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Rules are Rules: Reconceiving Monetary Gold as a Rule of Procedure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2021

Juliette McIntyre*
Affiliation:
PhD candidate, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia and Lecturer in Law, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
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Extract

The Case of the Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 is familiar to all international lawyers. Like a catechism, we are taught that the ICJ will not proceed with a case where the legal interests of a State not before the Court “would not only be affected by a decision, but would form the very subject-matter of the decision.” Mollengarden and Zamir's proposal that the Court should dispense with the Monetary Gold principle feels almost heretical. The authors contend that the ICJ Statute sets out a framework for balancing the interests of third parties through the use of the intervention procedure, and that Monetary Gold “disrupts that balance.” Monetary Gold is, they submit, to be treated as only a judicial decision, entitled under Article 36(1)(d) of the Statute to little deference as a source of legal principle. I suggest taking an altogether different approach. The best way to understand the place of the Monetary Gold principle is in the context of the ICJ's rule making powers pursuant to Article 30(1) of the Court's Statute. These rule making powers are not limited to the promulgation of formal Rules of Court but extend to the determination of appropriate procedures during the hearing of a case. These procedural rules (small r), articulated in the context of particular cases, may in time evolve into formal Rules of Court through an iterative process. Monetary Gold is an instance of the Court defining a small r procedural rule in a manner that is consistent with the Court's Statute.

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Essay
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Copyright © Juliette McIntyre 2021

The Case of the Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 is familiar to all international lawyers. Like a catechism, we are taught that the ICJ will not proceed with a case where the legal interests of a State not before the Court “would not only be affected by a decision, but would form the very subject-matter of the decision.”Footnote 1 Mollengarden and Zamir's proposal that the Court should dispense with the Monetary Gold principle feels almost heretical.Footnote 2 The authors contend that the ICJ Statute sets out a framework for balancing the interests of third parties through the use of the intervention procedure, and that Monetary Gold “disrupts that balance.”Footnote 3 Monetary Gold is, they submit, to be treated as only a judicial decision,Footnote 4 entitled under Article 36(1)(d) of the Statute to little deference as a source of legal principle.Footnote 5 I suggest taking an altogether different approach. The best way to understand the place of the Monetary Gold principle is in the context of the ICJ's rule making powers pursuant to Article 30(1) of the Court's Statute. These rule making powers are not limited to the promulgation of formal Rules of Court but extend to the determination of appropriate procedures during the hearing of a case. These procedural rules (small r), articulated in the context of particular cases, may in time evolve into formal Rules of Court through an iterative process. Monetary Gold is an instance of the Court defining a small r procedural rule in a manner that is consistent with the Court's Statute.

Article 30(1) and the Court's Rule Making Power

The Court's power to make rules of procedure is articulated in Article 30(1) of the Statute. It states: “[t]he Court shall frame rules for carrying out its functions. In particular, it shall lay down rules of procedure.”Footnote 6 The Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) provided likewise.Footnote 7 From the outset, the drafters of both the PCIJ and ICJ Statutes adopted the view that matters of procedure “should only be dealt with in the Statute of the Court where they involve fundamental points of principle which it is desirable to settle once and for all.”Footnote 8 To that end, the Statute grants the Court “wide-ranging autonomy in regulating the exercise of its functions,”Footnote 9 including the power to fill gaps or lacunae in the Statute. The power is, however, confined by the parameters of the Statute itself: the Court cannot in applying Article 30(1) make a rule that is directly in conflict with the Statute,Footnote 10 a point to which we will return.

Article 30(1) is the statutory authority for the Rules of Court, which have seen several iterations over the life of the PCIJ and ICJ combined.Footnote 11 The PCIJ adopted its first Rules of Court in a preliminary session, prior to its first sitting. As the Court's experience grew and as it encountered unforeseen problems in practice, so the Rules adapted and evolved. Indeed, this was a deliberate design feature.Footnote 12 The PCIJ Rules were silent in respect of a number of important matters,Footnote 13 with the intention that procedural decisions that were made by the Court in its case law would eventually be incorporated into the Rules.Footnote 14 The ICJ took the same approach when it adopted its first Rules of Court in 1946.Footnote 15

As such, rules promulgated in case law may in time become Rules. This evolution is best illustrated by the history of the preliminary objection procedure. The first iteration of the PCIJ Rules contained no procedure for separating preliminary objections from the merits. But in Mavrommatis,Footnote 16 the PCIJ was faced with a contention by Britain that it lacked jurisdiction to proceed with the case. The PCIJ observed that:

Neither the Statute nor the Rules of Court contain any rule regarding the procedure to be followed in the event of an objection being taken in limine litis to the Court's jurisdiction. The Court therefore is at liberty to adopt the principle which it considers best calculated to ensure the administration of justice, most suited to procedure before an international tribunal and most in conformity with the fundamental principles of international law.Footnote 17

When the Court revised its Rules in 1926, Article 38 was amended to set out the substantive requirements of such an objection.Footnote 18 This was further amended in 1936, with the introduction of an entirely separate procedure for preliminary objections in Article 62.Footnote 19

The Court's power under Article 30(1) is not limited to the promulgation of formal Rules of Court. On the contrary, Article 30(1) empowers the Court to address matters of procedure tout court.Footnote 20 For example, in recent years, it has provided the legal basis for the Court to adopt Practice Directions.Footnote 21 Crucially, the power also extends to answering unforeseen questions of procedure that may arise during the conduct of a case,Footnote 22 and even where this requires developing procedure in a “wholly novel way.”Footnote 23

Monetary Gold as a Rule of Procedure

While the Court made no explicit reference to its Article 30(1) powers in Monetary Gold, the rule it promulgated functions as a rule of procedure and should be conceived as such.Footnote 24 It is not a general principle of law. Mollengarden and Zamir suggest this is because it “falls short of the requisite pedigree and prevalence.”Footnote 25 I would rather argue that it is because principles and rules are separate concepts.Footnote 26 Principles “express general truth,”Footnote 27 while a rule is the practical and binding articulation of a broader principle or principles. A rule of procedure represents a choice, by a Court, to control how proceedings develop,Footnote 28 made either in advance in the formal Rules, or spontaneously during a case. As expressed by S.I. Strong, rules “reflect but one way to implement a particular principle, and the underlying concept may be given effect through a variety of different means.”Footnote 29

The Monetary Gold rule gives effect to the principle that “no State can, without its consent, be compelled to submit its disputes with other States either to mediation or to arbitration, or to any other kind of pacific settlement.”Footnote 30 Additionally, it concretely applies the Court's duty to “uphold the sound administration of justice,”Footnote 31 insofar as application of the rule contributes broadly to the prevention of multiplicity of proceedings, and ensures that any judgment the Court renders is capable of practical effect.Footnote 32 Importantly, the rule applied by the Court in Monetary Gold was not a foregone conclusion. Although on the facts it is difficult to see what other decision the Court could have reached, the Court was not compelled by substantive law to proceed as it did. As Mollengarden and Zamir point out, the Court was ostensibly vested with jurisdiction in respect of the parties before it.Footnote 33 But the Court elected to create a procedural rule that places an objective and fundamental limit on the exercise of its jurisdiction, one which, as Amerasinghe observes, “must be applied when the appropriate circumstances are present, leaving no room for a discretionary decision not to apply it.”Footnote 34 To that end, as Tams observes, the Monetary Gold rule “should not be seen as a necessary implication of consensualism, but as a deliberate extension.”Footnote 35

So, Monetary Gold can be reconceived as a rule of procedure, enacted pursuant to the Court's statutory authority in Article 30(1) in order to give effect to broader principles that the Court has determined to uphold. The content of the rule is quite simple. The applicant State must bring their action against the necessary party or parties, and where there is a contention that this has not occurred, the Court must decide whether the case is able to proceed. In this respect, the Monetary Gold rule can be viewed as part and parcel of the obligations for applicant states under Article 38 of the present Rules of CourtFootnote 36 and Article 40 of the Statute, that cases brought to the Court must identify in the application or special agreement both the subject of the dispute and the parties involved. Judge Read identified this issue in his individual opinion in Monetary Gold when he observed that, “as Albania was a necessary and indispensable party to the proceedings . . . there was a fundamental defect in the Application by which these proceedings were commenced.”Footnote 37 Sometimes the Court's lack of jurisdiction or another defect in the application is obvious,Footnote 38 but in Monetary Gold this was not immediately apparent.

A Rule Consistent with the Statute

The Court's power under Article 30(1) is subject to one inherent limitation: rules of procedure cannot conflict with the Statute. Mollengarden and Zamir imply that the ICJ Statute neatly triangulates all aspects of jurisdiction, and Monetary Gold undermines this structure, or is at least “in tension” with it.Footnote 39 But the Court's attitude to procedure has generally been that whatever is not expressly forbidden by the Statute is permitted.Footnote 40 Moreover, the Statute very much requires states to submit applications that are not defective, and are capable of resulting in an effective judgment.Footnote 41

The simple fact is that the drafters of the Statute did not foresee all possibilities, and nor did they expect to, or even want to, attempt such a feat. Instead, they empowered the Court through Article 30(1) to address procedural difficulties. As the Court stated in the Nottebohm case, the “seising of the Court is one thing, the administration of justice is another. The latter is governed by the Statute, and by the Rules.”Footnote 42 Monetary Gold is a prime example of this distinction.

Conclusion

If Monetary Gold is reconceived as a rule of procedure, any contention that it lacks normative authority falls away.Footnote 43 Rather than perceiving it as a general principle of law or simply a judicial decision, it should be considered a small r procedural rule made in the exercise of the Court's authority pursuant to Article 30(1) of its Statute. It sits alongside, with equal authority to, the Court's jurisdictional architecture. All that remains to be seen is whether Monetary Gold will be incorporated in future iterations of the Rules of Court.

References

1 Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 (It. v. Fr., U.K. & U.S.), 1954, ICJ Rep. 19, para. 32 (June 15).

2 Zachary Mollengarden & Noam Zamir, The Monetary Gold Principle: Back to Basics, 115 AJIL 41 (2021).

3 Id. at 56.

5 Mollengarden & Zamir, supra note at 2, 76.

7 “The Court shall frame rules for regulating its procedure. In particular it shall lay down rules for summary procedure.” Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, art. 30, 1920, 6 LNTS 390.

10 H.W.A. Thirlway, Article 30, in The Statute of the International Court of Justice: A Commentary 518 (Andreas Zimmermann et al. eds., 2019); Forlati , supra note 9, at 23.

11 The PCIJ Rules of Court were first adopted on March 24, 1922 and subsequently revised in 1926, 1931, and 1936. The ICJ's 1946 Rules of Court were a reproduction of the 1936 Rules save for technical changes to refer to the new institution. These Rules were partially revised in 1972 followed by a comprehensive revision in 1978. Since then, individual Rules have been the subject of amendment in 2001, 2005, and 2019.

12 Sergey M. Punzhin, Procedural Normative System of the International Court of Justice, 30 Leiden J. Int'l L. 661, 672 (2017).

13 Antonio Sánchez de Bustamante y Sirvén, The World Court 235 (1925).

14 Shabtai Rosenne, Intervention in the International Court of Justice 54 (1993); Punzhin, supra note 12, at 661; Paolo Palchetti, Making and Enforcing Procedural Law at the International Court of Justice, 61 Questions Int'l L. 5, 7 (2019).

15 Shabtai Rosenne, The 1972 Revision of the Rules of the International Court of Justice, 8(2) Isr. L. Rev. 197, 197 (1973).

16 The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions (Greece v. U.K.), Jurisdiction, 1924 PCIJ (ser. A) No. 2 (Aug. 30). A similar issue arose in Certain German Interests in Polish Upper Silesia (Ger. v. Pol.), Preliminary Objections, 1925 PCIJ (ser. A) No. 6 (Aug. 25).

17 The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions (Greece v. U.K.), Jurisdiction, 1924 PCIJ (ser. A) No. 2, 16 (Aug. 30).

18 Statute and Rules of Court art. 38 (adopted Mar. 24, 1922), 1922 PCIJ (ser. D) No. 1.

19 Elaboration of the Rules of Court art. 62 (adopted Mar. 24, 1922), 1922 PCIJ (ser. D) No. 2.

20 Lauterpacht has argued that Article 30(1) is also the source of the Court's “inherent powers”; see Elihu Lauterpacht, “Partial” Judgments and the Jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, in Fifty Years of the International Court of Justice – Essays in honour of Sir Robert Jennings 465, 477 (Vaughan Lowe & Malgosia Fitzmaurice eds., 1996). Contra Chester Brown, The Inherent Powers of International Courts and Tribunals, 76(1) Brit. Y.B. Int'l L. 195 (2005). A discussion of the Court's inherent powers is beyond the scope of this piece, save for noting that Brown does not consider Monetary Gold to have been an exercise of the Court's inherent powers (Id. at 237).

21 Forlati , supra note 9, at 26; Palchetti, supra note 14, at 11.

22 Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicar. v. U.S.), Merits, 1986 ICJ Rep. 14, para. 38 (June 27).

23 Lauterpacht, supra note 20, at 476.

24 The Court's decision in Monetary Gold has been referred to as a “rule” in other fora, see also M/V “Norstar” (Pan. v. It.), Case No. 25, Preliminary Objections, Judgment of Nov. 4, 2016, ITLOS Rep. 172.

25 Mollengarden & Zamir, supra note 2, at 41–77, 70.

26 Michael Bayles, Principles for Legal Procedure, 5 Law & Phil. 33, 35 (1986); S.I. Strong, General Principles of Procedural Law and Procedural Jus Cogens, 122 Pa. St. L. Rev. 347, 370 (2018).

27 Bin Cheng, General Principles of Law as Applied by International Courts and Tribunals 370, 376 (1987).

29 Strong, supra note 26, at 387–88.

30 Status of Eastern Carelia, Advisory Opinion, 1923 PCIJ (ser. B) No. 5, at 27 (July 23).

31 Forlati , supra note 9, at 78.

32 See also Fleming James, Necessary and Indispensable Parties, 18(1) U. Miami L. Rev. 68 (1963).

33 Mollengarden & Zamir, supra note 2, at 56–59.

34 Chittharanjan F. Amerasinghe, Jurisdiction of Specific International Tribunals 235–36 (2009). See also Robert Kolb, General Principles of Procedural Law, in The Statute of the International Court of Justice: A Commentary, supra note 10, at 812, 897 (“the Court can act on the merits only if certain objective and peremptory conditions are met”).

35 Christian J. Tams, The Contentious Jurisdiction of the Permanent Court, in The Legacy of the Permanent Court of International Justice 11, 31–32 (Malgosia Fitzmaurice & Christian J. Tams eds., 2013).

36 Article 32 in the 1946 Rules applicable at the time Monetary Gold was decided.

37 Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 (It. v. Fr., U.K. & U.S.), 1954 ICJ Rep. 19, para. 38 (June 15) (Read, J.).

38 See also Juan J. Quintana, Procedure Before the ICJ: A Note on the Opening (or Not) of New Cases, 9 Law & Prac. Int'l Cts. & Tribunals 115 (2010) and examples therein.

39 Mollengarden & Zamir, supra note 2, at 41–77, 76.

40 H.W.A. Thirlway, Procedural Law and the International Court of Justice, in Fifty Years of the International Court of Justice – Essays in honour of Sir Robert Jennings, supra note 20, at 389, 394.

41 Northern Cameroons (Cameroon v. U.K.), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, 1963 ICJ Rep. 15, para. 103 (Dec. 2).

42 Nottebohm (Liech./Guat.), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, 1953 ICJ Rep. 111, para. 122 (Nov. 18).

43 Mollengarden & Zamir, supra note 2, at 41, 71.