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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> McEldowney v Forde [1969] UKHL 6 (18 June 1969) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1969/6.html Cite as: [1969] UKHL 6, [1971] AC 632, [1971] 1 AC 632, [1970] NI 11 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1186
HOUSE OF LORDS
McELDOWNEY (A.P.)
v.
FORDE
Lord
Hodson
Lord Guest
Lord Pearce
Lord Pearson
Lord Diplock
Lord Hodson
MY LORDS,
The question for determination on
this appeal is whether the Resident
Magistrates sitting as a
Magistrates' Court for the Petty Sessions District
of Maghera on
12th June 1968 were right in law in dismissing a complaint
against
the present Appellant. He was charged in these words:
" You the said defendant were
and remained a member of an unlawful
" association, namely, a
Republican Club, contrary to Regulation 24A
" of the
Regulations made under the Civil Authorities (Special Powers)
"
Acts (Northern Ireland) 1922-1943."
The Act of 1922. which I will call
" the Act", was enacted, as the title
shows, to empower
certain authorities of the Government of Northern Ireland
to take
steps for preserving the peace and maintaining order in
Northern
Ireland and for purposes connected therewith. Section 1
provides:
" 1. (1) the civil authority
shall have power, in respect of persons,
" matters and things
within the jurisdiction of the Government of
" Northern
Ireland, to take all such steps and issue all such orders
"
as may be necessary for preserving the peace and maintaining order,
"
according to and in the execution of this Act and the regulations
"
contained in the Schedule thereto, or such regulations as may be
"
made in accordance with the provisions of this Act (which
regulations,
" whether contained in the said Schedule or made
as aforesaid, are in
" this Act referred to as ' the
regulations '):
" Provided that the ordinary
course of law and avocations of life
" and the enjoyment of
property shall be interfered with as little as
" may be
permitted by the exigencies of the steps required to be taken
"
under this Act.
" (2) For the purposes of
this Act the civil authority shall be the
" Minister of Home
Affairs for Northern Ireland, but that Minister may
"
delegate, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as
he
" thinks fit, all or any of his powers under this Act to
any officer of
" police, and any such officer of police
shall, to the extent of such
" delegation, be the civil
authority as respects any part of Northern
" Ireland
specified in such delegation.
" (3) The Minister of Home
Affairs shall have power to make regu-
" lations—
" (a) for making
further provision for the preservation of the peace
" and
maintenance of order, and
" (b) for varying or
revoking any provision of the regulations ;
" and any
regulations made as aforesaid shall, subject to the provisions
"
of this Act, have effect and be enforced in like manner as
regulations
" contained in the Schedule to this Act.
" (4) All regulations made as
aforesaid shall be laid before both
" Houses of Parliament as
soon as may be after they are made, and,
" if an address is
presented to the Lord Lieutenant by either House
" within the
next fourteen days on which such House shall be sitting
"
after any such regulation is laid before it praying that the
regulation
" may be annulled, the Lord Lieutenant may annul
that regulation
" and it shall thenceforth be void, without
prejudice to the validity of
" anything done thereunder, or
to the power of making a new regula-
" tion ; and regulations
made as aforesaid shall not be deemed to be
" statutory rules
within the meaning of section one of the Rules
" Publication
Act 1893."
A
2
Section 2 deals with offences against the Regulations.
Section 3
provides for trial of such offences by a Court of
Summary
Jurisdiction and requires that the prosecution must be by
an officer or person
authorised by the Attorney-General. No
question arises as to these procedural
requirements in this case.
On the
22nd May 1922 the then Minister of Home Affairs made a
further
regulation under the powers conferred by section 1(3) of
the Act. This
was Regulation 24A and reads:
" Any
person who becomes or remains a member of an unlawful
"
association or who does any act with a view to promoting or
calculated
" to promote the objects of an unlawful
association or seditious con-
" spiracy shall be guilty of an
offence against these Regulations.
" If
any person without lawful authority or excuse has in his
"
possession any document relating to or purporting to relate to the
"
affairs of any such association or emanating or purporting to
emanate
" from an officer of any such association or
addressed to the person
" as an officer or member of any such
association or indicating that
" he is an officer or member
of any such association that person shall
" be guilty of an
offence against these regulations unless he proves
" that he
did not know or had no reason to suspect that the document
"
was of any such character as aforesaid or that he is not an officer
"
or member of the association.
"
Where a person is charged with having in his possession any such
"
document, and the document was found on premises in his occupation,
"
or under his control, or in which he is found or has resided, the
"
document shall be presumed to have been in his possession unless
"
the contrary is proved.
" The
following organisations shall for the purposes of this Regulation
"
be deemed to be unlawful associations:
"
The Irish Republican Brotherhood
" The Irish Republican
Army
" The Irish Volunteers
" The Cumann na m'Ban
" The Fianna na h'Eireann."
These
named organisations were specific existing organisations of a
militant
type and it was conceded before your Lordships, as it was
before the Court
of Appeal in Northern Ireland, that they were in
fact unlawful organisations.
On the 7th
March 1967 the present Minister of Home Affairs purporting
to act
under section 1 (3) of the Act made a further regulation by way
of
addition to the list of organisations deemed to be unlawful
associations.
This, which is the impugned regulation, recites that
it is expedient that
further provision for the preservation of the
peace and maintenance of order
should be made, and runs:
" 1.
Regulation 24A of the principal Regulations shall have effect
"
as if the following organisations were added to the list of
organisa-
" tions which for the purpose of that Regulation
are deemed to be
" unlawful associations:
" '
The organisations at the date of this regulation or at any time
"
' thereafter describing themselves as " Republican Clubs "
or any
" ' like organisation howsoever described.' "
The
Appellant was found by the magistrates to have been on the
date
stated in the charge and thereafter a member of the
Slaughtneil Republican
Club. They also found that no evidence was
given that he "or the said
" Club was at any time a
threat to peace law and order but it was conceded
" by
witnesses for the Complainant in cross examination that in so far
as
" the Police were aware there was nothing seditious in its
pursuits or those
" of its members."
3
In
dismissing the complaint the Magistrates bore in mind the contents
and
purposes of the Act, that the Regulations thereunder are "
Regulations for
" Peace and Order in Northern Ireland "
and, noting the words " or any like
" organisation
howsoever described " in the Statutory Rule and Order of
1967
and that no definition of the term " Republican Club " was
shown to
them, came to the conclusion that the only reasonable
interpretation to be
given to the words " organisations . . .
describing themselves as " ' Republican
" ' Clubs'"
is " Clubs which have as their object the absorption of
Northern
" Ireland in the Republic of Ireland the activities
of whose members in
" seeking to further that object
constitute a threat to peace and order in
" Northern
Ireland—or any like organisation howsoever described."
The
magistrates accordingly found that the complainant had not
proved
that the Slaughtneil Republican Club was an unlawful
association within the
meaning of Regulation 24A and dismissed the
Complaint.
The Court
of Appeal in Northern Ireland by a majority allowed the appeal
and
the question posed in the Case Stated was answered in the
negative.
The case was accordingly remitted to the Magistrates to
do as to justice
may appertain.
The
Appellant obtained leave to appeal to this House but in argument
has
not sought to sustain the opinion expressed by the Magistrates or
the
reasons given by them for their decision in his favour.
As the
Lord Chief Justice pointed out in his dissenting judgment
their
reasoning is unsound, for the ultimate result would be in
effect that the
prosecution would have to prove that the club in
question was an unlawful
association but that is just what the
list of named bodies at the end of
Regulation 24A was intended to
avoid. The convenience of the list is that
specific organisations
notoriously unlawful had not to be proved unlawful
on the occasion
of every prosecution. They were deemed unlawful and
the 1967
addition to the list was intended to extend this "deeming"
so
that the unlawful nature of " Clubs " could be
assumed without proof. The
interpretation favoured by the
Magistrates would, as the Lord Chief Justice
pointed out, tend to
defeat rather than to favour such an intention for the
unlawful
nature of the club would have to be shown.
The
arguments directed to the Court of Appeal and to your Lordships
have
been directed solely to the question whether or not the impugned
regu-
lation is ultra vires the Act.
The
majority of the Court of Appeal held that it was for the Minister
to
decide whether a particular association should be deemed to be
unlawful and
the Court could not question what he had done. The
Lord Chief Justice,
on the other hand, held that the 1967
regulation was far too vague and wide
to come within even the
extensive powers conferred by section 1 of the Act.
It was not, to
apply the language contained in the judgment of the Privy
Council
in Attorney-General for Canada v. Hallet & Carey Ltd.
[1952] AC
427 at 450 " Capable of being related to one of
the prescribed purposes ".
The Lord Chief Justice attached
importance to the use of the words " any
" like
organisation howsoever described " as making the regulation even
more
vague than it would otherwise be and taking it even further
out of the scope
and meaning of the Act.
The
question may be put in this way—Is the whole regulation too
vague
and so arbitrary as to be wholly unreasonable as if, to take
an example
from one of the cases, a person were to be proscribed
because he had red
hair; or is the regulation, as the majority of
the Court held, a legitimate and
valid exercise of the Minister's
power confirmed on him by statute?
Both sides
referred to and relied upon the judgment of the Privy Council
in
the case of Attorney-General for Canada v. Hallet &
Carey Ltd. (supra).
By section 2(l)(c) of the National
Emergency Transitional Powers Act 1945
the governor in Council was
authorised to do such things and to make such
orders and
regulations as he might, by reason of the continued emergency
4
arising
out of the war against Germany and Japan, deem necessary or
advisable
for the purpose of, inter alia, " Maintaining,
controlling and regu-
" lating supplies and services, prices,
transportation, use and occupation of
" property, rentals,
employment, salaries and wages to ensure economic
" stability
and an orderly transition to conditions of peace ". Under
the
powers conferred by that Act the Governor in Council passed an
Order in
Council which provided that oats and barley in commercial
positions in
Canada, with certain exceptions, should be vested in
the Canadian Wheat
Board. The Order was successfully challenged in
Manitoba and in the
Supreme Court of Canada but was upheld by the
Privy Council on the
ground that although the Act of 1945 made no
specific reference to appropri-
ation yet the wide language of
section 2(1) ending with the words "as he
" may . . .
deem necessary or advisable " gave the amplest possible
discre-
tion in the choice of methods. The expression " as he
may deem necessary "
or like words are often found in
statutes in which a discretionary power is
given to a minister or
other authority. (Compare Padfield v. Minister
of
Agriculture, Fisheries & Food [1968] AC 997 where a
discretion was con-
sidered which was conferred on a Minister to
act as he thought fit and it
was held by this House that the
discretion was not wholly unfettered in that
it had to be used to
promote the policy and objects of the Act in question.)
Other
examples could be given.
In this
case no words directing the Minister to act as he thinks fit
or
similar words are employed. He is given power to make further
provision
for the preservation of the peace and the maintenance of
order which are to
be enforced in like manner as regulations
contained in the Schedule of " the
" Act ". "
Unlawful associations " were referred to in Regulation 24(1)
of
the regulations for peace and order in Northern Ireland
contained in the
Schedule to the Act. These regulations in the
Schedule form part of the Act
and regulations made under section 1
subsection (3) have to be laid before
both Houses of Parliament
and are liable to be annulled upon address
presented by either
House of Parliament.
It is not
contended that for that reason the impugned regulation can not
be
assailed in the Courts. A similar situation arose in R. v.
Halliday [1917]
A.C. 260 where a statutory regulation was
impugned as ultra vires. The
House upheld the regulation as
being within the scope of the power given
to the minister by the
statute on the ground that the regulation was intra
vires the
Act there being, as here, no deeming provision. I do not find
that
the absence of a deeming provision in this Act assists the
argument one way
or the other.
There was
a difference of opinion in the Court of Appeal as to the effect
of
the words which are contained in subsection (1) of section 1 of the
Act
giving the civil authority power to take all such steps and
issue all such
orders as may be necessary for preserving the peace
and maintaining order
according to and in the execution of the Act
and the regulations contained
in the Schedule or such regulations
as may be made in accordance with the
provisions of this Act.
These words are followed by a proviso that the
ordinary course of
law and avocations of life and the enjoyment of property
should be
interfered with as little as may be permitted by the exigencies
of
the steps required to be taken under this Act. I cannot,
however, accept
the argument that regulations made under
subsection (3) are invalid unless
it is proved that they are made
for the preservation of peace and good order
or that the word "
necessary " limits the power to be exercised within the
confines
of that word.
In my view
section 1 (1) is directed to the enforcement of regulations not
to
the making of them. As was pointed out in the Court of Appeal
there
are a number of regulations in the Schedule to the Act under
which the
civil authority must issue orders to make the
regulations effective. These
orders do not, like regulations, have
to be laid before both Houses of
Parliament. The regulations are
in the nature of enactments requiring a
high degree of formality
whereas orders are not in this category and are
issued pursuant to
powers contained in the regulations.
5
I agree
with the majority of the Court of Appeal that the Act in sub-
section
(1) is saying no more than that the words in question refer simply
to
taking such steps and issuing such orders as are permissible under
either
the Act or regulations including not only those contained
in the Schedule
but also any which may be made under subsection
(3). I observe that the
Lord Chief Justice, although taking a
different view of the proper con-
struction of section 1 of the
Act and regarding the earlier provisions as
giving assistance in
the way of guide lines, did not accept the argument
that every
step taken by the minister, although he thought taking steps
included
making regulations, must, if challenged, be proved to be
necessary
for preserving the peace and maintaining order.
In my
opinion there is a distinction between the powers given by section
1
subsection (1) and those given by subsection (2) of the same
section, in that
the former are executive and the latter
legislative powers. The minister is
not restricted by the language
relating to his executive powers when execut-
ing his legislative
powers though no doubt he will not be unmindful of the
language of
Parliament in the whole Act.
The vexed
question remains whether the impugned regulation is capable
of
being related to the prescribed purpose, that is to say, the
preservation
of the peace and the maintenance of order. The
authorities show that
where, as here, there is no question of bad
faith the Courts will be slow
to interfere with the exercise of
wide powers to make regulations.
There is,
on the face of the impugned regulation, no apparent misconstruc-
tion
of the enabling Act or failure to comply with any conditions
prescribed
by the Act for the exercise of its powers.
The
proscription of present and future " Republican clubs "
including " any
" like organisations howsoever described
" is said to be something outside
the scope and meaning of
the Act and so incapable of being related to the
prescribed
purposes of the Act. Accepting that the word " Republican "
is
an innocent word and need not connote anything contrary to law, I
can-
not escape the conclusion that in its context, added to the
list of admittedly
unlawful organisations of a militant type, the
word " Republican " is capable
of fitting the
description of a club which in the opinion of the minister
should
be proscribed as a subversive organisation of a type akin to
those
previously named in the list of admittedly unlawful
organisations. The
context in which the word is used shows the
type of club which the minister
had in mind and there is no doubt
that the mischief aimed at is an associa-
tion which has
subversive objects. On this matter, in my opinion, the Court
should
not substitute its judgment for that of the Minister, on the
ground
that the banning of " Republican clubs " is too
remote. I agree that the use
of the words " any like
organisation howsoever described" lends some
support to the
contention that the regulation is vague and for that reason
invalid
but on consideration I do not accept the argument based on
vagueness.
It is not difficult to see why the minister, in order
to avoid subter-
fuge, was not anxious to restrict himself to the
description " Republican "
seeing that there might be
similar clubs which he might seek to proscribe
whatever they
called themselves. If and when any case based on the words
"
any like organisation " arises it will have to be decided but I
do not, by
reason of the use of those words, condemn the
regulation as being too vague
or uncertain to be supported. I
would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Guest
my
lords.
The
Appellant was charged in the Magistrates' Court at
Magherafelt,
Northern Ireland with being a member of an unlawful
organisation, namely
a Republican Club, contrary to Regulation 24A
of the Regulations made
under the Civil Authorities (Special
Powers) Acts (Northern Ireland) 1922-
1943. The complaint was
dismissed and the Respondent appealed to the
6
Court of
Appeal (Northern Ireland) by way of Stated Case. The result was
that
the Court of Appeal, by a majority (Lord MacDermott CJ.
dissenting),
allowed the appeal and remitted to the Magistrates.
Regulation
24A was made under section 1(3) of the Civil Authorities
(Special
Powers) Act (Northern Ireland) 1922. This section is in the
following
terms: —
"
1.—(1) The civil authority shall have power, in respect of
persons,
" matters and things within the jurisdiction of the
Government of
" Northern Ireland, to take all such steps and
issue all such orders
" as may be necessary for preserving
the peace and maintaining order,
" according to and in the
execution of this Act and the regulations
" contained in the
Schedule thereto, or such regulations as may be
" made in
accordance with the provisions of this Act (which regulations,
"
whether contained in the said Schedule or made as aforesaid, are in
"
this Act referred to as ' the regulations '):
"
Provided that the ordinary course of law and avocations of life and
"
the enjoyment of property shall be interfered with as little as may
"
be permitted by the exigencies of the steps required to be taken
under
" this Act.
" (2)
For the purposes of this Act the civil authority shall be the
"
Minister of Home Affairs for Northern Ireland, but that Minister
may
" delegate, either unconditionally or subject to such
conditions as he
" thinks fit, all or any of his powers under
this Act to any officer of
" police, and any such officer of
police shall, to the extent of such
" delegation, be the
civil authority as respects any part of Northern
" Ireland
specified in such delegation.
" (3)
The Minister of Home Affairs shall have power to make
"
regulations—
" (a)
for making further provision for the preservation of the peace
"
and maintenance of order, and
" (b) for varying or revoking any provision of the regulations;
" and
any regulations made as aforesaid shall, subject to the provisions
"
of this Act, have effect and be enforced in like manner as
regulations
" contained in the Schedule to this Act.
" (4)
All regulations made as aforesaid shall be laid before both
"
Houses of Parliament as soon as may be after they are made, and,
"
if an address is presented to the Lord Lieutenant by either House
"
within the next fourteen days on which such House shall be sitting
"
after any such regulation is laid before it praying that the
regulation
" may be annulled, the Lord Lieutenant may annul
that regulation and
" it shall thenceforth be void, without
prejudice to the validity of any-
" thing done thereunder, or
to the power of making a new regulation;
" and regulations
made as aforesaid shall not be deemed to be statutory
" rules
within the meaning of section one of the Rules Publication Act
"
1893."
The
Schedule to the Act contains a number of regulations made
under
section 1. Regulation 24 provided that any person who
does an act with
a view to promoting the objects of an unlawful
association within the meaning
of section 7 of the Criminal Law
and Procedure (Ireland) Act 1887 is to
be guilty of an offence.
On 22nd
May 1922. Regulation 24A was added by the Minister acting
under
section 1(3) of the 1922 Act which empowers him to make
regulations
for making further provision for the preservation of
peace and the mainten-
ance of order. This regulation provides
as follows:
" Any
person who becomes or remains a member of an unlawful
"
association or who does any act with a view to promoting or
calculated
7
" to
promote the objects of an unlawful association or seditious con-
"
spiracy shall be guilty of an offence against these Regulations."
It
was also provided :
" The
following organisations shall for the purposes of this Regula-
"
tion be deemed to be unlawful associations: —
" The
Irish Republican Brotherhood,
" The Irish Republican Army,
"
The Irish Volunteers,
" The Cumann na m'Ban,
" The
Fianna na h'Eireann."
Later
regulations made in 1931, 1933 and 1936 respectively added to
the
list of organisations deemed to be unlawful for the purposes
of Regulation 24A
the following:
"
Saor Eire
" The National Guard
" Cumann Poblachta na
h'Eireann ".
The latter name means " Group of the
Republic of Eire ".
Regulation
24 was, together with a number of other regulations, revoked
in
1949, presumably on the ground that these stringent powers were
no
longer thought to be necessary, but Regulation 24A still
remained.
On 7th
March 1967 Regulation 24A was amended by adding to the list
of
organisations deemed to be unlawful the following:
" The
organisations at the date of this regulation or at any time
"
thereafter describing themselves as ' Republican Clubs' or any like
"
organisation howsoever described.".
The Case
Stated by the Magistrates that the Appellant was on 28th
March
1968 and still is a member of Slaughtneil Republican Club. It
was
further stated that there was no evidence that the Appellant
or the club
were at any time a threat to peace, law and order.
There was nothing
seditious in its pursuits or those of its
members. The resident magistrates
expressed their conclusion in
this form:
"
Bearing in mind the contents and purposes of ' the Act' that the
"
Regulations thereunder are ' Regulations for Peace and Order in
"
' Northern Ireland ' and noting the words ' or any like
organisation
" ' howsoever described ' in the said Statutory
Rule and Order of 1967
" and that no definition of the term '
Republican Club ' was shown to
" us, we came to the
conclusion that the only reasonable interpretation
" and the
true meaning of the portion of paragraph 1 of the said
"
Statutory Rule and Order within the inverted commas in the context
"
in which it has to be considered is ' The Organisations at the date
"
' of this Regulation or at any time hereafter describing themselves
"
' as " Republican Clubs "—being Clubs which have as
their object the
" ' absorption of Northern Ireland in the
Republic of Ireland the activities
" ' of whose members in
seeking to further that object constitute a
" ' threat to
peace and order in Northern Ireland—or any like organisation
"
' howsoever described.''
They accordingly dismissed the complaint.
The
Appellant's counsel did not seek to uphold this ground of
acquittal
before your Lordships. His argument was that the 1967
amendment to
Regulation 24A was ultra vires of the powers
contained in section 1(3) of
the 1922 Act. He prefaced his
argument by suggesting that the regulation
purported to cover
three types of organisation (1) existing organisations
calling
themselves " Republican Clubs "; (2) any organisation which
might
in the future call itself a " Republican Club "
and (3) " like organisations
" howsoever described ".
8
He also
submitted that the terms of section 1(1) along with the proviso
were
incorporated in subsection (3) of section 1 and that in
accordance
with section 1(1) the regulation, to be valid, must be
shown to be necessary
for preserving the peace and maintaining
order, and that it must also comply
with the proviso to section
1(1). In my view this is not a correct inter-
pretation of section
1. Section 1(1) and section 1(3) are dealing with
different
matters; subsection (1) deals with executive steps and orders
and
subsection (3) is dealing with legislative acts. Subsection
(3) must, in my
view, be construed quite independently of
subsection (1). In this regard I
find myself, with respect, in
disagreement with the Lord Chief Justice.
The
Appellant's counsel argued that it was for the prosecution to
show
that the regulation was intra vires of the Act and
that as there was no
evidence that a Republican Club so called was
a threat to peace and order
in Northern Ireland the amending
Regulation 24A was ultra vires. In my
view this is not the
true position. There is no doubt that it is open to the
Courts to
hold that a regulation made under a statute is ultra vires of
the
empowering Act. Such an argument was advanced in Rex v.
Halliday [1917]
A.C. 260 but unsuccessfully. The contention
for the subject in that case
was that although the regulation
came, upon a certain construction of
the Act, within the powers,
the Act must be construed in a way so as to
limit the ambit of the
regulation. Since that case I have been unable to
discover any
case in which a regulation made under an Act of Parliament
in the
form of a Statutory Instrument has ever been challenged.
Your
Lordships were certainly not referred to any such case. There
are a multitude
of statutes in which powers are given to Ministers
by order to make regula-
tions and indeed in some cases to alter
the terms of the statute by regulation.
In the absence of any such
challenges of the validity of Regulations made
in virtue of
statutory power it must be plain that the task of a subject
who
endeavours to challenge the validity of such a regulation is a
heavy one.
There are
in the authorities indications of the principle upon which a
Court
construes the validity of such regulations. For example in Minister
of
Health v. The King ex parte Yaffe [1931] A.C. 494
Lord Thankerton at page
532 said:
" In
this case, as in similar cases that have come before the Courts,
"
Parliament has delegated its legislative function to a Minister of
the
" Crown, but in this case Parliament has retained no
specific control
" over the exercise of the function by the
Minister, such as a condition
" that the order should be laid
before Parliament and might be annulled
" by a resolution of
either House within a limited period. In my opinion
" the
true principle of construction of such delegation by Parliament of
"
its legislative function is that it only confers a limited power on
the
" Minister, and that, unless Parliament expressly
excludes the jurisdiction
" of the Court, the Court has the
right and duty to decide whether the
" Minister has acted
within the limits of his delegated power."
Again at page 533:
"
Where, however, the power delegated to the Minister is a discre-
"
tionary power, the exercise of that power within the limits of the
"
discretion will not be open to challenge in a Court of law."
In such a
case as this the discretion entrusted to the Minister to
make
regulations for the preservation of peace and the maintenance
of order in
Northern Ireland is a very wide power and his
discretion will not lightly be
interfered with. The Court will
only interfere if the Minister is shown to
have gone outside the
four corners of the Act or has acted in bad faith (see
Lord Greene
M.R. in Carltona Ltd. v. Commissioners of Works [1943]
2 All
E.R. page 560). Lord Radcliffe in Attorney-General for
Canada v. Hallet
& Carey Ltd. [1952] AC 427 said
at page 450 that the executive act to be
valid must be "
capable of being related to the prescribed purposes of the
"
empowering Act."
Approaching
the present regulations with these principles in view I turn
to
the argument for the Appellant which was that as there was no
evidence
that there was anything sinister about the word "
republican " which could be
9
a threat
to peace and order the regulation was ultra vires. My answer
to
that argument is that I do not know what significance the word
" republican "
has in Northern Ireland. It may well be
that it will bear a different con-
struction in Northern Ireland
from what it might bear in another context.
These, however, are
matters for the Minister. It is important to observe that
the
inclusion of republican clubs eo nomine is an additional
category to a
list of organisations in Regulation 24A all of
which, according to the Lord
Chief Justice, were notoriously of a
militant type and were unlawful organis-
ations. Three of these
organisations bear the name "republican". No
challenge
was made of the validity of Regulation 24A as originally made
which
was admittedly intra vires. In these circumstances I am not
able to
say that a Minister acting in good faith—as it is
conceded he did—under
section 1(3) of the Act was exceeding
his powers in adding to the category
of organisations deemed to be
unlawful organisations described as " Repub-
" lican
Clubs ". In my view, in the words of Lord Greene, the
regulation
was " within the four corners of the Act "
or, in the words of Lord Radcliffe,
was " capable of being
related to the powers " conferred by the Act. In
these
circumstances the Court cannot, in my view, interfere with the
exercise
of the Minister's discretion.
There is a
long line of authorities dealing with executive orders made
by
ministers under powers conferred on them by the Defence
(General) Regula-
tions 1939 of which Carltona Ltd. v.
Commissioners of Works (supra) and
Point of Ayr
Collieries Ltd. v. Lloyd George [1943] 2 All E.R. 546 are
only
examples. In the latter case the minister was given power
under the Defence
(General) Regulations 1939 " if it appeared
to him that in the interests of the
" public safety, the
defence of the Realm, or the efficient prosecution of the
"
war it was necessary to take control " of property. It was held
that there
was no jurisdiction to interfere with the exercise of
an executive power within
his delegated authority.
The
present case, as I have already stated, is not a case of an
executive
order made by a Minister under a regulation, but the
challenge of a regula-
tion made by a minister under an Act of
Parliament conferring power on
him to make regulations for certain
specified purposes, the regulation to be
laid before Parliament
under section 1(4). The fact that in the cases above
referred to
there was a provision in the regulations to the effect that if
it
appeared to the Minister to be necessary for the specified
purposes does not,
in my view, distinguish these cases from the
present. In the regulation
in question the expediency is stated in
the Regulation and in the absence of
any charge of bad faith
expediency is presumed provided that the exercise
of the power is
capable of being related to the specified purposes.
The final
argument for the Appellant related to the third category
of
organisations which it is said the regulation covered, namely "
or any like
" organisation howsoever described". It was
submitted that this would
cover any club whatever its name and
whatever its objects and that such
an exercise of the Minister's
power was unreasonable, arbitrary and
capricious. In my view this
argument is not well founded. The regulation
first of all embraces
Republican Clubs eo nomine and they are caught by
their
very description. If they do not bear the name " Republican ",
it
would be a question of interpretation after evidence whether
any particular
club was covered by the words " any like
organisation howsoever described ".
It is indeed not
necessary for the purposes of this case where the organisa-
tion
bore the name " Republican Club " to examine this question
in any
great detail. But my provisional view is that the
regulation would cover
any organisation having similar objects to
those of a Republican Club or
of any of the named organisations or
of any organisation whose objects
included the absorption of
Northern Ireland in the Republic of Ireland.
Having
regard to all these matters I cannot say that the class of "
like
"organisations" is either ambiguous or arbitrary so
as to invalidate the
Regulation. In my view this ground of attack
also fails.
I agree
with the majority of the Court of Appeal in holding that
the
regulation was not ultra vires. I would therefore
dismiss the appeal.
10
Lord Pearce
MY LORDS,
The 1922
Act was passed at a time of unrest and disturbance. Its object
was
to empower certain authorities of the Government of Northern
Ireland
to take steps for preserving the peace and maintaining
order. It laid down
certain stringent regulations in its schedule.
By section 1 the Minister of
Home Affairs was given power "
to take all such steps and issue all such
" orders as may be
necessary for preserving the peace and maintaining
" order,
according to and in the execution of this Act and the regulations"
or
such further regulations as might be made in accordance with the
Act.
There was a proviso that the ordinary course of law and
avocations of life
and the enjoyment of property should be
interfered with as little as might
be permitted by the exigencies
of the steps required to be taken under the
Act. The section also
gave the Minister power to make regulations for
making further
provision for the preservation of the peace and maintenance
of
order and for varying or revoking any provision of the regulations in
the
schedule. The regulation here in question purported to be made
in 1967
under that power. Was it within that power or was it ultra
vires?
Before
considering the content of the 1967 regulation, it is convenient
to
see what was the extent of the Minister's power. He was not in
express
terms given a subjective discretion or indeed any
discretion at all. But
clearly some discretion was intended. Its
extent must be determined by
the context in which it is given. It
was a discretion to carry out the pur-
poses of the Act which gave
it. In Julius v. Bishop of Oxford 5 A.C. 214
at 235
Lord Selborne said—
" The
question whether a judge or a public officer to whom a power
"
is given by such words is bound to use it upon any particular
occasion
" or in any particular manner must be solved
aliunde, and, in general,
" it is to be solved from
the context, from the particular provisions, or
" from the
general scope and objects of the enactment conferring the
"
power."
That case
was dealing with a somewhat different point, namely whether
when a
power was given there was a duty to use that power in
proper
circumstances. But it is an example of the principle that
when Parliament
gives a power without any indications of its
extent, one must read the limita-
tions from the context. It is a
power given to carry out the purposes of the
Act and any
discretion given is limited to those purposes. Even where such
wide
words are used as " may make such regulations as he may think
fit",
the subjective power is limited to such things as the
general context of the
statute shows to be its objectives. It
cannot be suggested that he can make
any regulations that he
likes, regardless of the intentions to be derived from
the statute
conferring the power. A fortiori is this so when no
subjective
licence is given ; for it certainly should not be
implied.
When one
is seeking to define the extent of this power from its context
and
the objects of the Act, one cannot divorce subsection (3) from the
rest
of the section and derive from such severance a justification
for regarding
subsection (3) in vacuo. The section as a
whole clearly shows that Parlia-
ment was intending the stringent
powers under the Act to be used only in
respect of such steps and
orders as may be necessary for preserving the peace
and
maintaining order. And a proviso was deliberately inserted that "
the
" ordinary course of law and avocations of life and the
enjoyment of
" property shall be interfered with as
little as may be permitted by the
" exigencies of the steps
required." There is thus manifested a clear inten-
tion by
Parliament to limit the scope of the restrictive measures to such
as
were made essential by the demands of the crisis and any power
to make
regulations must be similarly limited.
I can find
no reality in the argument that whereas Parliament was thus
carefully
and somewhat apprehensively restricting any repressive steps and
11
orders
to the minimum demanded by the crisis, it was giving a free
rein
to the making of repressive regulations. Such a
refinement could not, I
feel sure, have occurred to any of the
Members of Parliament who voted
for the Act.
The
convention by which our Courts construe statutes in order to find
the
so-called "intention of Parliament" compels one to
disregard the fact
that this was an Act passed by Members of
Parliament. It subjects the
words of a statute to critical
analysis and construction with all the expertise
of legal
professional experience. Our Courts also (unlike the Courts of
some
other countries) disregard the debate which preceded the passing of
the
Act and any assurances that may have been given to the Members
by their
law officers.
This
somewhat artificial convention makes it all the more important
to
avoid refinements of construction which may be attractive to
the expertise
of the skilled lawyer but could never conceivably
have occurred to a Member
of Parliament when he read an apparently
comprehensible statute. In my
opinion the normal ordinary meaning
which this statute would bear is that
the Minister, whether making
orders or regulations or enforcing the statute,
must confine
himself to that which any crisis made necessary, and which
caused
the minimum disruption of the citizen's rights. It is within
that
limited area that his discretion was confined.
Does the
1967 regulation come within the power thus given? In my
opinion it
does not. I agree with the judgment of the learned Lord
Chief
Justice.
The
Justices construed the 1967 regulation with glosses intended to
make
rough and ready sense of it. On principles akin to the maxims
ejusdem
generis and noscitur a sociis, they assumed
that the clubs aimed at were those
whose activities were
subversive, like those whose names were already set
out in the
regulation. Thus they concluded that it only affected clubs
whose
activities were unlawful. But in that case the 1967
regulation was pointless,
since a club whose activities were
unlawful was already dealt with under
the previous regulations.
The Lord Chief Justice, therefore, rightly, I am
inclined to
think, rejected the Justices' gloss on the regulation.
The
original regulation 24 was aimed at subversive activities by
unlawful
associations. After the Act there was added by the
Minister a valid regula-
tion 24A which deemed to be unlawful
associations certain named militant
organisations whose activities
were well known to be subversive. That was
within the Minister's
discretion. Thus, in any prosecution their known
unlawfulness need
not be proved in evidence. By the 1967 regulation,
however, there
were added to the list of those deemed unlawful under 24A
"
The organisations at the date of this regulation or at any time
thereafter
" describing themselves as the ' Republican Clubs'
or any like organisation
" howsoever described ". It was
under this addition to the regulations that
the appellant was
prosecuted. It is admitted that the Republican Club to
which he
belonged was innocent of any unlawful activities. He can
only,
therefore, be guilty of an offence if the regulation makes
the club unlawful
howsoever innocent may be its activities.
It is
argued that it is for the Minister alone to decide how he should
use
his power and that the court should not interfere, however
wrong it thinks
that decision, unless there is some element of bad
faith. But in my opinion
the duty of surveillance entrusted to
the courts for the protection of the
citizen goes deeper than
that. It cannot take the easy course of " passing by
"
on the other side " when it seems clear to it that the Minister
is using a
power in a way which Parliament, who gave him that
power, did not intend.
When there is doubt, of course the courts
will not interfere. But if it seems
clear on grounds of
rationality and common sense that he was exceeding the
power with
which Parliament was intending to clothe him to further the
purposes
of the Act, the courts have a duty to interfere. The fact that
this
is not an easy line to draw is no reason why the courts
should give up the
task and abandon their duty to protect the
citizen.
12
I accept
the observations of the Lord Chief Justice as to the regulation
being
" too sweeping and too remote on any rational view ". "
It is not",
he said, " to use the words of Lord
Radcliffe, ' capable of being related to'
" these prescribed
purposes. An association may call itself a Republican
" Club
without exhibiting any evidence that its objects or activities are
in
" any sense seditious or otherwise unlawful. That is not
to say that the
" name chosen for an association by its
members could not amount to an
" indication that its objects
or activities were unlawful. To call a club the
" ' The
Freedom Through Violence Club ', for instance, would be asking for
"
trouble. But even in Ireland the word ' Republican ' need not
connote
" anything unconstitutional or contrary to law. If
this regulation is good
" where must the Minister stop? Will
' Irish Clubs ' or ' Ulster Clubs'
" or' Green Clubs' or'
Orange Clubs ' or ' Gaelic Clubs ' or ' Friends of the
" '
Republic ' or ' Friends of the North ' or ' Catholic Clubs ' or '
Protestant
" ' Clubs' all have to be deemed unlawful
associations if similar regulations
" are made regarding such
titles? Mr. Gibson had to concede that if the
" Minister
thought fit he could in the exercise of his discretion make any
"
club with any name in effect an unlawful association. I do not think
that
'' width of power lies within the Act of 1922 ".
Further,
the 1967 regulation is too vague and ambiguous. A man must
not be
put in peril on an ambiguity under the criminal law. When the
1967
regulation was issued the citizen ought to have been able to
know
whether he could or could not remain a member of his club
without being
subject to a criminal prosecution. Yet I doubt if
one could have said
with certainty that any man or woman was safe
in remaining a member of
any club in Northern Ireland, however
named or whatever its activities or
objects.
Had the
final phrase "or any like organisation howsoever described"
been
absent, the regulation would have simply been an attack on the
descrip-
tion " Republican Club ", however innocent the
club's activities. Presumably
the justification for it would have
to be that the mere existence of the word
Republican in the name
of a club was so inflammatory that its suppression
was "necessary
for preserving the peace and maintaining order" and that
the
" exigencies " of the need for its suppression did not
permit the citizen's
right in that respect to prevail. For the
reasons given by the Lord Chief
Justice I do not accept that such
a justification could suffice. But be that
as it may, the final
phrase shows that this is more than an attack on nomen-
clature,
since the club is deemed equally unlawful if it is a like
organisation
whatever be the name under which it goes.
And what
is the " likeness " to a Republican club which makes an
organi-
sation unlawful " howsoever described "? Since a
Republican club is banned
whatever may be its activities, the
likeness cannot consist in its activities.
And since the
organisation is unlawful, howsoever described, the " likeness
"
cannot consist in a likeness of nomenclature. The only
possibility left seems
to be that the " likeness " may
consist in the mere fact of being a club.
In which case all clubs,
however named, are unlawful—which is absurd.
One cannot
disregard the final phrase, since that would wholly alter the
meaning
of the regulation. Without the final phrase it is simply an attack
on
nomenclature. But with the final phrase it cannot simply be an
attack
on nomenclature. One cannot sever the bad from the good by
omitting a
phrase when the omission must alter the meaning of the
rest. One must
take the whole sentence as it stands. And as it
stands it is too vague and
ambiguous to be valid.
I would therefore allow the appeal.
Lord Pearson
MY LORDS,
The
question at issue in this appeal is whether the Regulation dated
the
7th March 1967, purporting to have been made by the Minister
of Home
13
Affairs
under section 1(3) of the Civil Authorities (Special Powers)
Act
(Northern Ireland) 1922, is within the powers conferred by
that Act.
The whole
of section 1 is relevant but it has already been set out and
I
will not repeat it.
The power
to make regulations is conferred on the Minister by sub-
section
(3) and not by subsection (1) of section 1. The scheme of the
section
is that the provisions of the Act and the regulations, both those
set
out in the Schedule to the Act and those which may be made
subsequently,
constitute the authority under and in accordance
with which orders may be
made and steps may be taken under
subsection (1). An examination of the
language of the regulations
set out in the Schedule shows clearly that
" orders" are
to be made and " steps " to be taken under the
regulations.
The orders and steps are executive or administrative
acts. The making of
regulations is part of the legislation and is
not the making of an order or
the taking of a step within the
meaning of subsection (1). Accordingly, the
limitations imposed on
the making of orders and the taking of steps by the
words "
As may be necessary for preserving the peace and maintaining order
"
and by the proviso to subsection (1) do not apply to the
making of regulations
under subsection (3). It is clear that the
regulations made by the Minister
of Home Affairs under subsection
(3) are legislative in character, because
they may vary or revoke
any provisions of the regulations and they are to
have effect and
be enforced in like manner as regulations contained in the
schedule.
They are thus on the same plane as the initial legislation
contained
in the Act.
The
directly relevant power under subsection (3) is " to make
regulations
"... for making further provision for the
preservation of the peace and
maintenance of order". That is
not an unlimited power. It is a power to
make regulations for the
specified purposes—the preservation of the peace
and
maintenance of order. If regulations purporting to be made under
this
power could be shown to have been made otherwise than for the
specified
purposes, I think they could be held to be ultra
vires. I am dealing only
with the construction of subsection
(3) of section 1 of the Act, and conse-
quently using the phrase "
otherwise than for the specified purposes"
without further
definition or elaboration.
I should
add that of course the Act is to be construed as a whole,
and
consequently, when one is construing subsection (3) of section
1, subsection
(1) can be taken into account. But, taking it into
account, I do not find that
it alters in any way the natural
meaning of subsection (3).
The
Northern Ireland Parliament must have intended that somebody
should
decide whether or not the making of some proposed regulation would
be
conducive to the " preservation of the peace and maintenance of
order ".
Obviously it must have been intended that the
Minister of Home Affairs
should decide that question. Who else
could? He might consult other
Ministers before making the
decision, but it would be his decision. The
Courts cannot have
been intended to decide such a question, because they
do not have
the necessary information and the decision is in the sphere
of
politics, which is not their sphere.
When the
Minister has made a regulation, and purports to have made it
under
section 1 subsection (3) of the Act, the presumption of
regularity
(omnia praesumuntur rite esse acta) applies
and the regulation is assumed
Prima facie to be
intra vires. But if the validity of the regulation
is
challenged, and it is contended that the regulation was made
otherwise than
for the specified purposes, the courts will have to
decide this issue, however,
difficult the task may be for them in
some circumstances.
The ways
in which an instrument may be shown to be ultra vires have
been
discussed in many cases, and I do not find it necessary to enter
into
such a discussion in this case. I shall assume that the
regulation might be
shown prima face to be ultra vires
(made otherwise than for the specified
purposes) either by
internal evidence from the provisions of the regulation
14
itself—e.g.
if it purported to render all chess clubs unlawful—or by
external
evidence of the factual situation existing at the time
when the regulation was
made.
To see
what the relevant internal evidence is, one has to begin with
the
original Regulation 24A made in 1922 soon after the enactment
of the Act.
The principal provisions are as follows:
" Any
person who becomes or remains a member of an unlawful
"
association or who does any act with a view to promoting or
"
calculated to promote the objects of an unlawful association or
"
seditious conspiracy shall be guilty of an offence against these
"
Regulations.
. . . . . . . . .
" The
following organisations shall for the purposes of this Regula-
"
tion be deemed to be unlawful associations: —
" The
Irish Republican Brotherhood
" The Irish Republican Army
"
The Irish Volunteers
" The Cumann na m'Ban
" The
Fianna na h'Eireann."
Later
regulations made in 1931, 1933 and 1936 respectively added to
the
list of organisations deemed for the purposes of Regulation
24A to be
unlawful associations the following:
" Saor Eire
" The National Guard
" Cumann Poblachta na h'Eireann ".
Counsel
has stated that " Cumann Poblachta na h'Eireann " means "
Group
" of the Republic of Eire ". It is conceded that
the original Regulation 24A
and these supplementary regulations
are valid.
Then the
regulation with which this appeal is concerned was made in
1967 by
the Minister of Home Affairs. One of its recitals was "And
"
whereas it is expedient that further provision for the preservation
of the
" peace and maintenance of order should be made".
The operative
provision was—
"
Regulation 24A. of the principal Regulations shall have effect as
if
" the following organisations were added to the list of
organisations
" which for the purpose of that Regulation are
deemed to be unlawful
" associations: —
" '
The organisations at the date of this regulation or at any time
"
' thereafter describing themselves as "Republican Clubs" or
any
" ' like organisation howsoever described '."
That
recital and those provisions do not to my mind afford any
evidence
that the regulation was made otherwise than for the
specified purposes. The
recital is evidence that it was made for
those purposes. The deeming of
Republican Clubs to be unlawful
organisations is in line with the deeming
of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood, the Irish Republican Army and the
Cumann Poblachta na
h'Eireann to be unlawful organisations. A Republican
Club in
Northern Ireland is presumably one whose members believe in
a
republican form of government, and wish to have such a form of
government
introduced into Northern Ireland, which would naturally
be effected by
Northern Ireland being severed from the United
Kingdom and incorporated
in the Irish Republic. Did such clubs in
Northern Ireland at the time when
the regulation was made have a
tendency to become militant, causing dis-
turbances and perhaps
committing acts of violence, or did they not? I could
not answer
that question, not having the relevant information. But presum-
ably
the Minister of Home Affairs in Northern Ireland did at that time
have
relevant information and on the basis of that information did
form the
15
opinion
that the continued existence of those clubs would be a threat to
the
preservation of the peace and maintenance of order. In saying
that, I am
applying the presumption of regularity. At any rate
there is not in the
provisions of the regulation any evidence that
it was made otherwise than
for the specified purposes.
The external evidence is summarised in paragraph 8 of the Stated Case:
" 8.
No evidence was given that the Respondent or the said Club
"
was at any time a threat to peace, law and order but it was
conceded
" by witnesses for the Complainant in cross
examination that in so
" far as the Police were aware there
was nothing seditious in its pursuits
" or those of its
members."
This
evidence relates only to one particular club, which had come
into
existence shortly before the date of the regulation, and it
relates to a later
date (in June 1968) and it only shows that the
Police did not know of
anything seditious in the pursuits of this
Club or its members. It is relevant
evidence which has to be taken
into account, but it is far from sufficient
to prove that the
regulation, made on the 7th March 1967, was made otherwise
than
for the specified purposes.
There is
one further argument against the validity of this Regulation, and
it
is the most formidable one. It is that the Regulation is too vague,
because
it includes the words " or any like organisation
howsoever described ". I
have had doubts on this point, but
in the end I think the argument against
the validity of the
regulation ought not to prevail. The Minister's intention
evidently
was (if I may use a convenient short phrase) to ban Republican
Clubs.
He had to exclude in advance two subterfuges which might defeat
his
intention. First, an existing Republican Club might be dissolved,
and
a new one created. The words " or at any time thereafter
" would exclude
that subterfuge as well as applying to new
Republican clubs generally.
Secondly a new club, having the
characteristic object of a Republican club,
might be created with
some other title such as " New Constitution Group "
or "
Society for the alteration of the Constitution ". The words "
or any
" like organisation however described " would
exclude that subterfuge.
In
construing this regulation one has to bear in mind that it
authorises
very drastic interference with freedom of association,
freedom of speech and
in some circumstances the liberty of the
subject. Therefore it should be
narrowly interpreted. Also it
should if possible be so construed as to have
sufficient certainty
to be valid—ut res magis valeat quam pereat.
In my
opinion the proper construction of the regulation is that the
organi-
sations to be deemed unlawful are—
(i) any
organisation describing itself as a " Republican Club ",
whatever
its actual objects may be, and
(ii) any
organisation which has the characteristic object of a
Republican
Club—namely to introduce republican government
into Northern
Ireland—whatever its name may be.
I would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Diplock
MY LORDS,
The
question in this appeal is whether the Civil Authorities (Special
Powers)
Acts (Amending) (No. 1) Regulations (Northern Ireland)
1967, by which
the Minister of Home Affairs for Northern Ireland
purported to add further
provisions to Regulation 24A of the
Regulations in force under the Civil
Authorities (Special Powers)
Act (Northern Ireland) 1922, fall within the
description "
regulations ... for making further provision for the preservation
"of
the peace and maintenance of order " contained in section 1(3)
of that
Act (which for brevity I shall call " the Special
Powers Act"). If they
do, the Minister was empowered by that
subsection to make the regulations
16
and this
appeal must be dismissed. If they do not, the regulations are
ultra
vires and void, the appeal must be allowed and the
Appellant acquitted.
The
legislative powers of the Parliament of Northern Ireland, unlike
those
of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, are limited by the
Constitution
of Northern Ireland contained in the Government of
Ireland Act 1920 as
amended. But it is not contended that the
Regulations challenged in the
present appeal, even if they bear
the meaning for which the Respondent
contends, are ultra vires
the legislative powers of the Parliament of Northern
Ireland.
The sole question is whether the making of these Regulations
is
within the legislative powers delegated to the Minister of Home
Affairs
by the Parliament of Northern Ireland. This falls to be
determined by
the same principles as would apply to an enactment
in similar terms of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom.
The
division of functions between Parliament and the Courts as
respects
legislation is clear. Parliament makes laws and can
delegate part of its power
to do so to some subordinate authority.
The Courts construe laws whether
made by Parliament directly or by
a subordinate authority acting under
delegated legislative powers.
The view of the Courts as to whether particular
statutory or
subordinate legislation promotes or hinders the common weal
is
irrelevant. The decision of the Courts as to what the words
used in the
statutory or subordinate legislation mean is decisive.
Where the validity of
subordinate legislation made pursuant to
powers delegated by Act of Parlia-
ment to a subordinate authority
is challenged, the Court has a three-fold task:
first to determine
the meaning of the words used in the Act of Parliament
itself to
describe the subordinate legislation which that authority is
authorised
to make, secondly to determine the meaning of the
subordinate legislation
itself and finally to decide whether the
subordinate legislation complies with
that description.
I turn
then first to the words used in the Special Powers Act to
describe
the subordinate legislation (therein called "
Regulations ") which the Minister
of Home Affairs was
authorised to make by the Special Powers Act. The
actual
delegation is to be found in section 1 (3) but the words there
used
take their colour from their context and must be construed in
the light of the
scheme disclosed by the Act as a whole and in
particular those parts of it
which deal with " Regulations ".
Your
Lordships' House is entitled to take judicial note of the fact that
in
1922 when the Act was passed there was a state of civil
insurrection in
Northern Ireland. The Act (1) created a whole
series of criminal offences on
the part of private citizens made
triable under section 3 by a court of summary
jurisdiction
consisting of two or more resident magistrates and punishable
under
section 4 by fine up to £100 or imprisonment up to two years;
and (2)
empowered the civil authority, defined in section 1 (2) as
the Minister of
Home Affairs and any police officer to whom he
delegates his powers, to
take various steps interfering with the
personal liberty and the rights of
property of citizens, subject
in the case of interference with rights of property
to the payment
of compensation under section 11.
The
offences created and the powers conferred upon the civil authority
by
the Act itself are set out not in the body of the Act but in the
Schedule
containing what are described as " Regulations for
Peace and Order in
" Northern Ireland ". The reason for
the use of this legislative technique
becomes apparent from
section 1 of the Act. It was to enable the provisions
of the Act
which created offences or conferred powers to be added to, varied
or
revoked by the Minister of Home Affairs as the exigencies of the
situation
might require without the need to obtain any fresh Act
of Parliament.
One
further comment on the nature of the regulations contained in
the
Schedule is germane before turning to section 1 of the Act.
Some of the
regulations which create offences are self-operating.
They define acts and
omissions which constitute offences in
themselves without need for any further
action by the civil
authority. Other regulations, however, are only brought
into
effect by the making of an " order " by the civil authority
the offence
17
being
non-compliance with such an " order ". An order made under
regula-
tions of this kind is in itself of the nature of
subordinate legislation, but we
are not concerned in this appeal
with the validity of an order.
Section 1 of the Act is in the following terms: —
" 1.
(1) The civil authority shall have power, in respect of persons,
"
matters and things within the jurisdiction of the Government of
"
Northern Ireland, to take all such steps and issue all such orders
as
" may be necessary for preserving the peace and
maintaining order,
" according to and in the execution of
this Act and the regulations
" contained in the Schedule
thereto, or such regulations as may be made
" in accordance
with the provisions of this Act (which regulations,
" whether
contained in the said Schedule or made as aforesaid, are in
"
this Act referred to as ' the regulations '):
"
Provided that the ordinary course of law and avocations of life and
"
the enjoyment of property shall be interfered with as little as may
be
" permitted by the exigencies of the steps required to be
taken under this
" Act.
" (2) ...
" (3)
The Minister of Home Affairs shall have power to make regu-
"
lations—
" (a)
for making further provision for the preservation of the peace
"
and maintenance of order, and
" (b)
for varying or revoking any provision of the regulations;
"
and any regulations made as aforesaid shall, subject to the
provisions
" of this Act, have effect and be enforced in like
manner as regulations
" contained in the Schedule to this
Act.
" (4) . . ."
The power
to make regulations conferred upon the Minister by subsection
(3)
is exclusively legislative in character. Regulations made by him
pursuant
to the power thus delegated are to have effect as if they
were contained in the
Act of Parliament itself. The regulations
challenged in the present appeal
are purported to be made under
the powers conferred in paragraph (a) of the
subsection. To
be valid they must comply with the description contained in
that
paragraph of the kind of regulation which the Minister is
empowered
to make.
The
relevant characteristic of regulations to which that description
refers
is the effect to be achieved by them. To be valid their
effect must be to
promote the preservation of the peace and the
maintenance of order. I use
the expression " effect "
rather than " purpose " for purpose connotes an
intention
formed by the maker of the regulation to achieve a particular
object,
and substitutes for the objective test of the effect which
the regulation is in
fact likely to achieve, the subjective test
of what effect the Minister himself
whether rightly or mistakenly
believes that the regulation is likely to achieve.
It is to be
observed that in contrast to the words of delegation of
legislative
powers used in modern statutes the description in
section 1(3) of the kind
of regulations which the Minister is
empowered to make contains no reference
to the Minister's own
opinion as to the necessity or expediency of the regu-
lation for
achieving the effect defined. He is not empowered to make
such
further provision as he may think or deem fit or necessary or
expedient or
advisable for the preservation of the peace or the
maintenance of order,
It was words of delegation of this latter
kind which were under consider-
ation in the authorities relied
upon by the majority of the Court of Appeal.
The relevant
characteristic of subordinate legislation so described in the
words
of delegation is the belief of the person empowered to make it that
it
will achieve the effect described. If he does so believe it
is valid. It is only
if he does not that it is ultra vires
and void. The relevant inquiry which the
Court has to make
when subordinate legislation made under words of dele-
gation of
this kind is challenged is not whether his belief was justified
but
whether it existed. The absence of such belief may connote
mala fides on
18
the part
of the maker of the subordinate legislation i.e. that he has used
the
delegated power with the deliberate intention of achieving an
effect
other than that described in the words of delegation but it
does not neces-
sarily do so. He may have honestly misconstrued
the words of the statute
describing the effect to be achieved and
for this reason have failed to form
the relevant belief. These are
two of the grounds referred to by Viscount
Radcliffe in
Attorney-General for Canada v. Hallett & Carey Ltd.
([1952]
A.C. 427 at pages 444 and 445) as invalidating
subordinate legislation made
under words of delegation in which
the belief of the subordinate authority
in the effect to be
achieved by the subordinate legislation is expressly stated
to be
the characteristic of the legislation which he is empowered to
make.
But in practice it is seldom possible to distinguish between
these two grounds.
The subordinate authority is not normally
compellable to disclose his own
mental processes and the Court is
powerless to declare the subordinate
legislation invalid unless,
in the words of Viscount Radcliffe (at page 450)
it is not "
capable of being related to one of the prescribed purposes "
so
that its very terms give rise to the inference that the
subordinate authority
whether deliberately or as a result of his
misconstruing the statute cannot
have formed the relevant belief.
But where,
as in the present case, the subordinate legislation which
the
Minister is empowered to make is described in the statute by
reference to the
effect to be achieved and not by reference to the
Minister's own belief in
the effect which it will achieve, the
relevant inquiry which the Court has to
make if the subordinate
legislation is challenged is not in my view the same.
Onmia
praesumuntur rite esse acta and the onus lies upon the
party challeng-
ing the subordinate legislation to establish its
invalidity. The Minister's
belief in its necessity or expediency
is cogent evidence of its validity but it is
not conclusive and
the ultimate decision whether or not the likelihood that
it will
achieve the effect described in the statue is sufficient to bring it
within
the words of delegation and whether or not that it will not
have any effects
which may be prohibited by those words is one for
the Court itself to make
upon the facts proved in evidence before
it, or of such general public
notoriety that the Court may take
judicial notice of them without further
proof. What degree of
likelihood is sufficient and to what extent the likely
effect must
be confined to that stated in the description are questions for
the
Court itself to determine by construing the words of
delegation in the light
of the general object that the statute
serves, the gravity of the mischief at
which the subordinate
legislation is aimed and the effect (if any) which it
will have
upon otherwise lawful acts or property rights of citizens
which
neither cause nor contribute to that mischief.
In R.
v. Halliday ([1917] AC 260) the words of delegation in the
Defence
of the Realm Consolidation Act 1914 were in a form
comparable to that
employed in the Special Powers Act. Your
Lordships' House by a majority
upheld the challenged Regulation,
but did so by forming its own opinion
based upon matters of which
it was entitled to take judicial notice that the
regulation was
reasonably likely to achieve the effect described in the words
of
delegation.
Subsection
(3) of section 1 itself contains no reference to necessity
or
expediency. The only characteristic referred to in the
description of the
regulations which the Minister is empowered to
make is that they will have
the effect of promoting the peace and
maintaining order, and regulations may
do this though they strike
also at conduct which in no way endangers the
preservation of the
peace or the maintenance of order. But subsection (1)
does limit
the power of the civil authority to take steps according to and
in
execution of the Act to such steps as may be necessary for
preserving the
peace and maintaining order and the proviso
manifests the intention of
Parliament that the ordinary liberties
and rights of citizens should be inter-
fered with as little as
practicable consistent with the preservation of the
peace and the
maintenance of order. In the Court of Appeal there was a
division
of opinion as to whether the making by the Minister of a
regulation
under subsection (3) was the taking of a " step "
within the meaning of sub-
section (1). I agree with the reasoning
which led Curran and McVeigh L.JJ
19
to reject
this submission. The " orders " referred to in
subsection (1) are
orders made under those regulations which
authorise the making of " orders "
and the " steps
" are in my view confined to the administrative action taken
by
the civil authority in the execution of the regulations.
But I
nevertheless agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Pearce
that
the provisions of subsection (1) are relevant as throwing light upon
the
intention of Parliament as to the way in which the powers
under the Act
generally including the power of the Minister to
make regulations under
subsection (3) of the same section were to
be exercised. A regulation which
creates an offence so wide in its
terms as to make unlawful conduct which
cannot have the effect of
endangering the preservation of the peace and the
maintenance of
order is not in my view rendered valid merely because the
description
of the conduct penalised is also wide enough to embrace conduct
which
is reasonably likely to have that effect.
I turn
next to the second task of determining what the words used in
the
regulations challenged in the present appeal mean. They add an
additional
provision to the existing Regulation 24A previously
made by the Minister
for Home Affairs under the same provision of
the Special Powers Act. So
far as is relevant to the present
appeal, Regulation 24A read as follows:
" Any
person who becomes or remains a member of an unlawful
"
association or who does any act with a view to promoting or cal-
"
culated to promote the objects of an unlawful association or
seditious
" conspiracy shall be guilty of an offence against
these Regulations. . . .
" The following organisations shall
for the purposes of this Regulation
" be deemed to be
unlawful associations: —
" The Irish Republican Brotherhood.
" The Irish Republican Army.
" The Irish Volunteers.
" The Cumann na m'Ban.
" The Fianna na h'Eireann."
The
subject matter of the first paragraph of this regulation is "
unlawful
"associations" and "seditious
conspiracies"—both of them expressions
of which the
meaning in the context of the regulation is clear.
Confining
myself to " unlawful associations ", an association is
unlawful
if any of its objects are unlawful, i.e. if either the
end which it seeks to
achieve is unlawful or, though the end is
lawful, the means by which it seeks
to achieve that end are not.
The characteristic of an association which
makes it an "
unlawful association " within the meaning of the first part
of
Regulation 24A is the unlawfulness of its objects. In any
prosecution of a
person for becoming or remaining a member of an
unlawful association or
doing any act with a view to promoting or
calculated to promote the objects
of an unlawful association, it
would be necessary for the prosecution to
prove that the objects
of the association were unlawful. Though if it were
a matter of
general public knowledge that the objects of a particular
associa-
tion were unlawful the court would be entitled to take
judicial notice of that
fact.
The last
paragraph of the regulation places within the category of
associa-
tions with unlawful objects the associations named
therein and thus removed
the need for the prosecution to prove
what their objects were. It is,
however, conceded that at the
time that Regulation 24A was made, viz.
22nd May 1922, it was a
matter of general public knowledge that the objects
of the named
organisations were unlawful and the paragraph does no more
than
assert facts of which the Courts would have been entitled to
take
judicial notice, even apart from that paragraph. For
this reason it is
conceded that Regulation 24A as it stood prior
to 1967 is intra vires:
although different considerations
would have applied if the last paragraph had
listed apparently
lawful organisations such as the Automobile Association
or the
Athenaeum.
The
regulation challenged in the present appeal added to the list of
the
organisations named in the last paragraph of Regulation 24A
not merely
329223 A 4
20
additional
organisations identified by name but a class of
organisations
identified by the words " The organisations at
the date of this regulation
" or at any time thereafter
describing themselves as ' Republican Clubs' or
" any like
organisation howsoever described ".
If these
words include any association which is not in fact unlawful
within
the meaning of the first part of Regulation 24A they alter the
mischief
at which that regulation was previously aimed by adding a
different kind of
mischief; and for the new regulation to be valid
this different kind of
mischief must also be one the suppression
of which will have the effect
of preserving peace and maintaining
order. The inclusion in the definition
of this new class of
proscribed associations of " any like organisation"
shows
that the mischief struck at is some characteristic of
organisations
describing themselves at the date of the regulation
or at any time thereafter
as " Republican Clubs ". The
only characteristics of such organisations to
which reference is
made in the regulation either expressly or by implication
are—
that they
are organisations composed of members and, as is implicit
in the
word " organisation ", possessing objects of some kind ;
and
that they describe themselves as " Republican Clubs ".
But the
possession of characteristic (2) cannot constitute the mischief
aimed
at for the relevant likeness can exist " howsoever [the
organisation is)
" described ".
The
Magistrates' Court took the view that the Minister cannot
have
intended to include in this category organisations composed
of members
irrespective of the objects for which the organisation
was formed, for on this
construction it would be an offence to
become or remain a member of any
club or organisation in Northern
Ireland. They therefore construed the
regulation in the light of
the first paragraph of Regulation 24A as limited
to organisations
composed of members and possessing objects which are
unlawful.
In your
Lordships' House, it has not been contended that this is a
legiti-
mate construction to put on the regulation. So construed
it adds nothing to
what was already contained in the first part of
Regulation 24A.
The
majority of the Court of Appeal for Northern Ireland evaded
the
difficulty involved in the words " any like organisation
howsoever described "
by confining their attention to some of
the words of the regulation only,
viz. " The organisations at
the date of this regulation . . . describing
" themselves as
' Republican Clubs' . . ." The " Slaughtneil Repub-
"
lican Club " of which the Appellant was found to have remained a
member
fell within this category.
The
argument for the Respondent then runs thus: It must be inferred
that
the Minister not merely believed but knew at
the time that he made the
regulation challenged that all
organisations then in existence which described
themselves as
" Republican Clubs " in fact had unlawful objects. That
part
of the regulation which relates to organisations in this
category does not
alter the mischief previously struck at by
Regulation 24A. It does no more
than enable the court to take
judicial notice that these organisations as well
as those
previously listed have unlawful objects. But even if it
were
legitimate to treat the regulation as severable by merely
striking out the two
groups of words omitted above, the inference
that the Minister had such
knowledge is an inference of fact which
cannot be drawn if it can be shown
that the " facts " of
which his " knowledge " is sought to be inferred did
not
exist. If. therefore, the evidence establishes that not all
organisations
which described themselves as " Republican
Clubs " at the date of the
regulation had unlawful objects
this destroys the ground for the inference
that membership of an
organisation with unlawful objects was the mischief
against which
the regulation was aimed.
It was
found as a fact in the present case, which we are informed is
the
only prosecution which has so far been brought under the
regulations
challenged, that as respects one club in this category
"The Slaughtneil
21
"
Republic Club ", there was nothing seditious in its pursuits or
those of its
members so far as the police were aware. It is to be
noted that the prosecu-
tion in which this fact was elicited from
the police witnesses was brought
by a police officer on the
direction of the Attorney-General, as required by
section 3 (2) of
the Act. What was known to the police was presumably
known to the
Minister and this admission gravely weakens any inference
of fact
that the Minister did have the knowledge postulated when he made
the
regulation upon which to base the conclusion of law that upon the
true
construction of the regulation the mischief intended to be
struck at even
in organisations describing themselves as
Republican Clubs at the date of
the regulations lay in their
unlawful objects.
But there
is another reason for rejecting this inference construction of
the
regulation which I find compelling. It is not, in my view,
permissible
to treat the regulation as severable in the way
adopted by the majority of
the Court of Appeal. To do so is to
treat it as striking at more than one
unrelated mischief whereas
the inclusion in the description of the organisa-
tions deemed to
be unlawful association of the words " any like organisation
"
makes it plain that it is organisations possessing a common
mischievous
characteristic that are intended to be proscribed.
What then
is that characteristic? Even if it were legitimate to infer that
the
Minister had knowledge of the objects of " Republican
Clubs " in existence
at the date of the regulation he could
not have knowledge of what would
be the objects of clubs to be
formed in the future which would describe
themselves as "
Republican Clubs ". The characteristic struck at,
therefore,
cannot be the possession in fact of unlawful
objects by the organisations
proscribed. Nor for the reasons
previously indicated can the common
characteristic struck at be
the use of the name "Republican Club". It is
conceivable
that the adoption of a particular name might of itself be
so
inflammatory in Northern Ireland as to endanger the
preservation of peace
and the maintenance of order, but the
regulation proscribes " like organisa-
" tions "
which do not adopt this name.
But there
are no other ascertainable common characteristics of the
organisa-
tions described in the regulation except that they are
composed of members
and possess objects of some kind or other and
describe themselves by some
name or other. If the Minister's
intention was to proscribe all clubs and
associations in Northern
Ireland whatever their objects and name the regula-
tion plainly
falls outside the power delegated to him by section 1 (3) of
the
Special Powers Act to make regulations "for making
further provision for
" the preservation of the peace and the
maintenance of order ". It makes
unlawful conduct which
cannot have the effect of endangering the preserva-
tion of the
peace or the maintenance of order. But if the Minister's
intention
was to proscribe some narrower category of organisations
the suppression
of which would have the effect of preserving the
peace and maintaining
order he has in my view failed to disclose
in the regulation what that
narrower category is. A regulation
whose meaning is so vague that it
cannot be ascertained with
reasonable certainty cannot fall within the words
of delegation.
It is
possible to speculate that the Minister when he made the
regulation
now challenged bona fide believed that the sort
of club which at that date
described itself as a " Republican
Club " was likely to have unlawful objects
which would
endanger the preservation of the peace and the maintenance of
order
and by the words that he added he may have intended to do no
more
than to prevent such clubs from evading the regulation by
dissolving and
re-forming or by changing their names. If this
was his intention he signally
failed to express it in the
regulation, for by no process of construction can
it be given this
limited effect. Or he may have thought it
administratively
convenient to insert in the regulation a
description of proscribed organisa-
tions so wide as to include
also those with lawful objects in order to be sure
that none with
unlawful objects should be omitted and to rely upon
the
administrative discretion of the Attorney-General under
section 3 (2) of the
Act not to enforce the regulation. But to do
this however administratively
convenient would be outside his
delegated legislative powers.
22
But
this is speculation not construction and your Lordships' function
is
limited to construing the words which the Minister has used. In
my view
the words used by the Minister in the regulation are
either too wide to fall
within the description of the regulations
which he is empowered to make
under section 1 (3) of the Special
Powers Act or are too vague and uncertain
in their meaning to be
enforceable.
I would allow this appeal.
(329223) Dd. 197039 25 6/69 St.S.