Date:
Fri, 11 Aug 2006 09:28:49 -0400
From:
David Cheifetz
Subject:
Law's (Il)logic
A cursory search for usages
of any of inductive reasoning, deductive reasoning, inductive logic,
deductive logic in Canadian law databases produced a handful of
instances (primarily criminal caselaw) in which the judges stated
that deciding what conclusions are to be drawn from the facts usually
involves inductive reasoning not deductive. I didn't find anything
suggesting that, somehow, judicial decision-making may be "alogical"
in the sense of being neither inductive or deductive but another
mode of mode of moving from evidence or premise to conclusion.
For example, R. v. R.P.
(1990), 58 C.C.C. (3d) 334 at 339 (Ont. H.C.J.) [R. v.
R.(S.), (1990), 73 O.R. (2d) 355] states "Relevance is
a matter of inductive logic requiring that the trial judge examine
the proffered evidence in light of his own knowledge and understanding
of human conduct: McCormick, ibid., p. 544; Delisle, ibid., p. 10.
Relevance is situational and depends not only on the ultimate issue
in the case (e.g., identification), but also on the other factual
issues which either of the litigants raises as relevant to the ultimate
issue."
[McCormick on Evidence, 3rd
ed. (1984), p. 544; R. Delisle: "Evidence Principles and Problems",
2nd ed. (1989), p. 10.]
I also found a reference to
a mid-30s Australian decision which, I think, asserts that the process
of judicial decision-making is scientific and rational because it
makes use of inductive reasoning (and implicitly deductive where
appropriate). Martin v. Osborne (1936), 55 C.L.R. 367 (High
Court of Australia), at p. 385: "The final reason why the question
as to the relationship between the fact tendered in evidence and
the issue required to be proved is one of 'degree' is that the judgment
or inference involved is not one of deductive logic. What is involved
is the task of admeasuring the probability or improbability of the
fact or event in issue, if we are given the fact or facts sought
to be adduced in evidence. A similar scientific and rational inquiry
is often required at another stage of the judicial process when
the proper inference to be drawn from circumstantial evidence is
in dispute."
Finally, I found a mid 1940s
Quebec civil case Re Porto Rico Power Co., 26 C.B.R. 170,
[1945] 2 D.L.R. 93, [1945] 4 D.L.R. 531 in which a Quebec SC trial
judge said about common law as opposed to civil law "in many
of them [common law decisions]the decisions are arrived at by a
system of inductive reasoning as contrasted with the deductive reasoning
of jurists trained under the Civil law system".
David Cheifetz
-----Original Message-----
From: Hedley, Steve
Sent: August 10, 2006 10:44 AM
Subject: RE: ODG: RE: Law's (Il)logic
Perhaps
we ought to reverse the question. Do anyone know of any judicial
statements which require logic in judicial decision-making? If so,
which sort of "logic" is involved?
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