Everything which is not forbidden is allowed

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Electrical Experimenter
lampooning proposed regulations to make radio a monopoly of the US Navy

"Everything which is not forbidden is allowed" is a legal maxim. It is the concept that any action can be taken unless there is a law against it.[1][2] It is also known in some situations as the "general power of competence" whereby the body or person being regulated is acknowledged to have competent judgement of their scope of action.

The opposite principle "everything which is not allowed is forbidden" states that an action can only be taken if it is specifically allowed.

A senior English judge, Sir John Laws, stated the principles as: "For the individual citizen, everything which is not forbidden is allowed; but for public bodies, and notably government, everything which is not allowed is forbidden."[3] Legal philosopher Ota Weinberger put it this way: "In a closed system in which all obligations are stated explicitly the following inference rules are valid: (XI) Everything which is not forbidden is allowed".[4]

Domestic law

Czech Republic

The Czech constitution, Article 2, paragraphs 2 and 3, respectively read[5]:

(2) The power of the state serves all citizens and can be only applied in cases, under limitations and trough uses specified by a law. (3) Every citizen can do anything that is not forbidden by the law, and noone can be forced to do anything that is not required by a law.

The same principles are reiterated in the Czech Bill of Rights, Article 2.

Germany

In discussion of German law, an argument often found is that a juristic construction is not applicable since the law does not state its existence – even if the law does not explicitly state that the construction does not exist. An example for this is the Nebenbesitz (indirect possession of a right by more than one person), which is denied by German courts with the argument that §868 of the Civil Code, which defines indirect possession, does not say there could be two people possessing. However, the German constitution Art. 2(1) protects the general freedom to act (Allgemeine Handlungsfreiheit), as demonstrated e.g. by the judgment of the Federal Constitutional Court known as Reiten im Walde (BVerfGE 80, 137; lit. "riding in the forest").[6]

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, the Ram Doctrine is a former constitutional doctrine based upon a 1945 memorandum by Granville Ram. Part of it reads:

A Minister of the Crown is not in the same position as a statutory corporation. A statutory corporation (whether constituted by a special statute as, for instance, a railway company is, or constituted under the Companies Acts as in the case of an ordinary company) is entirely a creature of statute and has no powers except those conferred upon it by or under statute, but a Minister of the Crown, even though there may have been a statute authorising his appointment, is not a creature of statute and may, as an agent of the Crown, exercise any powers which the Crown has power to exercise, except so far as he is precluded from doing so by statute. In other words, in the case of a Government Department, one must look at the statutes to see what it may not do, not as in the case of a company to see what it may do.[7]

The doctrine is also mentioned in Halsbury's Laws of England (though not explicitly by name)[8] and the Cabinet Manual.[9]

In R v Secretary of State for Health, ex parte C [2000] 1 FLR 627, it was found that, despite the fact that the Department of Health (as it was then known) had no statutory authority to maintain an unpublished but consulted (by employers in the child care field) database, it was not unlawful for it do so.

De Smith's Judicial Review is critical of the doctrine[10] and a 2013 House of Lords Constitution Committee report suggests that Ram's memorandum is not an accurate depiction of the law today and that the phrase "the Ram doctrine" is inaccurate and should no longer be used.[10]

Local authorities in England

The converse principle—"everything which is not allowed is forbidden"—used to apply to public authorities in England, whose actions were limited to the

powers explicitly granted to them by law.[11] The restrictions on local authorities were lifted by the Localism Act 2011 which granted a "general power of competence" to local authorities.[12]

Coronavirus pandemic

In March 2021, in response to

Lord Sumption, a former judge of the Supreme Court, stated in a lecture given on 27 October 2020 that "The ease with which people could be terrorized into surrendering basic freedoms which are fundamental to our existence as social beings came as a shock to me in March 2020".[18]

United States

In the US, similar restrictions on municipal authorities apply as a consequence of

Dillon's rule
.

International law

In international law, the principle is known as the Lotus principle, after a collision of the S.S. Lotus in international waters. The Lotus case of 1926–1927 established the freedom of sovereign states to act as they wished, unless they chose to bind themselves by a voluntary agreement or there was an explicit restriction in international law.[19]

Derived principles and sayings

The totalitarian principle in physics adapts the phrase to read: "Everything not forbidden is compulsory."[20]

The

Robert Heinlein 1940 short story "Coventry" uses a similar phrase to describe an authoritarian state: "Anything not compulsory was forbidden".[21] The 1958 version of T. H. White's The Once and Future King describes the slogan of an ant-hill as being "Everything not forbidden is compulsory".[22]

A jocular saying is that, in England, "everything which is not forbidden is allowed", while in Germany, the opposite applies, so "everything which is not allowed is forbidden". This may be extended to France—"everything is allowed even if it is forbidden".[23]

See also

References

  1. , p. 159.
  2. – via Taylor and Francis+NEJM.
  3. – via Wiley Online Library.
  4. ^ "Constitution of the Czech Republic".
  5. ^ "Eighth Report of Session 2007-08" (PDF). Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments. 1 February 2008. Retrieved 14 August 2020. Page 16.
  6. ^ Halsbury's Laws of England. Vol. 8 (4th reissue ed.). Butterworths. Para. 101.
  7. ^ "The Cabinet Manual" (PDF). 2011. p. 24.
  8. ^ a b "House of Lords – The pre-emption of Parliament – Constitution Committee". publications.parliament.uk. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  9. .
  10. ^ The General Power of Competence (PDF), Local Government Association, London, 2013
  11. ^ a b d'Ancona, Matthew (19 June 2020). "Sick man: the transcript". Tortoise.
  12. ^ "Coronavirus Act 2020".
  13. ^ "Legislation.gov.uk".
  14. ^ "Adam Wagner". Doughty Street Chambers. 12 June 2023.
  15. ^ "The risk of eternal lockdown". UnHerd. 8 February 2021. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  16. ^ "Cambridge Freshfields Lecture 27 October 2020" (PDF). Cambridge University.
  17. .
  18. ^ Stephen Weinberg, "Einstein's Mistakes", in Donald Goldsmith and Marcia Bartusiak (eds.), E: His Life, His Thought and His Influence on Our Culture, Sterling Publishing (2006) p. 312.
  19. ^ Anthologized in Robert A. Heinlein, The Past Through Tomorrow, Berkley Medallion mass-market paperback edition, 1967, p. 600. "The state was thought of as a single organism with a single head, a single brain, and a single purpose. Anything not compulsory was forbidden.."
  20. . The passage describes an ant-hill from the point of view of an ant: "The fortress was entered by tunnels in the rock, and, over the entrance to each tunnel, there was a notice which said: EVERYTHING NOT FORBIDDEN IS COMPULSORY." This passage does not appear in the 1938 and 1939 editions of The Sword and the Stone, but only in the 1958 revision incorporated into The Once and Future King.