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Poynings' Law (on certification of acts)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1494 law subordinating the Irish parliament to England
This article is about the act regulating summoning of the Irish parliament and pre-approval of its legislation. For the act adopting English statutes, seePoynings' Law (confirmation of English statutes). For other laws, seePoynings' Parliament.

Poynings' Law
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act that no Parliament be holden in this Land until the Acts be certified into England.
Citation10 Hen. 7. c. 4 (I) (The Irish Statutes numbering)
10 Hen. 7. c. 9 (I) (Analecta Hibernica numbering)
Introduced byProbablySir Edward Poynings,Lord Deputy of Ireland
Territorial extent Ireland
Dates
Commencement1 December 1494
Repealed13 August 1878
Other legislation
Amended by
Repealed byStatute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878
Status: Repealed
Text of statute as originally enacted
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Poynings' Law or theStatute of Drogheda[1] (10 Hen. 7. c. 4 (I) [The Irish Statutes numbering] or 10 Hen. 7. c. 9 (I) [Analecta Hibernica numbering]; later titled "An Act that no Parliament be holden in this Land until the Acts be certified into England") was a1494Act of theParliament of Ireland which provided that the parliament could not meet until its proposed legislation had been approved both by Ireland'sLord Deputy andPrivy Council and by England'smonarch (theLord of Ireland) andPrivy Council. It was a major grievance in18th-century Ireland, was amended by theConstitution of 1782, rendered moot by theActs of Union 1800, and repealed by theStatute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878 (41 & 42 Vict. c. 57).

Background

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Poynings' Parliament was called by SirEdward Poynings in his capacity asLord Deputy of Ireland, appointed by KingHenry VII of England in his capacity asLord of Ireland. Coming in the aftermath of the divisiveWars of the Roses, Poynings' intention was to make Ireland once again obedient to the English monarchy. Assembling theParliament of Ireland on 1 December 1494, he declared that it was thereafter to be placed under the authority of theParliament of England. This marked the beginning ofTudor direct rule in Ireland, although Henry VII was still forced to rely onOld English nobles (such asGerald FitzGerald, 8th Earl of Kildare, despite his support forLambert Simnel) as his deputies in Ireland through the intervening years. Poynings' Law was a major rallying point for later groups seeking self-government for Ireland, particularly theConfederate Catholics in the 1640s andHenry Grattan'sPatriot Party in the late 18th century, who consistently sought a repeal of Poynings' Law. The Act remained in place until theConstitution of 1782 gave the Irish parliament legislative independence.

Function and operation

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The working of Poynings' Law took place in several steps. The first step was for the lieutenant governor and the Irish council (or Irish executive) to decide that a parliament was needed, usually for the purpose of raising funds. At this point, the council and lieutenant would write drafts of legislation to be proposed to the king and his council. After this had been completed, the lieutenant and council, according to the act, were required to certify the request for parliament "under the great seal of that land [Ireland]”,[2] and then forward it to England for approval. Once the request arrived in England, it was reviewed by the King and his council, and a formal licence, approving the request for parliament and the draft bills were returned to Ireland.[3] Once the licence was received in Ireland, the governor would summon parliament, and the bills passed. "Government" was not representative as in the modern sense and there was no sustained opposition. Parliament's consent was necessary for some purposes, and it frequently offered advice, but the decisions were made by the English and Irish councils.[4] This is an important fact to consider when examining exactly who the law was aimed to suppress. As the point above demonstrates, parliament was virtually arubber stamp, and it was the Irish executive who made the actual decisions in proposing policy.

The two important aspects of the procedure presented by Poynings' Law are transmission and certification. Both of these requirements placed limits on various parties within the law-making process in Ireland. The combination of these processes created a situation where bills could be sent, along with the request for parliament, and the king could amend and remove such bills as he wished, however, he could not add new bills himself. This is a result of the certification process which requires the submission to be made by the Irish council "under the great seal of that land [Ireland]".[2] The original intention of the certification process was to remove the capacity of initiating legislation from the parliament, and place it with the Irish council and governor.[5] But as a result of the way it was framed in the act, it also removed that capacity from the English parliament and administration as well: legislation could only be submitted for approval by the Irish executive.

Furthermore, the two processes made it impossible for the Irish to add more bills or amendments to a request after the initial licence request had been granted.[6] This meant that any additional bills or amendments that they wished to pass in parliament would have to be re-sent along with an entirely new request for parliament. Clearly, this created severe inefficiencies in the legislative process, and thus gave the executive in Ireland as well as the crown an interest in relaxing procedure. As early as 1496 "the rigid procedure laid down by Poynings' Law was not being adhered to",[7] and additional bills were commonly sent to England after the original request and were returned to Ireland before the meeting of a new parliament. The example from 1496 was the separate request for parliamentary licence and sending of bills in the reappointment of theEarl of Kildare. At this time, because the rigid procedure of Poynings' Law was not in the interest of any of the parties involved, especially the Crown and Irish executive, Quinn argues that "no hesitation was felt about transmitting additional bills" after the licence had been granted.[8]

Changes after 1692

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After theRevolution of 1688 and the ensuingWilliamite War, an important development in the Poynings' Law procedure took place in the 1692 parliament as some members of theIrish House of Commons sought to establish for themselves a more central role in the process of drafting legislature. On 27 October 1692, the House of Commons passed two notable resolutions. The first, "that it was, and is, the undoubted right of the commons… to prepare and resolve the ways and means of raising money" and the second, "that it was, and is, the sole and undoubted right of the commons to prepare heads of bills for raising money".[9] Opposition to the executive was then expressed as the Commons used its veto power under Poynings' Law to reject "virtually two-thirds of the meticulously prepared government bills".[10] Political deadlock ensued and parliament was prorogued. Although judicial opinion in both Ireland and England served to vindicate the position of theLord Lieutenant and the English Government in the matter, it became clear that a compromise solution must be reached before parliament could be called again. From mid-1694, negotiations to this end began to bear fruit. The Irish parliament would pass one government money bill relating to excise at the beginning of the session in recognition of theroyal prerogative. The parliament would now appoint a committee to decide upon the "ways and means"[11] of raising supply and draw up the "heads of bills" of any related legislation. Government support ofpenal legislation against Catholics also helped placate the claims of the 'sole right' advocates. The compromise solution was put into effect in the 1695 parliament and all fourteen government bills presented in the first session were passed by both houses. Now the Irish House of Commons had major input into the substance, or 'heads', of supply bills that would then be transmitted to the English Privy Council for approval, amendment or rejection under the Poynings' Law procedure. This set the precedent for the parliaments of the eighteenth century.

Heads of bills

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Whereas an independent legislature can amend a bill between the time of its introduction and the time it is passed, this was not possible for the Parliament of Ireland, as only the bill originally introduced would be in compliance with the requirement under Poynings' Law to have been pre-approved by the privy councils. As a consequence, alegal fiction developed after theRevolution of 1688 whereby the Irish parliament introduced and debated the 'heads' of a bill before transmitting the heads to the Irish Privy Council. In theory, the 'heads' of a bill are simply its broad outline or general scheme; in practice, they were identical in form to a final bill, and processed identically, except that theenacting clause "be it enacted" was replaced with "we pray that it may be enacted".[12] On occasion, if either privy council amended a bill, the Irish parliament would symbolically assert its authority by rejecting the amended bill and resubmitting heads of a new bill identical to the rejected one.

Amendment and repeal

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TheDeclaratory Act 1719 declared the right of theParliament of Great Britain to make laws forIreland and overrule judgments of theIrish House of Lords. The Declaratory Act and Poynings' Law were two major grievances of theIrish Patriot Party that were addressed by theConstitution of 1782. One element of the Constitution wasBarry Yelverton's Act,[13] animplied amendment of Poynings' Law which removed the Irish Privy Council altogether from the legislative process and reduced the British Privy Council's power to one of veto rather than amendment. TheActs of Union 1800 rendered most of the Constitution of 1782 and Poynings' Law moot. Poynings' Law was formally repealed as obsolete by theStatute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878.

Notes

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References

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  1. ^Baker, John Hamilton (2003).The Oxford History of the Laws of England. Vol. VI: 1483-1558. Oxford University Press. p. 110.ISBN 9780198258179. Retrieved11 March 2015.
  2. ^abCurtis & McDowell 1968, p. 83.
  3. ^Quinn 1941, p. 245.
  4. ^Ellis 1985, p. 78.
  5. ^Bradshaw 1979, p. 150.
  6. ^Quinn 1941, p. 246.
  7. ^Quinn 1941, p. 250
  8. ^Quinn 1941, p. 247.
  9. ^McGrath 2000, p. 85.
  10. ^Bartlett & Hayton 1979, p. 21.
  11. ^McGrath 2000, p. 96.
  12. ^"Parliament".The Standard Library Cyclopaedia of Political, Constitutional, Statistical and Forensic Knowledge. Vol. 4. H.G. Bohn. 1853. p. 477.
  13. ^21 & 22 Geo. 3. c. 47

Sources

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Primary
Secondary
  • Bartlett, Thomas; Hayton, David, eds. (1979),Penal Era and Golden Age, Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation,ISBN 0-901905-23-2.
  • Bradshaw, Brendan (1979),The Irish Constitutional Revolution of the Sixteenth Century, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,ISBN 0-521-22206-0.
  • Curtis, E.; McDowell, R.B., eds. (1968), "Poynings' Law",Irish Historical Documents 1172–1922, London: Methuen & Company Limited, p. 83.
  • Ellis, Steven G. (1985),'Tudor Ireland: Crown, Community and the Conflict of Cultures 1470–1603, New York: Longman,ISBN 0-582-49341-2.
  • Hayden, Mary T. (1925). "The Origin and Development of Heads of Bills in the Irish Parliament".The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland.15 (2):112–125.ISSN 0035-9106.JSTOR 25513369.
  • McGrath, Charles Ivar (2000),The Making of the Eighteenth Century Irish Constitution, Dublin: Four Courts Press,ISBN 1-85182-554-1.
  • Pack, Mark (2001),"Charles James Fox, the Repeal of Poynings Law, and the Act of Union: 1782–1801"(PDF),Journal of Liberal History,33, archived fromthe original(PDF) on 26 March 2009, retrieved7 April 2008.
  • Porritt, Edward; Porritt, Annie (1909)."Poynings' Law".The Unreformed House of Commons; Parliamentary representation before 1832. Vol. 2: Scotland and Ireland. Cambridge University Press. pp. 424–449. Retrieved18 August 2016.
  • Quinn, D.B. (1941), "The early interpretation of Poynings' Law, 1494–1534",Irish Historical Studies,2 (7):241–254,doi:10.1017/S002112140011212X,JSTOR 30005898.
  • Richardson, H.G. (Henry Gerald);Sayles, G.O. (1964)."Poynings Law".The Irish Parliament in the Middle Ages. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 269–281. Retrieved8 July 2020.
  • "Background to the Statutes: The Constitutional Position".History of the Irish Parliament. Ulster Historical Foundation. Retrieved9 March 2015.

External links

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