Book Review
Abstract
Few modern-day lawyers, and even fewer in the socio-legal tradition, now
believe in what Pound termed ‘mechanical jurisprudence’, whereby judges
objectively and impassively analyse the law in order to arrive at the single
correct legal answer hidden within. Not only does this idea do a great
disservice to the complexity of the law, which is filled with gaps, rife with
ambiguity, and full of opportunities for the exercise of discretion, but it also
mischaracterizes the essential nature of judgment making. For better or for
worse, humans cannot make totally objective judgments, divorced from their
experiences, values, and preferences. Whilst it is comforting to think that
judges are somehow different in this regard, we should heed the words of Lord
Dyson: ‘it may be surprising [but] occasionally we need to remind ourselves
that judges are human beings [who] respond to problems in different ways.’1
Indeed, as long ago as 1943, Lord Wright opined that
the judge does not approach the case with a blank mind. Subconsciously or
consciously, trained mental processes are involved, rules learned in the past
function in his mind, his own past experience and his past reading of other cases
all combine to lead to a judgment.