Court, Seremban). The High Court occupies the lowest tier in Malaysia’s appellate court
structure, which comprises of the High Court, the Court of Appeal and the Federal Court.
, 129 [19].
See Li-ann Thio and Jaclyn Ling-Chien Neo, ‘Religious Dress in Schools: The Serban Con-
, 619 [23].
394
Yvonne Tew
special position in Article 3(1) ‘was never intended to override any right, privi-
lege or power explicitly conferred by the Constitution’.
93
Recourse to constitutional history as an extra-textual constitutional source
in Malaysia has reached beyond issues of religion and the state. Judges advo-
cating a purposive and rights-expansive approach to interpreting the Malaysian
Constitution’s bill of rights have also used the language of originalism to sup-
port their constitutional adjudication approach. Liberals promoting a robust
rights-oriented approach to constitutional interpretation systematically refer
to the original commitments of the framers.
94
Those who support this living
constitutionalist approach do so on originalist grounds, exhorting the courts
‘to adopt a liberal approach in order to implement the true intention of the
framers of the Federal Constitution’.
95
On this account, the framers them-
selves contemplated the necessity of constitutional construction by future
generations. As Justice Gopal Sri Ram declared, ‘the terms in which these
provisions of the Constitution are expressed necessarily co-opts future gen-
erations of judges to the enterprise of giving life to the abstract statements of
fundamental rights’.
96
Proponents of this form of framework originalism support empowering
judges to protect individual rights from legislative infringement by
expand-
ing the scope of enforceable constitutional rights.
97
Judges who endorse this
approach have been willing to find implied fundamental rights and to expand
a number of constitutional rights – such as the right to life,
98
equality,
99
and the
93
Ibid.
, 623 [53]–24 [53].
94
Sivarasa Rasiah v. Badan Peguam Malaysia & Anor [2010] 2 Malayan Law Journal 333, 339
(observing that ‘the provisions of the Constitution, in particular the fundamental liberties
guaranteed . . . must be generously interpreted’.).
95
Tan Tek Seng v.
Suruhanjaya Perkhidmatan Pendidikan [1996] 1 Malayan Law Journal 261,
288. See also Sukma Darmawan Sasmitaat Madja v. Ketua Pengarah Penjara Malaysia [1999]
1 Malayan Law Journal 266, 271 (‘[T]he Federal Constitution, unlike any ordinary statute,
does not merely declare law . . . It also confers upon individuals certain fundamental and inal-
ienable human rights, such as equality before the law. Its language must accordingly receive
a broad and liberal construction in order to advance the intention of its framers’.) (emphasis
added).
96
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