constitutional adjudication was ‘[in] stark contrast’ to that of the CFA.
(where the courts of the HKSAR were advised to examine legislative provisions on consistency
with the Basic Law and in the case they find any such provisions in contravention of the Basic
Law, they should not adjudicate cases in accordance with such provisions but should do so in
near parallel might be drawn with the PRC’s socialist state, as the PRC Constitution provides
in Article 2 for all power in the PRC to belong to the people, who may exercise state power
262
Albert H. Y. Chen and P. Y. Lo
Constitutional judicial review leading to legislative provisions being held
invalid and null and void already existed in Hong Kong’s common law-based
legal system during the colonial era, and rapidly developed after the enact-
ment of the Hong Kong Bill of Rights Ordinance 1991 and the corresponding
amendment to the Letters Patent as the written constitution of colonial Hong
Kong. After the HKSAR was established, the courts simply carried on the
work of constitutional judicial review, now using the provisions of the Basic
Law instead of those of the Letters Patent and the ICCPR as the yardstick
for review. The legal consequences of a legislative provision being judicially
determined to be unconstitutional, i.e., the provision being held to be inva-
lid and null and void, have remained the same as before the 1997 handover,
though the HKSAR courts have refined the techniques of and remedies in
constitutional adjudication.
By contrast, before the 1999 handover in Macau, there had not existed in
this Portuguese colony a well-developed or mature system of constitutional
judicial review. The jurisdiction of formally reviewing and invalidating uncon-
stitutional laws vested in the Constitutional Court of Portugal but not in any
court in Macau. Nevertheless, the Organic Statute of Macau (1990) expressly
provided that Macanese courts may not apply legal norms that were incon-
sistent with the Portuguese Constitution or the Organic Statute of Macau.
111
The jurisdiction of the MSAR courts after the 1999 handover to determine
whether a legal norm is inconsistent with the MBL therefore finds a parallel in
the pre-1999 legal system. As MSAR courts accumulated more experience in
constitutional adjudication, they have developed jurisprudence on the limited
legal consequences of a legal norm being determined to be unconstitutional.
It is understandable and by no means surprising that this jurisprudence is
distinctive and different from its counterpart in the HKSAR, given the influ-
ence of the continental European legal tradition in Macau
112
and the absence
under the MBL of a continental-style constitutional court with full power to
invalidate unconstitutional laws.
113
111
Cf. Eric Ip’s analysis of the pre-1999 Macau legal system with access to the modern ‘mixed’
system of constitutional adjudication in Portugal: Ip, Supra note 1, 825–6.
112
Castelucci considers that the MSAR’s
civil law based legal system, which does not recognise
the binding force of precedents, ‘is associated with a high level of observance of the literal
provisions of the statutory law, with a conservative attitude and a low level of judicial activism.
This rigid attitude seems to be shared by courts in at least some of the former socialist jurisdic-
tions of Eastern Europe . . .’: Castellucci, Supra note 1, 697–8.
113
Eric Ip has suggested that ‘the differing political transaction cost structures
faced by the Hong
Kong and Macau SAR governments’, as well as those faced by the NPCSC, have fostered the
more vibrant ‘constitutional jurisdiction’ of the CFA in the HKSAR and the ‘TUI’s well known
deference to the Macau government’, applying a model of strategic judicial behaviour; see Ip,