Martyn said:What we are debating, is the next step. Deegan petitioned an appeal to the House of Lords, which was refused. It was my understanding that this meant stare decisis was then extended to include the House of lords, the highest court in the land before parliament. Pteron is saying that the case must be heard in the Lords and a ruling passed before stare decisis is extended to include them.
My thoughts ...I dont know the law that well. I'm a lay person with a keen interest because of my hobby, but no more. pteron has a professional interest and his word should be taken over mine.
A fine summary, but before we debate further I must present my bona fides. I am not a lawyer, I too am just a lay person with a keen interest. I have been following the law on knives for some years now and keenly monitor any relevant erudite discussion. For me, the greatest resource for forming my own opinion has been the extensive publication of legal information on the net. You can actually read the Hansard where the ministers of the day discussed the locking blade issue and make your own mind up. I was flabbergasted to find that the discussion was clear as day, they had absolutely no intention of making ordinary lock knives illegal, the legislation on locks was specifically intended to prevent the carrying of 'Stanley' type knives. At the time of the Deegan appeal I confidently expected the Court of Appeal to dismiss the case on this basis. To find that they deferred to an obscure point of law that effectively forced them to dismiss the evidence was, frankly, astonishing. It was at about this time that I found many hits on my web page discussing the matter and followed them back to Britishblades. To find fellow knife nuts and one of them a law lecturer was serendipitous. Dan and I have had discussions on the points of law and came to the conclusion I mentioned previously, but as neither of us are judges, basing any actions on our opinions could be dangerous to your liberty.
So we come to the present day.
Martyn said:pteron, can you provide some reference to clarify? I dont have access to the legal resources you do and while I dont doubt you are right, it's an important point I would like to be clear about. If stare decisis is applied simply for a refusal of a petition, then only parliament can change things. If not, then at least the Lords are still an option.
I believe you are right, in principle, about stare decisis, but I can find nothing to support the assertion that the Court of Appeal can make a decision that binds the Law Lords. The document http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/cplan/downloads/env_law-intro.pdf appears to state the opposite - that only the Lords can make a decision regarding itself and even then it is not absolutely binding on itself, just on lower courts.
Martyn said:For all intents and purposes though, whatever the answer to this question is, unless you have the will and financial clout to take your argument to the Lords(?) and possibly further, you are snookered.
Absolutely. The next stage will only be fought by someone with a lot of money and an extremely good lawyer.
Again, i must stress, I am not a lawyer, neither are Martyn and Dan, so all of this discussion is just interesting banter and is worth what you paid for it. The only safe way is to treat the case law as absolute.