The Law behind the Law: Rookes v. Barnard [1964], the Common Law and the Right to Strike

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Paul M. Smith
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

By the 1950s, given the scope of the Trade Disputes Act (TDA) 1906, the courts had little role in industrial relations. Hence the importance of the House of Lords decision in 1964 for Douglas Rookes that Alfred Barnard, John Fistal and Reginald Silverthorne had used unlawful means in threatening to strike to secure Rookes’s removal from the Heathrow design office of the British Overseas Aircraft Corporation (BOAC) after his resignation from the Association of Engineering and Shipbuilding Draughtsmen (AESD), because a threat to break a contract of employment came within the tort of intimidation which was unprotected by the TDA’s statutory immunities. Rookes illustrated the relevance of Laski’s view that in labour law the common law is ‘a law behind the law’. It was a harbinger of a new judicial activism that outflanked the TDA’s tort immunities by creating novel common law liabilities, and which in turn strengthened calls for statutory restriction and regulation of industrial action.
法律背后的法律:Rookes诉Barnard[1964],普通法和罢工权
到20世纪50年代,考虑到1906年《贸易争端法》的范围,法院在劳资关系中几乎没有作用。因此,1964年上议院对Douglas Rookes的裁决非常重要,即Alfred Barnard、John Fistal和Reginald Silverthorne在Rookes从工程和造船制图师协会(AESD)辞职后,使用非法手段威胁罢工,以确保其从英国海外飞机公司(BOAC)希思罗设计办公室离职,因为威胁违反雇佣合同属于恐吓侵权行为,而TDA的法定豁免权不受保护。Rookes阐述了Laski的观点的相关性,即在劳动法中,普通法是“法律背后的法律”。这预示着一种新的司法行动主义,它通过创造新的普通法责任来绕过TDA的侵权豁免,并反过来加强了对劳工行动的法定限制和监管的呼吁。
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来源期刊
Historical Studies in Industrial Relations
Historical Studies in Industrial Relations Arts and Humanities-History
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0.50
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