The Centrality and Diversity of the Invisible Constitution
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recognition with the constitution (or certain constitutional provisions or prin-
ciples) of that system.
10
However, he makes the point that it cannot be the con-
stitutional text that renders the rule of recognition fundamental. Discussing
the rule that what the Queen in Parliament enacts is law, Hart observes that:
Even if it were enacted by statute, this would not reduce it to the level of a
statute; for the legal status of such an enactment necessarily would depend
on the fact that the rule existed antecedently to and independently of the
enactment. Moreover . . . its existence, unlike that of a statute, must consist
in an actual practice.
11
The point about actual practice is a consequence of Hart’s general account of the
existence of a legal system. Hart holds there to be two conditions necessary and
10
See e.g.,
ibid.
, 100–2, 106–7, 110–11, 113–16.
11
Ibid.
, 111. Hart further says (293) that:
If a constitution specifying the various sources of law is a living reality in the sense that
the courts and officials of the system actually identify the law in accordance with the cri-
teria it provides, then the constitution is accepted and actually exists. It seems a needless
reduplication to suggest that there is a further rule to the effect that the constitution (or
those who ‘laid it down’) are to be obeyed.
Gardner says of this second passage that:
The picture that Hart seems to be trying to conjure up is of a constitution containing
some law that is both written and unwritten – legislated and customary – at the same
time. The only picture he succeeded in conjuring up for me, however, is of written law
which was displaced, perhaps one step at a time, by unwritten law, so that the formerly
legislated constitution lost its force in favour of customary rules with similar content.
John Gardner, ‘Can There Be a Written Constitution’, in Leslie Green and Brian Leiter
(eds.) Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 180. As far
as the relationship between the rule of recognition and a written constitution is concerned,
therefore, Gardner prefers to identify the rule of recognition as an unwritten rule that ‘imposes
a legal duty upon law-applying officials’; the duty it imposes is to apply the constitution, which
itself identifies and confers powers upon the fundamental political organs and institutions; and
because the rule of recognition must be an actual social practice (‘custom’), it is ultimately ju-
dicial reception of the constitution that confers upon it its constitutional status: ‘Can There Be
a Written Constitution’ 165–7, 175–80, 186–7. The idea that the rule of recognition is consti-
tuted simply by judicial practice is contentious, however: Jeffrey Goldsworthy, for instance,
takes the view that the rule of recognition is constituted by the shared practice of all the senior
officials within a legal system: The Sovereignty of Parliament: History and Philosophy (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1999), 238–46. On such an understanding, the idea that the content of that
shared practice might be written down by the lawmaking officials, so that the law-applying
officials have a canonical statement of it to refer to when performing their adjudicative tasks,
would seem to make sense. In such a case, the duty to conform to the rule of recognition
would be overdetermined, but there would be no contradiction.
In any event, as will be discussed below, an unwritten rule of recognition is not as such in-
visible, and so even if Gardner was correct that the rule of recognition must be unwritten, that
would not in itself show that every constitution necessarily has an invisible aspect.
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