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Desuetude

 

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Desuetude



 
 
In law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
, desuetude (from the Latin word desuetudo, outdated, no longer custom) is a doctrine that causes statute
Statute

A statute is a formal written enactment of a legislative authority that governs a country, state, city, or county. Typically, statutes command or prohibit something, or declare policy....
s, similar legislation or legal principles to lapse and become unenforceable by a long habit of non-enforcement or lapse of time. It is what happens to laws that are not repeal
Repeal

A repeal is the removal or reversal of a law. This is generally done when a law is no longer effective, or it is shown that a law is having far more negative consequences than were originally envisioned....
ed when they become obsolete
Obsolescence

Obsolescence is the state of being which occurs when a person, object, or service is no longer wanted even though it may still be in good working order....
. It is the legal doctrine
Legal doctrine

Legal doctrine is a framework, set of rules, procedural steps, or test, often established through precedent in the common law, through which judgments can be determined in a given legal case....
 that long and continued non-use of a law renders it invalid, at least in the sense that courts will no longer tolerate punishing its transgressors.

British law
The doctrine of desuetude is not favoured in the common law
Common law

Common law refers to law and the corresponding Legal systems of the world developed through legal opinion of courts and similar tribunals , rather than through statute law or Executive ....
 tradition.






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In law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
, desuetude (from the Latin word desuetudo, outdated, no longer custom) is a doctrine that causes statute
Statute

A statute is a formal written enactment of a legislative authority that governs a country, state, city, or county. Typically, statutes command or prohibit something, or declare policy....
s, similar legislation or legal principles to lapse and become unenforceable by a long habit of non-enforcement or lapse of time. It is what happens to laws that are not repeal
Repeal

A repeal is the removal or reversal of a law. This is generally done when a law is no longer effective, or it is shown that a law is having far more negative consequences than were originally envisioned....
ed when they become obsolete
Obsolescence

Obsolescence is the state of being which occurs when a person, object, or service is no longer wanted even though it may still be in good working order....
. It is the legal doctrine
Legal doctrine

Legal doctrine is a framework, set of rules, procedural steps, or test, often established through precedent in the common law, through which judgments can be determined in a given legal case....
 that long and continued non-use of a law renders it invalid, at least in the sense that courts will no longer tolerate punishing its transgressors.

British law


The doctrine of desuetude is not favoured in the common law
Common law

Common law refers to law and the corresponding Legal systems of the world developed through legal opinion of courts and similar tribunals , rather than through statute law or Executive ....
 tradition. In 1818, the English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 court of King's Bench
King's Bench

The Queen's Bench is the superior court in a number of jurisdictions within some of the Commonwealth realms. The original Queen's Bench, in the United Kingdom, is one of the ancient courts of England, and is now a division of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales....
 held in the case of Ashford v. Thornton
Ashford v. Thornton

Ashford v. Thornton was an 1818 English legal case standing for the principle that all law remains until it is repealed.In 1817, Abraham Thornton was charged with the murder of Mary Ashford, but the jury acquitted the defendant....
 that trial by combat
Trial by combat

Trial by combat was a method of Germanic law to settle accusations in the absence of witnesses or a confession, in which two parties in dispute fought in single combat; the winner of the fight was proclaimed to be right....
 remained available at a defendant
Defendant

A defendant or defender is any party who is required to answer the complaint of a plaintiff or pursuer in a civil lawsuit before a court, or any party who has been formally indictment or accused of violating a crime statute....
's option in a case where it was available under the common law. The concept of desuetude has more currency in the civil law
Civil law (legal system)

Civil law is a most prevalent legal system in the modern world and the oldest in human history. It is based on a code, or "a systematic collection of interrelated articles written in a terse, staccato style." The two other major legal systems in the world are common law and Islamic law....
 tradition, which is more regulated by legislative codes, and less bound by precedent.

The doctrine has been applied in regard to acts of the pre-1707 Scottish Parliament
Scottish Parliament

The Scottish Parliament is the Devolution national, Unicameralism legislature of Scotland, located in the Holyrood, Edinburgh area of the capital Edinburgh....
.

United States law

Desuetude does not apply to violations of the United States constitution. In Walz v. Tax Commission of the City of New York, 397 U.S. 664, 678 (1970), the United States Supreme Court asserted that: "It is obviously correct that no one acquires a vested or protected right in violation of the Constitution by long use, even when that span of time covers our entire national existence and indeed predates it."

It may, however, have validity as a doctrine in defense of penal prosecution. In 1825, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court declined to enforce the traditional punishment of ducking
Cucking stool

Ducking-stools and cucking-stools are chairs formerly used for punishment. They were both instruments of social humiliation/censure, primarily for the offence of common scold or back biting, and less often for sexual offences like having an illegitimate child or prostitution....
 for women convicted as common scolds
Common scold

In the common law of criminal law in England and Wales, a common scold was a species of public nuisance?a troublesome and angry woman who broke the public peace by habitually arguing and quarrelling with her neighbours....
, stating that "total disuse of any civil institution for ages past, may afford just and rational objections against disrespected and superannuated ordinances." Wright v. Crane, 13 Serg. & Rawle 220, 228 (Pa. 1825).

The seminal modern case under U.S. state law is a West Virginia
West Virginia

West Virginia is a U.S. state in the Appalachian, Upland South, and Mid-Atlantic States regions of the United States, bordered by Virginia on the southeast, Kentucky on the southwest, Ohio on the northwest, and Pennsylvania and Maryland on the northeast....
 opinion regarding desuetude, Committee on Legal Ethics v. Printz, 187 W.Va. 182, 416 S.E.2d 720 (1992). In that case, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals held that penal statutes may become void under the doctrine of desuetude if:

  1. The statute proscribes only acts that are malum prohibitum
    Malum prohibitum

    Malum prohibitum is a List of Latin phrases used in law to refer to conduct that constitutes an unlawful act only by virtue of statute, as opposed to conduct evil in and of itself, or malum in se. Conduct that was so clearly violative of society's standards for allowable conduct that it was illegal under English common law is usuall...
     and not malum in se
    Malum in se

    Malum in se is a list of Latin phrases meaning wrong or evil in itself. This concept is a part of the value consensus model explanation of the origins of the criminal law....
    ;
  2. There has been open, notorious and pervasive violation of the statute for a long period; and
  3. There has been a conspicuous policy of nonenforcement of the statute.


This holding was reaffirmed in 2003 in West Virginia v. Blake, ___ S.E.2d ____ (W. Va. 2003)http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=wv&vol=spring2003\31150&invol=1.

While it may not be a violation of due process to enforce a desuetudinal law, the fact that a law has long gone unenforced may present a bar to standing
Standing (law)

In the common law, and under many statutes, standing or locus standi is the ability of a party to demonstrate to the court sufficient connection to and harm from the law or action challenged to support that party's participation in the case....
 in a suit to prevent its future enforcement. In Poe v. Ullman
Poe v. Ullman

Poe v. Ullman, Case citation , was a United States Supreme Court case that held that plaintiffs lacked Standing to challenge a Connecticut law that banned the use of contraceptives, and banned Physicians from advising their use, because the law had never been enforced....
, the Supreme Court refused to hear a challenge to Connecticut's ban on birth control
Birth control

Birth control, sometimes synonymous with contraception, is a regimen of one or more actions, devices, or medications followed in order to deliberately prevent or reduce the likelihood of pregnancy or childbirth....
, writing:
The undeviating policy of nullification by Connecticut of its anti-contraceptive laws throughout all the long years that they have been on the statute books bespeaks more than prosecutorial paralysis . . . . 'Deeply embedded traditional ways of carrying out state policy * * * '—or not carrying it out—'are often tougher and truer law than the dead words of the written text.'
Shortly thereafter, Connecticut's birth control law was enforced, and struck down, in Griswold v. Connecticut
Griswold v. Connecticut

Griswold v. Connecticut, Case citation , was a landmark case in which the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the Constitution of the United States protected a right to privacy....
.