Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Meaning & Definition of Law

Meaning & Definition of Law
The term ‘law’ means and includes different things in different societies. The corresponding word for the term ‘law’ in Hindu system is ‘Dharma’, in Islamic system it is ‘Hukum’, in Roman it is ‘Jus’, in French it is ‘Droit’, and in German it is ’Richt’.
For the purpose of clarity and better treatment to the subject, we may classify the definitions which we propose to discuss into three broad categories:
1.   Idealistic Definition:
Under this class fall most of the ancient definitions given by Roman and other ancient Jurists.
Romans – Justinian’s Digest defines law as “the standard of what is just and unjust”. Ulpain spoke of law as “the art of science of what is equitable and good”. Cicero said that law is “the highest reason implanted in nature”. In short, “justice” as the main element of law, is the view expressed in all these definitions. Romans never confused law with justice.
Hindu view – Ancient Hindu view was that ‘law’ is the command of God and not of any political superior (sovereign). The ruler is also bound to obey it and is under a duty to enforce it. Thus, law is the part of ‘Dharma’. This being the view about the law, we find moral and religious injunctions mingled up with legal percepts. The idea of ‘justice’ is always present in Hindu Concept of law.
Modern Idealistic Definition – The above definitions were given at a time when there was no clear cut distinction between law, morals and religion. In modern times, the law, in most part, has been secularizes and it has grown into an independent branch of social science. The most popular definition of this kind is of Salmond.

2.  Positive Definitions:
Austin – According to Austin, “Law is the aggregate of rule set by men as politically superior, or sovereign, to men as politically subject”. In other words, law is the ‘command if the sovereign’. Thus, the command, duty and sanction are the three elements of law. The law which has these elements or characteristics is called “Positive Law”.
Kelsen – He too is a positivist. He defines law as the ‘depsychologized command’. Though Kelsen defines law in terms of command, he uses it in a sense quite different from Austin’s. By command, he simply means that it imposes a duty. Austin’s sovereign does not come into picture in Kelsen’s definition.

3.   Sociological Definitions:
The sociological approach is not a single approach but it includes a number of thoughts. Following are the definitions of law in terms of its relation with the society.
Duguit’s definition of law – Duguit defines law as essentially and exclusively as social fact. It is in no sense a body of rules laying down rights. The foundation of law is in the essential requirements if the community life. It can exist only when men live together. Therefore, the most important fact of social life is the interdependence of men (this Duguit calls as ‘social solidarity’).
Ihering’s definition – He defines law as the ‘form of the guarantee of the conditions of life of society, assured by State’s power of constraint’. There are three main implications of this definition: First, in this definition law is treated as only one means of social control. Second, law is to serve social people. Third, it is coercive in character, in other words, the obedience of law is secured but the state through external compulsion.

The definition given by Ihering is very clear and simple. It incorporates in it all the necessary characteristics which the law, in modern times, has.

Functions

Functions

Law plays a significant role in the successful operation of business and society. Laws regulate social behaviour, which leads to a society that runs efficiently. Laws also supply ethical standards and expectations, while providing rules of conduct, measures to enforce those rules, and a means for settling disputes. Other functions of law include: peacekeeping; checking government power and promoting personal freedom; facilitating planning and the realization of reasonable expectations; promoting economic growth through free competition; promoting social justice; and protecting the environment. It is important to note that without laws to govern the actions of people and businesses, society would not be able to function effectively, and commerce would likely collapse.

A constitution is the overriding law, because it establishes the fundamental principles of a government at either the state or federal level. This includes creating the branches of the government, bestowing and refusing certain powers to each branch, and preventing other governmental units from passing certain laws, specifically those which limit individual rights.

Classification of Law

Classification of Law

1)   Public V/s Private:
Public law is a theory of law that governs the relationship between the state and the individual, who is considered to be either a company or a citizen. Public law covers three sub-divisions:-
a) Constitutional Law covers the different branches of the state: Executive, Legislative & Judiciary.
b) Administrative Law regulates international trade, manufacturing, pollution, taxation, and the like.
c) Criminal Law involves state imposed sanctions for individuals or companies in order to achieve justice and social order.
Private Law is also known as Civil Law. It involves relationships between individuals, or private relationships between citizens and companies. It covers the Law of Obligation and the Law of Torts, which is defined as follows: Firstly, the Law of Obligation organizes and regulates legal relations between individuals under contract; secondly, the Law of Torts addresses and remedies issues for civil wrongs, not arising from any contractual obligation.

Public Law is simply distinguished from private law as a law involving the state. Private Law is a private bill enacted into law. It targets individuals or corporations, unlike public law, which has a broader scope, and affects the general public.

Summary:
1) Public Law governs the individual, citizen or corporation, and the state, while private law applies to individuals.
2) Public Law deals with a greater scope, while private law deals with a more specific scope
3) Public Law deals more with issues that affect the general public or the state itself, whereas, private law focuses more on issues affecting private individuals, or corporations.
2)  Substantive V/s Procedural Law:
When you say substantive law, it actually refers to the written or statutory which governs the relationship between people, or between people and the state. Procedural Law, on the other hand, is the set of rules followed when a court is hearing a case so it basically dictates what will happen during a civil or criminal proceeding.
In lawman’s terms, substantive law defines how the facts in a case will be handled, as well as how a particular case is to be charged. As the name implies, it’s the ‘substance’ of the case that is being handled.
Meanwhile, procedural law is the step-by-step process that the case will go through. For example, procedural law will dictate whether a case will go into a trial or not. Other distinct difference between the two is that procedural law cannot function independently, while substantive laws can. Procedural law does not necessarily decide the fate of a case, while substantive law does. Substantive Law is also the branch of law which decides who wins the case, and the compensation to be received.
Procedural Law can be applied to non-legal contexts, but substantive law cannot. Finally, procedural law is more about how the law will be executed, while substantive law provides the legal solution to a case.

Summary:
à Substantive Law is about the definition of people’s rights, duties and power; while procedural law is about prescribing the form and order by which the law will be enforced.
à Substantive Law defines how the facts in a case will be handled, while procedural law defines the step-by-step process that the case will go through.
à Substantive Law cannot be applied to non-legal contexts, while procedural law can be.


3)  Municipal V/s International Law:
International law governs the relation of sovereign independent states inter  and constitutes a legal system the rules of which it is incumbent upon all states to observe. Municipal law also known as state law or national law is the law of state or a country. International law regulates the behaviour of states whereas national law the behaviour of individuals. International law concerns with the external relations of the states and its foreign affairs. Municipal law concerns with the internal relations of states o and its domestic affairs.
International law is a law between equal sovereign states in which no one is supreme to the other but municipal laws the w law of the sovereign over the individuals subject to the sovereign rule. Whether international law is a law or not is a debatable question and this debate is continued whereas municipal law is a law in a real sense and there is no doubt about it.
However international law and municipal law relates to each other and some justice considers that both from a unity being manifestation of single conception of law while others say that international law constitutes an independent system of law essentially different from the municipal Law.
Thus there are two theories knows as monastic and dualistic. According to monastic and the same thing. The origin and sources of these two laws are the same, both spheres of law simultaneously regulate the conduct of individuals and the two systems are in their essence groups of commands which bind the subjects of the law independently of their will.
According to dualistic theory international law and municipal law are separate and self-contained to the extent to which rules of one are not expressly tacitly received into the other system. The two are separate bodies of legal norms emerging in part from different sources comprising different difference subjects and having application to different objects.

Customs

Customs
1.  What is Custom?
When a person has been doing an act regularly over a substantial period of time, it is usual to say that he has grown accustomed to doing it. But when a large section of society is in the habit of doing that act over a very much longer period, it becomes a Custom.
Custom is a habitual course of conduct observed uniformly and voluntarily by the people concerned under like circumstances. Custom is tradition passing on from one generation to another that originally governed human conduct. Custom is of slow growth. All customs are not laws. The custom will be labelled ‘law’ when ‘ought’ rests on such practices or acts of the people which are being habitually used by the community for generations.
According to Austin, “Custom is a rule of conduct which the governed observed spontaneously and in pursuance of law set by a political superior”.

2.  The Origin of Custom
To the savages, custom was all in all. They were guided by magic and taboo. As long as the disposition of the early man remained synomic, he was inseparably bound to custom. With the growth of civilisation, man began to reason and to reject the unreasonable customs and accepted reasonable ones.
Allen says that some customs are the result of imposition by the ruling body or by the strong on the weak. Maine says that in the beginning the judgements of the kings under divine inspiration were the basis of the customs.
Customs originated from the common consciousness of the people. They came into existence due to necessity or convenience. They originated in the practices of the people as also in what was imposed upon them by the rules; and the Judges working on the raw material of customs fashioned them in the form of laws through the judicial recognition of custom.

3.   Reasons for the Recognition of Customs as Law
Some local and general customs have been given the force of law. Salmond gives two reasons for the recognition of customs as law. “In the first place, custom is frequently the embodiment of those principles which have commended themselves to the national conscience as principles of justice and public utility.” “A second ground of the law-creative efficacy of custom is to be found in the fact that the existence of an established usage is the basis of a rational expectation of its continuance in the future”.
Custom is to society what law is to the state. Each is the expression and realisation of the principles of right and justice. The law embodies the principles of right and justice by the power of the state whereas the custom embodies these principles by the public opinion of the society at large. When the state takes up its function of administering justice, it accepts as valid the rules of justice of rights already accepted by the society as customs of the realm.
The customs are continued to be accepted as law when they are adaptable to changing ideas and they are reasonable and possess antiquity and consistency and continuity.

4.   Requisites/Essentials of a Valid Custom (General or Local).
Any custom either general or local to be legally recognised and enforced should fulfil some essential requisites. Blackstone listed them following Cock on Littleton. Allen and many others followed the same. Among them the following five are necessary conditions as per Dias.

1) Immemorial Antiquity: A custom to be valid must be immemorial.
English law fixed the year 1189 to test the antiquity of a custom. A custom must be in existence prior to 1189, only then it can prove the consideration of antiquary. Under Hindu law also immemorial customs are transcendental law. However India law does not fix any particular year to test the antiquity of custom.
2) Continuance: A custom must be practiced without interruption; continuity is an essential feature of the custom. Continuity does not mean that it should be in operation all the time. It means that there should be a continuous availability of the terms of the customs to deal with particular rule of conduct with which it deals. Presence 6f custom if fact and its enforceability both are essential to prove antiquity. If a custom becomes legally unenforceable even for a short time it would not the recognized as a valid' custom.
3) Peaceable enjoyment: It is essential that custom must have been enjoyed peacefully by the concerned people.
4) Matter of right: Custom must have been enjoyed as a matter of right. This right should be enforceable. Thus custom must result in creating obligatory force at the one hand and related claim on the other hand. If a practice is observed as a courtesy and not as a matter of right then it can be termed a "custom" in legal sense.
5) Certainty: Custom must be certain. If the nature of the custom is not certain then it loses its validity. Custom originate from general consent, it is hard to determine existence of consent, on something which is not certain.
6) Consistency: A custom must not be in conflict with other prevailing customs. The customs must be in consistency with other custom. Difference or inconsistency in custom will amount to different rule of conduct for a given situation; it will negotiate the general consent.
7) Conformity with statute law: Custom should be conformity with statute law. A legislative enactment can abrogate a custom. In case of inconsistency between custom and statutory provision, former must give way to the latter. Thus, custom yield legislative enactment.

5.   Classification of Customs
The customs in their wider sense maybe divided into two classes:

1) Customs without Sanction: They are those customs which are non-obligatory. They are observed due to the pressure of the public opinion. They are social customs. Austin calls them “positive morality”.

2) Customs having Sanction: They are those customs which are enforced by the State. It is with these customs that we are concerned here. According to Salmond, a custom which has the force of law is of two kinds -

a) Legal Customs: A legal custom is one which possesses in itself the force of law. These customs operate as a binding rule of law. A legal custom is one whose legal authority is absolute - one which in itself and proprio vigore possesses the force of law. They have been recognised by the courts and have become a part of the law of land. They have the force of law without the necessity of any agreement – custom which exists of itself and is recognised by the law as so operative. Legal Customs maybe divided further into two categories:
i) The General Custom of the Realm or General Legal Custom: General Legal Custom is the custom prevailing throughout the entire realm and not limited to any locality if the state. Though by the common use of the term ‘custom’ is meant the ‘local custom’, in law, generally, the customs which are treated to be the part of the law of the land are general legal customs.
ii) Local Customs: By local customs is meant those customs which apply only to a definite locality of region of the realm such as a district, a village, etc. It is custom proprio vigore, existing irrespectively of any agreement.

b) Conventional Customs or Usages: A conventional custom or usage is a practice established by having been followed for a considerable period of time, and arising out of contract between the parties, it does not arise out of its own force. A conventional custom or usage is an established practice which is legally binding, not because of any legal authority independently possessed by it, but because it has been expressly or impliedly incorporated in an agreement. A conventional custom is so called because it is rooted in agreement. Its authority is dependent upon prior acceptance by the parties sought to be bound by it. Usually a conventional custom is referred to as ‘usage’ and legal custom as ‘custom simpliciter’.

Conclusion
In conclusion, it may be said that we can neither agree with the Analytical school nor that of the Historical school. Salmond’s view maybe accepted. His view is that custom becomes law whenever it, in fact, satisfies the conditions prescribed by the law as necessary for its validity. If proof of this is forthcoming, courts must affirm, the validity of the custom. Such a custom is called legal custom. Legal custom then supplies principles to which the will of the state is bound to give legal force. It is, therefore, to be ranked as a legal material source of law.
Prof. Keeton also shares the same view when he says that much customary law develops independently of the judges, although it is ultimately incorporated into a legal system by way of judicial recognition.

Precedent

Precedent
#Precedent as a Source of Law:
·       Judicial precedent is an imp source of law and is as important as Custom and Legislation.
·       Meaning:
à A precedent means a previous instance or case which is or maybe taken as an example of rule for subsequent cases, or by which some similar act or circumstances maybe supported or justified.
à In common parlance it means something said or done that maybe serve to authorise or justify further acts of the same or similar kind.
à It means some set pattern guiding the future conduct.
·       According to Jenks:
à A judicial precedent in a decision by a competent court of Justice upon a disputed point of law, becomes not merely a guide but an authority to be followed by all courts of inferior jurisdiction administering the same system until it has been overruled by superior court of Justice or by a Statue, e.g.- Act of Parliament.
à In short we can say – precedent means the guidance or authority of past decision for the future cases.
à Decisions which give new rule or principle are called Judicial Precedents. The application of the judicial precedents is governed by different principles in different legal system. These principles are called Doctrine of Precedent.

# In what sense is the Precedent binding? 
·       They influence reasoning à undoubtedly, they are not binding like the warrant issued by a magistrate, but are, more or less, a matter influencing the reasoning.
·      They are made on the basis of argument.

# Factors weakening the binding force of Precedent:
·       Legislation
à A statue or a statutory rule, enacted subsequent to a decision, may expressly or impliedly abrogate the decision.
à After such a Statue the precedent loses its authority completely, and the courts are guided by the Statue and by the Precedent.
·       Reversal/Over-Ruling
à Reversal takes place when a decision given by a lower court is reversed by an appellate court in appeal.
à If a decision has been reversed it has no binding effect.
à Over-ruling takes place when a higher tribunal or the same tribunal declares a decision to be wrong in a subsequent case.
·       Decision is not binding if it was given in ignorance of a statue on a rule having the force of a Statue.
·       A decision given by a court in ignorance of a decision of a higher tribunal, which is clearly inconsistent with it, has NO BINDING FORCE.
·       Precedent – not fully argued.
·       In the interest of public good or public welfare.

# Precedent has following two theories:
·       Declaratory Theory;
Authoritative or Persuasive Theory.

Legislation

Legislation
# Meaning:
The term ‘Legislation’ is derived from two Latin words, ‘Legis’ which means a ‘law’ and ‘Latum’ which means, ‘to make, put or set’. Thus legislation means making a law.
The term ‘legislation’ has been used in different senses. In its broadest sense it includes all methods of law making including judge-made rules of law, and even the particular rules of law, or the rights created at law between parties to contracts. In its technical sense it includes every expression of the will of the legislature, whether meant for making law or not. In its strict sense it may be termed as enacted law or statue law or written law to be followed and enforced in the courts of the state. These rules or laws can be only be made by a competent law-making body, i.e., a body which, under the constitution of the state, is empowered to make law. But when we use the term ‘legislation’ as a source of law, we mean law making by a defined person or body and not customary or conventional law or judicial decisions.
Gray defines legislation as “the formal utterance of the legislative organs of the society”. As Salmon puts it, “legislation is that source of law which consists in the declaration of legal rules by a competent authority”. Bentham and Austin signify the term ‘legislation’ as any form of law-making.

#Kinds of Legislation:
         Legislation may be divided into two forms –
1.    Supreme Legislation
Legislation is said to be supreme legislation when the authority under which the law is enacted as a supreme authority or a sovereign law-making body like a legislature of an independent and sovereign state. It is supreme because no other authority can annul, modify or control it. The characteristic of such legislation is that it cannot be abrogated or invalidated by any other legislative authority. The laws enacted by the parliament in England are the examples of supreme legislation. Neither the parliament of India nor the senate of USA can really be called sovereign law-making body, because the validity of its law can be challenged in a court of law, and the Act, or a portion of it, passed by the legislature, may be declared ultra vires.
2.   Subordinate Legislation
Legislation is said to be subordinate when the legislature is a subordinate law-making body deriving its power from the sovereign authority, i.e., a higher and paramount legislature. Legislation by subordinate law-making body is capable of being controlled by the Supreme authority. Subordinate forms of legislation derive their authority to legislate only by delegation, express or implied, of the supreme power. In England, rules, bye-laws, regulations made by the bodies in pursuance to the Act of parliament are the examples of subordinate legislation. In India, Municipal Corporations, University bodies, Railway Companies and clubs have got powers to make rules and orders governing themselves and their members. According to Salmond, the Chief forms of subordinate legislation are the following:
i)    Colonial Legislation – Formerly, Britain has had many colonies and dominions. Legislation by the legislature of the colonies for the self-government is subject to the control, alteration, repeal or supersession by the legislation of the British Parliament. As the colonies achieved independence this class of subordinate legislation is obsolete today.
ii)   Executive Legislation – The legislative body enacts the fundamentals only conferring upon the executive a rule-making power for carrying out the intentions of the legislature. The rules made in pursuance of this power of delegated legislation have the force of law.
Thus, this kind of legislative power possessed by the executive is a species of subordinate legislation.
iii) Judicial Legislation – Law-making power is also exercised by the law courts for the regulation of their internal business proceedings of the courts concerning their day to day functioning. This is known as Judicial Legislation and is different from judicial precedent.
iv)  Municipal Legislation – The bye-law making power of municipal authorities is another form of subordinate legislation. The municipal authorities have the power to make rules for the areas under their jurisdiction concerning water, land, urban cess, house tax, etc.
v)   Autonomous Legislation – Autonomous bodies like universities, corporations, railway companies, clubs, etc. have the power to make rules for the conduct of their business. These rules too are made by them in conformity with the Act of Parliament.
#Legislation & Precedent
v Advantages of Legislation Over Precedent:
1)   Abrogative Power – It is its abrogative power and amending facility that gives legislation superiority over precedents. Legislation in both constitutive and abrogative whereas precedent merely possesses constitutive efficacy. Legislative is not only a source of law. Precedent, on the other hand, cannot abrogate the existing rule of law although it may produce very good law and in some respect better than legislation. What it does, it does once and for all. It cannot retrace its steps.
2)  Efficiency – Legislation allows an advantageous division of labour by dividing the two functions of making law and administering it. This results in increased efficiency. Precedent, on the contrary, unites in the same hands the business of making the law and that of enforcing it.
3)  Declaration – Justice demands that law should be known before they are applied and enforced by the law courts, but the case law operated retrospectively, being applied to facts which are prior in date to the law itself. Statue law is seldom retrospective in its operation. Then legislation withstands the test of an interpretation of the statue by the courts of justice. If any alterations are proposed in the enacted law, they are published and opinions invited. Case law, on the contrary, is created and declared at one and the same time.
4)  Provision for future cases – Legislation can make rules in anticipation for cases that have not as yet arisen, whereas precedent must wait for the occurrence of some dispute before the court can create any definite rule of law. Precedent is dependent on, and legislation is independent of the accidental source of legislation. Legislation can fill up vacancy or settle a doubt in legal system as soon as the defect is brought to the notice of the legislation. This is not possible in the case of precedent. Case-law, therefore, is incomplete, uncertain and unsystematic.
5)  Form – Statue law is greatly superior to case law in point of form. Statue law is definite, brief, clear and easily understandable. In precedent, to know principles and rules one will have to look into the details of the case. As Salmond observes, case-law is gold in mine – a few grams of precious metal to the ton of useless material – while statue law is coin of the realm, ready for immediate use.
6)  Coherency – Judiciary law is bound to be lacking in coherency and completeness because, it is restricted to the particular case only at every time. Through legislation, on the other hand, the law lends itself to a systematic treatment. This is no mean advantage to legislation over case-law.
7)  Certainty – A legal system secures greater certainty when the law is codified by legislation than when it stands on the basis of case-law.
8)  Clarity & Accessibility – A statue is expressed in abstract terms as a series of general rules. It is, therefore, clear and concise and may be understood by the layman. A law made by judicial decisions, on the other hand, exists nowhere in a general and abstract form. In precedents, rules and principles are laid down by inductive method. In legislation the deductive method is resorted to. The courts take the ruled from the statue and apply it to particular case.
v Advantages of Precedent over Legislation
1)   Better Ethical content: “The morality of the courts”, says Dicey “is higher than the morality of politicians”. Legislation is the product of the will of politicians who are affected by the popular feelings and passions. That is why the judiciary often denounces statues as wrong, tyrannical, unjust or contrary to fundamental principles laid down in the written Constitution. Judiciary law, on the other hand, is made in the serene atmosphere of courts of justice by persons trained to hold the scales of justice evenly. Judiciary law is thus more equitable than statutory law.
2)  Flexibility – Sir John Salmond points out that one of the advantages of a system of case-law over enacted law consists in the greater flexibility of the former. Rigidity is the capital defect of statue law. In the case of statue law the letter of the law governs and so the true spirit of the law has sometimes to be sacrificed. The phraseology employed by a statue may fail  adequately to express its true intendment, but the courts are bound by the literal expression. Thus statue law is not always superior to case law in point of clarity, nor yet always inferior to it in point of flexibility.
v Delegated Legislation
Delegated Legislation is a kind of subordinate legislation. It means law made by the executive under the powers delegated to it by the supreme legislative authority. The term ‘Delegated Legislation’ has two meanings:-
1.    First, it means the exercise of power that is delegated to the executive to make rules;
2.   Secondly, it means the rules or regulations made under the power so given.
Individualisation which dominated the 19th century political thought laid emphasis on the fact that an individual was the best judge of his own interests and that the greatest service which the state could do to him was to let him alone. The only legitimate function for the state was the maintenance of the law and order within the country. The position is different today. Now State is assuming more and more responsibility for promoting the welfare of its citizens, e.g. health, education, employment, trade, industry, commerce and other services. The concept of negative state has turned into a welfare state. It involves the necessity of entrusting the executive with numerous powers, including that of delegated legislation.
Ø Reasons for Delegated Legislation
The circumstances particularly favouring delegated legislation are as follows:
i)    Want of Time – Parliament is too busy a body. If it devotes its time on entering into minor and subsidiary details and attempts to law down all rules itself, all of its time will be consumed in preparing only a few Acts. The pressure of time prevents Parliament to provide all the details in an Act and, therefore, it has to confer on the executive the rule-making power to supplement the Act.
ii)   Technicality of the Matters – Many rules which have to be made effective the policy of the Act are of technical nature and require consultants with the experts. It is, therefore, more convenient to delegate such rule-making power to the experts who are none else than the executive itself.
iii) Flexibility – The need for amplifying the main provisions of social legislation to meet unforeseen contingencies or to facilitate adjustments to new circumstances arises too frequently. The Parliamentary process involves delays. The delegated legislation offers quick machinery for amendments.
iv)  Emergency – An emergency may arise on account of war, insurrection, floods, epidemics, economic depression and the like, for which the executive must be armed with the rule-making power, that may be used instantly to meet them.
v)   Local Matters – There are matters which concern only a particular locality or particular group or profession. Any legislation on these matters needs consultation with the people of that particular locality, group or profession. Thus, regarding such legislation the departments are given powers to make changes and rules in consultation with that person acquired with and interested in it.
vi)  Changes – In some cases, such as, changes in rationing schemes or imposition of import duty or exchange control, public interest requires that the provisions of that law should not be known until the time fixed for that to come into operation. Delegated legislation is the only means to achieve this objective.
2) Dangers of Delegated Legislation
The following are the dangers of the delegated legislation as per Keith and Keeton:-
i)    Legislation fails to make full laws by passing in too skeleton a form leaving wide powers of action to executive.
ii)   Parliament may fail to scrutinise the regulation of the executive due to inadequate time.
iii) It may create difficulties to the subjects (citizens) to obtain redress for illegal actions done under the authority of delegated legislation.
iv)  Excessive power maybe delegated to executive.
v)   The Government Departments may assume a wider legislative competence than what the Parliament has granted.
vi)  Some of the regulations attempt to deprive the subjects of recourse to the law courts for protection.
3. Safeguards Against The Delegated Legislation
The following safeguards have been generally suggested by jurists against delegated legislation:
i)            Parliamentary Control – There are many methods through which the Parliament can exercise control. There are Selection Committees to examine every instrument laid down before the Parliament with a view to determine whether the special attention of the House should be drawn to it on certain specified grounds. The rules made by the executive shall be laid before the Parliament before it comes into operation.
ii)          Judicial Control – The main ground on which the interference of the judiciary is made is that the authority to which the power is delegated has exceeded it. The grounds on which courts declare a bye-law ultra vires are that it is unreasonable, or repugnant to the fundamental laws of the country, or is vague, or it has not been made and published in accordance with the rule prescribed for the same.
Publicity – It is necessary that due publicity should be given to the delegated legislation, because without such publicity it may be declared ultra vires.

Common Law

Common Law
A Common law legal system is a system of law characterized by case law which is law developed by judges through decisions of courts and similar tribunals. Common law systems also include statutes enacted by legislative bodies, though those statutes typically either codify judicial decisions or fill in areas of the law not covered by case law. In contrast to common law systems, civil law (codified/continental law) systems are founded on a set of legal codes, which are organized laws that attempt to cover exhaustively the various legal domains, and are characterized by an absence of precedent in the judicial application of those codes. In the modern period, both systems tend to include administrative regulations which may also be codified.

A common law system is a legal system that gives great potential precedential weight to common law, on the principle that it is unfair to treat similar facts differently on different occasions. The body of precedent is called "common law" and it binds future decisions. In cases where the parties disagree on what the law is, a common law court looks to past precedential decisions of relevant courts. If a similar dispute has been resolved in the past, the court is usually bound to follow the reasoning used in the prior decision (this principle is known as stare decisis). If, however, the court finds that the current dispute is fundamentally distinct from all previous cases (called a "matter of first impression"), judges have the authority and duty to make law by creating precedent. Thereafter, the new decision becomes precedent, and will bind future courts.