Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T15:37:01.461Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Madzimbamuto v. Lardner-Burke. Baron v. Ayre, Bezuidenhout, Dupont and Lardner-Burke.

Rhodesia.  09 September 1966 ; 29 January 1968 ; 23 July 1968 .

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Get access

Abstract

International law — Relation to municipal law — Jus gentium — Doctrine of State necessity — Whether part of law of Rhodesia — De jure and de facto Government — Use of international law definition by municipal court — Whether same test to be applied.

States as international persons — Sovereignty and independence In foreign relations — In matters of domestic jurisdiction — Rhodesia — Independent statehood of — Evidence of — Internal autonomy — Colonial status — Power to legislate extra — territorially incompatible there with — Power to confer citizenship — Power to make treaties — Membership of international organizations — Whether sovereignty divisible — Possession of internal sovereignty by one State while another State exercises powers of external sovereignty — Semi — independent States — Whether domestic court has jurisdiction to adjudicate on status of revolutionary Government.

Recognition — Of Governments — De facto, de jure, effective Government, and Government “for the time being” — Meaning of terms — Establishment of new Government by revolution — Relevance of international recognition — Whether recognition a political act or an objective legal appreciation of facts — Whether internal sovereignty depends on external recognition — Whether success of revolution depends on acquiescence or recognition — Whether a question of fact — Requirements of effectiveness and continuity — Evidence — Certificate from Secretary of State for Common wealth Relations — Whether conclusive on courts of territory in which revolutionary Government is operating — Whether court can take judicial notice of what is going on around it — Non — recognition Effect of — Whether a vacuum in the law — Whether court can recognize legislation and administrative acts of unrecognized Government — Doctrine of State necessity — Validity of acts of unrecognized or unlawful Government — Tests — Burden of proof.

International organizations — Membership of — As evidence of independent statehood — United Nations Security Council — Resolutions of — Rhodesia — Effect of Resolutions — Whether constituting international recognition — Whether implying statehood.

States as international persons — In general — Beginning of State existence — Colonies — Rhodesia — Revolution — Acquisition of sovereignty by — Whether a legal order ceases to have validity when it loses efficacy — Whether new legal order acquires de jure validity retrospectively by replacing old order — Whether this doctrine applies to colonies — Constitutional status of Rhodesia — Whether unilateral declaration of independence a “fundamental change of circumstances” — International status of Rhodesia — Whether a State — Acquiescence and recognition — Relevance of — International organizations — Membership of — Relevance of — United Nations Security Council — Resolutions of — Relevance of — Internal and external sovereignty — Whether internal sovereignty depends on international recognition — Whether a question of fact — Duty of judges — Authority of court — Whether derived from 1961 Constitution or 1965 Constitution or from de facto Government.

Type
Case Report
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 1970

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)