Judicial norm
The Code of Conduct is a code of conduct for judging and enforcing conduct that is contrary to social norms or for judging the contention of rights and obligations and the nature of liability. Most of the modern code is a court of this kind, and a judge who makes this judgment as a criterion for imposing certain sanctions on a person who has acted under certain conditions applies. In this respect, the rules of the trial are different from the rules of conduct that require certain acts and omissions. It is because it is the rule of law that the text of the Covenant is difficult for ordinary people other than legal experts. However, even if it is a trial rule, it presupposes a certain code of conduct and is only expressed as a rule when a judge imposes sanctions on anti-conduct normative acts. In complex modern societies, which still need to maintain the definition of social order and human relationships, even with legal enforcement, these kinds of judicial norms have become the majority of laws.