Resurrecting the Rule of Law In Liberia
Maine Law Review
Volume 60
Number 2 Symposium -- Nation-Building: A Legal
Architecture?
Article 19
June 2008
Resurrecting the Rule of Law In Liberia
Jim Dube
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Jim Dube, Resurrecting the Rule of Law In Liberia, 60 Me. L. Rev. 575 (2008).
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Dube: Resurrecting the Rule of Law in Liberia
RESURRECTING THE RULE OF LAW IN LIBERIA
Jim Dube
I. INTRODUCTION
II. A BRIEF LEGAL HISTORY
III. THE BRYANT CASE
IV. CONCLUSION
Published by University of Maine School of Law Digital Commons, 2008
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Maine Law Review, Vol. 60, No. 2 [2008], Art. 19
576
MAINE LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 60:2
RESURRECTING THE RULE OF LAW IN LIBERIA
Jim Dube*
I. INTRODUCTION
The rule of law is more than a legal concept. It encompasses more than an
established set of rules and legal institutions. In the case of Liberia, there can be no
rule of law without the commitment of those relatively few people who administer
those rules on behalf of a post-conflict state that has endured twenty-five years of civil
war and exploitation. This Essay seeks to prove that existing legal architecture and
institutions in a post-conflict state matter less to the rule of law than does the character
of the people who run the legal system. The Essay does not suggest that legal rules
are, or should be, subordinate to personality in the orderly functioning of a postconflict society. However, it concludes that emphasis on creating new laws to address
the perceived causes of state failure will ultimately accomplish little if the judges and
lawyers who operate the legal system are not genuinely committed to the rule of law.
This argument is developed by outlining, in very broad terms, the pre-conflict
Liberian legal system and how it failed to serve as a meaningful bulwark against
warlord predators. Then, the Essay focuses on a particular case, decided by Liberia’s
Supreme Court on August 23, 2007,1 involving Liberia’s former head of state, Charles
Gyude Bryant, who served as chairman of the National Transitional Government of
Liberia (NTGL) from October 2003 until the inauguration of Liberia’s current
President, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, on January 16, 2006. The Bryant case provides an
example of how the presidential immunity provision in Liberia’s Constitution was
invoked in an attempt to trump the rule of law with the rule of impunity, and how the
Supreme Court of Liberia’s judgment offers hope for a better day in Liberia’s legal
future, notwithstanding the divided opinion of the Court.
II. A BRIEF LEGAL HISTORY
Liberia came into being in July 1847, with a U.S.-style constitution.2 The fact that
Liberia looked to the United States in designing its legal system was only natural.
Those who were in control of Liberia’s geography at the time were freed slaves from
the United States who were transplanted by organizations such as the American
Colonization Society (ACS).3 These organizations were sponsored by the southern
* Jim Dube is a partner in the Canadian law firm of Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP. In February
2007, and again during April and May 2007, with the financial support of his law firm, he spent time in
Liberia as a volunteer lawyer for International Senior Lawyers Project. While there, he worked primarily
with Liberia’s Solicitor General, Tiawan Gongloe, and with the then Minister of Justice, Frances JohnsonMorris. Through this experience, he discovered that these dedicated Liberian lawyers have been entrusted
with the task of resurrecting the rule of law in Liberia’s post-conflict society.
1. Bryant v. Liberia, [2007] __ L.L.R. __ (Liber.) (slip opinion on file with author).
2. See generally CONSTITUTION (1847) (Liber.).
3. See JEREMY I. LEVITT, THE EVOLUTION OF DEADLY CONFLICT IN LIBERIA 32-33 (2005); see also
LESTER S. HYMAN, UNITED STATES POLICY TOWARDS LIBERIA1822 TO 2003: UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES?
3-5 (2003).
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aristocracy in the United States as a means to relocate freed slaves whose notions of
freedom were potentially contagious in the antebellum southern United States.4 The
freed American slaves were new settlers in the West African territory, now known as
Liberia, which was then occupied by various indigenous groups. These settlers
became known as the Americo-Liberians.
The 1847 Liberian Constitution, like its U.S. model, established three independent
branches of government: executive, legislative, and judicial.5 It called for an elected
president6 and an elected bi-cameral legislature, which was divided into a House of
Representatives and a Senate.7 It provided for a judiciary, with the Supreme Court of
Liberia at its pinnacle,8 consisting of the Chief Justice and four Associate Justices.
Below the Supreme Court were the Circuit Courts and the Magistrates Courts for each
of Liberia’s counties.9 Much of Liberia’s law was codified. To this day, the fivevolume Liberian Codes Revised is the bedrock text upon which Liberian lawyers rely.
Its source was primarily American common law.10
As in the United States, case precedent also served as an evolutionary mechanism
for the law to develop. Decisions of the Supreme Court are binding on lower courts.
The Liberian Law Reports disseminates important case law to judges and practitioners.
To an outside observer, it would appear that pre-conflict Liberia had a strong legal
architecture: codified law enacted by an elected legislature, construed by a hierarchical
court system, and guided by precedent; publication of case law, together with
publication of statutes enacted by the House of Representatives and the Senate; a
functioning national bar association; and the education of law students at the Louis
Arthur Grimes School of Law.
Yet, behind this legal structure, the reality was that most Liberians were excluded
from participation in their government and in their court system. The AmericoLiberian settlers and their descendants used the law to restrict voting rights to property
owners.11 Since indigenous groups, who accounted for more than ninety percent of the
population, had no concept of the private ownership of property, they did not get to
vote.12 From 1847 through 1980, the Americo-Liberian governing class kept tight
control over the instruments of government and the economy.13
The collapse of the Liberian state and the onset of civil war came suddenly and
violently on April 12, 1980, when Master Sergeant Sam (...truncated)