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OPINIO JURIS

Ruwanthika Gunaratne and Public International Law at https://ruwanthikagunaratne.wordpress.com, 2008


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What is opinio juris?
1. Article 38 (1) (b) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice explains customary international law as
comprising of (1) a general practice (2) accepted as law. The general practice or state practice was
discussed in an earlier post. The ICJ, in its jurisprudence, has relied on, and interpreted, Article 38 (1) (b) to
include two elements that assist the Court to determines the existence of an alleged customary international
law state practice and opinio juris (also known as opinio juris sive necessitates). The ICJ explained opinio
juris, in the Nicaragua case, as follows:
[] for a new customary rule to be formed, not only must the acts concerned amount to a settled practice,
but they must be accompanied by opinio juris sive neccessitatis. Either the States taking such action or
other States in a position to react to it, must have behaved so that their conduct is evidence of a belief that
the practice is rendered obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring it. The need for such belief..the
subjective element, is implicit in the very notion of opinio juris sive neccessitatis.
2. In the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases, the Court examined 15 cases where States had delimited their
boundaries using the equidistance method, after the Convention came into force. The court concluded, even
if there were some State practice in favour of the equidistance principle the court could not deduct the
necessary opinio juris. The North Sea Continental Shelf Cases confirmed that both State practice (the
objective element) and opinio juris (the subjective element) are essential pre-requisites for the formation of a
customary law rule.
3. State practice is often seen as a reflection of opinio juris. In the Asylum case, the court held that the
relevant practice must be consistent and uniform to show an expression of a right belonging to one state and
a duty incumbent on another. The court held that Columbia did not prove the existence of a regional custom
because it failed to prove consistent and uniform usage of the alleged custom by relevant States. The
fluctuations and contradictions in State practice did not allow for the uniform usage ( see also Nicaragua
case, p. 98). The court held in the Asylum case:
The Party which relies on a custom of this kind must prove that this custom is established in such a manner
that it has become binding on the other Party (that) it is in accordance with a (1) constant and uniform
usage (2) practiced by the States in question, and that this usage is (3) the expression of a right appertaining

to the State granting asylum (Columbia) and (4) a duty incumbent on the territorial State (in this case, Peru).
This follows from Article 38 of the Statute of the Court, which refers to international custom as evidence of a
general practice accepted as law(text in brackets added).
4. The fact that a state undertakes a particular because of political expediency and not because of a belief
that the said practice is binding on the State by way of a legal obligation (opinio juris) is detrimental to the
formation of a customary law. In the Asylum case the Court said: considerations of convenience or political
expediency seemed to have prompted the territorial State to recognise asylum without such a decision being
dictated by any feeling of legal obligation.(see also North Sea Continental Shelf Cases and Lotus Case).
5. Opinio juris is reflected in acts of states (Nicaragua Case) or in omissions (Lotus case) in so far as those
acts or omissions are done following a belief that the said State is obligated by law to act or refrain from
acting in a particular way. In the Lotus case, France alleged that jurisdictional questions on collision cases are
rarely heard in criminal cases because States tend to prosecute only before the flag State. France argued
that this absence of prosecutions points to a positive rule in customary law on collisions. The Court held that
this,
would merely show that States had often, in practice, abstained from instituting criminal proceedings, and
not that they recognized themselves as being obliged to do so; for only if such abstention were based on
their being conscious of having a duty to abstain would it be possible to speak of an international custom.
The alleged fact does not allow one to infer that States have been conscious of having such a duty; on the
other hand, as will presently be seen, there are other circumstances calculated to show that the contrary is
true.
6.In the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases, the ICJ explained the difference between customs (i.e. habits)
and customary law:
Not only must the acts concerned amount to a settled practice, but they must also be such, or be carried
out in such a way, as to be evidence of a belief that this practice is rendered obligatory by the existence of a
rule of law requiring it. The need for such a belief, i.e, the existence of a subjective element, is implicit in the
very notion of the opinio juris sive necessitatis. The States concerned must therefore feel that they are
conforming to what amounts to a legal obligation. The frequency, or even habitual character of the acts is
not in itself enough. There are many international acts, e.g., in the field of ceremonial and protocol, which
are performed almost invariably, but which are motivated only by considerations of courtesy, convenience or
tradition, and not by any sense of legal duty.
7. If a state acts in a particular way using its discretion, then, too, the relevant opinio juris is lacking. In the
Rights of Passage case, the ICJ held:
It would thus appear that, during the British and post-British periods, Portuguese armed forces and armed
police did not pass between Daman and the enclaves as of right and that, after 1878, such passage could
only take place with previous authorization by the British and later by India, accorded either under a
reciprocal arrangement already agreed to, or in individual cases. Having regard to the special circumstances

of the case, this necessity for authorization before passage could take place constitutes, in the view of the
Court, a negation of passage as of right. The practice predicates that the territorial sovereign had
the discretionary power to withdraw or to refuse permission. It is argued that permission was always granted,
but this does not, in the opinion of the Court, affect the legal position. There is nothing in the record to show
that grant of permission was incumbent on the British or on India as an obligation.

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