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6 Bus. L. Rev. 1 (1985)

handle is hein.kluwer/blr0006 and id is 1 raw text is: Editor
Ruth Eldon BA

January 1985
Vol 6 No 1

Editorial Advisory Board

Roy M Goode OBE LLD
Crowther Professor of Credit and Commercial
Law, and Director of the Centre for
Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary
College, University of London; Solicitor
L C B Gower
Former Vice-Chancellor and Professor of
Law, University of Southampton; Special
Research Adviser to the Department of Trade;
Solicitor
Frances Graupner MA(Oxon)
Solicitor, Clifford-Turner
E R Hardy Ivamy LLB PhD LLD
Professor of Law in the University of
London; Barrister

Richard Mallows
Solicitor, McKenna & Co
Hubert Picarda BCL MA
Barrister
Norman Selwyn JP LLM Dip Econ(Oxon)
ACIS
Labour Law Consultant
Kenneth R Simmonds
Professor of International Law in the
University of London
Keith Walmsley LLB FCIS
Solicitor in Commerce and Industry

Editorial

The Rule of Law
The law has often been called an ass
perhaps most recently and vociferously
in connection with the prohibition on the
Sunday opening of shops. The argument
goes that this particular ban rests upon
an archaic ideal of the Sabbath Day
which no longer commands general
support or respect; indeed, it is said to
please only the small minority who
adhere to the Lord's Day Observance
Society, so that the directors of Heals,
Debenhams and the other stores which
opened for Sunday trading on December
9 last were striking a blow for common
sense and meeting the needs of real life in
this day and age.
The first point which needs to be made
is that the law in question is far from
archaic, but was made by Parliament,
after due deliberation, as recently as
1950.
The second, which is doubtless
approved by people who work in shops
and by their t--de unions, is that they,
like everyone else and regardless of the
religious issues, need and no doubt
deserve a day a week off work; and the
costs of arranging for other or extra
employees to work for the additional
hours would result in unacceptable
increases in prices.
This much is probably generally
acceptable. Where the law starts to
become an ass is where the principle of
Sunday closing has been weakened to

allow certain types of Sunday trading.
Thus the Shops Act 1950 prevents a
general photographic shop from opening,
but makes an exception for passport
photographers. Other relaxations allow
the sale of fodder for horses, mules and
donkeys, and the sale, despatch and
delivery of goods to a club. Funeral
directors and undertakers may trade on
Sundays (it is a comfort to know that)
and so may shops selling Kosher meat,
provided they are closed on Saturdays.
Each relaxation was doubtless made for a
good reason, but the sum total of
individual anomalies, some of which are
quite ludicrous, has led Lady
Trumpington to introduce a Bill into the
House of Lords to allow shops to open on
Sundays as they please. But a Bill is only
a proposal, not law, and there can be no
question whatever that the maintenance
of the rule of law is a matter of far greater
moment than the wishes of any number
of shopkeepers to open and shoppers to
shop on a Sunday.
The third and much the most
important point is that the law must be
obeyed by all and applied equally to all
without fear or favour, which is a
principle fundamental to maintaining a
free society. What is most objectionable
about Mr Arthur Scargill's handling of
his present miners' strike is the contempt
for the law which has consistently been
shown - beside that the issues are
Continued on inside back cover

Business Law Review  lanuary 1985  1
Business
Law
Review
Contents
In Perspective
Competition Law - II: The EEC       3
Practice
Interest as a Head of Damage        8
Far East
Directors' Fiduciary Duties in Malaysia
and Singapore                      10
Sale of Goods
In Place of Merchantability       23
Consumer Law
Consumer Protection and the Courts 25
Company Law
Accountability Evolving            28
Pension Law
The Consultative Process and the
Social Security Bill               31

City Newsletter

Infobank

Book Reviews

© 1985, Graham & Trotman
Editorial Office
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Telephone 01-821 1123
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