Supreme Court of Ireland
The Supreme Court of Ireland is the highest judicial authority in Ireland. It is a court of final appeal and exercises, in conjunction with the Court of Appeal and the High Court, judicial review over Acts of the Oireachtas. The Supreme Court also has appellate jurisdiction to ensure compliance with the Constitution of Ireland by governmental bodies and private citizens. It sits in the Four Courts in Dublin.
Establishment
The Supreme Court was formally established on 29 September 1961 under the terms of the 1937 Constitution of Ireland. Prior to 1961, a transitory provision of the 1937 Constitution permitted the Supreme Court of the Irish Free State to continue, though the justices were required to take the new oath of office prescribed by the 1937 Constitution. The latter court was established by the Courts of Justice Act 1924 under the terms of the 1922 Constitution of the Irish Free State. Prior to 1924, a transitory provision of the 1922 Constitution permitted the Supreme Court of Judicature to continue, the latter established in 1877 in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Whereas the 1924 act was a comprehensive revision of the court's foundation preserving little of the 1877 arrangement, the 1961 act was a brief formal restatement in terms of the 1937 Constitution.Composition
The Supreme Court consists of its president called the Chief Justice, and not more than nine ordinary members. There are two ex officio members: the President of the Court of Appeal who normally sits in the Court of Appeal, and the President of the High Court who normally sits in the High Court. The Supreme Court sits in divisions of three, five or seven judges. Two or more divisions may sit at the same time. When determining whether the President is permanently incapacitated within the meaning of Article 12 of the constitution, ruling on the constitutionality of a bill referred to it by the President under Article 26, or ruling on the constitutionality of any law the court must consist of at least five members.Judges of the Supreme Court are appointed by the President of Ireland in accordance with the binding advice of the Government, who, since 1995, act in turn on the non-binding advice of a judicial advisory board.
Current members
members
Former members
- List of Judges of the Supreme Court of Ireland
Tenure
Jurisdiction
The Supreme Court hears appeals from the Court of Appeal, and as part of the transitional arrangements following the establishment of the Court of Appeal, from the High Court, the Court of Criminal Appeal and the Courts-Martial Appeal Court, where cases have not been transferred from the Supreme Court to the Court of Appeal. The Court's power to hear appeals can be severely restricted or excluded altogether, with the exception of appeals concerning the consistency of a law with the constitution. The Supreme Court also hears points of law referred to it from the Circuit Court.The Supreme Court only has original jurisdiction in two circumstances. This is when a Bill is referred to it by the President under Article 26 of the Constitution for an opinion on its constitutionality before promulgation or when the court must determine under Article 12 of the Constitution whether the President has become incapacitated.
The Supreme Court originally had little discretion to determine which cases it hears as requirements to seek the leave of either the trial court or the Supreme Court itself before an appeal could be brought were rare. After the Thirty-third Amendment created the Court of Appeal, however, the Supreme Court's appellate jurisdiction is entirely by leave; the Supreme Court can refuse to hear any appeal.
Judicial review
The Supreme Court exercises, in conjunction with the High Court, the power to strike down laws which are inconsistent with the constitution. The courts also grant injunctions against public bodies, private bodies and citizens to ensure compliance with the constitution. The Irish constitution explicitly provides for the judicial review of legislation. Acts passed after the coming into force of the constitution, are invalid if "repugnant" to the constitution, while laws in force prior to the coming into force of the constitution are invalid if "inconsistent" with the constitution. The constitution also provides, under Article 26, for the judicial review of bills before they are signed into law. The power to refer bills is personally exercised by the President after consulting the Council of State. When the Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of a bill referred to it under Article 26, its constitutionality can never again be questioned in any court whatsoever.Supreme Court judges are normally free to deliver their own judgements, whether dissenting and concurring. There is an exception when considering the constitutionality of a bill referred by the President under Article 26 of the Constitution, for which only a single judgment can be delivered. Formerly, the single-judgment rule also applied when considering the constitutionality of an Act of the Oireachtas passed under the 1937 Constitution; this was removed by the 33rd Amendment in 2013. Acts passed prior to 1937 have always permitted multiple judgments.
Jurisprudence
After a slow start in its first two decades of the Constitution, the Supreme Court has expounded a significant constitutional jurisprudence. This slow start was partly because, prior to 1922, the whole of Ireland was a part of the United Kingdom, and Supreme Court judges had been trained in British jurisprudence, which stresses the sovereignty of parliament and deference to the legislature. It was also the case that under the 1922 Constitution there was a right of appeal to the Privy Council which was exercised on a number of occasions. Nonetheless from the 1960s onwards the Court has made a number of significant decisions. It has, for example:- Developed a doctrine of unenumerated rights based on an expansive reading of Article 40.3.1°, with elements of natural law and liberal democratic theory.
- Developed and defended the separation of powers.
- Ruled that major changes to the treaties establishing the European Union may not be ratified by the state unless allowed by a previously passed constitutional amendment.
- Ruled that Articles 2 and 3 did not impose obligations upon the state that were enforceable in a court of law.
- Discovered a broad right to privacy in marital affairs implicit in Article 41.
- Discovered a right to an abortion where there is a risk to the life of the mother through suicide in Article 40.3.3°.
- Imported the doctrine of proportionality into Irish law.
Significant rulings
- 1940 – State v. Lennon, imprisonment without trial
- 1950 – Buckley v. The Attorney General
- 1965 – Ryan v. The Attorney General
- 1966 – The State v. An Bord Uchtála
- 1967 – Wunder v. Hospitals Trust
- 1971 – Byrne v. Ireland
- 1974 – McGee v. The Attorney General
- 1976 – De Búrca v. The Attorney General
- 1979 – East Donegal Co-operative v. The Attorney General
- 1983 – Norris v. The Attorney General
- 1987 – Crotty v. An Taoiseach
- 1988 – Attorney General v. Open Door Counselling
- 1988 – Webb v. Ireland
- 1989 – Kennedy v. Ireland
- 1992 – Attorney General v. X, more commonly the "X case"
- 1993 – Attorney General v. Hamilton
- 1993 – Meagher v. The Minister for Agriculture
- 1994 – Heaney v. Ireland
- 1995 – In re Article 26 and the Regulation of Information Bill 1995
- 1995 – Re a Ward of court
- 1995 – McKenna v. An Taoiseach
- 2001 – Sinnott v. Minister for Education
- 2003 – Lobe and Osayande v. Minister for Justice
- 2006 – Curtin v. Dáil Éireann
- 2006 – A. v. The Governor of Arbour Hill Prison
- 2009 – McD v. L
- 2013 – Marie Fleming v Ireland and the Attorney General
- 2018 – M. v. Minister for Justice
Sharing of sovereignty
The relationship between the Irish courts and the ECtHR is more complicated. The European Convention on Human Rights is a treaty binding on the state in international law. However, as a matter of Irish domestic law the Convention is enshrined only in statute, and does not have the status of constitutional law. Under the terms of the European Convention on Human Rights Act, passed by the Oireachtas in 2003, ordinary statutes must, when possible, be interpreted in line with the Convention. However, in Irish courts the Convention must give way both to clear legislative intent and to any countermanding requirement of the Constitution. Furthermore, convention provisions cannot be relied upon as separate causes of action.
Supreme Court decisions cannot be appealed, as such, to either court. The ECJ hears cases referred to it by the Irish Courts by way of preliminary ruling and while unsuccessful litigants before the Supreme Court can apply to the ECtHR, the latter court's decision does not have the effect of voiding the Supreme Court's decision. As a matter of Irish domestic law, a decision of the ECtHR does not override acts of the Oireachtas, but instead it must be brought to the attention of the Oireachtas, which may decide upon legislation or perhaps even a constitutional referendum to implement it.