Surprised you make any distinction...The Dublin Metropolitan area is governed entirely by British laws....R.I.C.
http://irserver.ucd.ie/bitstream/handle/10197/6055/British_Imperial_Statutes_and_Irish_Law.pdf?sequence=1Think it's page 8 or 9 Rats,,,,if you could be bothered. All our barristers are called to the B.A.R....British Accreditation Registry. The imperial statutes have been supplanted in the main by E,U. imbued directives. Dublin Castle remains the seat of all power for the Irish within the Empire. Solicitors have asked for sittings of certain courts outside the D.M.A. on several occasions, but I'm sure it has never happened.
The nature of the
relationship between Irish law and British Imperial law was never clarified in the
negotiations that preceded the creation of the 1921 Treaty. This issue finally came to the
fore in the months that followed the drafting of the Constitution of the Irish Free State in
1922. It soon became clear that consideration of this matter could no longer be avoided
when the British and Irish referred the draft Constitution to their respective parliaments.
In early 1922 it became clear that the Constitution of the Irish Free State
would have to be enacted in parallel statutes passed by the Imperial parliament at
Westminster and by the Irish house of representatives, known as ‘Dáil Éireann’, sitting as
a special ‘constituent assembly’. At this juncture the British and Irish governments were
forced to consider two related issues. The first issue concerned the nature of the
relationship between Irish law and existing Imperial legislation, in other words Imperial
statutes passed before 1922. The second issue concerned the nature of the relationship
between Irish law and future Imperial statutes that would be passed after 1922. The
second issue, with its obvious implications for Irish legislative sovereignty, attracted most
attention during the creation of the Constitution of the Irish Free State. Nevertheless the
first issue, which is the primary focus of this article, was not ignored in 1922.
In January 1922, just weeks after the signature of the 1921 Treaty, a special
British committee led by the attorney general came to the conclusion that the creation of
9
the Irish Free State would have to involve a significant body of Imperial statutes being
incorporated into Irish law.13 A definite agreem