Statutory Interpretation - Paper 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four rules of statutory interpretation?

A

Literal, Golden, Mischief, Purposive

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2
Q

Define the literal rule

A

Judges give words their plain, ordinary, literal meaning, even if it leads to an absurd outcome

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3
Q

What is the key case for the literal rule?

A

Cheeseman v DPP

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4
Q

Which Act of Parliament was interpreted in Cheeseman, and which word did the judge look up in the dictionary?

A

The Town & Police Clauses Act 1847 was interpreted, and the word ‘passengers’ was looked up in the dictionary

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5
Q

What was the ruling in Cheeseman?

A

Police were not passengers because they were stationed in the toilets and not literally passing by or through

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6
Q

What are the main advantages of the literal rule?

A

It respects parliamentary supremacy, and is easy to apply and predictable

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7
Q

What are the main disadvantages of the literal rule?

A

Words can have more than one meaning, and it can lead to unfair and unjust decisions

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8
Q

Define the golden rule

A

Starts by using the literal rule, but if it would lead to an absurd result, the golden rule can be used to avoid that result

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9
Q

What are the two approaches of the golden rule?

A

Narrow and broad/wide approaches

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10
Q

Explain the narrow approach of the golden rule

A

Where a word has more than one meaning, courts can choose which meaning to follow

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11
Q

What was the decision in R v Allen

A

‘Marry’ meant to be legally married to someone, or to go through a marriage ceremony. The court chose the second meaning

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12
Q

Explain the broad approach of the golden rule

A

Words have one meaning but following that meaning would lead to a repugnant situation, so the golden rule is used to avoid that situation

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13
Q

What is the key case for the broad approach of the golden rule?

A

Re Sigsworth

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14
Q

Define the mischief rule

A

Looks at why Parliament passed the legislation, what was the mischief / problem / gap in the law they were trying to remedy

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15
Q

Which case established the mischief rule?

A

Heydon’s Case in 1584

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16
Q

What was the decision in Smith v Hughes?

A

It was illegal for prostitutes to solicit ‘on the street,’ she wasn’t literally doing this but the Street Offences Act had been passed to remedy the behaviour of harassing men for their services

17
Q

Explain the purposive approach

A

It looks at what Parliament intended, the purpose behind the Act

18
Q

Which two types of law is the purposive approach always used to interpret?

A

EU law and human rights law

19
Q

What is the key case for the purposive approach?

A

Royal College of Nursing v DHSS

20
Q

Which Act did the judge interpret in the RCN v DHSS case?

A

Abortion Act 1967

21
Q

What was the ruling in RCN v DHSS?

A

The purpose of the Abortion Act was to prevent dangerous backstreet abortions, so nurses were allowed to perform them as they could do it safely

22
Q

What are intrinsic aids?

A

Things inside the Act which may assist a judge in finding the meaning of certain words

23
Q

Give four examples of intrinsic aids

A

Short title, long title, interpretation section, preamble

24
Q

What are extrinsic aids?

A

Things found outside of an Act which may assist the judge in finding the meaning of certain words

25
Q

Give three examples of extrinsic aids

A

Dictionaries of the time, Hansard, Law Commission Reports