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Saturday 25 January 2020

Of separation of power and tussle between the legislature and judiciary

This article appeared in Kuensel on weekly legal column on 25 Jan 2020

During the deliberation on the amendment of Civil and Criminal Procedure Code (CCPC) in the National Council, a member raised concerns about the judiciary amending the laws made by the parliament and the need to include a provision to control such powers.  This was followed by a Kuensel article “Contradicting Supreme Court Orders confuse courts”, which discussed on a standing order and many legal experts raised concerns of such orders.

This standing order was issued on November 26, 2019, instructing all the courts to implement the earlier standing order issued on June 17, 2015, which declared S.199.8A unconstitutional making every criminal offence a bailable.
In Bhutan, though Article 1(13) of the Constitution makes it  clear: “Separation of the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary” except as permitted by the Constitution. The separation of power adopted by numerous constitutions centuries ago mainly “as the system of checks and balances among the three arms of the government”.
Article 1(11) our constitution appoints the Supreme Court as the guardian and the final interpreter of the Constitution. This is an enormous authority the Supreme Court enjoys. However, reading this Article with Article 21 (8) and (10) does seem to limit the scope of authority of the Supreme Court.
For example, under Article 21 (8), Supreme Court can interpret the Constitution when there is a question of law or fact referred by His Majesty and under article 21(10), the Supreme Court can issue declaration, writs, orders, directions only based on circumstances of each case.
This indicates that there must be a case in order to exercise authorities under Article 21(10). Similarly, to interpret the provision on fundamental rights, it can be done only when a person aggrieved by action of the state is challenged. Thus, it is unclear, if current practice of Supreme Court issuing merely a standing order to amend or repeal parliamentary acts is within the framework of separation of powers.
Contrarily, Article 10 (1) explicitly states: “there shall be a Parliament of Bhutan in which all legislative powers under this Constitution were vested”. Therefore, legislative authority is an exclusive domain of the parliament. This can be inferred even from Article 1 (1) which states that, “Bhutan is a sovereign and sovereign power belongs to people of Bhutan” and parliamentarian are representatives of the people and not the judiciary.
When the principle of Separation of Power was propounded by a French Philosopher Montesquieu to fight against tyranny of the leaders who hold on absolute powers, he suggested that there is should absolutely no encroachment of each other. But with changing of times and shift in governance system towards people centric democracy, absolute separation of power is impossible and some overlap authorities into each other’s boundaries are inevitable.
Therefore, it is not uncommon for any legal system across the world that courts, in particular appellate courts, does amend lot of parliamentary acts through its decisions when a case has been filed before the court. But amendment of laws through issuance of standing order are often seen very rare in any democracy set up as it is often seen as direct infringement on the parliamentary domain.
Therefore, our judiciary must exercise due care when it requires to enter into domain of legislature to protect public confidence in the judiciary. Any form of power tussle between the judiciary and parliament is unhealthy for a democracy.
Sonam Tshering
Lawyer, Thimphu
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are author’s own.

Of separation of power and tussle between the legislature and judiciary

This article appeared in Kuensel on weekly legal column on 25 Jan 2020

During the deliberation on the amendment of Civil and Criminal Procedure Code (CCPC) in the National Council, a member raised concerns about the judiciary amending the laws made by the parliament and the need to include a provision to control such powers.  This was followed by a Kuensel article “Contradicting Supreme Court Orders confuse courts”, which discussed on a standing order and many legal experts raised concerns of such orders.

Saturday 18 January 2020

Right to mediation exist in every civil case not special as media indicated

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
This week, both Kuensel and BBS indicated, the right to settle out of court in civil case as some kind of special consideration by Trongsa District Court.  Such news may create confusion among the general public who are ignorant of litigation. However, this remedy known as “negotiated settlement” under the Bhutanese legal system has been a part of our judicial process since decades. In fact, S. DA-3-1 of Thrimzhung Chhenmo provide this right any case including criminal offences except larceny, armed robbery, murder and treason.

Need for a social welfare law to protect common people

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
Kuensel headline this week stated “Authorities’ inaction worrying resident more than cracks” in Trongsa and  another headline reads “Poor drainage system spoils the winter charm in S’jonkhar”. Similarly,  an alarming headline in 2018 reported “24 babies infected in NICU, 15 survive, 9 die in JDWNRH” and list goes on. There are numerous reports of wall collapses, potholes, unsafe

A paradigm shift from punitive to restorative justice system

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
This week, the Trongsa Dzongkhag Court deviated from conventional punitive judgment to corrective or reformative judicial process. Such new thoughts from our courts are welcome, though effects of this paradigm shift remain uncertain in terms of reduction in juvenile crimes in the country.

The historic new year gift- Gyalsung – our constitutional duty

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
One of the most exciting and memorable moments of the 112th National Day was the announcement of institution of Gyalsung (National Service). While His Majesty formally confirmed time frame and criteria to participate in Gyalsung but this sacred duty to Tsa-Wa-Sum has been long been envisioned by none other than our Great Fourth, His Majesty Drugyel Zhipa decades back and has been incorporated within our Constitution.

Inconsistency in procedure may create mistrust and weaken confidence in justice system

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
Procedural law is fundamental to the enforcement of legal rights. Without procedural laws legal rights will remain a paper tiger.  Access to justice is key in ensuring the right to equality before the law. Right to file a suit is fundamental to access to justice.

Who is a public servant in Bhutan, a political dilemma and drama

This article was published in Kuensel for Saturday Legal Column Series 
The question of whether public servant include corporate employees has made the headlines recently. Government is of the view that public servant does not include corporate employees. In the meanwhile, the opposition argues otherwise.

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