Phillips v Eyre | |
---|---|
Court | Court of Common Pleas |
Decided | 23 June 1870 |
Citation(s) | (1870) LR 6 QB 1 |
Case opinions | |
Willes J | |
Court membership | |
Judge(s) sitting | Kelley CB Martin J Piggott J Cleasby BB Willes J Brett J |
Keywords | |
Phillips v Eyre (1870) LR 6 QB 1 is a famous English decision on the conflict of laws in tort. The Court developed a two limbed test for determining whether a tort occurring outside of the court's jurisdiction can be actionable. In time this came to be referred to as the "dual-actionability test" (or "double actionability test").
Edward John Eyre had been the Governor of Jamaica during the Morant Bay rebellion. As Governor he ordered a forceful response, which led to the deaths of numerous Jamaicans, and the arrest and summary execution of various political figures whom Eyre believed to be instigators of the uprising. At the end of his term as governor the colonial assembly had passed an Act of Indemnity covering all acts done in good faith to suppress the rebellion after the proclamation of martial law.
When he returned to England several Jamaicans sued him for trespass to the person and false imprisonment in the Courts of England.
Professor Hanford described the background to the case as follows:
The particular activist concerned was one George William Gordon, a mixed-race member of the local assembly. Bad blood existed between Eyre and Gordon before the rebellion. Having had Gordon and William Bogle (the brother of Paul Bogle, the main leader in the revolt) arrested on suspicion of treason, both were tried under martial law and then summarily executed within two days. The entire suppression of the rebellion was undoubtedly extremely violent. Some 439 people were killed by British forces, and a further 600 odd were flogged and about 1000 houses burned down. Further there is evidence that some of the British officers treated the task as "hunting sport".
Although most contemporary accounts seem to blame specific British military officers (under the command of General Luke O'Connor) rather than Eyre, sensational reporting of both the rebellion and its bloody suppression made Eyre a controversial figure in Britain. This came to be known as the "Jamaica Question", which essentially boiled down to the question of whether Eyre to be regarded as a hero who had fulfilled his duties as Governor in suppressing the rebellion and saving the white population of Jamaica from massacre, or a murderer who should be prosecuted and held accountable for his crimes. Attempt to bring criminal proceedings against Eyre failed, and so the various activists tried again bringing a civil suit. The activists referred to themselves as the "Jamaica Committee" and included liberal thinkers like John Bright, Charles Buxton, Peter Alfred Taylor, John Stuart Mill, Thomas Hughes, Charles Darwin, Thomas Huxley and Goldwin Smith.