probably owed a considerable amount to his long-standing involvement with the Royal Society, whose published Transactions exhibit a series of generic changes, anticipating in some respects those that Burrow would adopt.
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