âLaw Masterâsâ Publication
âAdministration of justiceâ
Prof. .S. D. Bhosale
11
Jermy Taylor had once observed, âA herd of wolves is quieter and more
at once than so many men unless they all had one reason in them or have one power
over themâ. In other words, man is the most selfish animal, and the Stateâs coercive
authority is necessary to keep him within limits and restrain. Unfettered and
unrestrained liberty leads to a state of anarchy and chaos. Therefore, Herbart
Spenser mentioned the need to limit individuals' liberty. He laid limits on personal
liberty by saying, âEvery man is free to do what he desires provided he infringes
not with the equal freedom of any otherâ. Thus, liberty should extend within the
limit permitted by the law.
Thus, for the development of society, the administration of justice by the
physical force of the State is necessary.
III KINDS OF ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE-
Administration of justice can be divided into two parts viz-
(i) Civil and (ii) criminal. However, Blackstone calls them âprivate wrongsâ and
âpublic wrongsâ. According to him, âprivate wrongsâ are violations of civil or legal
rights of individuals and are therefore called civil injuries, whereas âpublic wrongsâ
are violations of public rights and duties which affect the community as a whole
and are called âcrimeâ or âmisdemeanoursâ. Thus, in other words, a crime is a
wrong against the community as a whole and is publishable by the state, whereas
a civil wrong is an infringement of the legal right of an individual and is redressable
by monetary compensation or by conferring rights.
1) Civil Justice-
The object of civil justice is the enforcement of rights. Such rights may either
be primary or sanctioning rights.
Primary and Sanctioning Rights-
âPrimary rightsâ are a bundle of rights which are the privileges enjoyed by
any person. These are the rights in themselves, and they do not have their source
in some wrong. E.g., a personâs right to liberty, safety, reputation, etc.
âSanctioningâ or âremedial rightsâ are those rights which come into existence
after the violation of primary rights. For example, oneâs right ânot to be defamedâ
is his primary right, and the right to get compensation for defamation is a remedial
or sanctioning right.
âPrimary rightsâ exist independently, while remedial or sanctioning rights
have no such independent existence and arise only on the violation of âprimary
rightsâ.