Bill of Rights: Its Reception of and Contribution to International and Comparative Jurispru-
Some Have Bills of Rights Thrust upon Them: The Experience of Hong Kong’s Bill of Rights’,
240
Albert H. Y. Chen and P. Y. Lo
Kong Court of Appeal in 1991.
24
The case concerned the constitutional valid-
ity of a presumption for the purpose of the law of evidence contained in the
Dangerous Drugs Ordinance. The presumption was that if the accused was
found in possession of 0.5 grams of dangerous drugs, it would be presumed that
he possessed it for the purpose of trafficking unless he could prove otherwise.
The Court of Appeal applied the three-stage proportionality test developed
by the Canadian Supreme Court in R v. Oakes,
25
which included elements
of justification and deference as respect, yet with
a bias towards human rights
protection, and struck down the presumption as contrary to the presumption
of innocence in the Hong Kong Bill of Rights.
26
8.3.2. Constitutional Judicial Review in the HKSAR
Upon the establishment of the HKSAR in 1997, the colonial constitution
embodied in the Letters Patent lost its force. As mentioned above, art. 8 of the
HKBL provides for the continued validity of the laws previously in force in
Hong Kong, except for any law that contravenes the HKBL and subject to any
amendment by the SAR legislature. Under art. 160 of the HKBL, the NPCSC
may declare which of Hong Kong’s pre-existing laws contravene the HKBL
and cannot therefore survive the 1997 transition. Such a declaration was
made by the NPCSC on 23 February 1997 in its Decision on the Treatment
of the Laws Previously in Force in Hong Kong.
27
The Decision declared the
non-adoption, inter alia, of three interpretative provisions in the Hong Kong
Bill of Rights Ordinance, apparently on the ground that they purported to give
the Ordinance a superior status overriding other Hong Kong laws, which was
said to be inconsistent with the principle that only the HKBL is superior to
other Hong Kong laws.
28
24
[1992] 1 HKCLR 127.
25
[1986] 1 SCR 103. The case is a leading case on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
incorporated into Canada’s constitution in 1982.
26
However, a less rigorous proportionality analysis was used by the Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council in
Attorney General v.
Lee Kwong-kut (1993) 3 HKPLR 72,
a case on appeal
from Hong Kong. See Lo, Supra note 1, 281–3. The Privy Council and the United Kingdom
Supreme Court have since then made an about turn: see de Freitas v. Permanent Secretary of
Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Land and Housing [1999] 1 AC 69 (PC); and Gaughran v.
Chief Constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland [2015] 2 WLR 1303 (UKSC).
27
For an English translation of this Decision, see (1997) 27
Hong Kong Law Journal 419.
28
The interpretative provisions concerned were sections 2(3), 3 and 4 of the Ordinance. For the
effect of the non-adoption of these provisions, see Peter Wesley-Smith, ‘Maintenance of the
Bill of Rights’ (1997) 27 Hong Kong Law Journal 15; Johannes Chan, ‘The Status of the Bill
of Rights in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region’ (1998) 28 Hong Kong Law
Journal 152.