Event

Law is as law does: Revisiting retroactivity in common law jurisdictions

Tuesday, May 17, 2016 12:30to13:30
Chancellor Day Hall NCDH 316, 3644 rue Peel, Montreal, QC, H3A 1W9, CA

Each summer, the Paul-André Crépeau Centre for Private and Comparative Law organizes a series of seminars to promote research of students from McGill and elsewhere.  

For this presentation, we welcome Jennifer Anderson, McGill University.

Abstract

The strong presumption of prospectivity in statutory construction reflects well-established concerns with retroactivity on the bases of the rule of law, liberty, and reliance. Strikingly, common-law judicial lawmaking routinely exemplifies these problems, yet largely escapes criticism for its retroactivity. Arguments justifying this difference amount to variations on one theme: lawmaking is simply not what courts are, or should be, doing, and worrying about their decisions’ real-world retroactive effects is therefore beside the point.

I challenge this view. Not only do appellate courts make law, that is their primary function. Further, if judge-made law is law more than in name only, then certain logical consequences follow. Chief among these is that retroactivity (and the problems it creates) requires defending as much in judicial as in statutory lawmaking. My analysis suggests that such a defence is elusive; more radically, it also calls into question the precise relationship between lower and higher courts.

Attendance is open to all. For more information, please centre [dot] crepeau [at] mcgill [dot] ca (email the Crépeau Centre).

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