Statutory interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

What is statutory interpretation?

A

When judges try of interpret the wording of the act when trying to apply the law.

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2
Q

Why do statutes need to be interpreted?

A
  1. Mistakes- by people who write them up.
    (Fisher V Bell)
  2. Words can change meaning over time.
    (Cheeseman V DPP)
  3. Circumstances can change so words no longer appropriate.
    (Royal College of nursing V DHSS)
  4. Act may use broad terms instead of a specific word.
    ( Brock V DPP)
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3
Q

What are the four main rules?

A
  1. Literal
  2. Golden
  3. Mischief
  4. Purposive
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4
Q

What is the literal rule?

A

Judges take the ordinary and natural meaning of the word, respects parliamentary sovereignty and creates consistency.

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5
Q

What happened in Fisher and Bell?

A

Restriction of offensive weapons act passed to stop sale/ use of flick knives, D had a flick knife for sale in window. A shop display is not an offer for sale but invitation to treat.
- He was acquitted but went against what the act wanted so absurd result.

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6
Q

What is the golden rule?

A

Extension of the literal rule when it gives an absurd result then judge can alter the words to produce desired outcome.

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7
Q

What are the two types of golden rule?

A
  1. Narrow rule- when word has several meanings pick the meaning which makes sense.
  2. Wide rule- judge understands the meaning but doesn’t use it as creates an absurd result.
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8
Q

What happened in Allen?

A

Offence to marry when already married. Marry had 2 meanings.
A) Legally married
B) Ceremony
- Used first meaning and found him guilty.
(Narrow rule)

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9
Q

What happened in Re Sigworth?

A

Property of dead person goes to next of kin, he killed his mother.
- Didn’t want property to go to him so he used the wide approach so this didn’t happen.

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10
Q

What should a judge consider when using mischief rule?

A
  1. What was common law before the act?
  2. What was the problem with that law?
  3. What remedy were parliament trying to provide?
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11
Q

What does the mischief rule allow?

A
  • Rule was created in Heydon’s case and gives the judge the most flexibility when deciding what parliament wanted to stop.
  • They can ignore the wording of the act to fin result they want.
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12
Q

What happened in Smith and Hughes?

A

Offence for prostitutes to loiter in streets or public places, the prostitutes were in windows.
- Guilty as the point of the act was to stop prostitutes harassing people which they still were.
(Mischief)

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13
Q

What is the purposive approach?

A
  • Looks for the ‘purpose’ of an act.
  • Don’t just look back at what the act wanted to put right, but look at what parliament wanted to achieve.
  • When using this the judge will usually look outside of the act to find parliament’s true intentions.
    (R V Registrar-General)
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14
Q

What are aids to interpretation?

A

Help the judge find out what the statute means, helps them further understand the law.

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15
Q

What are the three latin rules of language?

A
  1. Edjusdem generis
  2. Expressio unius exlusio alterius
  3. Noscitur a sociis
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16
Q

What is edjusdem generis?

A

States that general words that follow specific words are to be of the same type. At least 2 examples.

17
Q

What is expressio unius exclusio alterius?

A

If the statute specifically states a certain type other similar things are not to be included.

18
Q

What does noscitur a sociis mean?

A

Words draw meaning from the words around them. Its known by the company it keeps.

19
Q

What are intrinsic aids?

A

They are aids which are found inside the act itself to further offer help.

20
Q

Examples of intrinsic aids?

A
  1. Long title- sets out purpose.
  2. Preamble- statement which sets out its purpose.
  3. Marginal notes- explains different sections.
  4. Schedules- detailed explanations at the end.
  5. Interpretation sections- explain key words.
21
Q

What are extrinsic aids?

A

Sources of help which are from outside of the act.

22
Q

Example of extrinsic aids?

A
  1. Hansard- written record of everything that is discussed in parliament.
  2. Explanatory notes- from when the act is passed, gives details on the law.
  3. Dictionaries- from the time the act was passed.
  4. Previous law- use cases from the past to help interpret.