RATIO DECIDENDI

ratio decidendi (ray-shee-oh des-<<schwa>>-den-dI), n.[Latin “the reason for deciding”] 1.

The principle or rule of law on which a court’s decision is founded <many poorly written judicial

opinions do not contain a clearly ascertainable ratio decidendi>.2. The rule of law on which a later

court thinks that a previous court founded its decision; a general rule without which a case must

have been decided otherwise <this opinion recognizes the Supreme Court’s ratio decidendi in the

school desegregation cases>. — Often shortened to ratio. Pl. rationes decidendi (ray-shee-oh-neez

des-<<schwa>>-den-dI). Cf. OBITER DICTUM; HOLDING(1).

“The phrase ‘the ratio decidendi of a case’ is slightly ambiguous. It may mean either (1) the

rule that the judge who decided the case intended to lay down and apply to the facts, or (2) the rule

that a later court concedes him to have had the power to lay down.” Glanville Williams, Learning

the Law 75 (11th ed. 1982).

“There are … two steps involved in the ascertainment of the ratio decidendi…. First, it is

necessary to determine all the facts of the case as seen by the judge; secondly, it is necessary to

discover which of those facts were treated as material by the judge.” Rupert Cross & J.W. Harris,

Precedent in English Law 65–66 (4th ed. 1991). [Blacks Law 8th]