Conditions and Rules of Repealing Laws
By repealing a law it ceases to be valid and its life terminates. Abrogation is the usual way to suppress the domination of law. Hence, legislation or rogation is the normal form of making law. Therefore, repealing and enacting law are subject to the same rules.In traditional approach, abrogation has two forms: explicit and implicit. This article attempts to amend this theory. Abrogation is only explicit and it occurs when legislator specifies the repealed law. Also legislator can exclusively repeal law so that he can enact. Moreover, statutes or enacted laws may be specifically repealed. But when judge cannot reconcile two conflicting laws, his main task is to override one of them. Regarding the purport of laws and arguing in persuasive manner are the exclusive way to proclaim tacit abrogation or predomination of it. Indeed judge has no authority to rescind law. Therefore, implicit repealing is a matter of construction and metaphorical expression.
Law , Repeal , Abrogation , Implied , Explicit , legislation , statute , Act
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