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John Austin (1790-1859)

The Province of Jurisprudence Determined


(1832)

Lecture VI

Every positive law is set by a sovereign person or body to


the members of the independent political society wherein
that person or body is sovereign (supreme).

Distinguish a Sovereign from superiority or might:

The bulk of the given society are in a habit of obedience or submission to an


independent, determinate, and common superior

That individual or body (to whom such obedience is given) is not in a habit of
obedience to a determinate human superior.

Since bulk, habit of obedience, and independent are relative terms, the
abstraction of Sovereign or Independent Political Society cannot be precisely
defined.

In such cases, the society (including its Sovereign) is a society political and
independent.

If a possible sovereign is in the habit of obedience to another, then that


sovereign (and its subjects) are not independent but rather a limb or
member of the greater society to which it habitually owes obedience.

Lecture VI (cont.)

A society in a state of nature is independent when composed of persons


connected by mutual intercourse, but not in the habit of obedience to a
person or body. I.e. they are not a political society.

Independent political societies, then, can in some ways be said to live in a


state of nature with one another.

International Law is not positive law. The duties it imposes are only
enforced by moral sanctions, or fear of incurring the wrath of more powerful
sovereign(s).

Neither a weakness, nor occasional obedience to a more powerful sovereign


destroys a societies sovereignty or independence.

Lecture VI (cont.)

Every government, no matter how powerful:

Renders occasional obedience to commands of other governments

Defers frequently to international law

Defers habitually to the opinions and sentiments of its own subjects (or at
least a more or less defined subset of subjects.)

None of these weaken the governments status as sovereign because it does


not habitually obey the commands of another.

A sovereign government may exercise its powers:

Directly

By delegation to representative(s) subject to a trust

The trust may be enforced legally (by positive law), or

By moral sanctions (fear that it will offend the community)

By delegation to representatives unconditionally

Lecture VI (cont.)

Austin does not buy the concept of separation of the powers of sovereignty
(executive (including judicial), and legislative), because under any known
system, each distinct party to which those powers may be given also
exercise other types of powers.

Rather, he divides sovereignty into supreme and subordinate.

The supreme are the infinite political powers of the sovereign partly
exercised and partly dormant, but nevertheless existing.

The subordinate are those portions of the supreme powers of sovereignty


which are delegated to political subordinates as ministers and trustees.

Lecture VI (cont.)

Therefore, there is no such thing as sovereign:

Either the government at issue is totally subordinate, or

It is completely independent, or

It is jointly sovereign with the more powerful, and therefore simply a


constituent member of the more powerful sovereign.

When one government is formed from a union of states:

A Composite State is Formed when the overall government is now obeyed


throughout the old states.

A Supreme Federal Government is formed by the federal union of several


independent political governments which results in the central government
together with the governments of the forming societies being jointly
sovereign in each of the forming states and also in the larger society formed.
In such case neither the central nor constituent governments are sovereign
and supreme.

A System of Confederated States wherein each state is still truly sovereign,


and the acts of the central government are simply adopted, and enforced by,
each state without creating one single political society.

Lecture VI (cont.)

The power of a Sovereign is incapable of legal limitation, it being a flat


contradiction of terms to say that the positive law eminating from a
Sovereign may limit that Sovereign.

Constitutional law is simply positive morality, or a compound of positive


morality and positive law which fixes the structure of the given government.

Thus, although an act of the sovereign or its constituent members may be


unconstitutional, it cannot be illegal.

Unconstitutional actions of part of the sovereigns agents may be checked by:

Refusal of other agents to enforce the particular act

Refusal of the community to adhere to the act (moral sanction)

Lecture VI (cont.)

Liberty is, therefore, simply those areas which the sovereign has chooses to
leave within the discretion of the individual, realizing that the sovereign may
at any time abridge that liberty at its discretion.

Every supreme government is legally despotic. Whether a given government


is good or bad, free or despotic simply denotes whether we agree with
its actions.

Those who divide governments between free and despotic are simply
lovers of democracy.

The true distinction is not the power of the government, for they all truly
have complete powers, rather whether it is so constituted as to be beneficial
to the people.

A sovereign is not subject to the civil law, because he would thus be subject
to himself.

Lecture VI (cont.)

There are no sovereign rights with respect to the sovereigns relation to its
people.

All rights have three parties:

The government which sets the right and enforces it

The ones on whom the right is conferred

The ones who have a relative duty not to interfere with that right.

The proper end of every government is the happiness of the people,


achieving this happiness promotes obedience, which is also promoted by:

Custom

Prejudices (opinions and sentiments)

Habit

The tactic or actual consent of the people is not the true origin or
permanence of government only that they wish to escape a state of nature
by living in a political society and therefore tolerate whatever government
exists.

Lecture VI (cont.)

Theory of the social contract is rejected:

1. The rights and duties of the government and governed flow only from the
law of God, positive law, and positive morality.

2. The hypothesis of an original covenant is therefore needless and useless.

3. The covenant would not bind original or following subjects, or original or


following sovereigns since there is no positive law or sovereign to enforce
that contract.

4. Religious rationales would bind both sovereign and subjects without a


covenant, but would not bind following sovereigns or subjects.

5. The extent to which the sovereign would be bound by the opinions or


expectations of its subjects will always be limited by:

The extent (nature and uniformity) of the expectations of the subjects

The degree of clearness or precision with which they conceive the ends in
which their sentiments coincide.

6. The hypothesis has no foundation in fact.

7. All governments have changed or grown.

8. Conquest

Lecture VI (cont.)

Governments de jure and government de facto

1. De jure and also de facto (lawful, right, just, and being obeyed)

2. De jure, but not de facto (lawful, rightful, or just, but displaced)

3. De facto, but not de jure (unlawful, unrightful, or unjust, but nevertheless


being currently obeyed)

4. Neither de facto nor de jure (not a government at all, but a former


government which one wishes still was)

In respect to positive law, the de jure distinction is without meaning, such


distinction is only appropriate for positive morality.

A sovereign established, is neither lawful nor unlawful with respect to its


positive law, and cannot be said to be legal or illegal. It simply is.

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