three judges. The President, Sam Hou-fai, was born in Mainland China and aged thirty-eight
at the time of his appointment in December 1999. He had, prior to his appointment to the
TUI, worked in the Macau judicial system for four years and as a judge since 1997. Of the
other two judges, Justice Virato Manuel Pinheiro de Lima had more than twenty years of
judicial experience, the last seven years of which were spent in Macau as a judge. The third
judge, Justice Chu Kin, was the first Chinese Macanese judge (mentioned above), having
been appointed as a judge in 1996. Justice Chu Kin was declared in 2011 to be incapable of
holding office due to critical injuries suffered in a traffic accident in Mainland China and was
therefore subject to compulsory retirement. His vacancy was filled by Judge Song Man-lei,
formerly the first female prosecutor of Chinese origin in Macau when she was appointed to
that position in September 1996.
This may include resolving differences between two TUI judgments; see Godinho and Cardi-
who, among other things, solicited bribes from property developers). See also ‘MDT inter-
view/Paulo Cardinal, Legal Expert: The Denial of the Right of Appeal is Inadequate and Embar-
mdt-interview-paulo-cardinal-legal-expert-denial-right-appeal-inadequate-embarrassing.html
248
Albert H. Y. Chen and P. Y. Lo
For our present purposes, two aspects of the TUI’s activities are examined
by reading the Chinese version of its judgments.
62
The first concerns its power
to review legislation on the basis of consistency with the MBL. The second
involves its application of the principle of proportionality.
8.4.2. Judicial Review of Legislation and Legal
Norms Having Legislative Effect
Unlike the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal, the TUI had not been ini-
tially active in developing a ‘constitutional jurisdiction’. Rather, in 2000, as
Paulo Cardinal had described, it dealt ‘a deadly blow’ to the availability of
the traditional continental mechanisms of constitutional review, namely the
amparo and constitutionality appeal.
63
Jiang Chaoyang considered that the
absence of jurisdiction to entertain challenges to the validity of legislation or
administrative regulations on the ground of contravention with the MBL was
well justified under art. 19(2) of the MBL as well as the previous organic law
of the Macau judiciary.
64
On the other hand, the TUI explained in Case No
9/2006 (25 October 2006) that the Code of Administrative Procedure (Código
do Procedimento Administrativo) of the MSAR was at first enacted with an
expectation that later there would be conferred upon the TUI an appellate
jurisdiction to examine the validity of legal enactments on the ground of
inconsistency with the MBL, but this expected jurisdiction of the TUI was
not subsequently provided for, with the result that art. 44 of the Law on the
Organisation of the Judiciary (Lei de Bases da Organização Judiciária) of the
62
Judgments of the TUI are prepared by one of the judges of the three-person bench hearing the
case; this designated author judge or ‘relator’ can choose to write the judgment in Chinese or
Portuguese, one of the two official languages of the MSAR. Judgments of the TUI are accessi-
ble in their Chinese version at:
www.court.gov.mo/c/cdefault.htm
.
63
See Godinho and Cardinal, Supra note 57, 621, referring to TUI Case No 1/2000 (16 February 2000)
and TUI Case No 2/2000 (23 February 2000) in respect of amparo and TUI Case No 8/2000 (29
March 2000) and TUI Case No 4/2000 (2 February 2000) in respect of constitutionality appeal.
64
Jiang Chaoyang, ‘The judicial application of the Macau Basic Law’ 23(2)
Journal of Nation-
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