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The purpose of a declaratory relief action is to obtain clarity on a legal issue before any harm or damage has occurred. In a declaratory relief action, the plaintiff typically asks the court to make a declaration regarding the legal rights and obligations of the parties involved in a dispute.
This act was passed to assert the authority of the British government to tax its subjects in North America after it repealed the much-hated Stamp Act.
The purpose of the Declaratory Act of 1766 was to affirm that Great Britain had complete authority to tax its American colonies. Colonists had been upset by the Sugar Act of 1764 and Stamp Act of 1765, which they viewed as taxation without representation.
So, immediately after repealing the Stamp Act, Parliament issued the Declaratory Act. The Declaratory Act stated that Parliament had complete control over the governing of the colonies in “all cases whatsoever.” The British were not willing to give up any control to the colonies.
The colonists ignored the Declaratory Act for the same reasons they ignored the Stamp Act, which the Declaratory Act helped repeal. They claimed their colonial assemblies were the only government bodies with the right to impose taxation and make laws.
What was the purpose of the Declaratory Act? to show the american colonists that the british parliament had a right to tax them, and that they are stronger than them. It was to assert to the colonists that they have authority to make laws, and it was a reaction to the failure of the stamp act.
Declaratory Act. The Declaratory Act, passed by Parliament on the same day the Stamp Act was repealed, stated that Parliament could make laws binding the American colonies "in all cases whatsoever."
The colonists protested until Britain canceled the Stamp Act in 1766. Nevertheless, Parliament insisted that it still held the power to tax the colonists. When it ended the Stamp Act, it passed the Declaratory Act. That law said that Parliament could tax the colonies “in all cases whatsoever.”
The American Colonies Act 1766 (6 Geo. 3. c. 12), commonly known as the Declaratory Act, was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain which accompanied the repeal of the Stamp Act 1765 and the amendment of the Sugar Act.