Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286
The General Division of the High Court of Singapore stated (obiter) in Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong that it does not have a general power to order that damages or costs be paid in instalments. It reasoned that any such power must have been impliedly restricted by legislation. So instalment orders c...
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-64482024-07-25T07:29:57Z Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 ONG, Benjamin Joshua The General Division of the High Court of Singapore stated (obiter) in Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong that it does not have a general power to order that damages or costs be paid in instalments. It reasoned that any such power must have been impliedly restricted by legislation. So instalment orders can only be made (a) by certain subordinate courts; (b) by the General Division on appeal; (c) by the General Division at first instance in personal injury cases. In response, this note aims to advance the conversation on the law on instalment orders and what the Constitution has to say about the courts’ inherent powers. There are possible arguments, based on constitutional principle and/or constitutional history, that legislation purporting to take away certain powers from the courts is unconstitutional, or at least that the courts should be slow to hold that such powers have been taken away. Anyway, the legislation which the General Division cited arguably did not take away the powers to make instalment orders; neither do common-law rules such as the rule that damages are ordered “once and for all”. Therefore, we need not rely on legislative reform to avoid the uneasy conclusion which the General Division felt compelled to reach. 2024-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/4490 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/6448/viewcontent/Constitutional_supremacy__inherent_powers__and_orders_that_damages_be_paid_in_instalments.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Dispute Resolution and Arbitration |
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Dispute Resolution and Arbitration ONG, Benjamin Joshua Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
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The General Division of the High Court of Singapore stated (obiter) in Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong that it does not have a general power to order that damages or costs be paid in instalments. It reasoned that any such power must have been impliedly restricted by legislation. So instalment orders can only be made (a) by certain subordinate courts; (b) by the General Division on appeal; (c) by the General Division at first instance in personal injury cases. In response, this note aims to advance the conversation on the law on instalment orders and what the Constitution has to say about the courts’ inherent powers. There are possible arguments, based on constitutional principle and/or constitutional history, that legislation purporting to take away certain powers from the courts is unconstitutional, or at least that the courts should be slow to hold that such powers have been taken away. Anyway, the legislation which the General Division cited arguably did not take away the powers to make instalment orders; neither do common-law rules such as the rule that damages are ordered “once and for all”. Therefore, we need not rely on legislative reform to avoid the uneasy conclusion which the General Division felt compelled to reach. |
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ONG, Benjamin Joshua |
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ONG, Benjamin Joshua |
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ONG, Benjamin Joshua |
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Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
title_short |
Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
title_full |
Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
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Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
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Constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: Tan Meow Hiang v Ong Kay Yong [2023] SGHC 286 |
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constitutional supremacy, inherent powers, and orders that damages or costs be paid in instalments: tan meow hiang v ong kay yong [2023] sghc 286 |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/4490 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/6448/viewcontent/Constitutional_supremacy__inherent_powers__and_orders_that_damages_be_paid_in_instalments.pdf |
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