Bulletin Number Four 1987
‘Management fo r Executive Deve lopmen t’ Graduation Ceremony The Eighth Graduation Ceremony o f the Diploma Course in Management f o r Executive Development o f the Department o f Extramural Studies, The Chinese University o f Hong Kong, was held on 26th September , 1987 at the Hotel Furama Inter-Continental. There were altogether sixty-one graduates. Dr. Francis K, Pan, Director o f Studies , delivered a speech o f welcome and the Hon. Chief Justice Designate T.L. Yang officiated at the ceremony. While Justice Yang addressed the gathering on the significance and meaning o f 'The Independence o f Judiciary', Mrs. Yang presented prizes, diplomas and certificates to the graduates. The follow ing is the address by the Hon. Chief Justice Designate T.L. Yang: The Independence o f Judiciary It seems to be generally accepted that the government shall be o f law instead o f personal auth ority. It is therefore both right and necessary that the judiciary be called upon to lim it the role o f govern ment, particularly in its dealings w ith the people, whose fundamental freedoms are held to be inviolate. The judiciary thus occupies an anomalous position o f being part of the government and yet standing apart from it and independent o f it. The separateness o f the judiciary as a necessary feature o f the government was recognized as early as the time o f Aristotle. The process o f separation was however slow and incom plete. It was not firm ly established in England until about the eighteenth century. Even now, remnants o f judicial power, such as the power to pardon, still remain w ith the executive. The independence o f judiciary as a concept concerns the guaranteed right and duty o f the judges to deal w ith cases brought before them strictly ac cording to law, uninfluenced and unfettered by any extraneous considerations. Clearly, if the law is to be fairly interpreted and impartially applied, it is o f vital importance that the judges should enjoy an indepen dent status free from pressures o f any sort, whether they be exerted by the media or pressure groups, people in high places or the vox populi, or worst of all, by the executive branch o f government. Indeed, as Professor de Smith o f Cambridge in his book on Constitutional and Administrative Law said, ‘It is clearly o f great importance that justice be dispensed even-handedly in the courts and that the general public feel confident in the integrity and the impartiality o f the Judiciary. Where the Government o f the day has an interest in the outcome o f judicial proceedings, the court should not act merely as a mouthpiece o f the Executive. The Judiciary must therefore be secure from undue influence and auton omous w ithin its own field'. As part o f a political philosophy propounded by Montesquieu in his Doctrine o f Separation o f Powers, it has lost none o f its lustre and stature which it enjoyed in the eighteenth century, though the doctrine itself, intended to be o f universal application, is now regarded as outmoded, particularly by writers in England. Certainly in England, the so-called sepa ration between the legislature, the executive and the judiciary has never been as clear-cut as the Doctrine would like it to be. The Parliament, for example, is dominated by the government o f the day, and the Lord Chancellor as the head o f the judiciary, is also a cabinet minister. Another example is the appointment o f judges, which is on the nomination o f the Lord Chancellor or the Prime Minister. Montesquieu's doctrine is therefore not entirely supported by the actual state o f affairs in England, though no one would doubt that the judges in that country are tru ly 16
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