Unit 1
Unit 1
Unit 1
JURISPRUDENCE
Latin
Legis Latum
(it means Law) (to make or set)
Existence Its made before case actually arises It came into existence only after the
case has arisen and brought before
court.
Publication is done before its application It comes into at once after its
pronouncement.
It is not difficult for public to know Its not easily known to public.
enacted laws.
Secondary rules are those that stipulate how and by whom the primary rules may be formed,
recognized modified or extinguished.
Example: - Contract law rules that enable parties to form contracts, the rules that allow testators to
create a will, the constitutional rules that confer legislative powers on Congress, the statute that
authorizes the Supreme Court to promulgate rules of practice and procedure for the federal courts.
• Hart criticizes Fuller’s work, saying that these principles are merely ones of
means-ends efficiency; it is inappropriate, he says, to call them morality.
Law & Justice
• The concepts of law and justice are often confused and
misinterpreted by many. While the two are strictly
connected, they are not the same thing. Justice is a
broad concept that is based on equality of rights,
fairness and morality. Conversely, law is a body of
regulations and standards set up by governments and
international bodies and is (or should be) based on the
idea of justice. Laws are written norms that regulate the
actions of the citizens and of the government itself in all
aspects, whereas justice is a principle that may or may
not be universally recognized.
What is Law?
• Laws are rules and guidelines established and enforced by the government
and its entities. They vary from country to country and there is a body of
international laws that applied to all states that decide to ratify certain
treaties or conventions.
• National laws are principles and norms that regulate the behavior of all
citizens and of all individuals under the government’s jurisdiction. Laws are
created by the government thorough a long and complex process, and once
established they are implemented by governmental entities and interpreted
by lawyers and judges.
• Laws establish what citizens, business, and governmental agencies can or
cannot do. Although there is a set of written legislations, the judiciary
system has the power to interpret them and to enforce them in all different
situations. Laws vary from one country to another (or even from one state
to another).
What is Justice?
• Justice is a broad and somehow abstract concept based on equality
of rights, fairness, kindness, dignity, moral and ethics. In a just
world, we would not have:
– Discrimination;
– Violence;
– Abuses;
– Poverty;
– Slavery; and
– Injustices in general.
• Therefore, all laws should be based on the idea of justice and all
governments should enforce national laws in a just and equal way.
Unfortunately, this is not always the case and laws are often
broken, non-respected and/or enforced in biased and partial ways.
Similarities between Law and Justice
• The concepts of law and justice are fairly similar as most laws
are thought to be just and fair. Some of the main similarities
between the two include:
• Both concepts regulate human behavior and aim at creating a
more just and equal environment;
• Law should be based on the idea of justice and should be
implemented and interpreted in a just manner – without
discriminations; and
• Both are based on the ideas of morality, equality, order and
fairness.
• The term law refers to an existing and concrete set of
written regulations established by the government in
order to regulate and control the actions of the
citizens. Conversely, justice is not a universally
recognized concept and is subject to interpretations.
Justice is often depicted a woman wearing a blindfold–
representing equality and fairness, and applying laws
and regulations to all individuals without
discrimination.
• Laws are found in written codes and are enforced
by the government and its bodies, including
security forces, police, judiciary, etc. Conversely,
justice is a more abstract concept based on the
idea of equality of rights, and fairness. All laws
should be based on the idea of justice and should
be implemented and enforced in a just way
without discrimination of sex, gender, age, color,
race, religion, language or any other status.
Administration of Justice
• Justices is the soul of every judicial system. Justices is
established in the society by the law. So administration
of justices is the essential subject matter of the law.
The administration of justices is the process by which
the legal system of a government is executed.
• The main function of state are to protect the rights of
all person and to maintain the law and order in the
society.
• Administration means: - To management.
Justice means: - To protect rights and fair treatment.
Origin of Administration of Justice
• It is the social nature of men that inspires him to live in a community. This
social nature of men demands that he must reside in a society. However,
living in a society leads to conflict of interests and gives rise to the need
for Administration of Justice. This is considered to be the historical basis
for the growth of administration of justice. Once the need for
Administration of Justice was recognized, the State came into being.
• Initially, the so called State was not strong enough to regulate crime and
impart punishment to the criminals.
• In the next phase of the development of Administration of Justice, the
State came into full-fledged existence. With the growth in the power of
the state, the state began to act like a judge to assess liability and impose
penalty on the individuals. The concept of Public Enquiry and Punishment
became a reality.
• Thus, the modern Administration of Justice is a natural corollary to the
growth in the power of the political state.
Advantages of Legal Justice
• 1. Uniformity and Certainty– Legal Justice made
sure that there is no scope of arbitrary action and
even the judges had to decide according to the
declared law of the State. As law is certain, people
could shape their conduct accordingly.
• 2. Legal Justice also made sure that the law is not
for the convenience of a particular special class.
Judges must act according to the law. It is through
this that impartiality has been secured in the
Administration of Justice.
DISADVANTAGES OF LEGAL SYSTEM
1. It is rigid. The rate of change in the society
is always more rapid than the rate of change in
the Legal Justice.
2. Legal Justice is full of technicalities and
formalities.
3. Legal Justice is complex. Our society is
complex too. Thus, to meet the needs of the
society, we need complex laws which are
difficult to interpret.
TYPES OF ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE
• CIVIL ADMINISTRATION
Civil administration of justice Adjudication of civil disputes by the civil
courts is known as administration of civil justice. Those offences which
are dealt with by civil courts through civil proceeding are called civil
offences. The rights enforced by civil proceeding are two kinds.
– A primary rights are the privileges enjoyed by any person. A sanctioning right
is one that arises out of the violation of the other rights. A violation of breach
of the primary rights gives rise to a sanctioning right or remedial right.
– Primary rights or rights may be explained as the bundle of rights which are the
privileges enjoyed by any person, e.g., a person’s right to liberty, safety and
reputation.
– For example, if X enters into a valid contract, his right to have the contract
performed is a primary right. If the contract is broken, his right to damages for
the loss caused to him for the breach of contract is sanctioning right.
• CRIMINAL ADMINISTRATION
Administration of criminal justice deals with Public wrongs. all
offenses included in Indian Penal Code(IPC) are public wrongs. The
administration of criminal justice is to punish the offender.
Punishment may be described as the infliction by State Authority,
of a consequence normally regarded as an evil (for example
imprisonment or death) on an individual found to be legally guilty
of a crime.
The main purpose and object of criminal justice is to punish the
wrongdoer (offender) and to maintain law and order in society. It
is the State which punishes the Criminal. Punishment necessarily
implies some kinds of pain inflicted upon the offender or loss
caused to him for his criminal act which may either be intended to
deter him from repeating the crime or maybe an expression of
society disapprobation for his Anti Social conduct or it may also
be directed to reform and regenerate him and at the time ported
the society from criminals.
Theories of Punishment