posted on 2019-10-29, 09:15authored byStella Tarrant
This article seeks to promote effective discourse across the divide that exists in Australian criminal law between code and common law jurisdictions. It proposes two ways in which the pervasive, reifi ed dichotomy — ‘code’/’common law’ — can be rethought. First, certain barely articulated but well-known assumptions that help to maintain the dichotomy are re-examined. It is argued that the fi xed ideas that the common law is fl exible and a ‘richer’ or more nuanced law, while codes are rigid and ‘mechanistic’, are in critical respects wrong and entrench the divide. Second, the settled orthodoxy that codes should be interpreted by applying ‘special rules’ of interpretation is challenged. It is argued that these special rules can be seen, when examined, to be less than useful, and inconsistent with constitutional principles. Exactly the same principles of interpretation apply to all criminal statutes. Re-thinking in these ways brings all nine Australian jurisdictions into the same legal landscape.
History
Publication Date
2013
Volume
39
Issue
3
Type
Article
Pages
838–863
AGLC Citation
Stella Tarrant, 'Building Bridges in Australian Criminal Law: Codification and the Common Law ' (2013) 39(3) Monash University Law Review 837