Tutorial 4
Tutorial 4
Tutorial 4
discretion thesis
Separability thesis denies the existence of necessary moral constraints on the content of law.
This approximates to what is often called the ‘social thesis’ that law may be identified as a social
fact without reference to moral considerations. In its most general form, the separability thesis
asserts that law and morality are conceptually distinct. This abstract formulation can be
interpreted in a number of ways. For example, Klaus Faber interprets it as making a meta-level
claim that the definition of law must be entirely free of moral notions. This interpretation implies
that any reference to moral considerations in defining the related notions of law, legal validity,
and legal system is inconsistent with the separability thesis.
More commonly, the separability thesis is interpreted as making only an object-level claim about
the existence conditions for legal validity. As Hart describes it, the separability thesis is no more
than the “simple contention that it is in no sense a necessary truth that laws reproduce or satisfy
certain demands of morality, though in fact they have often done so”. Insofar as the object-level
interpretation of the separability thesis denies it is a necessary truth that there are moral
constraints on legal validity, it implies the existence of a possible legal system in which there are
no moral constraints on legal validity.
Pedigree thesis articulates necessary and sufficient conditions for legal validity in respect of
how or by whom law is promulgated. Positivism supplies a rival explanation in the form of the
pedigree thesis, which finds legal validity on the manner, form, and source of promulgated
norms. Thus for Austin a proposition is legally valid only if it is promulgated by a ‘sovereign’ who
is habitually obeyed, but who is not in the habit of obeying any other person; and is backed up
by the threat of a sanction (see 3.4.5). Hart, as will become evident, is less concerned with who
promulgates the law than with the manner of its promulgation. Though classical positivists such
as Austin diff er in several respects from Hart and his account of the pedigree thesis, both
subscribe to the view that law is created by human beings through acts that may be described
as ‘official’. For Austin, they are official because they have been performed by the sovereign; for
Hart, because they meet the procedural (and perhaps also the substantive) requirements of the
rule of recognition.
Discretion thesis asserts that judges decide hard cases by making new law, according to
which judges decide difficult cases by making new law in the exercise of discretion. Ronald
Dworkin describes this thesis as follows:
The set of these valid legal rules is exhaustive of ‘the law’, so that if someone’s case is
not clearly covered by such a rule . . . then that case cannot be decided by ‘applying the
law.’ It must be decided by some official, like a judge, ‘exercising his discretion,’ which
means reaching beyond the law for some other sort of standard to guide him in
manufacturing a fresh legal rule or supplementing an old one (Dworkin 1977, p. 17).
On this view, a judge cannot decide a case that does not fall clearly under a valid rule by
interpreting or applying the law; she must decide the case by creating or promulgating a law that
did not exist prior to the adjudication. Thus, the discretion thesis implies that judges are
empowered with a quasi-legislative lawmaking authority in cases that cannot be decided merely
by applying law.
Though often associated with positivism, the discretion thesis does not belong to positivism’s
theoretical core. The pedigree and separability theses purport to be conceptual claims that are
true of every possible legal system. These two claims jointly assert that, in every possible legal
system, propositions of law are valid in virtue of having been manufactured according to some
set of social conventions. On this view, there are no moral constraints on the content of law that
hold in every possible legal system.