Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Separation of Powers (Public Law )
The earliest government which is kingship as we all know of during  nary(prenominal)mandy  periods have inevitably becomes corrupt and passes into tyranny. The  vanquish men in the community then unseat the tyrant and  be an aristocracy. But their descendants are corrupted by the opportunity to  meet their desires and so become oligarchs. Thereupon the community overthrows the oligarchy and institutes a democracy. Next, the people are  quick by evil leaders, thus the end of the people brings in a  sovereign once more.It is recommended that the  opening of the  insularity of powers grew out of the older theory of mixed monarchy as expressed by the Greek historian of capital of Italy Polybius whose idea was simple. Instead of having an aristocracy, monarchy or democracy, a combination of  whatever  2 of these forms of government would suffice to break away from this vicious cycle. However, the theory of the  insularity of powers as put forward by Montesquieu deals with the  subdivisi g   eniuss of government  quite than the  cause of government. Lord Acton believed that Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.Therefore, in  assign to eradicate the corruption of absolute power, Montesquieu identified lead branches of government  amongst which power should be allocated and  disciplined the   decision maker director which takes action to implement the law,  obtain the nation, conduct foreign affairs and administer internal policies the legislative which  ease ups law, and the  judicatory which applies the law to determine disputes and punish criminals. According to the  precept of the  judicial separation of powers, the  executive director can non make law.Neither can the legislative determine disputes or any of the  trinity branches  doing the power of the other. Nor can any  unity person be a member of any  both of the branches. This is in order to  cling to our emancipation as according to Montesquieu When the legislative and executive powers a   re  linked in the same person, or in the same body of magistrates, thither can be no  self-reliance  in that location is no liberty if the powers of judging is not separated from the legislative and executive there would be an end to everything, if the same man or the same body ere to exercise those three powers. Indeed that  energy be true and  instead desircapable. To  slay a pure separation of powers in theory is feasible though in practice  thus far is almost impossible. The closest  constitutive(a) arrangements to the doctrine of separation of powers are found in the United States of America, is where the Congress is elected separately from the President, the President can veto legislation passed from Congress if  nonpareil third of the house agrees with him and the  tyrannical  tap can declare the acts non  native of both Congress and President.The constitution of the United States is arranged in such(prenominal) a way as to allow a complex  carcass of checks and balances  min   gled with the three branches of government  eon maintaining a clear separation of powers between them. However on the other side of the Atlantic  hitherto ,perhaps due to the history of the evolution of the British constitution and the absence of a codified constitutional text  the emphasis are more on checks and balances rather than a pure separation of powers.Yet, according to Hilaire Barnett, the doctrine of the separation of powers runs like a thread throughout the constitution of the United Kingdom. It might be true that the doctrine of the separation of powers is deeply deep-rooted in our constitutional thought and tradition, but our constitutional arrangements and the implementation of these three powers in practice is far from separate. Sir Ivor Jennings interprets the doctrine of the separation of powers as suggesting that neither branch should execute the powers of the other, not that the three branches should not have any  specify over each other.Sir William Blackstone se   ems to agree to  well-nigh extend in suggesting that a complete separation of powers may lead to the dominance of the executive by the legislature. In my  mint it is believed it overlaps between the three branches may be illustrated by the position of Lord Chancellor who is a member of the cabinet while being the head of the  judicial system and  too chairs the  kin of Lords when they sit as legislature. The role of the Lord Chancellor is now being reformed by the  temperamental  reform Act 2005 to conform to the theory of the separation of powers.However, some see his role as a voice on beone-half of the judiciary and pivotal in order to preserve the  license of the judicial branch. It is to a fault argued that Lord Chancellor serves as a communicative bridge between the judiciary and the executive, especially when in times of pressure between the two branches. Another part being reformed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 is the relocation of the House of Lords.Some have been i   n doubt however that these reforms are  mere(prenominal)ly formal by creating a Supreme Court only so that the House of Lords may be physically separate from the legislative body, thus one should also take into account that it is not easy to change a well establish body  nightlong as it takes time. For instance the Human Rights Act itself took two years to  alone come in to effect after the royal assent or the popular quote the Rome was not built in a day could be  employ here.The matters on  dissembles to the change of the House of Lords to Supreme Court are far from being the only overlaps between the three branches of government. The executive and legislature are seen as a close union,  well a complete fusion of the executive and legislative and this influence of which Baghot views as the efficient secret of the English constitution. Meanwhile, Lord Halisham suggests that the current electoral  butt against which generally returns a government with a large majority of  sit in  pa   rliament, contributes to an electoral dictatorship.It might be argued that this close union is  on the button what Montesquieu warned us against as he states When the legislative and executive powers are  fall in in the same person, or in the same body of magistrates, there can be no liberty because apprehensions may arise, lest the same monarch or senate should enact tyrannical laws, to execute them in a tyrannical manner.  The independence of the judiciary however seems to be deeply rooted in our constitution. It is not easy to dismiss a judge and by  host the executive does not criticise the judiciary.Some have argued that the constitutional reform jeopardises this independence due to the introduction of appointing commissions which leaves room for political selection rather than selecting  decide on merit. Nonetheless, the judicial branch seems to be not only autonomous, it seems to also perform the  pop offs of the other branches as although the judiciary is only supposed to  d   rill the law, every new meaning conferred on a word, every  employment of a rule to a new situation, whether by way of statutory interpretation or under common law, creates new law.This very function of the judiciary is clearly illustrated by the case of Magor and St. Mellons Rural District Council v Newport Corporation (1965) where Lord Dennings answer to the accusation of Lord Simond of naked  trespass of the legislative function was The court, having discovered the intention of fantan and Ministers too, must proceed to  take away in the gaps. What the legislature has not written, the court must write. Barnett sees this as a constitutional partnership between the legislative and judiciary as when judges make law, Parliament may tactically approve by not interfering with it. When Parliament disagrees however, as it did when the House of Lords awarded compensation for the properties lost in Burmatic Oil v Lord Advocate (1965), Parliament overrules the decision  in this case by enact   ing the War Damage Act 1965. The relationship between the judiciary and the executive seems more controversial in the light of the doctrine of separation of powers.This relationship may be shown by the inability of the judiciary to punish a Minister of the Crown as demonstrated in M v  infrastructure Office 1994, In which an asylum seeker who was refused asylum applied for a judicial  fall over which he failed. Later, he was advised by his lawyer to make another request for a judicial review on different and stronger grounds while his deportation was in half an hour. The only judge present on that afternoon was Garland J. who  perceive Ms emergency application and asked for M to not be deported until the application could be fully heard nonetheless Ms flight took off.Ms lawyers initiated  disdain proceedings against the Home Secretary for ignoring the will of the court. This case therefore dealt mainly with whether the courts have any  jurisdiction to  run a risk a minister of the     summit in contempt of the court, which is a criminal offence. Simon Brown J, the judge who heard the case, stated  indisposed(p) though any court must be to proclaim the  top off beyond the reach of its ultimate coercive jurisdiction, it is, I believe, difficult to regard this as a black day for the rule of law or for the liberty of the subject.The court is not abrogating an historic responsibility for the control of executive government. Rather, it is recognising that when it comes to the enforcement of its decisions the relationship between the executive and the judiciary must, in the end, be one of trust. The word Trust Whatever happened to power tends to corrupt. However, the ruling was overruled by the House of Lords which concluded, after thirty pages, that while the court has no jurisdiction to find the crown itself in contempt of the court, they have the power to do so for a servant of the crown.However, in the case of a minister of the crown, a mere finding should suffice a   s the court has no jurisdiction otherwise. Lord Wolf, who drafted the verdict, states that the crowns relationship with the courts does not depend on coercion hence  confirmative Simon Brown Js statement that the relationship between the crown and the court is of mere trust. When evaluating the British constitution it would be unwise to ignore the history by which it came to be. It should firstly be noted hat these constitutional arrangements were established one hundred years before Montesquieu wrote The Spirit of Laws, in a time of tension between Parliament and the Crown. Although Montesquieu was absent, there was no lack of  exalted thinkers such as Thomas Hobbes and John Locke. According to WB Gwyn no-one has been able to find an explicit statement of the separation of powers before it was discussed in the  writings of  ordinal  degree centigrade Englishmen. Apart from that the Judicial Review plays a  immense task in keeping the checks and balance of the executive by the judic   iary.However, the seventeenth century doctrine of the separation of powers was more interested with accountability rather than preserving liberty. Parliament in those early days was keen to hold ministers of the crown under scrutiny, which is perhaps where the idea of ministerial responsibility comes from. It would therefore be safe to suggest that the separation of powers in the British constitution do not derive from the mixed monarchy theory as that is more concerned with the preservation and stability of the ruler rather than the quality of the government.Nor are these constitutional arrangements based on Montesquieus doctrine of separation of powers, although he popularised the term. Thus the  trope of the separation of powers in Britain are based on the seventeen century style separation of powers, which tries to hold a balance between the crown and parliament and allows for power to be used to check on the other powers rather than a formal and complete separation of the three    branches in my view which is currently in place.Bibliography * Francis D Wormuth, The Origins of Modern Constitutionalism (New York Harpers, 1949) * MJC Ville , Constitutionalism and the Separation of Powers (Indianapolis 1998 2nd Edition) * Montesquieu, The Sprit of Laws , Translated and  redact by Anne Cohler, Basia Miller, Harold Stone. (New York Cambridge University Press, 1989) * Barnett, Hilaire, Constitutional and administrative Law, 6th Ed( Routledge- Cavendish) * Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765-1769) Cambridge Law  ledger Volume * Bagehot, The English Constitution * http//www. goodreads. com/story/show/31602-separation-of-powers * http//www. megaessays. com/viewpaper/47362. html * http//www. law-essays-uk. com/resources/revision-area/administrative-law/cases/separation-powers-doctrine. php   1 . Francis D Wormuth, The Origins of Modern Constitutionalism (New York Harpers, 1949) 22  2 .MJC Ville , Constitutionalism and the Separation of Powers (Indianapolis 1998 2   nd Edition) 36  3 . Montesquieu, The Sprit of Laws , Translated and edited by Anne Cohler, Basia Miller, Harold Stone. (New York Cambridge University Press, 1989)  4 . The Constitution of United States of America,  obligate II,III  5 . Barnett, Hilaire, Constitutional and Administrative Law, 6th Ed( Routledge- Cavendish) 105  6 . Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765-1769), Volume 1  7 . 17-330, Cambridge Law Journal Volume 63, No. 2  8 . Bagehot, The English Constitution ,1867 ,67  9 . Bagehot, The English Constitution ,1867,68  10 . Albert Venn Dicey, John Humprey Carlile Moris, Dicey and Moris on the Conflicts of Laws, 129  11 . Barnett, Hilaire, Constitutional and Administrative Law  12 . Ibid  13 . Gwyn, W. B,The Meaning of the Separation of Powers ,The Hague Martinus Nijhoff, (1965),9  14 . Sarah  groom , Regicide and Republicanism, Edinburgh University Press, 13-14  
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