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''Morgentaler v R'', () 1 S.C.R. 616 is a famous decision of the Supreme Court of Canada where Henry Morgentaler unsuccessfully challenged the prohibition of abortion in Canada under the Criminal Code. The Court found the abortion law was appropriately passed by Parliament under the laws of federalism. This was the first of three Supreme Court decisions on abortion that was brought by Morgentaler. ==Background== Dr. Morgentaler was prosecuted, for openly providing abortions, by the provincial government of Quebec three times, but they failed to secure a conviction at a jury trial: * The first Quebec case was in 1973. Dr. Morgentaler used the defence of necessity, that abortions were necessary for his patients' life or health. The jury acquitted him. However, Quebec's provincial appeal court reversed the acquittal and replaced it with a conviction and a prison term. * In 1975, a jury in Quebec again found Morgentaler not guilty. However, Morgentaler was already in prison. In 1975, under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, the law of Canada was changed so that courts could not replace a jury acquittal by a conviction (however, appeal courts can still overturn an acquittal and order a new trial). This is called the Morgentaler Amendment. * After Morgentaler was released from prison, Quebec again brought a case against him. A jury acquitted him for the third time.〔('I practically told the jury to find him guilty' - Erin Anderssen, Ingrid Peritz, The Globe and Mail, last updated 2009 March 31, retrieved 2009 July 24. )〕 In 1976, the Parti Québécois was elected and announced that it would not prosecute Dr. Morgentaler, so the repeated prosecutions came to an end.〔(Brian Dickson: A Judge's Journey, p. 14, by Robert J. Sharpe, Kent Roach )〕 Morgentaler challenged the law on two grounds. First, on the grounds that modern abortion techniques were no longer a threat to the woman's health so the dangers that the law was intending to protect no longer applied and consequently the law no longer had a valid criminal purpose required under the federal government's criminal law-making power under section 91(27) of the Constitution Act, 1867. Second, on the grounds that the provisions violated the Bill of Rights. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Morgentaler v R」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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