Tuesday 21 July 2020

Classification of Institutions of Law as per Roscoe Pound: 5

Read Part 1
Read Part 2
Read Part 3
Read Part 4



Classification of Institutions of Law as per Roscoe Pound:
Roscoe Pound used ‘social engineering’ as a metaphor. According to him, law is an instrument of social engineering, for balancing competing individual, public and social interests within the society. In doing so, Pound argued that the tools of rules, principles, conceptions and standards must be employed. Pound maintains that one cannot balance an individual interest against a social interest. He classifies the institutions of the law as follows.
1) There are, first, rules, which are precepts attaching definite consequences to definite factual situations.
2) Secondly, there are principles, which are authoritative points of departure for legal reasoning in cases not covered by rules.
3) Thirdly, there are conceptions, which are categories to which types or classes of transactions and situations can be referred and on the basis of which a set of rules, principles or standards becomes applicable.
4) Fourthly, there are doctrines, which are the union of rules, principles and conceptions with regard to particular situations or types of cases in logically independent schemes so that reasoning may proceed on the basis of the scheme and its logical implications.
5) Finally, there are standards prescribing the limits of permissible conduct, which are to be applied according to the circumstances of each case.
Pound assumes that ‘Recognition’ has many gradations, which makes it necessary to specify in what sense an interest is recognised as such. It is not interests as such, but the yardsticks with reference to which they are measured that matter. Whether the proprietary right of a slave-owner is to be upheld or not depends upon whether sanctity of property or sanctity of the person is adopted as the ideal. The choice of an ideal, or even a choice between competing ideals, is a matter of decision, not of balancing.
The ‘weight’ to be attached to an interest will vary according to the ideal that is used. The point is that the whole idea of balancing is subordinate to the ideal that is in view. The march of society is marked by changes in its ideals and standards for measuring interests.
In any case, all questions of interests and ideals should be considered in the context of particular issues as and when they come up for decision. It is for the judge to translate the activity involved in the case before him in terms of an interest and to select the ideal with reference to which the competing interests are to be measured.

Monday 20 July 2020

Interests as per Roscoe Pound - 4

Read Part 1
Read Part 2
Read Part 3



Interests as per Roscoe Pound
Roscoe Pound defined interest as: a demand or expectation which human beings either individually or in groups, or associations or relations, seek to satisfy, of which, therefore, the adjustment of human relations and ordering of human behaviour through the force of a politically organized society must take account. Note that legal protection of interest is usually expressed by conferring the status of a legal right on it. He identified and classified interests into three groups – individual interests, public interests, and social interests. Pound says that interests are the chief subject-matter of law. The main public interest according to him is the interest of the state as a juristic person and secondly interest of the state as the guardian of social interest. These interests are protected by law.
Individual Interests. Individual interests are ‘demands or claims or desires involved in or regarded from the standpoint of the individual life.’ They concern:
1) Personality. This includes interests in (a) the physical person, (b) freedom of will, (c) honour and reputation, (d) privacy, and (e) belief and opinion.
2) Domestic relations. It is important to distinguish between the interest of individuals in domestic relationships and that of society in such institutions as family and marriage. Individual interests include those of (a) parents, (b) children, (c) husbands, and (d) wives.
3) Interest of substance. This includes interests of (a) property, (b) freedom of industry and contract, (c) promised advantages, (d) advantageous relations with others, (e) freedom of association, and (f) continuity of employment.
Public Interests. Public interests are ‘demands or desires involved in or looked at from the viewpoint of life in a politically organised society, asserted in title of political life.’ These are claims or demands or desires asserted by individuals in title of a politically organised society which are mainly of two types:
1) Interests of the state as a juristic person. These, include (a) the integrity, freedom of action and honour of the state’s personality, and (b) claims of the politically organised society as a corporation to property acquired and held for corporate purposes.
2) Interests of the state as guardian of social interests. This concept is explained in the next major category.
Social Interests. Social interests are those ‘wider demands or desires involved in or looked at from the standpoint of social life in civilised society and asserted in title of social life.’ Such social interests enumerated by Pound are many. These are claims or demands or desires, even some of the foregoing in other aspects, thought of in terms of social life and generalised as claims of the social group and include:
1) Social interest in the general security- This is the claim of the civilised society to be secured against those forms of action and courses of conduct which threaten its existence which relate to (a) general safety, (b) general health, (c) peace and order, (d) security of acquisitions, and (e) security of transactions.
2) Social interest in the security of social institutions. This is the claim of the civilised society that its fundamental institutions be secured from factors which threaten their existence or impair their efficient functioning and comprises of (a) domestic institutions, (b) religious institutions, (c) political institutions, and (d) economic institutions.
3) Social interest in general morals. This is for civilised society to be secured against factors offensive to the moral sentiments of it and conveys a variety of laws, for example, those dealing with prostitution, drunkenness and gambling.
4) Social interest in the conservation of social resources. This is the claim of the civilised society that the goods of existence shall not be wasted and covers (a) conservation of natural resources, and (b) conservation of human resources.
5) Social interest in general progress- This is the claim of the civilised society that the goods of existence shall not be wasted; which has three aspects;
a) Economic progress, which covers (i) freedom of use and sale of property, (ii) free trade, (iii) free industry, and (iv) encouragement of invention by the grant of patents.
b) Political progress, which covers (i) free speech, and (ii) free associations; and
c) cultural progress, which covers (i) free science, (ii) free letters, (iii) free arts, (iv) promotion of education and learning, and (v) aesthetics.
6) Social interest in individual life. This is the claim or of the civilised society that each individual be able to live a human life therein according to the standards of the society and involves (a) self-assertion, (b) opportunity, and (c) conditions of life.
With this array of interests in a society, it is only a matter of course that contention, conflicts and controversies will arise. According to Pound law is really about reconciling, harmonising, or compromising these conflicting interests either through securing them directly and immediately or through securing certain individual interests so as to give effect to the greatest number of interests, or to the interests that weigh most in our civilisation with the least sacrifice of other interests. All he appeared to be saying is if all the interests cannot be enforced then most of the interests should be enforced. Alternatively, certain interests must be prioritized over others and enforced with minimal collateral damage to other non-priority interests. Pound was of the opinion that the concern of the law is to satisfy as many interests as possible and to resolve any conflicts amongst the categories of interests he had identified.

Sunday 19 July 2020

Sociological jurisprudence according to Pound: 3

Read Part 1
Read Part 2


Sociological jurisprudence according to Pound:
Sociological jurisprudence, according to Pound, should ensure that the making, interpretation and application of laws take account of social facts. Towards achieving this end there should be;
a. A factual study of the social effects of legal administration,
b. Social investigations as preliminaries to legislation,
c. A constant study of the means for making laws more effective, which involves,
d. The study, both psychological and philosophical, of the judicial method,
e. A sociological study of legal history,
f. Allowance for the possibility of a just and reasonable solution of individual cases,
g. A ministry of justice in English-speaking countries, and
h. The achievement of the purposes of the various laws.
So in order to achieve the purposes of the legal order, in the words of Pound, there has to be;
a. A recognition of certain interests, individual, public and social,
b. A definition of the limits within which such interests will be legally recognised and given effect to, and
c. The securing of those interests within the limits as defined.
When determining the scope and subject-matter of the system, the following five things require to be done;
i. Preparation of an inventory of interests, classifying them;
ii. Selection of the interests which should be legally recognised;
iii. Demarcation of the limits of securing the interests so selected;
iv. Consideration of the means whereby laws might secure the interests when these have been acknowledged and delimited; and
v. Evolution of the principles of valuation of the interests.

Saturday 18 July 2020

The Task of Law is Social Engineering : 2

Read Part 1

The Task of Law is Social Engineering - Pound’s main thesis is that the task of law is ‘social engineering’, He says - “For the purpose of understanding the law of today, I am content with a picture of satisfying as much of the whole body of human wants as we may with the least sacrifice. I am content to think of law as a social institution to satisfy social wants, the claims and demands involved in the existence of civilized society - by giving effect to as much as we may with least sacrifice, so far as such wants may be satisfied or such claims given effect to by an ordering of human conduct through politically organized Society.
By ‘social engineering’ Pound means a balance between the competing interests in society. He entrusts the jurist with a commission. He lays down a method which a jurist should follow for ‘social engineering’. He should ‘study the actual social effects of legal institution and legal doctrines, study the means of making legal rules effective, sociological study in preparation of law-making, study of judicial method, a sociological legal history and the importance of reasonable and just solutions of individual cases.’ He himself enumerates the various interests which are to be protected by the law. He classifies them under three heads - Private interests, Public interest and Social interests. Pound linked the task of the lawyer to engineering, an analogy which he used repeatedly. The aim of social engineering is to build as efficient a structure of society as possible, which requires the satisfaction of the maximum of wants with the minimum of friction and waste. It involves the balancing of competing interests.


Friday 17 July 2020

Roscoe Pound and the Social Engineering Theory:1


Social Engineering: 
In America, the law school and the jurist enjoy a status superior to that of their counterparts in Great Britain. These factors have combined to produce an American movement in sociological jurisprudence lead by Roscoe Pound of the Harvard Law School. “The aim of Social Engineering is to build an efficient structure of the society as far as possible which involves the balancing of competing interests.” said Pound.
Functional approach to Law:
Pound’s approach was for a functional approach to law. Also, his approach harmonizes with that of the utilitarian school which propounds the greatest happiness of the greatest number of people. All he was mostly concerned about was the need for the legal order to influence societal needs so that the law would not appear foreign or alien to the people. He was, therefore, desirous of bridging the gap between the law in textbooks and the law in action.
In any case, lists of interests are only the products of personal opinion. Different writers have presented them differently. As Pound himself says, in most cases it is preferable to transfer individual interests on to the plane of social interests when considering them. It is the ideal with reference to which any interest is considered that matters, not so much the interest itself.
Pound concentrates more on the functional aspect of law, that is why some writers name his approach as ‘functional school’. For Pound, the law is an ordering of conduct so as to make the goods of existence and the means of satisfying claims go round as far as possible with the least friction and waste. According to him, the end of law should be to satisfy a maximum of wants with a minimum of friction.

Short Q n A: High voltage AC circuit breakers - 1

1. What are circuit breakers?
Answer. Circuit breakers are atomatic switches.

2. What is the function of circuit breakers?
Answer. prediction of the power system circuit or power supply circuit  or electrical equipment.

3. Which thing can be done by a circuit breaker?
Answer. Circuit breakers can interrupt fault currents.

4. What is pole?
Answer. The part of circuit breaker connected in one phase is called the pole.

5. What are single pole and triple pole circuit breakers?
Answer. single pole circuit breaker is suitable for single phase system triple pole circuit breaker is suitable for 3-phase system.

Wednesday 1 July 2020

Inter Alia

Word or phrase Inter alia in a dictionary. — Stock Photo ...

Image Credit: depositphotos.com

1.    Inter Alia is a Latin phrase for "among other things."

2.    The phrase inter alia is used in sentences in place of the phrase “among other things,” to indicate that what is being discussed is just one of a number of items or possibilities.

3.    You use inter alia, meaning 'among other things', when you want to say that there are other things involved apart from the one you are mentioning.

4.    This phrase is often found in legal pleadings and writings to specify one example out of many possibilities. Example: "The judge said, inter alia, that the time to file the action had passed."

5.    This phrase is used in Pleading to designate that a particular statute set out therein is only a part of the statute that is relevant to the facts of the lawsuit and not the entire statute.

6.    Inter alia is also used when reporting court decisions to indicate that there were other rulings made by the court but only a particular holding of the case is cited.

7.    It is used to indicate that something is one out of a number of possibilities. For example, "he filed suit against respondents in state court, alleging, inter alia, a breach of contract."

8.    It was very firstly used in 1665.