Revisiting the Contribution of Literal Meaning to Legal Meaning

17 Pages Posted: 4 Jun 2010 Last revised: 3 Oct 2011

See all articles by Brian Flanagan

Brian Flanagan

National University of Ireland, Maynooth (NUI Maynooth) - Faculty of Law

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Date Written: Summer 2010

Abstract

Many theorists take the view that literal meaning can be one of a number of factors to be weighed in reaching a legal interpretation. Still others regard literal meaning as having the potential to legally justify a particular outcome. Building on the scholarly response to HLA Hart’s famous ‘vehicles in the park’ hypothetical, this article presents a formal argument that literal meaning cannot be decisive of what’s legally correct, one which, unusually, makes no appeal to controversial theories within philosophy of language or literary criticism. If the argument is sound, it follows that an enactment’s literal meaning neither weighs in the determination of correct legal outcomes nor permits the application of a sequencing model, ie a non-monotonic logic, to its interpretation. These implications are considerably more controversial within contemporary legal theory than the idea that a statute’s literal meaning is not necessarily its legal meaning. Yet we see that, given an intuitive notion of legal truth, they follow from it nonetheless.

Suggested Citation

Flanagan, Brian, Revisiting the Contribution of Literal Meaning to Legal Meaning (Summer 2010). Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Vol. 30, Issue 2, pp. 255-271, 2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1620295 or http://dx.doi.org/gqp030

Brian Flanagan (Contact Author)

National University of Ireland, Maynooth (NUI Maynooth) - Faculty of Law ( email )

Maynooth, County Kildare
Ireland

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