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Reasonableness
Legal concept
Legal concept
The concept of reasonableness has two related meanings in law and political theory:
- As a legal norm, it is used "for the assessment of such matters as actions, decisions, and persons, rules and institutions, [and] also arguments and judgments."
- As a regulative idea, it "requires... that all factors that might be relevant in answering a practical question be considered and... that they be assembled in a correct relation to each other in order to justify [a judgement]."
Reasonableness should not be conflated with rationality.
Political theory
Reasonableness has been discussed by political thinkers such as John Rawls (in his 1993 Political Liberalism), T. M. Scanlon, Brian Barry and Georg Henrik von Wright.
Law
The notion of "reasonableness" is omnipresent in European law, and has also affected "international treaties and general customs". Examples of its use can be found in canon and medieval law, suggesting roots going back to Ancient Rome.
Standards and doctrines
Standards and doctrines requiring reasonableness include:
- Reasonability
- Reasonable accommodation
- Reasonable act
- Reasonable appearance of danger
- Reasonable care
- Reasonable cause
- Reasonable and competent support
- Reasonable creature
- Reasonable danger
- Reasonable diligence
- Reasonable doubt
- Reasonable expectation
- Reasonable facilities
- Reasonable fitness
- Reasonable mind
- Reasonable and non-discriminatory licensing
- Reasonable person (or reasonable man)
- Reasonable person model
- Reasonable portion
- Reasonable possibility
- Reasonably practicable
- Reasonable and probable damage
- Reasonable and probable grounds
- Reasonable provocation
- Reasonable prudence
- Reasonable question
- Reasonable rates
- Reasonable regulation
- Reasonable right of way
- Reasonable skill
- Reasonable suspicion
- Reasonable time
- Reasonable use
- Reasonable wear and tear excepted
- Subjective and objective standard of reasonableness
Constitutional and administrative law
In constitutional and administrative law, reasonableness is a lens through which courts examine the constitutionality or lawfulness of legislation and regulation. According to Paul Craig, it is "concerned with review of the weight and balance accorded by the primary decision-maker to factors that have been or can be deemed relevant in pursuit of a prima facie allowable purpose".
Common law
Examples of reasonableness standards in common law jurisdictions include:
- Reasonableness simpliciter and patent unreasonableness (repealed in 2008) in Canadian law
- Wednesbury unreasonableness in English law
- Wednesbury unreasonableness in Singaporean law
Mixed jurisdictions
- Reasonableness cause in Israeli law (עילת הסבירות)
- Reasonableness in South African administrative law
Reasonability
Reasonability is a legal term. The scale of reasonability represents a quintessential element of modern judicial systems and is particularly important in the context of international disputes and conflicts of laws issues. The concept is founded on the notion that all parties should be held to a reasonable standard of conduct and has become embedded in a number of international conventions such as the UNIDROIT principles and the CISG.
The concept of reasonability is applicable to Roman law.
References
References
- (2009). "Reasonableness and law". Springer.
- Moore, Margaret. (1996). "On Reasonableness". Journal of Applied Philosophy.
- Boettcher, James W.. (2004). "What is reasonableness?". Philosophy & Social Criticism.
- Zorzetto, Silvia. (2015). "Reasonableness". Italian Law Journal.
- Thomas Johnson Michie. "Reasonable-Reasonably". Garland and McGehee (eds). The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law. Second Edition. Edward Thompson Company. 1903. Volume 23. Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924061132621/page/946/mode/1up 946] and 947
- Garland and McGehee (eds). "Reasonable Care". The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law. Second Edition. Edward Thompson Company. 1903. Volume 23. Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924061132621/page/947/mode/1up Page 947].
- or reasonable and probable causeWood Renton and Robertson (eds). Encyclopaedia of the Laws of England. 2nd Edition. 1908. vol 12. [https://archive.org/details/encyclopaediaofl12jacouoft/page/378/mode/1up?view=theater p 378].
- Garland and McGehee (eds). "Reasonable Diligence". The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law. Second Edition. Edward Thompson Company. 1903. Volume 23. Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924061132621/page/947/mode/1up Page 947].
- Garland and McGehee (eds). "Reasonable Skill". The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law. Second Edition. Edward Thompson Company. 1903. Volume 23. Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924061132621/page/971/mode/1up Page 971].
- Thomas Johnson Michie. "Reasonable Time". Garland and McGehee (eds). The American and English Encyclopaedia of Law. Second Edition. Edward Thompson Company. 1903. Volume 23. Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924061132621/page/971/mode/1up Page 971].
- (21 December 2020). "5.3 Reasonableness".
- Zaring, David. (2011). "Rule by Reasonableness". Administrative Law Review.
- Garrett, Brandon L.. (2017). "Constitutional Reasonableness". Minnesota Law Review.
- Craig, Paul. (2013-01-01). "The Nature of Reasonableness Review". Current Legal Problems.
- Knight, Cjs. (2008). "Reasonableness Transformed (in Canada)". Judicial Review.
- Teramura. [https://books.google.com/books?id=PJrnDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT155 "Demonstrating reasonableness"]. Ex Aequo et Bono as a Response to the ‘Over-Judicialisation’ of International Commercial Arbitration. 2020.
- Article 8 United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
- Frier, "Case 98: Reasonability", ''A Casebook on the Roman Law of Contracts'', OUP, 2021, [https://books.google.com/books?id=huEsEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA223 p 223]. María José Falcón y Tella, ''Case Law in Roman, Anglosaxon and Continental Law'', 2011, pp [https://books.google.com/books?id=i_N5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA138 138] to 140.
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