Criminal Code of England and Wales
The jurisdiction of England and Wales does not have a Criminal Code though such an instrument has been often recommended and attempted. The creation of such a Code would require both consolidation and codification.
The Law Commission views a comprehensive criminal code as desirable in principle, but not currently feasible as a single undertaking. Its present approach is incremental simplification of discrete offence-areas and procedural law, creating code-ready statutes over time.
History
- 1818 - Parliament petitions the Prince Regent for a Law Commission to consolidate English statute law.
- 1831 - A Royal Commission on the Criminal Law was established to enquire into the possibility of a criminal code. The commission reports in 1835 and there are seven more reports until 1845. A Criminal Law Code Bill is introduced, referred to a Select committee and then dropped.
- 1849 - The Royal Commission on Revising and Consolidating the Criminal Law recommends consolidation.
- 1878 - Sir James Fitzjames Stephen introduces a consolidation Bill in Parliament, which is later withdrawn.
- 1879 - The Royal Commission on the Law Relating to Indictable Offences (1871–1879) under Colin Blackburn, Baron Blackburn recommends and drafts a code.
- 1882 - Since 1844 there had been eight unsuccessful attempts to enact a code.
- 1965 - The Law Commission of England and Wales is established with a remit to review the law of England and Wales:
- 1985 - Draft code published.
- 1989 - Draft code revised and expanded.
- 2002 - Government reiterates its intention to proceed with a code.
Arguments for a Code
Attorney-General Sir John Holker said:Sir John Smith was, in general an opponent of legal codes but said:
Reports of the Royal Commissions
Royal Commission on the Criminal Law
First to Sixth Reports of the Royal Commission on the Criminal Law.Seventh and Eighth Reports of the Royal Commission on the Criminal Law.Royal Commission on Revising and Consolidating the Criminal Law
First to Fifth Reports of the Royal Commission on Revising and Consolidating the Criminal Law.Royal Commission on the Law Relating to Indictable Offences
Report of the Royal Commission on the Law Relating to Indictable Offences.Law Commission Reports and Papers
Codification of the Criminal Law: Law Com. Nos 143 and 177
Sources:- LC 143. Codification of the Criminal Law: a Report to the Law Commission.
- LC177. A Criminal Code for England and Wales .
- LC177. A Criminal Code for England and Wales .Hansard Debates, House of Lords, Vol 508, Col 2 56 ‘Law Commission Report No 177’.
Suggested reading
Books
- Smith, K. J. M.. Lawyers, legislators, and theorists: developments in English criminal jurisprudence 1800-1957.
- Cornish, W.R. and Clarke, G. de N.. Law and Society in England 1750–1950.
- Lang, Maurice Eugen. Codification in the British Empire and America.
- Stephen, James Fitzjames.. A Digest of the Criminal Law .
- Cottu, Charles.. On the Administration of the Criminal Code in England, and the Spirit of the English Government.
- Schofield, Philip; Harris, Jonathan. Legislator of the world: writings on codification, law, and education .
Chapters in books
- Cross, Sir Rupert.. Pages 5–20: The Reports of the Criminal Law Commissioners and the Abortive Bills of 1853 in Reshaping the Criminal Law: Essays in Honour of Glanville Williams.
- Clive, Eric.. Chapter 4 : Codification of the Criminal Law in Essays in Criminal Law in Honour of Sir Gerald Gordon.
- Clarkson, Chris.. Recent Law Reform and Codification of the General Principles of Criminal Law in England and Wales: A Tale of Woe in Codification, Macaulay and the Indian Penal Code: The Legacies and Modern Challenges of Criminal Law Reform.
- Herring, J.. Chapter 1 in Criminal Law: Text, Cases, and Materials.
Journal articles
- Chalmers, James.. Frenzied Law Making: Overcriminalization by Numbers 67 Current Legal Problems.
- Lavery, Jenny.. Codification of the Criminal Law: An Attainable Ideal? 74 J. Crim. L. 557.
- Ferguson, Pamela R.. Constructing a criminal code 20 Crim. L.F. 139.
- Dennis, Ian.. RIP: The Criminal Code Crim. L.R. 1-2.
- Ferguson, Pamela R.. Codifying criminal law: the Scots and English draft codes compared Crim. L.R. 105-119.
- Samuels, Alex.. Why do we not have a criminal code? 67 J. Crim. L. 214-219.
- Dennis, Ian.. The Law Commission and codification of the criminal law: Part 35 Crim. L.R. 431-432.
- Dennis, Ian.. Reviving the criminal code Crim. L.R. 261-264.
- Farmer, Lindsay. Reconstructing the English Codification Debate: The Criminal Law Commissioners, 1833–45 18 Law and History Review 397–442.
- Robinson, Paul H.. Structuring Criminal Codes to Perform Their Function 4 Buff. Crim. L.R. 1.
- Arden, Mary. Criminal law at the crossroads: the impact of human rights from the Law Commission's perspective and the need for a code Crim. L.R. 439-459.
- Bingham of Cornhill, Lord Justice.. A criminal code: must we wait for ever? Crim. L.R. 694-696.
- Smith, J.C.. The Law Commission's Criminal Law Bill: a good start for the Criminal Code Stat. L.R. 105-108.
- Brooke, Henry. The Role of the Law Commission in Simplifying Statute Law 16 Stat. L.R. 1.
- Samuels, Alec.. Drafting the criminal code 13 Stat. L.R. 229-239.
- Gardiner, Simon.. Reiterating the Criminal Code 55 M.L.R. 839-847.
- Wells, Celia.. Moral boundaries and criminal codes 142 N.L.J. 1133-1134.
- Ashworth, Andrew.. Legislating the criminal code Crim. L.R. 393-395.
- Smith, A.T.H.. Legislating the criminal code: the Law Commission's proposals Crim. L.R. 396-406.
- Ashworth, Andrew.. Codifying English criminal law Crim. L.R. 141-142.
- Midland Circuit.. Lord Chief Justice Cockburn's letters on the Criminal Code Bill of 1879 Crim. L.R. 315-317.
- de Burca, Grainne, and Gardner, Simon. The codification of the criminal law 10 O.J.L.S. 559-571.
- Cowley, David.. Codification of the criminal law 54 J. Crim. L. 98-99.
- Ashworth, Andrew.. A criminal code for England and Wales 393-394.
- Editorial.. Criminal law codification 139 NLJ 529.
- Buxton, Richard.. The Law Commission's Criminal Code 139 N.L.J. 639-640.
- Smith, J.C.. Codification of the criminal law Denning L.J. 137-150.
- Smith, A.T.H.. Codification of the criminal law - Part 1: The case for a code Crim. L.R. 285-295.
- Bennion, Francis.. Codification of the criminal law - Part 2: The technique of codification Crim. L.R. 295-302.
- Ashworth, Andrew.. Codification of the criminal law - Part 3: The draft code, complicity and the inchoate offences Crim. L.R. 303-314.
- Wells, Celia.. Codification of the criminal law - Part 4: Restatement or reform Crim. L.R. 314-323.
- Wasik, Martin. Codification: mental disorder and intoxication under the draft criminal code 50 J. Crim. L. 393-404.
- Clarkson, C.M.V., and Keating, H.M.. Codification: offences against the person under the draft criminal code 50 J. Crim. L. 405-431.
- Ashworth, Andrew. Influences on the Creation of Criminal Law and Criminal Policy in England 13 J. Crim. L.955-111.
- Friedland M L, ‘R S Wright’s Model Criminal Code: A Forgotten Chapter in the History of the Criminal Law’ 1 Oxford J Legal Stud 307.
- Shapiro, Barbara. ‘Codification of the Laws in Seventeenth-Century England’ Wis. L. Rev. 428.
- Smith, K.J.M.. The Law Commission Working Paper No. 55 on Codification of the Criminal Law, Defences of General Application: Official Investigation and Entrapment Crim.L.R. 12.
- Andrews J.A.. Codification of Criminal Offences Crim. L.R. 59.
- Scarman, Leslie Codification and Judge-Made Law: A Problem of Coexistence 42 Indiana Law Journal 3.
- Stone, Ferdinand Fairfax. A Primer on Codification 29 Tul. L. Rev. 303.