Business law essay
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BUSL377 Week 4 Tutorial Class Mock Trial Class
Activity
This Class Activity is adopted from the case: 1988 (O) No.436 (Judgment of the Supreme Court on 8
March 1989). The Judgment (in English) can be found online at:
.
There are some modifications in the facts from the real case as follows:
1. The Plaintiff was an American lawyer.
2. The criminal trial was in Tokyo District Court, not Osaka District Court.
3. I have also changed the name of the accused in the criminal trial.
Judgment in the real case:
(majority opinion was given by 14 of the 15 Justices in the Supreme Court Grand Bench hearing; the
remaining Justice concurred in the conclusion but with different reasoning )
The main points of the majority opinion are as follows:
a. Paragraph 1 of Article 82 of the Constitution guarantees the system of pubic trials but it does not
go as far as guaranteeing spectators rights to take notes.
b. Note-taking done by a spectator in order to understand and remember t he trial seen and heard
should not be hindered without due reasons. However, there can be “certai n reasonable
restrictions” on such note-taking in order to “reconcile with other pe ople’s human rights” or due
to the necessity of securing “some superior public welfare”.
c. In a court room, the “realization of a just and speedy trial should be most highly respected”.
Therefore, the administration of a fair and smooth trial procee ding has a legal interest superior to
the spectators’ interest in note-taking.
d. If note-taking interferes with the administration of a fair and smooth trial p roceeding, it should be
restricted or prohibited.
e. Note-taking may “give rise to an atmosphere which is not appropriat e for the place of trials” or
may cause “unjust psychological pressure on witnesses or [the acc used]” so that there may be
interference with the administration of a fair and smooth trial proceedings .
f. It is however “an unusual case that note-taking by spectators m ay interfere with the
administration of the fair and smooth trial proceedings and therefore, without special
circumstances, spectators should be left free to take notes and such freedom should be considered
as being in consonance with the spirit of Paragraph 1, Article 21 of the Constitution”.
g. Under Article 71 of the Court Law/Act and Paragraph 2 of Article 288 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure , the presiding judge “is entitled to take reasonable measures to maintain order in the
courtroom against those who interfere with the exercise of the functions of the c ourt or those who
behave improperly in the courtroom”.
h. “[Decisions] of the presiding judge as to whether to exercise his/her authority and as to what
measures to be taken must be respected to the maximum extent”.
i. The presiding judge is entitled “to take measures to prohibit or regulate note-taking by spectators
… when it is probable that note-taking might interfere with the admi nistration of the fair and
smooth trial proceedings”.
j. It “is desirable that the presiding judge imposes restrictions or prohibition against note-taking ...
only when there are especially concrete probabilities that note -taking might interfere with the 4
administration of the fair and smooth trial proceedings”. However,
“it should be allowed as a
measure within the discretion of the presiding judge” to impose a ge neral prohibition on note-
taking by spectators and, dependent on circumstances, allow it individua lly, “so long as it does
not amount to hindering note-taking by spectators without due reason”.
k. Regarding the rejection of the Plaintiff’s application but allowi ng journalists of the Judicial
Reporters’ Club to take notes, it is not against Paragraph 1 of Art icle 14 of the Constitution. The
latter does not guarantee each individual an “absolute equality”. It prohibits discrimination
without due reason. Freedom of news-gathering for the press is “wor th respecting under the
spirit of Article 21 of the Constitution”. On the basis of “consideration in favor of the public
interests of the press and freedom of news-gathering therefor”, i t is not unreasonable for the
presiding judge to allow only the journalists belonging to the Judici al Reporters’ Club to take
notes in the court-room.
l. It cannot be found that note-taking by the Plaintiff “might possibly interfere with the
administration of the fair and smooth trial proceedings in that it m ight disturb order and quietness
in the courtroom, might give rise to an atmosphere which is not appropr iate for the place of trial
or might have unjust effects on the witnesses or the [accused]”. The measure taken by the
presiding judge “should be supposed to be the exercise of authority ... w ithout reasonable
grounds”.
m. “[In] the past when many of so-called public security cases w ere filed before the courts and rude
behavior occurred daily in the courtroom, it used to be necessary to take measures of prohibiting
note-taking generally in the courtroom in order to expedite the smooth proc eedings in those cases
…”. However, at the time of the criminal trial concerned in this case, “the vast majority of
people had already come to deeply understand the court and there have bee n becoming few cases
in which spectators in the courtroom interfered with the administra tion of the trial by the court.
At present the courts should admit frankly that note-taking by spect ators is at a stage of not being
given sufficient consideration and should acknowledge that sufficient conside ration to note-
taking is required hereafter”.
n. However, “this conclusion presupposes naturally that note-taking does not hi nder order and
quietness in the courtroom nor interfere with the administration of t he fair and smooth trial
proceedings”. The presiding judge “also owes a duty and has the obliga tion to exercise the
authority of maintaining court order strictly and decisively agains t any activities by spectators
which, if ever, may be regarded as ones leading to the said harmful situation.”
o. Judgment by the presiding judge in the exercise of his authority to maintain court order “should
be respected to the maximum extent”. Measures “taken by the pre siding judge under the
authority of maintaining court order cannot be regarded as an illegal exercise of the public power
… unless there are special circumstances such as the measure taken deviates markedly from the
purpose and scope of the authority or the manner of taking the measure is utterly inapp ropriate”.
p. At the time of the criminal trial concerned in this case, th e view “broadly adopted” was that “the
court can properly open the court, generally prohibiting spectators from taking notes under the
authority of maintaining court order”. “[Considerable] numbers of courts had taken similar
measures”. The measure taken by the presiding judge in this case cannot be s aid as falling within
the aforesaid “special circumstances”. Therefore, such measure does not amount to an
illegal/unlawful exercise of the public power/authority although it “was lacking in sufficient
consideration”.