Showing posts with label history of adjudication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history of adjudication. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Dictum of the day, or on the umpf of judiciary

[W]hy should acts of a foreign judiciary be treated differently from other acts of state, and what is the basis of that difference? – the answer, in our judgment, is that judicial acts are not acts of state for the purposes of the act of state doctrine. The doctrine in its classic statements has never referred to judicial acts of state, it has referred to legislative or executive (or governmental or official) acts of a foreign sovereign. [...]. It is not hard to understand why there should be a distinction. Sovereigns act on their own plane: they are responsible to their own peoples, but internationally they are responsible only in accordance with international law and internationally recognized norms. Courts, however, are always responsible for their acts, both domestically and internationally. Domestically they are responsible up to the level of their supreme court, and internationally they are responsible in the sense that their judgments are recognizable and enforceable in other nations only to the extent that they have observed what we would call substantive or natural justice, what in the United States is called due process, and what internationally is more and more being referred to as the rule of law. In other words the judicial acts of a foreign state are judged by judicial standards, including international standards regarding jurisdiction, in accordance with doctrines separate from the act of state doctrine, even if the dictates of comity still have an important role to play [...][O]nly the more normal restraints of judicial comity hold sway in that judicial context.’

Yukos Capital Sarl v OJSC Rosneft Oil Company [2012] EWCA Civ 855

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Dictum of the day, or on history of adjudication

There may be many situations in which previous decisions of a judicial officer on issues of fact and law may generate an expectation that he is likely to decide issues in a particular case adversely to one of the parties. But this does not mean either that he will approach the issues in that case otherwise than with an impartial and unprejudiced mind in the sense in which that expression is used in the authorities or that his previous decisions provide an acceptable basis for inferring that there is a reasonable apprehension that he will approach the issues in this way.

Prosecutor v. Radoslav Brđanin and Talić, IT-99-36/l-PT, Decision on Application by Momir Talić for the Disqualification and Withdrawal of a Judge, ICTY, 18 May 2000, para. 18.