, 9–10. See also TUI Case No 21/2007 (14 May 2008).
(Coimbra: Almedina 2002).
’判斷,即排除那些從各點上看都不能列為合乎情理的法律解決辦法。).
See TUI Case No 2/2011 (12 January 2011) 5–6 (where the TUI referred to a 2007 annotation of
the Portuguese Constitution by the jurists Gomes Canotilho and Vital Moreira on the nature
of the rights of assembly and demonstration).
The Constitutional Orders of ‘One Country, Two Systems’
253
The TUI finally encountered the first right of abode case in 2014, which
concerned the application by an Irish national for permanent resident sta-
tus on the ground that he had ordinarily resided in Macau for a continuous
period of seven years immediately before the making of the application and
had taken Macau as his place of permanent residence. The TUI affirmed the
TSI’s judgment in favour of the applicant on the meaning of the requirement
in art. 24(5) of the MBL of ‘having taken Macau as his place of permanent
residence’ (as it was implemented in MSAR legislation), after consulting both
Mainland Chinese and Macanese texts, as well as the text of the Portuguese
jurist Joao de Castro Mendes on the concept of ‘domicile’. It held that the
Bureau of Identity Establishment’s rejection of the applicant’s application was
contrary not only to the relevant MSAR legislation, but also to the said provi-
sion of the MSAR.
82
In the same year, the TUI dealt with a case of a Chinese
national claiming to be a permanent resident of the MSAR under art. 24(2) of
the MSAR, namely, a Chinese national who has ordinarily resided in Macau
continuously for seven years before the establishment of the MSAR. The court
referred to the law previously in force before the establishment of the MSAR
to determine whether the claimant had ordinarily resided in Macau continu-
ously for seven years by that time.
83
This series of cases and the legal reasoning in them would have been
of little surprise to Vitalino Canas, who wrote in early 2007 that while the
Macanese courts before the 1999 handover may conduct judicial review of
constitutionality, be it on their own after 1990 or by way of an appeal to the
Constitutional Court (Tribunal Constitucional) of Portugal at Lisbon, ‘in the
context of the Basic Law, there can be no judicial review of the constitutional-
ity by a Constitutional Court. But we may consider whether the MSAR ordi-
nary courts can, under the BLM, Article 143 and 11, second paragraph, refuse
the application of rules in conflict with the same BLM’.
84
It also appears to
the present authors that anyone who has read art. 41 of the Estatuto Organico
de Macau would also find the TUI’s exposition of the above constitutional
principles unsurprising.
85
Yet, such judicial examinations have had effect only
82
See TUI Case No 21/2014 (7 January 2015).
83
See TUI Case No 115/2014 (28 January 2015). The TUI relied on the principle in art. 11 of the
Macau Civil Code (Código Civil) on the temporal application of laws.
84
See Canas, Vitalino, ‘The General Regime of Fundamental Rights in the Basic Law and the
International Instruments’ in Jorge Oliveira and Paulo Cardinal (eds.), One Country, Two
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: