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Codification (law)

In law, codification is the process of collecting and restating the law of a jurisdiction in certain areas, usually by subject, forming a legal code, i.e. a codex (book) of law.

Codification is one of the defining features of civil law jurisdictions.[contradictory] In common law systems, such as that of English law, codification is the process of converting and consolidating judge-made law or uncodified statutes enacted by the legislature into statute law.[1][2][3]

History edit

Ancient Sumer's Code of Ur-Nammu was compiled circa 2050–1230 BC, and is the earliest known surviving civil code. Three centuries later, the Babylonian king Hammurabi enacted the set of laws named after him.

Important codifications were developed in the ancient Roman Empire, with the compilations of the Lex Duodecim Tabularum and much later the Corpus Juris Civilis. These codified laws were the exceptions rather than the rule, however, as during much of ancient times Roman laws were left mostly uncodified.

The first permanent system of codified laws could be found in imperial China[note 1] , with the compilation of the Tang Code in AD 624. This formed the basis of the Chinese criminal code, which was eventually replaced by the Great Qing Legal Code, which was in turn abolished in 1912 following the Xinhai Revolution and the establishment of the Republic of China. The new laws of the Republic of China were inspired by the German codified work, the Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch. A very influential example in Europe was the French Napoleonic code of 1804.

Upon confederation, the Iroquois created constitutional wampum, each component symbolizing one of the many laws within the 117 articles. The union of the five original nations occurred in 1142,[4] and its unification narrative served the basis for the Iroquois laws.[5]

Systems of religious laws include the halakha of Judaism and the sharia of Islam. The use of civil codes in sharia began with the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century.

Civil law jurisdictions edit

Civil law jurisdictions rely, by definition, on codification. Notable early examples were the Statutes of Lithuania, in the 16th century. The movement towards codification gained momentum during the Enlightenment, and was implemented in several European countries during the late 18th century (see civil code). However, it became widespread only after the enactment of the French Napoleonic Code (1804), which has heavily influenced the legal systems of many other countries.

Common law jurisdictions edit

Common law has been codified in many jurisdictions and in many areas of law: examples include criminal codes in many jurisdictions, and include the California Civil Code and the Consolidated Laws of New York (New York State).

England and Wales edit

The English judge Sir Mackenzie Chalmers is renowned as the draftsman of the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, the Sale of Goods Act 1893 and the Marine Insurance Act 1906, all of which codified existing common law principles. The Sale of Goods Act was repealed and re-enacted by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 in a manner that revealed how sound the 1893 original had been.[note 2] The Marine Insurance Act (mildly amended) has been a notable success, adopted verbatim in many common law jurisdictions.

Most of England's criminal laws have been codified, partly because this enables precision and certainty in prosecution. However, large areas of the common law, such as the law of contract and the law of tort remain remarkably untouched. In the last 80 years there have been statutes that address immediate problems, such as the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 (which, inter alia, coped with contracts rendered void by war), and the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, which amended the doctrine of privity. However, there has been no progress on the adoption of Harvey McGregor's Contract Code (1993), even though the Law Commission, together with the Scots Law Commission, asked him to produce a proposal for the comprehensive codification and unification of the contract law of England and Scotland. Similarly, codification in the law of tort has been at best piecemeal, a rare example of progress being the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945.

Consolidation bills are routinely passed to organize the law.

Ireland edit

Law of the Republic of Ireland evolved from English law, the greatest point of difference being the existence of the Constitution of Ireland as a single document. The unofficial "popular edition" of the Constitution is regularly updated to take account of amendments to it, while the official text enrolled in the Supreme Court in 1938 has been replaced five times: in 1942, 1980, 1989, 1999, and 2019.[6] As in England, subordinate laws are not officially codified, although consolidation bills have restated the law in many areas. Since 2006 the Law Reform Commission (LRC) has published semi-official "revised" editions of Acts of the Oireachtas taking account of textual and other amendments to the original version.[7] The Finance Acts are excluded from the LRC programme.[7] Private companies produce unofficial consolidated versions of these and other commercially important pre-2005 laws. An official advisory committee between 2006 and 2010 produced a Draft Criminal Code.[8]

United States edit

The early codification movement edit

In the United States, a critique of the inherited English tradition of common law and an argument for systematic codification was championed by the United Irish exiles William Sampson (admitted to the New York bar in 1806),[9][10] and William Duane publisher of the Jeffersonian paper, the Philadelphia Aurora.[11] In 1810, Sampson published Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages,[12] commentary on his (unsuccessful) argument in The People v Melvin (1806) to quash an indictment of illegal worker combination. Insisting on the supremacy of the elected legislature, Sampson's objected that the prosecution was reasoning "abstractedly" from principles of English common law without any reference to statute. It was this, alone, that allowed them to deny journeymen the right to "conspire against starvation" while, without notice or challenge, leaving master tradesmen in a "permanent conspiracy" to suppress wages.[13] He went on to argue that an "indiscriminating adoption of common law" had caused the New-World society to carry over "barbarities" from the Old: laws that "can only be executed upon those not favoured by fortune with certain privileges" and that in some cases operate "entirely against the poor".[14]

Sampson's summary Discourse on the Common Law (1823),[15] holding common law to be contrary to the ethos a democratic republic and urging, with reference to the Code Napoleon, its replacement by a general law of reference, was hailed as "the most sweeping indictment of common law idealism ever written in America" .[16] It was a source of inspiration for Edward Livingston[17] who drew upon French, and other European, civil law in drafting the 1825 Louisiana Code of Procedure.[18] Later, Sampson's efforts appeared vindicated in New York where in 1846 a new state constitution directed that the whole body of state law be reduced to a written and systematic code, and in David Dudley Field's subsequent drafting of the New York Code of Civil Procedure (1848).[19][20]

Sampson sought to disassociate codification from the doctrinaire insistence on positive legislation that had marked Jeremy Bentham's championing of the cause in Britain. But, focussing on the French experience, critics thought it sufficient to comment on the futility of trying to compress human behaviour into rigid categories.[21] President Thomas Jefferson had remained neutral when Duane's attempted to force the issue in the 1805 election in Pennsylvania. Federalists joined with "Constitutional Republicans" to defeat the reform agenda.[22]

Present status edit

In the United States, acts of Congress, such as federal statutes, are published chronologically in the order in which they become law – often by being signed by the President, on an individual basis in official pamphlets called "slip laws", and are grouped together in official bound book form, also chronologically, as "session laws". The "session law" publication for Federal statutes is called the United States Statutes at Large. A given act may be a single page or hundreds of pages in length. An act may be classified as either a "Public Law" or a "Private Law".

Because each Congressional act may contain laws on a variety of topics, many acts, or portions thereof, are also rearranged and published in a topical, subject matter codification by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel. The official codification of Federal statutes is called the United States Code. Generally, only "Public Laws" are codified. The United States Code is divided into "titles" (based on overall topics) numbered 1 through 54.[23] Title 18, for example, contains many of the Federal criminal statutes. Title 26 is the Internal Revenue Code.[24]

Even in code form, however, many statutes by their nature pertain to more than one topic. For example, the statute making tax evasion a felony pertains to both criminal law and tax law, but is found only in the Internal Revenue Code.[25] Other statutes pertaining to taxation are found not in the Internal Revenue Code but instead, for example, in the Bankruptcy Code in Title 11 of the United States Code, or the Judiciary Code in Title 28. Another example is the national minimum drinking age, not found in Title 27, Intoxicating liquors, but in Title 23, Highways, §158.

Further, portions of some Congressional acts, such as the provisions for the effective dates of amendments to codified laws, are themselves not codified at all. These statutes may be found by referring to the acts as published in "slip law" and "session law" form. However, commercial publications that specialize in legal materials often arrange and print the uncodified statutes with the codes to which they pertain.

In the United States, the individual states, either officially or through private commercial publishers, generally follow the same three-part model for the publication of their own statutes: slip law, session law, and codification.

Rules and regulations that are promulgated by agencies of the Executive Branch of the United States Federal Government are codified as the Code of Federal Regulations. These regulations are authorized by specific legislation passed by the legislative branch, and generally have the same force as statutory law.

International law codification edit

Following the First World War and the establishment of the League of Nations, the need for codification of international law arose. In September 1924, the General Assembly of the League established a committee of experts for the purpose of codification of international law, which was defined by the Assembly as consisting of two aspects:

In 1930 the League of Nations held at the Hague a conference for the purpose of codification of rules on general matters, but very little progress was made.

Following the Second World War, the International Law Commission was established within the United Nations as a permanent body for the formulation of principles in international law.[26]

Canon law codification edit

Papal attempts at codification of the scattered mass of canon law spanned the eight centuries since Gratian produced his Decretum c. 1150.[27] In the 13th century especially canon law became the object of scientific study, and different compilations were made by the Roman Pontiffs. The most important of these were the five books of the Decretales Gregorii IX and the Liber Sextus of Boniface VIII. The legislation grew with time. Some of it became obsolete, and contradictions crept in so that it became difficult in recent times to discover what was of obligation and where to find the law on a particular question.

 
Hardcover of the 1917 Code of Canon Law

Since the close of the ‘’Corpus Juris’’ numerous new laws and decrees had been issued by popes, councils, and Roman Congregations. No complete collection of them had ever been published and they remained scattered through the ponderous volumes of the ‘’Bullaria’’ the ‘’Acta Sanctae Sedis’’, and other such compilations, which were accessible to only a few and for professional canonists themselves and formed an unwieldy mass of legal material. Moreover, not a few ordinances, whether included in the ‘’Corpus Juris’’ or of more recent date, appeared to be contradictory; some had been formally abrogated, others had become obsolete by long disuse; others, again, had ceased to be useful or applicable in the present condition of society. Great confusion was thus engendered and correct knowledge of the law rendered very difficult even for those who had to enforce it.[28]

When the Vatican Council met in 1869 a number of bishops of different countries petitioned for a new compilation of church law that would be clear and easily studied. The council never finished its work and no attempt was made to bring the legislation up to date. By the 19th Century, this body of legislation included some 10,000 norms. Many of these were difficult to reconcile with one another due to changes in circumstances and practice. In response to the request of the bishops at the First Vatican Council,[29] on 14 May 1904, with the motu proprio Arduum sane munus ("A Truly Arduous Task"), Pope Pius X set up a commission to begin reducing these diverse documents into a single code,[30] presenting the normative portion in the form of systematic short canons shorn of the preliminary considerations[31] ("Whereas...") and omitting those parts that had been superseded by later developments.

By the winter of 1912, the "whole span of the code"[32] had been completed, so that a provisional text was printed.[32] This 1912 text was sent out to all Latin bishops and superiors general for their comment, and their notations which they sent back to the codification commission were subsequently printed and distributed to all members of the commission, in order that the members might carefully consider the suggestions.[32] The new code was completed in 1916.[33] Under the aegis of Cardinal Pietro Gasparri, the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law was completed under Benedict XV, Pius X's successor, who promulgated it on 27 May 1917[34] as the Code of Canon Law (Latin: Codex Iuris Canonici) and set 19 May 1918[34] as the date on which it came into force.[35] In its preparation centuries of material were examined, scrutinized for authenticity by leading experts, and harmonized as much as possible with opposing canons and even other codes, from the Codex of Justinian to the Napoleonic Code. It contained 2,414 canons[36] and was in force until Canon 6 §1 1° of the 1983 Code of Canon Law[37] took legal effect—thereby abrogating it[38]—on 27 November 1983.[39]

Recodification edit

Recodification refers to a process where existing codified statutes are reformatted and rewritten into a new codified structure. This is often necessary as, over time, the legislative process of amending statutes and the legal process of construing statutes by nature over time results in a code that contains archaic terms, superseded text, and redundant or conflicting statutes. Due to the size of a typical government code, the legislative process of recodification of a code can often take a decade or longer.

Notes edit

  1. ^ See Chinese law.
  2. ^ For the most part, the Sale of Goods Act 1979 retains the wording and section numbers of its 1893 predecessor.

References edit

  1. ^ Weiss, Gunther A. (2000). "The Enchantment of Codification in the Common-Law World". Yale Journal of International Law. 25 (2).
  2. ^ Lord Scarman on codification [1]
  3. ^ Sauveplanne article on codification [2]
  4. ^ McClure, Bruce (July 15, 2019). "The Eclipse That Marked The Start Of The Iroquois Confederacy". EarthSky. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  5. ^ "Kayanlaˀ Kówa – Great Law of Peace". Oneida. Oneida Nation. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  6. ^ Supreme Court of Ireland (2020). "Sixth enrolment of the Constitution". Annual Report 2019 (PDF). Dublin. pp. 50–52. Retrieved 13 August 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ a b "Revised Acts". Dublin: Law Reform Commission. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  8. ^
    • Criminal Law Codification Advisory Committee (20 September 2013) [2010]. Draft Criminal Code and Commentary. Dublin: Stationery Office. ISBN 978-1-4064-2783-7. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
    • "Latest News". Official website. Criminal Law Codification Advisory Committee. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  9. ^ Walsh, Walter J. (2014). "Rights, Revolutions, Republics, 1750-1850: The Work and Works of William Sampson (1764—1836): A Chronology". American Journal of Irish Studies. 11: (41–88), 42. ISSN 2165-3224. JSTOR 43234379.
  10. ^ Walsh, Walter (2005). "The Priest-Penitent Privilege: An Hibernocentric Essay in Postcolonial Jurisprudence". 80 Indiana Law Journal 1037 (2005). 80 (4). ISSN 0019-6665.
  11. ^ Bushey, Glenn Leroy (1938). "William Duane, Crusader for Judicial Reform". Pennsylvania History. V (3 (July): (141-156), 144.
  12. ^ Sampson, William (1810). Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New-York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages . . . New York City: I. Riley.
  13. ^ Howe, Mark De Wolfe (2001). Readings in American Legal History. Beard Books. pp. 435–436, 141. ISBN 978-1-58798-094-7.
  14. ^ Howe, Mark De Wolfe (2001). Readings in American Legal History. Beard Books. pp. 435–436, 141. ISBN 978-1-58798-094-7.
  15. ^ Sampson, William (1824). An Anniversary Discourse: Delivered Before the Historical Society of New York, on Saturday, December 6, 1823; Showing the Origin, Progress, Antiquities, Curiosities, and Nature of the Common Law. E. Bliss and E. White.
  16. ^ Maxwell (1967), p. 240.
  17. ^ Subrin, Stephen N. (Autumn 1988). "David Dudley Field and the Field Code: A Historical Analysis of an Earlier Procedural Vision" (PDF). Law and History Review. 6 (2): 311–373. doi:10.2307/743686. hdl:2047/d20002460. JSTOR 743686. S2CID 145512997.
  18. ^ Clark, David S. (2019-03-21), Reimann, Mathias; Zimmermann, Reinhard (eds.), "Development of Comparative Law in the United States", The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law, Oxford University Press, pp. 147–180, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198810230.013.6, ISBN 978-0-19-881023-0, retrieved 2020-05-17
  19. ^ Subrin, Stephen N. (1988). "David Dudley Field and the Field Code: A Historical Analysis of an Earlier Procedural Vision". Law and History Review. 6 (2): 311–373. doi:10.2307/743686. hdl:2047/d20002460. ISSN 0738-2480. JSTOR 743686. S2CID 145512997.
  20. ^ "William Sampson". Historical Society of the New York Courts. Retrieved 2023-01-11.
  21. ^ Maxwell (1967), p. 246.
  22. ^ Bushey, Glenn Leroy (1938). "William Duane, Crusader for Judicial Reform". Pennsylvania History. V (3 (July): (141-156), 153–156.
  23. ^ Public Law No: 113-287, To enact title 54, United States Code, "National Park Service and Related Programs", as positive law.
  24. ^ USC table of contents
  25. ^ see 26 USC 7201
  26. ^ Meyer, Timothy (2012). "Codifying Custom". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 160: 995-1069.
  27. ^ Peters, Life of Benedict XV, pg. 204.
  28. ^ Ayrinhac, ‘’General Legislation’’ §55.
  29. ^ Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, preface to the CIC 1917
  30. ^ Manual of Canon Law, pg. 47
  31. ^ Manual of Canon Law, pg. 49
  32. ^ a b c Peters, Life of Benedict XV, pg. 205.
  33. ^ Entry for 'canon law, new code of'. 1910 New Catholic Dictionary. http://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/ncd/view.cgi?n=1909. 1910. Accessed 14 April 2016
  34. ^ a b La Due, William J., J.C.D.: The Chair of Saint Peter: A History of the Papacy (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1999), pg. 256.
  35. ^ Ap Const. Providentissima Mater Ecclesia Benedict XV, 27 May 1917
  36. ^ Dr. Edward N. Peters, CanonLaw.info "A Simple Overview of Canon Law", accessed June-11-2013
  37. ^ 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated, Canon 6 (pg. 34)
  38. ^ Dr. Edward Peters, CanonLaw.info, accessed June-9-2013
  39. ^ NYTimes.com, "New Canon Law Code in Effect for Catholics", 27-Nov-1983, accessed June-25-2013

codification, codification, process, collecting, restating, jurisdiction, certain, areas, usually, subject, forming, legal, code, codex, book, codification, defining, features, civil, jurisdictions, contradictory, common, systems, such, that, english, codifica. In law codification is the process of collecting and restating the law of a jurisdiction in certain areas usually by subject forming a legal code i e a codex book of law Codification is one of the defining features of civil law jurisdictions contradictory In common law systems such as that of English law codification is the process of converting and consolidating judge made law or uncodified statutes enacted by the legislature into statute law 1 2 3 Contents 1 History 2 Civil law jurisdictions 3 Common law jurisdictions 3 1 England and Wales 3 2 Ireland 3 3 United States 3 3 1 The early codification movement 3 3 2 Present status 4 International law codification 5 Canon law codification 6 Recodification 7 Notes 8 ReferencesHistory editAncient Sumer s Code of Ur Nammu was compiled circa 2050 1230 BC and is the earliest known surviving civil code Three centuries later the Babylonian king Hammurabi enacted the set of laws named after him Important codifications were developed in the ancient Roman Empire with the compilations of the Lex Duodecim Tabularum and much later the Corpus Juris Civilis These codified laws were the exceptions rather than the rule however as during much of ancient times Roman laws were left mostly uncodified The first permanent system of codified laws could be found in imperial China note 1 with the compilation of the Tang Code in AD 624 This formed the basis of the Chinese criminal code which was eventually replaced by the Great Qing Legal Code which was in turn abolished in 1912 following the Xinhai Revolution and the establishment of the Republic of China The new laws of the Republic of China were inspired by the German codified work the Burgerliches Gesetzbuch A very influential example in Europe was the French Napoleonic code of 1804 Upon confederation the Iroquois created constitutional wampum each component symbolizing one of the many laws within the 117 articles The union of the five original nations occurred in 1142 4 and its unification narrative served the basis for the Iroquois laws 5 Systems of religious laws include the halakha of Judaism and the sharia of Islam The use of civil codes in sharia began with the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century Further information Legal historyCivil law jurisdictions editMain article Civil law legal system Civil law jurisdictions rely by definition on codification Notable early examples were the Statutes of Lithuania in the 16th century The movement towards codification gained momentum during the Enlightenment and was implemented in several European countries during the late 18th century see civil code However it became widespread only after the enactment of the French Napoleonic Code 1804 which has heavily influenced the legal systems of many other countries Common law jurisdictions editMain article Common law Common law has been codified in many jurisdictions and in many areas of law examples include criminal codes in many jurisdictions and include the California Civil Code and the Consolidated Laws of New York New York State England and Wales edit The English judge Sir Mackenzie Chalmers is renowned as the draftsman of the Bills of Exchange Act 1882 the Sale of Goods Act 1893 and the Marine Insurance Act 1906 all of which codified existing common law principles The Sale of Goods Act was repealed and re enacted by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 in a manner that revealed how sound the 1893 original had been note 2 The Marine Insurance Act mildly amended has been a notable success adopted verbatim in many common law jurisdictions Most of England s criminal laws have been codified partly because this enables precision and certainty in prosecution However large areas of the common law such as the law of contract and the law of tort remain remarkably untouched In the last 80 years there have been statutes that address immediate problems such as the Law Reform Frustrated Contracts Act 1943 which inter alia coped with contracts rendered void by war and the Contracts Rights of Third Parties Act 1999 which amended the doctrine of privity However there has been no progress on the adoption of Harvey McGregor s Contract Code 1993 even though the Law Commission together with the Scots Law Commission asked him to produce a proposal for the comprehensive codification and unification of the contract law of England and Scotland Similarly codification in the law of tort has been at best piecemeal a rare example of progress being the Law Reform Contributory Negligence Act 1945 Consolidation bills are routinely passed to organize the law Ireland edit Law of the Republic of Ireland evolved from English law the greatest point of difference being the existence of the Constitution of Ireland as a single document The unofficial popular edition of the Constitution is regularly updated to take account of amendments to it while the official text enrolled in the Supreme Court in 1938 has been replaced five times in 1942 1980 1989 1999 and 2019 6 As in England subordinate laws are not officially codified although consolidation bills have restated the law in many areas Since 2006 the Law Reform Commission LRC has published semi official revised editions of Acts of the Oireachtas taking account of textual and other amendments to the original version 7 The Finance Acts are excluded from the LRC programme 7 Private companies produce unofficial consolidated versions of these and other commercially important pre 2005 laws An official advisory committee between 2006 and 2010 produced a Draft Criminal Code 8 United States edit The early codification movement edit In the United States a critique of the inherited English tradition of common law and an argument for systematic codification was championed by the United Irish exiles William Sampson admitted to the New York bar in 1806 9 10 and William Duane publisher of the Jeffersonian paper the Philadelphia Aurora 11 In 1810 Sampson published Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages 12 commentary on his unsuccessful argument in The People v Melvin 1806 to quash an indictment of illegal worker combination Insisting on the supremacy of the elected legislature Sampson s objected that the prosecution was reasoning abstractedly from principles of English common law without any reference to statute It was this alone that allowed them to deny journeymen the right to conspire against starvation while without notice or challenge leaving master tradesmen in a permanent conspiracy to suppress wages 13 He went on to argue that an indiscriminating adoption of common law had caused the New World society to carry over barbarities from the Old laws that can only be executed upon those not favoured by fortune with certain privileges and that in some cases operate entirely against the poor 14 Sampson s summary Discourse on the Common Law 1823 15 holding common law to be contrary to the ethos a democratic republic and urging with reference to the Code Napoleon its replacement by a general law of reference was hailed as the most sweeping indictment of common law idealism ever written in America 16 It was a source of inspiration for Edward Livingston 17 who drew upon French and other European civil law in drafting the 1825 Louisiana Code of Procedure 18 Later Sampson s efforts appeared vindicated in New York where in 1846 a new state constitution directed that the whole body of state law be reduced to a written and systematic code and in David Dudley Field s subsequent drafting of the New York Code of Civil Procedure 1848 19 20 Sampson sought to disassociate codification from the doctrinaire insistence on positive legislation that had marked Jeremy Bentham s championing of the cause in Britain But focussing on the French experience critics thought it sufficient to comment on the futility of trying to compress human behaviour into rigid categories 21 President Thomas Jefferson had remained neutral when Duane s attempted to force the issue in the 1805 election in Pennsylvania Federalists joined with Constitutional Republicans to defeat the reform agenda 22 Present status edit Main articles United States Code and Code of Federal Regulations In the United States acts of Congress such as federal statutes are published chronologically in the order in which they become law often by being signed by the President on an individual basis in official pamphlets called slip laws and are grouped together in official bound book form also chronologically as session laws The session law publication for Federal statutes is called the United States Statutes at Large A given act may be a single page or hundreds of pages in length An act may be classified as either a Public Law or a Private Law Because each Congressional act may contain laws on a variety of topics many acts or portions thereof are also rearranged and published in a topical subject matter codification by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel The official codification of Federal statutes is called the United States Code Generally only Public Laws are codified The United States Code is divided into titles based on overall topics numbered 1 through 54 23 Title 18 for example contains many of the Federal criminal statutes Title 26 is the Internal Revenue Code 24 Even in code form however many statutes by their nature pertain to more than one topic For example the statute making tax evasion a felony pertains to both criminal law and tax law but is found only in the Internal Revenue Code 25 Other statutes pertaining to taxation are found not in the Internal Revenue Code but instead for example in the Bankruptcy Code in Title 11 of the United States Code or the Judiciary Code in Title 28 Another example is the national minimum drinking age not found in Title 27 Intoxicating liquors but in Title 23 Highways 158 Further portions of some Congressional acts such as the provisions for the effective dates of amendments to codified laws are themselves not codified at all These statutes may be found by referring to the acts as published in slip law and session law form However commercial publications that specialize in legal materials often arrange and print the uncodified statutes with the codes to which they pertain In the United States the individual states either officially or through private commercial publishers generally follow the same three part model for the publication of their own statutes slip law session law and codification Rules and regulations that are promulgated by agencies of the Executive Branch of the United States Federal Government are codified as the Code of Federal Regulations These regulations are authorized by specific legislation passed by the legislative branch and generally have the same force as statutory law International law codification editMain article International law Following the First World War and the establishment of the League of Nations the need for codification of international law arose In September 1924 the General Assembly of the League established a committee of experts for the purpose of codification of international law which was defined by the Assembly as consisting of two aspects Putting existing customs into written international agreements Developing further rulesIn 1930 the League of Nations held at the Hague a conference for the purpose of codification of rules on general matters but very little progress was made Following the Second World War the International Law Commission was established within the United Nations as a permanent body for the formulation of principles in international law 26 Canon law codification editMain articles 1917 Code of Canon Law and Legal history of the Catholic Church Papal attempts at codification of the scattered mass of canon law spanned the eight centuries since Gratian produced his Decretum c 1150 27 In the 13th century especially canon law became the object of scientific study and different compilations were made by the Roman Pontiffs The most important of these were the five books of the Decretales Gregorii IX and the Liber Sextus of Boniface VIII The legislation grew with time Some of it became obsolete and contradictions crept in so that it became difficult in recent times to discover what was of obligation and where to find the law on a particular question nbsp Hardcover of the 1917 Code of Canon LawSince the close of the Corpus Juris numerous new laws and decrees had been issued by popes councils and Roman Congregations No complete collection of them had ever been published and they remained scattered through the ponderous volumes of the Bullaria the Acta Sanctae Sedis and other such compilations which were accessible to only a few and for professional canonists themselves and formed an unwieldy mass of legal material Moreover not a few ordinances whether included in the Corpus Juris or of more recent date appeared to be contradictory some had been formally abrogated others had become obsolete by long disuse others again had ceased to be useful or applicable in the present condition of society Great confusion was thus engendered and correct knowledge of the law rendered very difficult even for those who had to enforce it 28 When the Vatican Council met in 1869 a number of bishops of different countries petitioned for a new compilation of church law that would be clear and easily studied The council never finished its work and no attempt was made to bring the legislation up to date By the 19th Century this body of legislation included some 10 000 norms Many of these were difficult to reconcile with one another due to changes in circumstances and practice In response to the request of the bishops at the First Vatican Council 29 on 14 May 1904 with the motu proprio Arduum sane munus A Truly Arduous Task Pope Pius X set up a commission to begin reducing these diverse documents into a single code 30 presenting the normative portion in the form of systematic short canons shorn of the preliminary considerations 31 Whereas and omitting those parts that had been superseded by later developments By the winter of 1912 the whole span of the code 32 had been completed so that a provisional text was printed 32 This 1912 text was sent out to all Latin bishops and superiors general for their comment and their notations which they sent back to the codification commission were subsequently printed and distributed to all members of the commission in order that the members might carefully consider the suggestions 32 The new code was completed in 1916 33 Under the aegis of Cardinal Pietro Gasparri the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law was completed under Benedict XV Pius X s successor who promulgated it on 27 May 1917 34 as the Code of Canon Law Latin Codex Iuris Canonici and set 19 May 1918 34 as the date on which it came into force 35 In its preparation centuries of material were examined scrutinized for authenticity by leading experts and harmonized as much as possible with opposing canons and even other codes from the Codex of Justinian to the Napoleonic Code It contained 2 414 canons 36 and was in force until Canon 6 1 1 of the 1983 Code of Canon Law 37 took legal effect thereby abrogating it 38 on 27 November 1983 39 Recodification editRecodification refers to a process where existing codified statutes are reformatted and rewritten into a new codified structure This is often necessary as over time the legislative process of amending statutes and the legal process of construing statutes by nature over time results in a code that contains archaic terms superseded text and redundant or conflicting statutes Due to the size of a typical government code the legislative process of recodification of a code can often take a decade or longer Notes edit See Chinese law For the most part the Sale of Goods Act 1979 retains the wording and section numbers of its 1893 predecessor References edit Weiss Gunther A 2000 The Enchantment of Codification in the Common Law World Yale Journal of International Law 25 2 Lord Scarman on codification 1 Sauveplanne article on codification 2 McClure Bruce July 15 2019 The Eclipse That Marked The Start Of The Iroquois Confederacy EarthSky Retrieved 14 August 2021 Kayanlaˀ Kowa Great Law of Peace Oneida Oneida Nation Retrieved 14 August 2021 Supreme Court of Ireland 2020 Sixth enrolment of the Constitution Annual Report 2019 PDF Dublin pp 50 52 Retrieved 13 August 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Revised Acts Dublin Law Reform Commission Retrieved 23 August 2022 Criminal Law Codification Advisory Committee 20 September 2013 2010 Draft Criminal Code and Commentary Dublin Stationery Office ISBN 978 1 4064 2783 7 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Latest News Official website Criminal Law Codification Advisory Committee Retrieved 2 September 2022 Walsh Walter J 2014 Rights Revolutions Republics 1750 1850 The Work and Works of William Sampson 1764 1836 A Chronology American Journal of Irish Studies 11 41 88 42 ISSN 2165 3224 JSTOR 43234379 Walsh Walter 2005 The Priest Penitent Privilege An Hibernocentric Essay in Postcolonial Jurisprudence 80 Indiana Law Journal 1037 2005 80 4 ISSN 0019 6665 Bushey Glenn Leroy 1938 William Duane Crusader for Judicial Reform Pennsylvania History V 3 July 141 156 144 Sampson William 1810 Trial of the Journeymen Cordwainers of the City of New York for a Conspiracy to Raise Their Wages New York City I Riley Howe Mark De Wolfe 2001 Readings in American Legal History Beard Books pp 435 436 141 ISBN 978 1 58798 094 7 Howe Mark De Wolfe 2001 Readings in American Legal History Beard Books pp 435 436 141 ISBN 978 1 58798 094 7 Sampson William 1824 An Anniversary Discourse Delivered Before the Historical Society of New York on Saturday December 6 1823 Showing the Origin Progress Antiquities Curiosities and Nature of the Common Law E Bliss and E White Maxwell 1967 p 240 Subrin Stephen N Autumn 1988 David Dudley Field and the Field Code A Historical Analysis of an Earlier Procedural Vision PDF Law and History Review 6 2 311 373 doi 10 2307 743686 hdl 2047 d20002460 JSTOR 743686 S2CID 145512997 Clark David S 2019 03 21 Reimann Mathias Zimmermann Reinhard eds Development of Comparative Law in the United States The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law Oxford University Press pp 147 180 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780198810230 013 6 ISBN 978 0 19 881023 0 retrieved 2020 05 17 Subrin Stephen N 1988 David Dudley Field and the Field Code A Historical Analysis of an Earlier Procedural Vision Law and History Review 6 2 311 373 doi 10 2307 743686 hdl 2047 d20002460 ISSN 0738 2480 JSTOR 743686 S2CID 145512997 William Sampson Historical Society of the New York Courts Retrieved 2023 01 11 Maxwell 1967 p 246 Bushey Glenn Leroy 1938 William Duane Crusader for Judicial Reform Pennsylvania History V 3 July 141 156 153 156 Public Law No 113 287 To enact title 54 United States Code National Park Service and Related Programs as positive law USC table of contents see 26 USC 7201 Meyer Timothy 2012 Codifying Custom University of Pennsylvania Law Review 160 995 1069 Peters Life of Benedict XV pg 204 Ayrinhac General Legislation 55 Pietro Cardinal Gasparri preface to the CIC 1917 Manual of Canon Law pg 47 Manual of Canon Law pg 49 a b c Peters Life of Benedict XV pg 205 Entry for canon law new code of 1910 New Catholic Dictionary http www studylight org dictionaries ncd view cgi n 1909 1910 Accessed 14 April 2016 a b La Due William J J C D The Chair of Saint Peter A History of the Papacy Maryknoll NY Orbis Books 1999 pg 256 Ap Const Providentissima Mater Ecclesia Benedict XV 27 May 1917 Dr Edward N Peters CanonLaw info A Simple Overview of Canon Law accessed June 11 2013 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated Canon 6 pg 34 Dr Edward Peters CanonLaw info accessed June 9 2013 NYTimes com New Canon Law Code in Effect for Catholics 27 Nov 1983 accessed June 25 2013 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