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- May 22, 2013
- Updated: 2:14pm
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Preserve common law after 2047: top Hong Kong judge
Chief justice says legal system must continue as it is after 2047, and warns against a repeat of 1999 case in which top court was overruled
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Common law should remain the basis of Hong Kong's legal system beyond 2047, the end of the 50-year guarantee stated in the Basic Law, the city's top judge says.
Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma Tao-li also warned that the judiciary's authority would be undermined if the government again sought a Basic Law interpretation from Beijing in the way it did in the 1999 right of abode case.
"There is nothing in the Basic Law that says, 'by 2047 there must be a convergence of legal systems'. It's difficult to see a convergence. At the moment, the way our law works and the way the law works in the mainland are quite different," Ma told the Hong Kong Student Law Gazette.
"Only by showing that a system works for the community ... and also demonstrating this to the wider world, the central people's government or the [National People's Congress], can we ensure its survival," he said. Ma was speaking in a rare interview in which he also said some lawyers have huge egos and that judges lacked a "human touch".
Hong Kong follows the English common law system where judgments and legislation together form the law. The mainland's civil law relies solely on statute.
"We're moving away now from 1997," Ma said. "People want to be assured that Hong Kong will carry on the way it is."
In the 1999 case, the Court of Final Appeal ruled that the children of parents who have the right of abode in Hong Kong also have the right of abode.
But the government then asked Beijing for an interpretation of the Basic Law that in effect overturned the court's decision.
Ma said: "If you use Article 158 [of the Basic Law] to seek an interpretation every time you don't like a court decision, it undermines the authority of the courts." Ma said it was legitimate for the top court to seek interpretations. "That is perfectly within [judges'] remit," he said. "What is not permissible is to ignore laws."
The interview was conducted about six weeks before Secretary for Justice Rimsky Yuen Kwok-keung announced last month the government had asked the Court of Final Appeal to consider seeking a "clarification" from Beijing over the 1999 interpretation.
The request was made in connection with a residency appeal by foreign domestic helpers due to be heard next month.
Constitutional law professor Michael Davis, of the University of Hong Kong, agreed common law should be preserved after 2047, especially as the mainland had shown "little evidence" of advancing its rule of law.
"It would be almost catastrophic to take that away from Hong Kong," Davis said. "Our economy is built around the common-law legal system."
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1:15am
However my opinion remains same... may be i am too content individual. Looking around the world from Americas to Timbuktu, Islamabad to Singapore, HK Law Rules.
Since thou being highly influential commentator, instead reading lots of english novels, why dont you start creating a new constifution for HK that can be applied @ mid nite of 2047. :) Pls. dont take personally am supporting ure comment totally, am scared to death to know that HK Law will soon wither away and "die" so good luck with ure new species... seems like ure reading some scifi novels these days... :)
11:16pm
Thus, I can but repeat his "so be it"
Different leagues, different frequencies
I didn't learn my English in the army
If my opinions are too much for your intelligence
Try to think why they put commentators' names at the beginning of postings
Let's hope this hint is useful to you
9:50pm
8:49pm
7:04pm
So we should maintain it. Only old fashioned dumb **** like pslhk will not realize it. :)
This is nothing to do with digital Y2K bug its about the real existence and the foundation of our unique HK. Our system is perfect so be it! BTW pslhk where did u study? your English makes me sick :D
4:15pm
the legal profession’s y2k bug hongkongensis
Funny and hollow sales pitch of
self-important legal myopic
Laughable god delusion of the superstitious
Common law is a prisoner of the English language
Confined to part of the English-speaking sphere,
outside which it can’t survive.
In HK it will wither and die
Now we must develop
a locally adapted and strong species
2:58pm
The economy will face ruin due to uncertainty. If a USD 100 million dollar building will take 20 years for the new owner to realize their anticipated profit, but the property title, lease contracts, sales contracts and all other issues of law that surround the deal come into question, then the deal is not viable.
Changing a legal system without going though a war that has basically ruined everything already does not seem possible without significant issues that will severely impact the economy. Trillions of dollars could be wiped out and trillions more will leave Hong Kong in advance. There clearly is no choice.
12:27pm
Common law is a much abused and misunderstood vernacular, even among lawyers. In a Ming Pao article, a reasonable legislator and practicing lawyer, recommended John Grisham’s novels, alleging that they show US’ differences from HK because here we practice common law (?)
Common Law is judge-make and adversarial.
(1) Precedence: Ma CJ once told Sandra O’Conner HK’s emphasis on common law. The US justice replied, “Remember Dred Scott”.
HK’s small-time common law has its small-time cl perversities; e.g., HCA378/2001. Pretentious junior jurists in fact-finding lower courts and lazy-simpleminded HiCourt judges emphasize case law, to take advantage of public ignorance of precedence for hurried discharge of caseload.
(2) Adversarial Obsolescence: HK is about the only cl jurisdiction where champerty and maintenance reign while others have opened up to conditional and contingency fees. Lawyers’ performance-detached rent-guaranteed license inhibits professional development making lawyers the primary source of injustice in HK’s legal system.
HK’s so-called cl tradition is a pathetic joke.
With less than half the population of HK today, US jurists in 1789 developed their own cl system. 200+ years on, HK jurists still cling to histrionics as necessary tradecrafts.
We need wise and honest jurists to tailor cl to our (HK/China) needs.
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