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Law Reporting in the Sudan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

The first volume of the Sudan Law Journal and Reports has at last appeared. Its publication marks the culmination of over thirty years of spasmodic agitation for an adequate system of law reporting of cases decided in the Civil Courts2 of a country which has been receiving English law under the guise of “justice, equity and good conscience” since 1900.3 In 1926 a Digest of the Decisions of the Court of Appeal of the Sudan was published, containing notes on a selection of some eighty cases decided between 1915 and 1926. It was intended that the Digest should be brought up to date annually, but in fact this was not done, and the next period covered is from January 1st, 1953, to June 30th, 1954, in a Digest of Cases in the Court of Appeal and High Court, prepared by Mr. Justice Stanley-Baker. In 1954 the first eleven judgments of the Sudan Court of Criminal Appeal, set up in 1949, were reported and published in loose-leaf form, the intention being to report and print each decision immediately after its delivery. This was done with two cases.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1959

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References

2 The legal system in the Sudan is divided into a Civil Division and a Sharia Division. The S.L.J.R. reports cases decided in the former only, but this includes criminal cases. A full account of the Sudan legal system is given in the first number. A more complete history of law reporting in the Sudan is to be found in (1957) 6 I.C.L.Q. 685. Both of these articles are by E. Guttmann, the first General Editor of the S.L.J.R.

3 Section 4, Civil Justice Ordinance, 1900 (re-enacted in C.J.O., 1929).

page 177 note 1 S.L.J. p. 30, Note 1. In the 1956 volume the Journal section starts at p. 1. The original idea was that the Law Reports and Journal could then be bound in separate volumes. However the binding of the present volume makes this impracticable and it has been decided in future to number the S.L.J.R. straight through from start to finish.

page 177 note 2 Guttmann, (1956) S.L.J. 9.

page 177 note 3 October, 1959.