The act meant that those ordinarily in fear of being sent to
debtors' prison could emerge from hiding on Sundays; one case hinged on whether the clock had struck midnight before the debtor's arrest. In the nineteenth century, Sabbatarians advocated use of the act to prevent playing of sports on Sundays, which was common in rural areas. From 1872,
Royal Irish Constabulary policy was to permit Sunday sports events unless they were likely to lead to a
breach of the peace. The
Statute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878 repealed sections 6 and 11, and section 9 "so far as it relates to the appropriation of penalties". The
Statute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1879 repealed section 5 and part of section 3 so far as it relates to the appropriation of penalties. Some acts of the
Parliament of Northern Ireland and associated
secondary legislation allow the effecting of legal documents "notwithstanding anything in section 7 of the Sunday Observance Act (Ireland) 1695". In the
Republic of Ireland, the act was invoked in 1951 to strike out a drunk driving charge where the
Peace Commissioner's
remand order was made on a Sunday, whereas in 1964 a
summons issued on a Sunday was ruled valid despite the 1695 act. The act was repealed in the Republic by the
Criminal Law Act 1997. In the 1990s the act remained in force and was utilised by
Northern Ireland district councils as grounds to close parks and
leisure centres on Sundays. An
adjournment debate in the
House of Commons of the United Kingdom led by the
Social Democratic and Labour Party's
Seamus Mallon in 1995 criticised the act and requested it be repealed. The
Northern Ireland Office minister
Malcolm Moss stated that they would look into amending some of the provisions of the act; his legal advice was that leisure centres open on Sunday "could technically be in breach" of the act but that "the chances of a successful prosecution ... are considered remote". Section 7 has been affirmed as valid by the
Police Service of Northern Ireland's Human Rights legal advisor and still remains in force in Northern Ireland which prevents the PSNI issuing warrants on Sunday. ==See also==