McGimpsey v. Ireland [1990] IESC 3 (1st March, 1990)
The Supreme Court
1988 No. 314
Between
Christopher McGimpsey and
Michael McGimpsey
Plaintiffs
And
Ireland and Others
Defendants
[1st March, 1990] FINLAY CJ:1.
This is an appeal by the plaintiffs against the dismissal on the 25th July,
1998, by order of the High Court made by Barrington J. of their claim for
a declaration that the "Agreement between the Government of Ireland and
the Government of the United Kingdom" made on the l5th November, 1985 (the
Anglo-Irish Agreement) is contrary to the provisions of the Constitution.
The parties
2. The plaintiffs are two brothers, each of whom was
born in Northern Ireland, and each of whom now resides in Northern Ireland. 3.
In the course of his judgment Barrington J. described the political ambitions
and activities of both the plaintiffs in the following words:- "Both plaintiffs
are members of the Official Unionist party of Northern Ireland. Both are
deeply concerned about the present state of Northern Ireland and of all
Ireland. Both reject any form of sectarianism and both have been involved
in peace movements working to accommodate people of various traditions
who live on the island of Ireland. Both gave evidence before the New Ireland
Forum and, in oral and written submissions, attempted to explain to the
Forum how the problem appeared to men fully committed to unionism but interested
in finding a peaceful solution to the problem of Northern Ireland and of
Ireland.Both believe that the Anglo-Irish Agreement has aggravated the
problem and instead of solving the problem, has become part of it." 4.
The learned trial judge, having heard the plaintiffs in evidence, was satisfied
that in the expression of these opinions and in their attitude to the problems
with which the case is concerned, they were both sincere. Against these
findings by the learned trial judge there is no form of appeal, nor is
there any suggestion that they are otherwise than justified by the evidence
which he heard.
The plaintiffs' claim
5. The plaintiffs' claim for a declaration that the
provisions of the Anglo-Irish Agreement are contrary to the provisions
of the Constitution was directed in particular to Articles 1, 2, 4 and
5 of the Agreement, and the inconsistency alleged was with Articles 2,
3, 29 and 40 of the Constitution.
The defence
6. The defendants in their defence, apart from joining
issue on the claims of the plaintiffs, raised a special defence denying
the locus standi of the plaintiffs in the following terms:- "The
plaintiffs
do not have the locus standi necessary to seek the reliefs sought
in the statement of claim on the grounds that neither of them has any interest
or right which has or will suffer any injury or prejudice by reason of
any of the matters alleged in the statement of claim or by reason of the
coming into force of the said Agreement or at all, nor has either a common
interest with any other person who could claim to be or to be likely to
be adversely affected thereby." 7. Amongst the
submissions made on behalf of the defendants in the court below on foot
of this plea of an absence of locus standi was that the plaintiffs
should not be permitted to invoke Article 2 of the Constitution because
they themselves do not believe that "the national territory consists of
the whole island of Ireland" and are only invoking the Article in a tactical
manoeuvre. 8. In his judgment the learned trial
judge stated:- "Both plaintiffs were born in Ireland and are therefore,
in contemplation of Irish law, citizens of Ireland." 9.
The statement of claim contains no claim that either plaintiff is a citizen
of Ireland, although it is stated that the first plaintiff is the holder
of an Irish passport. No evidence was given by either plaintiff that either
he or either of his parents had made the prescribed declaration pursuant
to s. 7, sub-s. 1, of the Irish
Nationality and Citizenship Act, 1956, or of any facts which would
indicate that he was "otherwise an Irish citizen". 10.
It may well be that the plaintiffs are Irish citizens under s.
6, sub-s. 1 of the Act of 1956 because either or both of their parents
were Irish citizens at the respective dates of their births, though this
was not proved. 11. Since the defendants made
no submissions to this Court on this issue and have not sought to vary
the finding of the learned trial judge to which I have referred, I will
assume without deciding that each of the plaintiffs is an Irish citizen. 12.
The learned trial judge decided this issue of locus standi in favour
of the plaintiffs in the following passage contained in his judgment:-
"The present case is, to say the least, unusual and there is no exact precedent
governing it. But it appears to me that the plaintiffs are patently sincere
and serious people who have raised an important constitutional issue which
affects them and thousands of others on both sides of the border. Having
regard to these factors and having regard to the wording of the preamble
to the Constitution and of Articles 2 and 3, it appears to me that it would
be inappropriate for this court to refuse to listen to their complaints." 13.
Against this finding the defendants did not enter any cross-appeal or notice
to vary. This Court, as it would be bound to do, raised the query as to
the locus standi of the plaintiffs and the consequent jurisdiction
of this Court to determine the issues raised on the appeal. Counsel for
the defendants, upon that being raised, did not seek by any special submission
or argument to vary the decision which had been reached by the learned
trial judge. 14. As a general proposition it
would appear to me that one would have to entertain considerable doubt
as to whether any citizen would have the locus standi to challenge
the constitutional validity of an act of the executive or of a statute
of the Oireachtas for the specific and sole purpose of achieving an objective
directly contrary to the purpose of the constitutional provision invoked.
However, having regard to the evidence in this case, to the findings of
fact made by the learned trial judge, and to the absence of any cross-appeal
brought on behalf of the defendants, I am satisfied that the plaintiffs'
claim in this case and their appeal against the dismissal of it by the
High Court should be entertained on its merits.
The relevant constitutional provisions
15. The relevant constitutional provisions are as
follows:-
Article 2
“The national territory consists of the whole island of Ireland,
its islands and the territorial seas.”
Article 3
"Pending the re-integration of the national territory, and without
prejudice to the right of the Parliament and Government established by
this Constitution to exercise jurisdiction over the whole of that territory,
the laws enacted by that Parliament shall have the like area and extent
of application as the laws of Saorstát Éireann and the like
extra-territorial effect."
Article 29
"1. Ireland affirms its devotion to the ideal of peace and friendly
co- operation amongst nations founded on international justice and morality.2.
Ireland affirms its adherence to the principle of the pacific settlement
of international disputes by international arbitration or judicial determination.3.
Ireland accepts the generally recognised principles of international law
as its rule of conduct in its relations with other States.4. 1° The
executive power of the State in or in connection with its external relations
shall in accordance with Article 28 of this Constitution be exercised by
or on the authority of the Government."
Article 40
"1. All citizens shall, as human persons, be held equal before the
law.
Article 40
"3. 1° The State guarantees in its laws to respect, and, as far
as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate the personal rights
of the citizen."
The Anglo-Irish Agreement
ARTICLE 1
16. The two Governments (a) affirm that any change
in the status of Northern Ireland would only come about with the consent
of a majority of the people of Northern Ireland;(b) recognise that the
present wish of a majority of the people of Northern Ireland is for no
change in the status of Northern Ireland;(c) declare that, if in the future
a majority of the people of Northern Ireland clearly wish for and formally
consent to the establishment of a united Ireland, they will introduce and
support in the respective Parliaments legislation to give effect to that
wish.
ARTICLE 2
(a) There is hereby established within the framework of the Anglo-Irish
Intergovernmental Council set up after the meeting between the two Heads
of Government on the 6 November 1981, an Intergovernmental Conference (hereinafter
referred to as "the Conference"), concerned with Northern Ireland and with
relations between the two parts of the island of Ireland, to deal, as set
out in this Agreement, on a regular basis with(i) political matters;(ii)
security and related matters;(iii) legal matters, including the administration
of justice;(iv) the promotion of cross-border co-operation.(b) The United
Kingdom Government accepts that the Irish Government will put forward views
and proposals on matters relating to Northern Ireland within the field
of activity of the Conference in so far as those matters are not the responsibility
of a devolved administration in Northern Ireland. In the interests of promoting
peace and stability, determined efforts shall be made through the Conference
to resolve any differences. The Conference will be mainly concerned with
Northern Ireland; but some of the matters under consideration will involve
co-operative action in both parts of the island of Ireland, and possibly
also in Great Britain. Some of the proposals considered in respect of Northern
Ireland may also be found to have application by the Irish Government.
There is no derogation from the sovereignty of either the Irish Government
or the United Kingdom Government, and each retains responsibility for the
decisions and administration of government within its own jurisdiction.
ARTICLE 4
(a) In relation to matters coming within its field of activity, the
conference shall be a framework within which the Irish Government and the
United Kingdom Government work together(i) for the accommodation of the
rights and identities of the two traditions which exist in Northern Ireland;
and(ii) for peace, stability and prosperity throughout the island of Ireland
by promoting reconciliation, respect for human rights, co-operation against
terrorism and the development of economic, social and cultural co-operation.(b)
It is the declared policy of the United Kingdom Government that responsibility
in respect of certain matters within the powers of the Secretary of State
for Northern Ireland should be devolved within Northern Ireland on a basis
which would secure widespread acceptance throughout the community. The
Irish Government support that policy.(c) Both Governments recognise that
devolution can be achieved only with the co-operation of constitutional
representatives within Northern Ireland of both traditions there. The Conference
shall be a framework within which the Irish Government may put forward
views and proposals on the modalities of bringing about devolution in Northern
Ireland, in so far as they relate to the interests of the minority community.
ARTICLE 5
(a) The Conference shall concern itself with measures to recognise
and accommodate the rights and identities of the two traditions in Northern
Ireland, to protect human rights and to prevent discrimination. Matters
to be considered in this area include measures to foster the cultural heritage
of both traditions, changes in electoral arrangements, the use of flags
and emblems, the avoidance of economic and social discrimination and the
advantages and disadvantages of a Bill of Rights in some form in Northern
Ireland.(b) The discussion of these matters shall be mainly concerned with
Northern Ireland, but the possible application of any measures pursuant
to this Article by the Irish Government in their jurisdiction shall not
be excluded.(c) If it should prove impossible to achieve and sustain devolution
on a basis which secures widespread acceptance in Northern Ireland, the
Conference shall be a framework within which the Irish Government may,
where the interests of the minority community are significantly or especially
affected, put forward views on proposals for major legislation and on major
policy issues, which are within the purview of the Northern Ireland Departments
and which remain the responsibility of the Secretary of State for Northern
Ireland.
Interpretation of Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution
17. Barrington J. in the course of his judgment identified
from previous decisions what appeared to him to be two conflicting interpretations
of Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution. He concluded that the impugned
provisions of the Agreement were not contrary to either of these interpretations,
and that accordingly it was not necessary for him to decide between them.18.
The first interpretation mentioned by the learned trial judge was derived
by him from the decision of this Court on the reference of the Criminal
Law (Jurisdiction) Bill, 1975 [1977] I.R. 129, and he quotes from that
decision the following paragraph at p. 584:- "One of the theories held
in 1937 by a substantial number of citizens was that a nation, as distinct
from a State, had rights: that the Irish people living in what is now called
the Republic of Ireland and in Northern Ireland together form the Irish
nation: that a nation has a right to unity of territory in some form be
it as a unitary or federal state; and that the Government
of Ireland Act,
1920, though legally binding was a violation of that national right
to unity which was superior to positive law.This national claim to unity
exists not in the legal but in the political order and is one of the rights
which are envisaged in Article 2; it is expressly saved by Article 3 which
states that the area to which the laws enacted by the parliament established
by the Constitution apply." 19. From that decision
he concluded that the interpretation of the Articles was as follows: Article
2 contained a claim to the national territory of the whole of the island
of Ireland, its islands and the territorial seas as a claim in the political
order and not as a claim of legal right. Article 3 provided that, pending
the re-integration of the national territory, the Parliament established
by the Constitution could only enact laws with a like area and extent of
application as the laws of Saorstát Éireann and the like
extraterritorial effect, and therefore could not enact laws with an area
of application in the counties of Northern Ireland. 20.
Counsel for both parties submitted in the High Court, and repeated those
submissions in this Court, that Article 2 constituted a claim of a legal
right, but that, pursuant to Article 3, the Parliament established by the
Constitution was entitled at any time it wished to enact laws applicable
in the counties of Northern Ireland, though pending the re-integration
of the national territory, laws enacted which did not otherwise provide
are deemed to have the restricted area and extent mentioned in the article. 21.
In support of this submission they relied on the dictum of O'Keeffe P.
in Boland v. An Taoiseach [1974] I.R. 338, and on the decision of
O'Byrne J. in The People v. Ruttledge decided in 1947 but reported
at [1978] I.R. 376. 22. I am not satisfied that
the statement that "this national claim to unity exists not in the legal
but the political order and is one of the rights which are envisaged in
Article 2", necessarily means that the claim to the entire national territory
is not a claim of legal right. 23. The phrase
occurs in a decision tracing the historical, political and social background
to the Constitution, and seems more appropriately understood as a reference
to the origin of the claim than to its nature. If, however, it is so construed,
I would after careful consideration feel obliged to decline to follow it.
I do not accept the contention that Article 3 is to be construed as permitting,
during the period pending the re-integration of the national territory,
the enactment of laws applicable in the counties of Northern Ireland. 24.
With Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution should be read the preamble,
and I am satisfied that the true interpretation of these constitutional
provisions is as follows:- 1. The re-integration of the national territory
is a constitutional imperative (cf. Hederman J. in Russell v. Fanning
[1988]
I.R. 505).2. Article 2 of the Constitution consists of a declaration of
the extent of the national territory as a claim of legal right.3. Article
3 of the Constitution prohibits, pending the re-integration of the national
territory, the enactment of laws with any greater area or extent of application
or extra-territorial effect than the laws of Saorstát Éireann
and this prohibits the enactment of laws applicable in the counties of
Northern Ireland.4. The restriction imposed by Article 3 pending the re-integration
of the national territory in no way derogates from the claim as a legal
right to the entire national territory. 25. The
provision in Article 3 of the Constitution contained in the words "and
without prejudice to the right of the Parliament and Government established
by this Constitution to exercise jurisdiction over the whole of that territory"
is an express denial and disclaimer made to the community of nations of
acquiescence to any claim that, pending the re-integration of the national
territory, the frontier at present existing between the State and Northern
Ireland is or can be accepted as conclusive of the matter or that there
can be any prescriptive title thereby created and an assertion that there
can be no estoppel created by the restriction in Article 3 on the application
of the laws of the State in Northern Ireland. This is of course quite distinct
from the extra-territorial effect of the laws of the State in respect of
matters occurring outside the State for which persons are made answerable
in the courts of the State.
The grounds of the plaintiffs' claim
26. Barrington J. has correctly identified the three
main submissions on which the plaintiffs' claim rested in the High Court
and they remain the same on the appeal to this Court. "1. That the Agreement
recognising the legitimacy of the present constitutional arrangements in
respect of Northern Ireland, violates Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution;2.
that, in as much as the Agreement establishes an intergovernmental conference
and secretariat, it fetters the power of the Government to conduct the
external affairs and powers of the state under Articles 28 and 29 of the
Constitution.3. that the State may not enter into a treaty whereby it commits
itself to have regard to one section of the Irish nation (i.e. the "minority"
population of Northern Ireland) and to disregard the interests of a section
of the Irish people, namely, the "majority" community in Northern Ireland." 27.
In regard to the first of these grounds the plaintiffs relied, in addition
to the terms of the Agreement and of the Constitution, upon submissions
that the terms of the Agreement could in international law constitute an
estoppel preventing a subsequent assertion of right to the re-integration
of the national territory and also on a submission that the fact that the
Agreement did not contain a fixed time for its duration added to the alleged
constitutional inconsistency.
The decision
28. With regard to these three main grounds of appeal
I have come to the following conclusions. 1. Inconsistency of the Agreement
with Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution29. The
main source of this submission was article 1 of the Anglo- Irish Agreement.
In the course of his judgment Barrington J., after considering the details
of that and other provisions of the Agreement, reached the following conclusion:-
"It appears to me that in article 1 of the agreement the two Governments
merely recognise the situation on the ground in Northern Ireland, (paragraph
(b)), form a political judgment about the likely course of future events,
(paragraph (a)), and state what their policy will be should events evolve
in a particular way (paragraph (c))." 30. I find
myself in agreement with this economical but precise analysis of the provisions
of article 1. The learned trial judge then concluded that on any interpretation
of the provisions of Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution, these provisions
of the Anglo-Irish Agreement were not in any way inconsistent with either
of those two Articles. With that conclusion I am in complete agreement.
There can be no doubt but that the only reasonable interpretation of article
1, taken in conjunction with the denial of derogation from sovereignty
contained in article 2, para. (b), of the Anglo-Irish Agreement is that
it constitutes a recognition of the de facto situation in Northern
Ireland but does so expressly without abandoning the claim to the re-integration
of the national territory. These are essential ingredients of the constitutional
provisions in Articles 2 and 3. 31. This interpretation
is not affected by the provisions of article 4, para. (c) or article 5,
para. (c) nor are either of these two articles capable of any separate
inconsistent interpretation. In so far as they accept the concept of change
in the de facto status of Northern Ireland as being something that
would require the consent of the majority of the people of Northern Ireland
these articles of the Agreement seem to me to be compatible with the obligations
undertaken by the State in Article 29, ss. 1 and 2 of the Constitution,
whereby Ireland affirms its devotion to the ideal of peace and friendly
co-operation and its adherence to the principles of the pacific settlement
of international disputes. 32. The conclusion
that these articles of the Anglo-Irish Agreement do not constitute any
form of abandonment of the claim of right to the re-integration of the
national territory but constitute instead a realistic recognition of the
de
facto situation in Northern Ireland leads to the consequential conclusion
that the Anglo-Irish Agreement cannot be impugned on the basis of any supposed
estoppel arising to defeat the constitutional claim to re-integration,
nor on the basis of any indefinite duration in the Agreement. 2.
Fettering
of the power of Government to conduct external relations in breach of Article
29 of the Constitution33. The submission made
on this issue was that the terms of the Anglo-Irish Agreement were of similar
character to the terms of the Single European Act which the decision of
this Court in Crotty v. An Taoiseach [1987] I.R. 713 held to be
inconsistent with the provisions of Article 29 of the Constitution. 34.
I am satisfied that this analogy is quite false. The Anglo-Irish Agreement
is an agreement reached between two governments, both of whom have an acknowledged
concern in relation to the affairs of Northern Ireland. It acknowledges
that the Government of Ireland may make representations, put forward proposals,
and try to influence the evolution of peace and order in Northern Ireland. 35.
The frameworks contained in the Agreement and structures created by it
provide methods of carrying out these activities, it can be argued, in
the manner most likely to make them effective and acceptable, namely, constant
mutual discussion. The Government of Ireland at any time carrying out the
functions which have been agreed under the Anglo-Irish Agreement is entirely
free to do so in the manner in which it, and it alone, thinks most conducive
to the achieving of the aims to which it is committed. A procedure which
is likely to lead to peaceable and friendly co-operation at any given time
must surely be consistent with the constitutional position of a state that
affirms its devotion not only to the ideal of peace and friendly co-operation
but to that ideal founded on international justice and morality. 36.
The basis of the decision of this Court in Crotty v. An Taoiseach [1987]
I.R. 713 was that the terms of the Single European Act could oblige the
Government in carrying out the foreign policy of the State to make the
national interests of the State, to a greater or lesser extent, subservient
to the national interests of other member states. I have no doubt that
there is a vast and determining difference between the provisions of this
Agreement and the provisions of the Single European Act as interpreted
by this Court in Crotty v. An Taoiseach [1987] I.R. 713. 3.
Disregard
of the interests of the "majority" community in Northern Ireland37.
The submission made on the appeal in regard to this matter was that the
provisions of the Anglo-Irish Agreement contained in article 4, para. (c)
and article 5, para. (c) which expressly recognised the conference as a
framework within which the Irish Government might put forward views and
proposals on bringing about devolution in Northern Ireland, in so far as
they relate to the interests of the minority community, constituted a breach
of Article 40, s. 1 of the Constitution. The Anglo-Irish Agreement is not
"a law" within the meaning of that term contained in Article 40, s. 1 of
the Constitution. A provision for the capacity of the Irish Government
in regard to possible devolution in Northern Ireland to put forward views
and proposals as to the modalities of bringing that about could not be
the holding of any person equal or unequal before the "law". 38.
In the alternative, the submission was made that the provisions of this
subclause of the Agreement were inconsistent with Article 40, s. 3, sub-s.
1 of the Constitution. I am satisfied that they are not. The mere fact
that there is an express acknowledgment in the event of discussions leading
or intended to lead to devolution in Northern Ireland of the right of the
Irish Government to bring forward views and proposals in so far as they
relate to the interests of the minority community in Northern Ireland is
in no way an abandonment of concern by the Irish Government for the majority
community in Northern Ireland. 39. It does not
seem to me that there are any grounds for suggesting that there has been
an invidious or any discrimination between the two communities in Northern
Ireland by virtue of the terms of the Anglo-Irish Agreement. 40.
I am satisfied, therefore, that all the grounds of the appeal brought by
the plaintiffs must fail. I come to that conclusion from an analysis of
each of the submissions that have been made, both in the High Court and
in this Court. I would also point out, however, that there is, looking
at the Anglo-Irish Agreement in its totality and looking at the entire
scheme and thrust of the Constitution of Ireland a high improbability that
a clear attempt to resolve the position with regard to the re-integration
of the national territory and the position of Northern Ireland by a process
of consultation, discussion and reasoned argument structured by constant
communication between servants of each of the two states concerned could
ever be inconsistent with a Constitution devoted to the ideals of ordered,
peaceful international relations. I would dismiss this appeal. Walsh
J. I agree. Griffin J. I agree. Hederman J. I agree.
McCarthy J.
Locus standi
41. The trial judge concluded that each of the plaintiffs
was a citizen of Ireland. As citizens they are bound by the provisions
of Article 9, s. 2 of the Constitution which prescribes that fidelity to
the nation and loyalty to the State are fundamental political duties of
all citizens. Such fidelity and loyalty do not prohibit or restrict disagreement
with the content of the Constitution nor with the actions of government.
There are few citizens who have made a public declaration to uphold the
Constitution which contains the constitutional imperative in its preamble
that the unity of our country be restored and Article 2 which defines the
national territory as the whole island of Ireland, its islands and the
territorial seas. The plaintiffs uphold the union of Northern Ireland with
Britain, they reject Article 2 but claim that the Anglo-Irish Agreement
is in conflict with it, is therefore invalid having regard to the provisions
of the Constitution and thereby call it in aid to achieve their objective
which is the maintenance of partition and of the union with Britain. They
approbate and reprobate. 42. There is a distinction
between an objective and the means of achieving it. One does not look to
the objective of a particular legal submission; one looks to the submission
itself. One does not determine locus standi
by motive but rather
by objective assessment of rights and the means of protecting them. In
Cahill v. Sutton [1980] I.R. 269 the plaintiff who invoked constitutional
protection was denied the right to do so because the type of protection
invoked would not, on the facts, have done her any good. It would have
done her a great deal of good if the result was to condemn the section
of the statute which defeated her claim, but the argument of constitutional
injustice did not apply to her situation. Here the argument advanced by
the plaintiffs does apply to the facts of their case, as Irish and as British
citizens living in Northern Ireland, and in such case, their motive is
irrelevant. It is commonplace for litigants to invoke the law for the worst
of motives; many pleas of statutory defence may have a most venal purpose
but that does not affect the validity of any such defence. The plaintiffs
appear to be contending that, being made Irish citizens by this State,
disapproving of the constitutional claim in Article 2, being concerned
as to the effect of the Anglo-Irish Agreement on them as residents of Northern
Ireland, they are entitled to demand of this State that, as the People
make the rules, they must abide by them, whatever be the plaintiffs' motive
or objective. 43. Does this right, however, extend
to a challenge to the making of a treaty by the Government pursuant to
Article 29? In Kostan v. Ireland [1978] I.L.R.M. 12 a foreign captain
of a fishery vessel successfully challenged the constitutionality of certain
provisions of the Fisheries(Consolidation)
Act, 1959, under which he was prosecuted for unlawful fishing. In Crotty
v. An Taoiseach [1987] I.R. 713 a successful challenge was made by
an undoubted citizen against the ratification of part of the Single European
Act. It seems unlikely that a non-citizen would have been allowed to maintain
such proceedings. The citizens of the United Kingdom in Britain have a
very real interest in the Anglo-Irish Agreement; is each one of them to
be heard to challenge its validity as being repugnant to the Constitution
of Ireland? I think not. Might such a claim be sustained at the suit of
a person living in Northern Ireland but born outside of Ireland? I think
not. The .plaintiffs' right to sue, if right there be, must depend upon
citizenship. In The State (Nicolaou) v. An Bord Uchtála [1966]
I.R. 567 Teevan J., said at p. 600:- "Circumstances may exist by reason
of which it would be no more than impertinent for a non-citizen to attack
the constitutionality of one of our statutes, or by reason of which it
would otherwise be necessary or prudent to take the point." 44.
In the Supreme Court, Walsh J., at p. 645 said:- "This Court expressly
reserves for another and more appropriate case consideration of the effect
of non-citizenship upon the interpretation of the Articles in question
and also the right of a non-citizen to challenge the validity of an Act
of the Oireachtas having regard to the provisions of the constitution." 45.
In a case such as the present, in my judgment, a non-citizen does not have
the locus standi to maintain a challenge of the kind propounded
here against the constitutional validity of the Anglo-Irish Agreement.
The issue of locus standi was raised in the defence and contested
at the trial. The statement of claim does not allege that either plaintiff
is a citizen of Ireland and neither plaintiff testified as to being a citizen
or having made the prescribed declaration pursuant to s. 7, sub- s. 1 of
the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act, 1956. In my view, the plaintiffs
were not shown to be Irish citizens although Barrington J., in his judgment,
stated that both plaintiffs were born in Ireland and "are therefore in
contemplation of Irish law citizens of Ireland." No appeal or notice to
vary was brought in respect of this finding. Because of this and the importance
of the issue raised, whilst I am not satisfied that the plaintiffs have
locus
standi to maintain this action, I think it right to determine the main
issue in the case.
The constitutional issue
46. I have read the judgment delivered by the Chief
Justice and I wholly agree with the conclusion that the plaintiffs have
failed in their challenge to the Anglo-Irish Agreement. I would wish to
state my firm opinion that, whatever the political background to the wording
of Article 2 of the Constitution, it is an unequivocal claim as of legal
right that the national territory consists of the whole island of Ireland,
its islands and the territorial seas (see O'Keeffe P. in Boland v. An
Taoiseach [1974] I.R. 338 at p. 363). 47.
I would dismiss the appeal.
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