| Act of Parliament | |
| Long title | An Act to provide for the constitution of Commissions for the reform of the law. |
|---|---|
| Citation | 1965 c. 22 |
| Territorial extent |
|
| Dates | |
| Royal assent | 15 June 1965 |
| Other legislation | |
| Amended by | Wales Act 2014 |
Status: Amended | |
| Text of the Law Commissions Act 1965 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, fromlegislation.gov.uk. | |
TheLaw Commissions Act 1965 (c. 22) was an act which created theLaw Commission of England and Wales and theScottish Law Commission, tasked with reviewingEnglish andScots law respectively.
During the Victorian era, successiveLord Chancellors made an effort to reform the law; asGerald Dworkin writes, "there was hardly one of the Victorian Lord Chancellors who did not have something to his credit in the sphere of legal reform."[1] During the twentieth century this changed, with Lord Chancellors not having the time or energy to add law reform to their host of judicial and political duties.Lord Sankey did set up theLaw Reform Commission, which led directly to the English and Scottish Law Commissions.[1]
Lord Gardiner convincedHarold Wilson to add law reform to theLabour Party manifesto for the1964 general election, and when the Labour Party were returned to power, Gardiner made a promise to set up a Law Commission a requirement for his acceptance of the post of Lord Chancellor.[2] The Law Commissions Bill was introduced to Parliament on 20 January 1965, receiving its second reading on 8 February and theroyal assent on 15 June, a remarkably fast passage of a bill.[3]
The act created two commissions; theLaw Commission of England and Wales to reviewEnglish law and theScottish Law Commission to reviewScots law. The English commission has five commissioners, including a chairman, all appointed by the Lord Chancellor. The commissioners are to have experience working in the legal profession, by legal academics or be members of the judiciary. Each commissioner sits for five years, although they may resign at any point and still be eligible for reappointment.[4] The Scots Commission has a similar make-up.[5]
The commissions' duties are:
The Law Commissions are assisted by parliamentary draftsmen, research and administrative assistants and officials from theGovernment Legal Service.[6]
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