"give the words their
ordinary, natural meaning
from a dictionary of the
time when the statute
was written" - Lord Reid
"if the words of the Act are clear,
you must follow them, even
though they lead to a manifest
absurdity" - Lord Esher
Advantages
Respects Parliamentary
Sovereignty - elected and
therefore democratic
Fits with the Separation of
Powers, gives judges a restricted
role, restricts judicial bias
Highlights problematic areas to
Parliament who can make changes
e.g Fisher V Bell (direct change)
Allows for
consistency and
a predictable
outcome which
aids lawyers
ability to advise
clients
Disadvantages
Does not always give effect to
Parliament's intentions, can
cause absurd results e.g
Cheeseman e.g Fisher V Bell
Unjust results e.g
LNER V Berriman
Causes problems where there
are ambiguities or broad terms
Cases
Fisher V Bell - the restriction
of offensive weapons Act
1959 which made it an
offence to 'sell or offer for
sale'. The judge applied the
literal rule and stated that the
flick knives sitting in the
window were not on being
physically sold, and therefore
he was found not guilty.
LNER V Berriman - Claimant wanted
compensation for the death of those
'relaying' or 'repairing' the track. The literal
rule found that the claimant's husband was
'maintaining' the track, and therefore the
defendant was found not liable.
Cheeseman - charged with performing a
private act to the 'annoyance of passengers'. A
dictionary of the time of the act stated that a
passenger was someone passing through, and
since the police stationed there were not, the
defendant was found not guilty.
Whitely V Chappell - charged with 'impersonating any
person who was entitled to vote'. The literal approach was
applied and the defendant was acquitted as the individual
he was impersonating was deceased and could not vote.
The purposive approach
Advantages
Allows for a fair result
e.g compare
Berriman and
Cotlman
Allows the law to develop and cope with
unforeseen situations e.g Quintavalle
Creates
consistency across
countries (EU Laws)
Definitions
"seeks to give effect to the true purpose
of the legislation" - Lord Griffiths
Disadvantages
Infringes
Separation
of Powers
Judges become law makers e.g Fitzpatrick
Gives judges too
much power
Scope for
judicial bias
It is inconsistently applied,
makes it difficult for lawyers
to predict the outcome
Cases
Cotlman V Bibby Tankers; employers
should be liable for death as a result of
"defective equipment", equipment
defined as aircraft, vehicle or clothing,
judge read the list as if including ships,
the employer was found to be liable.
Quintavalle; offence to experiment
"after fertilisation has occurred",
judge ignored the word 'fertilised'
and the experiments were stopped.
Fitzpatrick V Sterling Housing; partner of deceased could
remain living in the house if "married", homosexuals were
not offered the option to marry, judge allowed the tenant
to remain living in the house.
The golden rule
Advantages
Avoids absurdity e,g R V Allen
Most likely to achieve
Parliament's intentions
Errors can be corrected immediately e.g Alder V George
Respects judges' constitutional role as it limits them
Disadvantages
Open to judicial bias as
judges can decide what
constitutes as 'absurd'
Uncertain outcome, inability for lawyers
to advise clients e.g Fisher V Bell
Broad allows for judges to change meaning
of Parliament's words, undemocratic and
unelected e.g Sigswoth policy decision
Definitions
"giving the words their ordinary
significance unless when applied
they produce an inconsistency
or an absurdity" - Lord Blackburn
Narrow approach; applied when the
word or phrase is capable of more than
one meaning, allows the judge to chose
the meaning that avoids an absurdity
Broad approach; applied
when the literal
meaning would cause an
absurdity, the court will
modify the meaning to
avoid an absurdity
"if the words of the Act
have several meanings,
you can chose between
those, but beyond that
you cannot go" - Lord Reid
Cases
R V Allen; offence to marry if already married,
marry had two meanings, defendant found guilty
Alder V George; defendant was trespassing on a military base, the meaning of vicinity
was changed to include 'in' as well as 'nearby or around', defendant found guilty
Sigsworth; murdered his mother, he was the "sole
issues" and therefore was entitled to her house, court
changed the Act, making it so that only the next of kin
can inherit the estate if they weren't the murder
The mischief rule
Disadvantages
Infringes
Separation
of
Powers
Judges go beyond
constitutional role
e.g RNC V DHSS
Discovering
mischief is
not always
easy
Creates
Retrospective
law e.g Smith V
Hughes
Inconsistencies
can arise
Advantages
Avoids absurd
outcomes e.g
Berriman
Promotes flexibility, allows
the law to stay up to date
e.g RNC V DHSS
Law is applied
in the way that
Parliament
intended e.g
Corkey V
Carpenter
Hayden's case rules
What was the common
rule before the act?
What was the mischief that the
common law did not provide?
What was the remedy that Parliament
passed to cure the mischief?
Lord Diplock
The mischief must be seen within the Act
Parliament obviously
overlooked the problem
The words required to be added could be
identified with a high degree of certainty
Cases
RNC V DHSS; offence
for anyone other
than "medical
professionals to
preform an abortion,
mischief was
backstreet abortions
(death, exploitation
and infections), judge
read it as 'medically
trained staff' and
therefore nurses
were allowed to
provide abortions.
Corkey V Carpenter; offence to
be in charge of a "carriage" while
drunk, despite a bike not
technically being a carriage, the
judge changed the meaning to
include bikes, mischief was
putting yourself and other road
uses at risk of harm.
Smith V Hughes; charged
with soliciting in a
public place, despite
soliciting from an open
bedroom window the
defendants were found
guilty.