Lecture 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Nature of legal interpretation

A

= function of discovering and expounding the inteded signification* of a legal text* in order to apply that signification to set legal cases.
- signification= norm= the behaviour that is expressed by the legal rule
- legal text= disposition= the text the law uses to provide the rule

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2
Q

Types of interpretations (clear and proper meaning, logical connection, systematical connection, original legislative system):

A
  • clear and proper meaning= defining the litteral meaning of the words written down to then elaborate them into legal language
  • logical connection= the legal text is interpreted logically based on the practical reason for which is has been produced
  • systematical connection= the meaning of law is primarly determined by considering it in its statutory or legal context
  • original legislative will= what the lawmaker wanted to express through the writing of the legal rule= identifying what the political body’s actual intentions were when writing the legal rule (= best way of interpretation)– anachronism= acts’ interpretations can remain the same as they were
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3
Q

Types of interpretation (pursuant to the Connection, pursuant to the European Union Law, authentic):

A
  • pursuant to the Constitution: in case of several different interpretations the one that is closer to the Constitution is the best (most coherent)
  • pursuant to the EU Law or ECHR: same as for the Constitution (obv worth only in countries in the EU)
  • authentic: comes from the same author of the law; interpretation given byt the body that approved the law. No interpretation: 1. leaving bendness on the legal rule; 2. to adopt an authentic interpretation, procedures are required
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4
Q

Interpreters of law

A
  • judges= they identify the principles of law; possess the capability of interpreting the law
  • law professors: may provide an interpretation used by the judges
  • public administration
  • the same legislative brach that provided the law (interpretazione autentica)
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5
Q

Lacuna

A

= a “gap” or lack of a piece of law for a case wherefor there’s no proper rule to be applied

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6
Q

Lacuna in Common and Civil Law

A
  • Common Law: the judge is vested with the power to create a new rule (in case there’s no precise law) that will become a precedent for future cases
  • Civil Law: the judge must express e a verdict by finding the rule in the statutory law. Ways of search:
    1. analogia legis= the rule in found in the most similar statutory disposition
    2. analogia iuris= the rule is found in the general principels of the Constitution
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7
Q

Antinomia

A

= contrast or incompatibility between two or more laws, coming from different sources of law, that are all applicable to a case

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8
Q

Criteria in case of an Antinomia

A
  • Chronological Criterion (repeal): the newest law repeals the old one
  • Hierarchical Criterion (annulment): the strongest law, following the hierachy of the sources of law: constitutional, primary= from the Parliament, secondary= regulations and executive acts, tertiary= customs and conventions
  • Criterion of Specialisation (co-application): contrast between general and particular– wins the general one although the specific one remains in force
  • Criterion of Attribution/Competence (non-application): based on “matter” of attributed legislative power
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