Law and Morality

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Defining 'Law'

  • Law = a set of rules + regulations that govern society and 'guide our conduct' (Twinings v Miers)
  • Sir John Hammond - law = body of principles recognised + applied by the state in administration of justice
  • Complience w/law = compulsory
  • Governs all in society
    • Breaches -> sanctions + consequences
  • Can be introduced/changed instantly

Main Theories of Law

  • Legal Positivism
  • Natural Law
  • Salmond
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Legal Positivism

  • ANY LAW IS VALID, PROVIDED THAT IT IS MADE IN THE PROPER WAY (Wednesbury Unreasonableness)
    • Moral content irrelevant to validity of law
  • Believe in seperation of law + morality

John Austin - Command Theory

  • Argued law = command from sovereign
    • distinguishable from other commanders (e.g. God)
  • Reinforced by availability of sanction
  • Laws = orders backed by threats

HLA Hart

  • Law = absolute + should be followed regardless of moral content
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Natural Law

  • LAW COMES FROM HIGHER MORAL AUTHORITY
  • validity of man-made laws depend on compatibility w/higher moral authority
    • Law + morals coincide
  • In the extreme, would say that legal rules that don't conform to moral standards shouldn't be obeyed

Thomas Acquinas - 13th Century Philosipher

  • Natural Law from eternal law - implanted in us by God as part of our nature
  • Eternal law governs everything in universe
    • Inc general moral rules of conduct in humans

Lon Luvois Fuller

  • Defended positivism + Criticised Hart's view on positivism
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Salmond's Definition

  • Law = 'the body of principles recognised and applied by the state in the administration of justice'
    • LAW = RULES RECOGNISED + ACTED UPON BY COURTS
  • Laws = laws because courts enforce them
  • Law = tool/instrument of justice
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Morals

  • Phil Harris definition - 'a set of beliefs, values, principles and standards of behaviour'
  • Morality generally concerned w/beliefs -> often religious
  • Everyone has moral code of acceptable/unacceptable behaviour
  • Not enforced by the state
    • Instead through social condemnation
  • Can be debated
  • Changes in moral attitudes change gradually - e.g. view on homosexuality
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Relationship Between Law and Morals

  • Both legal rules + morals = normative
    • Specify what should/should not be done + mark boundries of acceptable/unacceptable conduct
  • Many rules + regs are both laws + morals

Salmond's Interlocking Circles

  • Legal Deviation
    • SL
    • Driving Offences
  • Moral Deviation
    • Tax Planning
    • Gamling - no contract (Appleson v Littlewood Pools)
    • Adultery
    • Swearing
  • Coincidence of Law + Morals
    • Murder
    • Theft, burglary, robbery
    • ****
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Areas Where Law + Morals Coincide

  • Intersection w/coinciding of law + morals = primary law
  • Traced back to ten commandments
  • E.g. murder, R4PE, OAP
    • Shows close proximity of law + morals
      • Violate both
  • Arguably comes from natural law perspective
    • Duty to life bestowed from higher authority

Marital ****

  • Law slow to catch up w/contemporary moral standards
  • R v R (1991) - HL ruled non-consensual sex between married couple = ****

Abortion

  • Law influenced morals
  • Private Member's Bill (David Steele) introduced to stop backstreet abortions
  • Since passing, attitudes towards abortion have changed
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Areas where Law + Morals Deviate

Laws Serving Utalitarian Functions

  • Traffic offences - Obstructing public highways
  • SL - Callow v Tilstone
  • Tesco v Natrass - mislabling goods for sale

Statutory Interpretation

  • Cheeseman - court used literal rule to interpret 'passenger' and 'street'
    • held to be not guilty when it was morally wrong
  • Fisher v Bell - Immoral actions found not guilty due to use of literal rule

Pluralistic Society

  • Harder for law to take a moral stance - law made on principles, rather than morals
  • Why moral issues such as adultery, infidelity, sex before marriage are not legislated against, as some would like to see
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Areas of Deviation Cont

Matching Law + Morals

  • Everyone has different moral codes + see diferent things as unnaceptable
  • Law on abortion still contraversial
    • Women's groups say women should have right to choose, other's argue it's child's right to life

Bland - Limited Euthanasia

  • Ruled that medical staff could withdraw feeding tubes of a patient who could breathe unaided but in persistant vegatative state
  • Withdraw feeding allowed -> causing him to die
    • Many find this immoral - denies sanctity of life

R v Brwn and Others / R v Wilson

  • Example of law being used to regulate what is morally acceptable
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Areas Where Boundary = Unclear

  • 2001 Scotland Yard Raid of gallary showing photographer's naked children
    • Against Protection of the Children Act 1978
    • CPS decided not to prosecute
      • Demonstration of Salmond - LAW ONLY BECOMES LAW IN ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE

Gibson v Sylveur (1991)

  • Foetus earings
  • Argument 1) this has no place in moral society + conviction upheld moral values
  • Argument 2) artist claimed this was a statement about the casual nature of abortions - would be morally wrong to not show it

R v Knuller (1973)

  • Ds convicted of inviting readers to engage in homosexual acts
  • For offence to succed, must be 'lewd,disgusting and offencsive'
  • Attitudes towards homosexuality have changed
  • Outraging Public decency (Offence D convicted of) still exists - LC's 'Conspiracy and Criminal Law Reform (1976)': offence should be repealed
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Should the Law Seek to Uphold Moral Principles

  • Depends on PoV
  • Natural lawyers - yes
    • Aristotle + Thomas Acquinas believe that  (in conflict between man-made and divine law), divine law should be upheld
    • Law not simply uphold morality, but stems from it
  • Positivists - no
    • Believe natural law is 'nonsense upon stilts'

Martin Luther King Jr

  • Wrote letter discussing religious + moral foundations of law
  • Talked about differences between just and unjust laws
  • 'a just law is a man-made code that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law'
  • Citing Thomas Acquinas - any law that degrades human personality = unjust
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Should Law Seek Uphold Principles Cont

Criticism of natural law + MLK Jr

  • WHOSE MORALS SHOULD BE UPHELD
    • Upholding one group's morals -> disrespecting another's
    • Conforming to mainstream -> infringing on belief's of those who don't fit mainstream
      • Seen in Brown, Bland, Gibson and Sylveur, Knuller
    • Leaves one conclusion -> law should take positivist approach + distance from morality

Criticism of Positivist Stance

  • decisions in Cheeseman, Fisher v Bell = unsatisfactory - ignored citizens' rights to go about business w/out fear of prosecution
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Should Law Seek Uphold Principles Cont

Gillick Complex - Positivist

  • Whether child under 16 can consent to medical treatment w/out need for parental permission
  • Mrs Gillick - this would encourage sex w/minor b/cos underage girls could get abortion w/out parental knowledge
  • HL Dilema:
    • Parent consent = required -> increase in teen pregnancies
    • Parent consent = not required -> encourages underage sex
  • Eventually, court took pragmatic (positivistic ) approach+ only concerned itself w/whether a minor is physically capable of consenting

Hamilton - Moral Outrage

  • D convicted of secretly filming up women's skirts
  • Law clear that this offence only satisfied if at least one other perosn could see act
    • Nobody but D saw it
      • Conviction still upheld: Ruling obviously reflecting moral values
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Wolfenden Investigation - Hart/Devlin Debate

Devlin

  • Law w/out morality 'destroys freedom of conscience and is the paved road to tyranny'
  • Law must respect/reinforce moral norms to keep society from unravelling
    • shared morality = necessary for survival of society

Criticisms

  • 'Society' undefined + is a broad term
  • 'common morality' = questionable -> society = pluralistic
  • Little evidence society would unrevel

Hart

  • warned against 'populism' - morality of few of population not justification for preventing people doing what they want
  • Undesirable, Unnecessary, morally unacceptable to impose morality - infringes on rights of individuals
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Conclusion

  • Devlin's focus = majority's view at time
  • Hart's view = more humanistic
  • Law = competent at adapting to shifts in moral attitudes - Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013
  • Progress will always offend shared moral beliefs of some communities
  • Law + morality -> a very close relationship - seen in primary law
  • Also areas where diverge + grey areas (abortions)
  • Necessary to uphold moral values but done so minorities don't suffer
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