The Immense Power of Judges in the United Kingdom

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The statement made above is true to a certain extent. The legal system in the United Kingdom is mainly based on The Doctrine of the Separation of Powers, which is written in the 18th century by a French philosopher called Montesquieu. Montesquieu, believed that in order to have a ‘fair’ legal system, the functions should be divided into 3 different bodies of power in a state. This was to prevent absolute power in either one person or a body of people. He believed that by giving one person or a body of people absolute power the state would be in danger of people having the ability to abuse this power and it would eventually lead to a dictatorship. To ensure that this would not happen, he suggested to separate the functions into three different bodies; the executive (government), legislature (parliament) and the Judiciary.

Theoretically the powers in Britain are generally well separated with each body being in charge of a different aspect. The executive (government) is in charge of making and proposing policies as to which laws should be brought in, the legislature (parliament) is put in charge of passing the laws proposed by the executive and bring them into effect, and the Judiciary is in charge of interpreting the meaning of these laws and apply these laws in court. In reality, however, these powers seem to overlap with each other quite often. The process of making the law is through passing Acts of Parliament and by use of delegated legislation. Judges use these acts to judge cases and apply it in court. However, nowadays, judges do not only apply these acts, but are also able to ‘make law’ themselves by using the doctrine of judicial precedent and statutory interpretation.

The doctrine of judicial precedent is the process ...

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...an lead to miss-interpretation of the act or legislation. It can result into laws being uncertain to different cases and can also lead to unjust decisions being ruled. With rules such as the literal rule, this interpretation may lead to an absurd result Re Sigsworth (1935).

To conclude, judges are found to be usurping the legislative function to a certain extent, as they do have to ability to adjust and create law. This however, does not necessarily mean that it has a negative effect on the legal system in the UK. As discussed above, the interpretation of statues by judges has both its negative and positive effects. Without the interpretation of judges there would be the assumption that every Act is perfectly drafted, when in fact, most Acts are not. Some Acts have large gaps where words are used in broad terms, this leaves the judges to fill these gaps themselves

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