[1935] 1 IR 170.
The Evolution of Natural Law in Ireland
433
the same unfettered amendment power), it was argued (and accepted by the
majority) that the amendment was not contrary to the Constitution. Kennedy
CJ, however, suggested that the derivation of lawful authority God introduced
additional (invisible) requirements for the valid exercise of lawful power.
Every act, whether legislative, executive or judicial, in order to be lawful
under the Constitution, must be capable of being justified under the author-
ity thereby declared to be derived from God. From this it seems clear that,
if any legislation of the Oireachtas (including any purported amendment of
the Constitution) were to offend against that acknowledged ultimate Source
from which the legislative authority has come through the people to the
Oireachtas, as, for example, if it were repugnant to the Natural Law, such
legislation would be necessarily unconstitutional and invalid, and it would
be, therefore, absolutely null and void and inoperative.
4
Applying that approach to the amendment before the Court, he concluded
that it was contrary to the natural law. Furthermore, he suggested that the
judiciary’s authority could similarly – and directly – be traced back to God in
a manner which effectively carved out the judicial power as an independent,
distinct and exclusively court-based function.
Coming, as it did, as part of a dissenting judgment, the Chief Justice’s asser-
tion of an independent natural law jurisdiction on the part of the courts had lit-
tle immediate influence. It should not be overlooked, however, that Kennedy
CJ’ s ‘celebrated dissent’
5
was – and continues to be
6
– regarded within legal
circles as a brave and powerfully expressed effort to resist an unjust attack on
fundamental rights.
In 1937, a new Constitution of Ireland was introduced. Article 6 of the
Constitution retained a link between governmental authority and God, stat-
ing that ‘All powers of government, legislative, executive and judicial, derive,
under God, from the people’. In addition, however, the 1937 Constitution
contained several new provisions with a more avowedly religious dimension.
4
State (Ryan) v. Lennon [1935] IR 170, 204–5.
5
Tom Hickey, ‘Revisiting Ryan v. Lennon to Make the Case against Judicial Supremacy’ (2015)
53 (1)
Irish Jurist 125, 130.
6
For example, the Supreme Court’s website lists it first in the thirty or so most important cases
in Irish constitutional history. It has also been the subject of numerous
academic articles in-
cluding G. Hogan, ‘A Desert Island Case Set in the Silver Sea: The ‘State (Ryan) v. Lennon’
in E. O’Dell (ed.), Leading Cases of the Twentieth Century (Dublin: Sweet & Maxwell, 2000);
G. Quinn, ‘Dangerous Constitutional Moments: The “Tactic of Legality” in Nazi Germany
and the Irish Free State Compared’ in John Morison, Kieran McEvoy and Gordon Anthony
(eds.), Judges, Transition and Human Rights (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007); and
Hickey, Supra note 5.