The Mischief Rule

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A-Level Law (Statutory Interpretation) Flashcards on The Mischief Rule, created by Lily Gray on 02/12/2013.
Lily Gray
Flashcards by Lily Gray, updated more than 1 year ago
Lily Gray
Created by Lily Gray over 10 years ago
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Question Answer
What is the mischief rule? It allows a court which cannot solve an ambiguity to look at the problem that the Act was designed to resolve.
What must the court decide? 1) What was the law before the statute was passed 2) What problem existed which needed Parliament to step in 3) Which solution Parliament chose in order to solve the problem
Which case best describes the mischief rule? Gorris and Scott Facts - Claimant owned a flock of sheep and made a contract with the defendant to transport the sheep on the deck of his sheep. Statute - St the time 'if you transport live stock on a ship they should be in pens'. Outcome - court said no as statute was unclear, what the statute meant was to stop spread of disease whereas LR would've said yes.
What other case describes the MR? Gardiner v Sevenoaks Facts - About storage of a film (stored in a cave) Statute - Any premises in which you're storing film had to comply with certain regulations. Outcome - Define 'premise' - LR would have said not guilty. MR - courts said the likeliness of films setting a light was high so guilty.
What are the advantage of the MR? Court is seeking the true intention behind the statute rather than resorting to technicalities of language. - The Lae commission have said that they believe the MR is preferable than the LR.
Give an example of a case which describes the advantage of the MR seeking the true intention. Smith v Hughes Facts - 'D' were soliciting from balconies and through ground floor windows . Statute - Street offences Act 1959 ' Offence to solist in the street or other public place'. Outcome - LR - Not guilty as inside public place MR - Guilty as they were trying to clear prostitutes out
Give an example of a case which describes the advantage of the MR that it avoids daft results. McMonagle v WCC Facts - 'D' had a sex encounter establishment without legal authority licence. Statute - 'That it was an offence to operate a live sex encounter establishment without a local authority licence. Outcome - His defence was that the activities in his establishment were so indesent that they were not lawful so he wouldn't need a licence as it was worse - LR - correct, not guilty - MR Guilty as it was act was used to control this activity.
What are the disadvantages of the MR? It allows the courts to get dangerously close to rewriting laws. Difficult to discover what previous laws was and Parliaments reason for interfering. MR is dated as it was developed at a time when statutes were different.
Give a case which helps describe the disadvantages that the MR allows the courts to become close to writing new laws. RCN v DHSS Facts - New abortion procedure (2 stages often hours) doctor was present for first few hours then left. Statute - Abortion Act 1967 ' AN abortion is illegal unless a registered practitioner is present'. Outcome - has to go to the QBD for declaration what law meant, HC said it was lawful as it complied with what Parliament wanted. (MR) 3:2 decision to lawful MR
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