Concept of Justice, Utilitarianism and Other Modern Approaches

(B) Utilitarianism and notion of justice

Utilitarianism as an ethical political and legal theory is essentially a product of the English mind. It is essentially associated with Jermy Bentham and John Stuart Mill. The theory believes that man is social by nature and is always motivated in life chiefly by the desire to obtain happiness and avoid pain and that the happiness of each individual involves relations with other individuals which necessitates state regulation of mutual relations of men by legislation. Utilitarian philosophy is thus closely associated with practical ethics and practical politics. The object of legislation of the state is to promote and secure the greatest happiness of the greatest number. The criterion of right and wrong of good and bad which the state should apply is found in happiness and not in divine revelation, dictates of conscience or in the abstract principles of reason. It insisted that all political institutions and public offices must be judged by their fruits and not by their ideality, i.e., by their actual effects on the happiness of the people and not by their conformity to the theories of natural rights or absolute justice. Thus this theory is based on the psychological doctrine of hedonism which proceeds on the assumption that man is a sentient being, a creature of feeling and sensibility. The principle of utility or the greatest happiness of the greatest number is the measuring rod by which utilitarian measure and evaluate the public policies and legislative enactments of governments. The state is a necessity for the promotion of the greatest happiness of the greatest number and it is a means, not an end in itself.

Thus, Bentham does not recognize individual's human rights and therefore the idea of justice is merely a subordinate aspect of utility.5 His principle of justice is an implicit part of utility as incorporated in a legislation. It, therefore, seems that his theory of justice is justice according to law as laid down in a legislation. He was not prepared to recognize a general or specific human right to justice because he had no respect for natural rights. In his "Anarchical Fallacies", Bentham critically examined the French Declaration of the Rights of man and dubbed them as simple nonsense rhetorical nonsense, "nonsense upon stilts".6 Every just government, Bentham accordingly would have said, had he been writing the American Declaration of Independence, deprives its authority not from the consent of the governed but from the utility of its acts in promoting the happiness of its subjects. The happiness of the body politic consists in promoting security, substance, abundance and equality and these are the objects which legislator should keep in view while enacting a particular piece of legislation.

John Stuart Mill agreed generally with Bentham's doctrine but he slightly modified it and included qualitative pleasure along with quantitative one. He also insisted that the utilitarian doctrine of happiness was altruistic rather than egoistic, since its ideal was the happiness of all concerned. Within the utilitarians, one of the chief issues of legal philosophy to which Mill suggested an approach different from that of Bentham was the significance that should be attributed to the concept of justice. Bentham had spoken of justice in a deprecatory fashion and had subordinated it completely to the dictates of utility. At one place he observed:

"Sometimes in order the better to conceal the cheat (from their own eyes doubtless as well as from others) they set up a phantom of their own, which they call 'Justice': whose dictates are to modify (which being explained means to oppose) the dictates of benevolence. But justice in the only sense in which it has a meaning, is an imaginary personage feigned for the convenience of discourse, whose dictates are the dictates of utility applied to certain particular cases." 7

Whereas Mill, although taking the position that the standard of justice should be grounded on utility, believed that the origin of the sense of justice must be sought in two sentiments other than utility namely, the impulse of self defense and feeling of sympathy.8 Differently expressed the feeling of justice is the urge to retaliate for a wrong, placed on a generalized basis.9 This feeling rebels against an injury, not solely for personal reasons, but also because it hurts other members of society with whom we sympathize and identify ourselves. The sense of justice, Mill pointed out, encompasses all those moral requirements, which are most essential for the well being of mankind and which human beings therefore regard as sacred and obligatory.10

Apart from the above differences, Bentham's notion of subordination of justice to utility is further evident by the fact that he was opposed to wide judicial discretion to be given to judges to interpret the laws. He counsels that judicial interpretation should have no other role than strict interpretation, not an activist interpretation which gets "rid of the intention clearly and plainly expressed" and substitutes judicial intention for the legislative one.11

Bentham has characterized an activist judge as a charlatan who nourishes the spectators by making sweet and bitter run from the same cup.12 While making a scathing attack of judicial activism, Bentham observed:

"The serpent, it is said can pass his whole body whenever he can introduce his head. As respects legal tyranny, it is this subtle head of which we must take care, least presently we see it followed by all the tortious fields of abuse. 13

Prof. Upendra Baxi is of the opinion that Benthamite condemnation, of a Judge as usurper, who substitutes his will for that of the legislatior as a conscious overtaker who produces and reproduces arbitrariness is clearly addressed to a context where the legislator has, in fact followed Bentham's Counsel of producing clear laws. It is only in such contexts that judicial activism, rightly thus stands condemned.14

Bentham's condemnation of Judges is not confined to mere usurpation of powers but he also condemned the delay and denial of justice on the part of Judges. He addressed them scomfully as "Judges and Co."15 and even advocated the abolition of House of Lords and Monarchy.16

It is, therefore, submitted that although Bentham does not formulate anywhere in the "Theory" a fully fledged justification of judicial review, Prof. Baxi opines that it is embedded in the notion of reciprocal dependence of three powers. "The principle of utility asks us to guard against all forms of usurpation of political (legislative) power.17

Thus, while recapitulating our discussion on Bentham's notion of justice, it is submitted that there is no elaborate and systematic theory of justice given by Bentham. His theory of justice is grounded in the happiness of individual and not that of society, which he never recognized. However, notwithstanding its incomplete and insufficient notion of justice it is submitted that the utilitarian concept of justice is a landmark in the evolution of the theory of justice. Its value lies in starting a rational inquiry with logical and analytical approach to the realization of truth and reality. It also gives objective and scientific approach to the concept of justice, which throws and opens the avenues for reform development and progress even by socialization of its shortcomings, errors and failures.

The great merit of utilitarian approach to justice is that it dissociates justice from theology, mysticism, imagination and speculation which leads to illusions unreal apprehensions and frustrations.