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Denning: The Due Process of Law

This document provides a book review of Lord Denning's latest collection of essays titled "Due Process of Law". The following key points are made: 1. The book discusses Lord Denning's view of the role of judges in ensuring fairness and equity in the legal process. 2. It contains 8 essays on topics related to procedural law and recent developments in family law. 3. Lord Denning advocates for an activist role of judges in shaping the law to adapt to changing times and demands of justice, beyond strict statutory interpretation. 4. The review examines Lord Denning's perspective on the judiciary's involvement in law reform but notes debate around the proper scope of judicial creativity.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
396 views

Denning: The Due Process of Law

This document provides a book review of Lord Denning's latest collection of essays titled "Due Process of Law". The following key points are made: 1. The book discusses Lord Denning's view of the role of judges in ensuring fairness and equity in the legal process. 2. It contains 8 essays on topics related to procedural law and recent developments in family law. 3. Lord Denning advocates for an activist role of judges in shaping the law to adapt to changing times and demands of justice, beyond strict statutory interpretation. 4. The review examines Lord Denning's perspective on the judiciary's involvement in law reform but notes debate around the proper scope of judicial creativity.

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abdur.s.nowshath
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BOOK REVIEWS • REVUE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE 243

Denning: The Due Process of Law , The R t Hon. Lord


Denning, M.R., London: Butterworths, 1980. Pp. 263. $30.00 (cloth).

It has been said th at ju d g es are the g uardians o f the gate o f o rd e re d


society;1 to them belongs the o nerous office o f en su rin g that the
principles o f rig h t dealing according to law are p u rsu e d by private
citizens tow ards each o th er, and tow ards the state and, m ost crucial o f
all, by the State tow ards private citizens. T o them also, on at least o n e o f
the received interp retations, belong two fu rth e r tasks: that o f ensuring
th at the various practical constitutive elem ents o f the legal process are
kept clear and p u re so th at parties may proceed safely and
expeditiously, and th at o f en su rin g that when parties do proceed the
rem edies available are consonant with the d em an d s o f the age and with
those o f ju stice and equity. It is these last two facets o f the judicial office
— g u ard ian sh ip o f the effective and equitable operation o f the legal
process — th at is the subject m atter o f L ord D en n in g ’s latest collection
o f essays, Due Process of Law.

Due Process o f Law , the second o fferin g by the M aster o f the Rolls in
as m any years, is not, as the title m ight lead one to expect, an
exam ination o f the rules o f procedure. T hese, we are told, are fa r too
dull. R ather, in p u rsu it o f his subject-m atter L ord D enning chooses a
m o re im m ediate and readily accessible m edium : the law in which
persons co unt. “So I tell you about the cylinder o f laughing gas; and the
ju d g e who talked to m uch; and the ship which sank w ithout a trace; and
th e wife w ho was d ese rted .”2 T h e orientation th ro u g h o u t is upon the
practical, not upon the bookish subjects tau g h t in the Law Schools o f
Universities. T h e style, tone and o m n ip resen t note o f self-justification
with which all this is served u p will be fam iliar to readers o f last year’s
The Discipline of Law .3 Also fam iliar will be the them atic thread: that
principles o f law d em an d a pragm atic and teleological interp retatio n , an
in terp retatio n which takes into account consequences involving questions
o f equity, social developm ent and the com m on good. It is not surprising
th at the a u th o r wishes both books to be considered as com panion
volumes.

T h e topics chosen fo r inclusion in Due Process of Law are


d eterm in e d , L ord D enning tells us, by his own familiarity with them .
“. . . I have tried to do — w hat the cobbler should do — to stick to his
last — to those topics o f which I have m ost experience.”4 T h e book is
'See H anbury, H. and D. Yardley, English Courts o f Law (Oxford: O xford University Press. 1979), at 126;
see also Perelinan, C. H., Justice New York: Random House, 1967), at 4.

2Denning. at vi.

’London: Butterworths, 1979; see also, (1980) 29 U. V.B.L.J. 275-8.

*Sufna, footnote 2.
244 U.N.B. LAW JO U R N A L • REVUE DE D R O IT U.N.-B.

com prised o f eight essays. T h e topics canvassed are: contem pt o f court;


inquiries into conduct; arrest and search; the M areva injunction;
im m igration law; family law; the d eserted wife’s equity; and the wife’s
sh are in the hom e. T his practically orien ted grab-bag — each o f the
essays, we are told, contains a lesson o f practical im portance — divides
into two groups. T h e first five essays deal, broadly speaking, with the
fair and effective w orking o f the m achinery o f the legal process, while
the latter th ree deal with recent developm ents in the field o f family law,
focusing particularly on Lord D enning’s contributions to m atrim onial
p ro p erty law. T h ro u g h o u t both groups, however, th ere is one unifying
central them e: viz. that the ju d g e as the guardian o f the gate o f o rd e red
society should have sufficient latitude to shape the law in accordance
with the exigencies o f the times and the dem ands o f justice.
For L ord D enning developm ent o f this them e within the context o f
the first g ro u p o f essays is co-extensive with providing an explanation o f
the p h rase d u e process’. In the preface we read: “. . . by d u e process I
m ean the m easures authorized by the law so as to keep the stream s o f
justice p u re: to see that trials are fairly conducted; that arrests and
searches are p ro p erly m ade; that lawful rem edies are readily available;
an d that unnecessary delays are elim inated.”5 T h e Modus operandi used
will be readily recognized by those conversant with The Discipline of Law.
Each essay o p ens with the presentation o f a problem that has faced the
English jud iciary since the Second W orld W ar and proceeds with an
exposition o f the m an n er in which that problem has been solved or
attem p ted to be solved. As is to be expected in a work o f general
interest, em phasis everyw here is not so m uch upon scholarly m inutae
but ra th e r upo n a broad brush presentation o f the central notion that
the genius o f the com m on law lies in its ability to provide fair solutions
to novel and changing dem ands.
An apt instance o f the evolutionary genius o f the com m on law is
fo u n d in the grow th o f the M areva injunction. Until 1975 th ere was no
p ro c ed u re in English Law w hereby a cred ito r before ju d g m e n t could
m ake application fo r an o rd e r restraining his d e b to r from rem oving
p ro p erty outside the jurisdiction o r otherw ise dealing with it. T his
lacuna, which did not exist in eith er civil legal systems o r Am erican Law,
gave wide scope to the sophisticated o r absconding debtor, particularly
u n d e r m o d ern conditions o f banking and travel. T h e re was a clear and
perceived n eed to fill the gap and, as Lord D enning relates the story, he
and his colleagues in the C o u rt o f A ppeal were ready to m eet the
challenge. T h e result was the introduction into English Law o f a
p ro c ed u re sim ilar to the saisie conservatoire o f F rench Law. T h e key
decisions were Nippon Yusen Kaisha v. Karagcorgis 6 and Mareva v.
International Bulkcarriers,1 and both decisions, despite a rebuke from the
slbid., at v.

•[1975] 1 W.L.R. 1093 (Eng. C.A.).

7[1975] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 509 (Eng. C.A.).


BOOK REVIEWS • REVUE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE 245

H ouse o f L ords in The Siskina 8 for the ostensible usurpation by the


C o u rt o f A ppeal o f the legislative process, rem ain good law.

A fu rth e r and m ore widely discussed instance o f the com m on law’s


evolutionary capacity is the subject o f L ord D enning’s final g ro u p o f
essays; viz. recent developm ents in the field o f family law and in
p articu lar in the area o f m atrim onial pro p erty law. T h e story- o f
em ancipation is briefly sum m arized, as is the grow th o f an equitable
principle o f co-ow nership o f all m atrim onial assets. L ord D enning’s
survey includes a review o f both case law and legislation, b u t he leaves
little d o u b t as to which he considers prior. It is developm ent in case law,
we are told, which led the way and which p re p a re d the g ro u n d fo r the
work o f Lady Sum m erskill and the th ird R eport o f the English Law
Com mission on Family Property. In deed L ord D enning’s claim is
stronger. It is ju d g es who led the way. It is to them that we owe these
recent developm ents, for in essential respects it has been they, by which
we are to u n d erstan d particularly the ju d g es o f the C o u rt o f A ppeal,
who have been the pioneers.

By now it should be clear that Lord D enning’s view o f the role o f


the ju d iciary in law reform is in essence an activist one. He states his
position in the preface in a passage which, though lengthy, deserves to
be cited in full:

Many proposals have been made by us in the Court o f Appeal. T im e and


again we bave ventured out on a new line: only to be rebuffed by the House
o f Lords. On the ground that the legislature — advised by this body or that
— can see all round; whereas the judges see only one side. This I dispute.
T h e jud ges have better sight and longer sight than those other bodies:
especially in the practical working o f the law and in the safe-guarding o f
individual freedom . And when it is said that some other body should first
investigate and report I ask: “How long, O Lord (Chancellor), how long?"9

T his passage m ight be characterized as vintage Lord D enning;


certainly it perfectly em bodies the judicial fram e o f m ind that has been
the source o f constant annoyance to constitutional traditionalists and
those o f m ore conservative learning. C ertainly, too, if carried to its
u tterm ost it would lead to a considerable m elding o f the constitutional
functions exercised by the judiciary and the legislature, functions which
all students o f M ontesquieu know' are best kept separate and distinct
from on e an o th er. But m ust we say that ju d g es are to play a role in
shaping legal principles? And as legislation, as opposed to litigation, the
only acceptable m ethod o f law reform ? L ord D enning’s answ er to these
questions is clear and unm istakeable.

Delineation o f the p ro p e r function o f the judiciary in o rd e re d


society, to re tu rn to the point from which we began, is a thorny and
•[1979] A.C. 210 (H.L.).

•Denning, at v-vi.
246 U.N.B. LA W JO U R N A L • REVUE DE D R O IT U.N.-B.

p erh ap s unresolvable question. Some place fo r judicial creativity seems


inevitable in any instance w here a ju d g e has to decide betw een two
com peting tenable argum ents; a ju d g m e n t is not a c o m p u ter p rin t out.
B ut w h eth er it is desirable to go all the way with L ord D e n n in g s view o f
judicial activism, given present ill-defined m ethods o f choosing the
judiciary, seems d o u btful. L ord D enning’s own thirty-six year ca ree r on
the English Bench has been a rem arkable one, and o n e w ell-chronicled
by him self. It is best to leave to history the final verdict on both it and
his own peculiar b ran d o f creative law-making.

CHRISTOPHER P. CURRAN*

*B.A., M.A., (Memorial University of Newfoundland), LL.B. (U.N.B.), M em ber o f the Newfoundland
Bar.

Canadian Mortgage Practice Reporter , Gerald s. Fields


and Bernard Gersham (editors-in-chief), Toronto: Richard DeBoo,
1979. 2 Vols. $225.00 (loose-leaf service).

With the proliferation o f re p o rtin g services reaching the C anadian


legal m arket, the C.anadian Mortgage Practice Reporter would at first glance
a p p e a r to be a priority acquisition for those solicitors engaged in
m ortgage financing. T he title itself would lead one to such a conclusion.
However, it m ight be advisable to consider the adage, “never judge a
book by its cover” an d indeed m ore so w here the initial cost alone
m erely reflects a highly inflationary econom y.

T h e first question one m ight ask is w hether this two volum e series
does, in fact, relate to the practice o f m ortgage law in C anada? Secondly,
to what p art o f the C anadian m arket is the R ep o rter series directed?
T h e questions in them selves m ight a p p e ar trite, if not the inauguration
o f an overly critical review, yet ultim ately the p ractitioner will have to be
the sole judge.

T h e first volum e o f the “R ep o rter” contains the editorial


com m entary, conveniently divided according to topic followed by form s,
p reced en ts an d check lists. Volum e II will eventually contain the
relevant statutes and regulations for both the provincial and federal
jurisdictions. Accordingly, it may be convenient to look at each volum e
separately.

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