Semester 2 - Judicial Review Flashcards
CCSU v Minister for Civil Service (GCHQ) [1985] AC 374
judicial review grounds - procedural impropriety
Wider question flowing from the decision:
‘The reason normally given by the judiciary for avoiding engaging with the royal prerogative when it relates to national security and similar concerns is that such political, policy-related matters are properly part of the legitimate function of the executive;’
Some interpretations of the separation of powers fail to consider its dependence on the wider constitutional context. The rule of law mandates the lawful exercise of power, often necessitating scrutiny of decisions, complicating non-justiciability rulings. Parliament isn’t always apt to scrutinize executive activity (consider Miller [2019]), thus the judiciary may be the only other capable branch. Can the rule of law and the separation of powers principles be reconciled considering this?
On the first issue, the reviewability of the royal prerogative, all of their Lordships were agreed that the particular type of prerogative in question was reviewable. Lords Fraser (at 398) and Brightman (at 424) did not speculate about the reviewability of all types of prerogative power. Conversely, Lords Scarman (at 407), Diplock (at 410), and Roskill (at 417) agreed that the prerogative power in general is subject to judicial control.
What about the justicability of the issue in question ⇒ they agreed that the CCSU appeal ought to be disissed because they were issues of national security involved. Lord Scarman observed that this was not an ‘abdication of the judicial function’, but was instead ‘a common sense limitation recognised by the judges as to what is justiciable’ (at 406–7). For Lord Diplock, the non-justiciability of national security issues arose from the different functions of the executive and the judiciary, reasoning that ‘the judicial process is totally inept to deal with the sort of problems which [national security] involves’ (at 412).
Minister for the Civil Service, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher exercised the royal prerogative through an Order in council to change the conditions of service for staff at Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ). In particular, civil servants based at GCHQ would no longer be permitted to be members of a trade union. The announcement before the House of Commons was the first time the unions heard of the change in policy, contrary to an established history of consultation with the Council of Civil Service Unions (CCSU) (see Lord Fraser, at 596).
R v Home Secretary, ex parte Zamir [1980] AC 930.
old approach to JR - collateral questions doctrine
the determination as to whether an immigrant was an “illegal entrant” or not was not jurisdictional.
distinguish ex parte Khawaja
R v Home Secretary, ex parte Khawaja [1984] AC 74
JR
the courts decided who could be classified as an illegal entrant
Anisminic v Foreign Compensation Commission [1969] 2 AC 147
new approach to JR - error of law
also see the privacy international case.
= any error of law can be nullified under judicial review
Anisminic won the case. The majority in the HoL held that:
- The FCC had made a Jurisdictional error
- The FCC determination was in fact no determination at all but only a purported determination
- The ouster clause did not preclude the courts from correcting jurisdictional errors
Lord Morris’s dissent (at 189):
*‘[The Commissioners] were at the very heart of their duty, their task and their jurisdiction. It cannot be that their necessary duty of deciding as to the meaning [of the eligibility criteria] would be or could be followed by the result that if they took one view they would be within jurisdiction and if they took another view they would be without’
=> It was not clear from the judgment why the issue was jurisdictional.
A British company with property in Egypt (4.4 million). The property was sequestrated by the Egyptian govt during the Suez Crisis (1956)
- Anisminic recieved 500, 000
- The Egyptian got sold the prop to TEDO an Egyptian organization
- Later, Egypt made a grant of 27, 5 million to the UK govt to compensate property owners.
- The Foreign Compensation Commission was established to allocate compensation in such cases. The FC Act 1950 contained eligibility criteria (the owner or successor in title had to be British) => FCC decided that Anisminic was ineligible
- Anisminic sought judicial review claiming that the FCC had misinterpreted the eligibility criteria BUT ouster clause (= privative, preclusive clause) in FCC Act 1950, s 4(4) :
*‘The determination by the Commission of any application made to them under this Act shall not be called in question in any court of law.’
R v Hull University Visitor, ex parte Page [1993] AC 682 (HL), 702
error of law - exception (anismininc)
The principle in Anisminic, that any error of law is ultra vires, does not apply to decisions of University visitors
Lord Browne-Wilkinson:
‘Therefore…in general any error of law made by an administrative tribunal or inferior court in reaching its decision can be quashed for error of law’: p. 701C
However, In contrast to tribunals and inferior courts that apply the general law of the law, under which any error of law will be deemed ultra vires, a visitor applies ‘a peculiar, domestic law of which he is the sole arbiter and of which the courts have no cognisance’, and an error under such domestic law is not an error of the general law that is amenable to review: p. 702C
E v Home Secretary [2004] EWCA Civ 49
error of fact (exceptions) - judicial review -
= the court will quash if there’s an error of fact that gives rise to unfairness and is ‘uncontentious and objectively justifiable’
The first applicant, E, an Egyptian national, had tried to claim asylum in the UK
Being a sympathiser of the Muslim Brotherhood group, he feared persecution if sent back to Egypt
After his asylum claim was refused by the Home Secretary, he appealed to the Adjudicator and then Immigration Appeal Tribunal (IAT), where his appeal was unsuccessful
The second applicant, R, also a foreign national seeking asylum, also had his appeal dismissed
E and R sought to rely on new evidence suggesting that they would be at risk of persecution or torture if sent back to their home countries
The applicants both appealed against the IAT’s decision not to grant permission to appeal
R (A) v Croydon LBC [2009] UKSC 8
errors of fact (exceptions)
= ‘jurisdictional facts’ can be corrected by the courts even if not objectively verifiable
Lady Hale:
Deciding what a child is treated is a ‘jurisdictional fact’ for the courts to determine, but whether this child is in need is to be determined by the local authorities as it ‘requires a number of different value judgments’.
= The question whether an individual is a child for the purpose of the Children Act 1989 is a precedent fact that determines the jurisdiction of the decision maker, and is subject to review by the court
The Children Act 1989 s20(1):
‘Every local authority shall provide accommodation for any child in need within their area who appears to them to require accommodation’
(What is a child? What does ‘in need mean’?)
Liversidge v Anderson [1942] AC 206
discretionary powers
The HoL (4:1) held that it was subjective. The court would not investigate whether the SoS really did have reasonable cause to believe.
Famous dissent from Lord Atkin:
‘I view with apprehension the attitude of judges who … show themselves more executive minded than the executive. … In this country, amid the clash of arms, the laws are not silent. They may be changed, but they speak the same language in war as in peace.’
Home secretary used emergency powers in WWII=> regulation 18B, under the Defence of the Realm Act
*‘If the Secretary of State has reasonable cause to believe any person to be of hostile origin or association … he may make an order against that person directing that he be detained.’ *
Is discretion subjective or objective? (for the Secretary of State to decide according to what he thinks or for the courts to test whether there actually was a reasonable cause to believe)
Padfields v Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [1968] AC 997
discretionary powers - control- wide ultra vires - duty to give reasons
= Padfield is also a good example of another important public law principle: the expectation that reasons should be given, particularly when refusing to exercise a power in response to a legitimate request. The failure to provide reasons may, the Court indicated, attract the negative inference that there are no good reasons to give.
= Padfield suggests that executive discretion granted by statute is defined by Parliament’s intention in the enacting legislation
= Do you think that the courts’ apparent reliance on common law principles in place of statutory interpretation is constitutionally justifiable?
The HoL (4:1) held that Minister had taken into account irrelevant considerations + failed to act for a proper purpose.
Lord Reid:
*‘Parliament must have conferred the discretion with the intention that it should be used to promote the policy and objects of the Act, the policy and objects of the Act must be determined by construing the Act as a whole and construction is always a matter of law for the court.’ *
= the court turned that discretionary power into a duty.
See Lord Morris’s dissent: *
‘The language here is, in my view, purely permissive. The Minister is endowed with discretionary powers. … If the respondent [i.e., the Minister] proceeded properly to exercise his judgment then, in my view, it is no part of the duty of any court to act as a Court of Appeal from his decision or to express any opinion as to whether it was wise or unwise.’ *
Farmers complained abt the Ministers of Agriculture management of a milk marketing scheme.
The Agriculture Marketing Act 1959: the Minister may refer a complaint to a committee of investigation *‘if the Minister in any case so directs’. *
If the committee recommended changes, the Minister could amend the scheme *‘if he thinks fit to do so’ *
The Minister refused to refer the complaint to the committee and Padfield sought judicial review.
Pergau Dam Case: R v Foreign Secretary, ex parte World Development Movement [1995] 1 WLR 386
common law constraints on discretion - purposive interpretation
The Court quashed the foreign secretary’s decision
Rose LJ:
*‘[I]t is, as it seems to me, a matter for the courts and not for the Secretary of State to determine whether, on the evidence before the court, the particular conduct was, or was not, within the statutory purpose.’ *
- The statutory power in s 1(1) of the Act to provide assistance for the purpose of promoting development did not include economically ‘unsound developmental purposes’.
=>Applying the objective approach, the statutory power in s 1(1) of the Act to provide assistance for the purpose of promoting development did not include economically unsound developmental purposes.
=> though the Secretary of State was entitled when making decisions whether to grant assistance under the Act to take into account political and economic considerations, on the evidence, no developmental promotion purpose within s.1 existed at the time the financial agreement was signed and the Secretary of State’s decision was therefore unlawfu
*Margaret Thatcher reached an aid-for-arms deal with Malaysia.
*In return for financial assistance from the UK, Malaysia would buy British fighter aircraft.
*In 1993, the Foreign Secretary committed £234 million to build the Pergau dam.
*The National Audit Office, among others, considered the UK’s funding of the dam to be a waste of money. WDM sought judicial review.
The Overseas Development and Co-operation Act 1980, s 1:
*‘The Secretary of State shall have power, for the purpose of promoting the development or maintaining the economy of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, or the welfare of its people, to furnish any person or body with assistance, whether financial, or of any other nature.’ *
R (Corner House Research) v Director of the Serious Fraud Office[2008] UKHL 60, [2009] 1 AC 756 ( outside the lawful limits of discretion)
discretionary powers - common law constraints on discretion
But it is overturned by a unanimous house of Lords.
D had been victim of threats and had reluctantly given up on the investigation
Lord Bingham: The court should ask ‘whether, in deciding that the public interest in pursuing an important investigation into alleged bribery was outweighed by the public interest in protecting the lives of British citizens, the Director made a decision outside the lawful bounds of the discretion entrusted to him by Parliament.’
Lady Hale: ‘The only question is whether it was lawful for [the Director] to take [the threat and national security risk] into account. … Put like this, it is difficult to reach any other conclusion than that it was indeed lawful for him to take this into account.’
= It was for the director to balance the various relevant considerations.
D had been investigating allegations that B had made corrupt payments in connection with a contract for military aircraft between the United Kingdom government and Saudi Arabia. D sought access to bank accounts in Switzerland. An explicit threat was then made by an official of Saudi Arabia that if the investigation continued, Saudi Arabia would withdraw from counter-terrorism co-operation arrangements with the UK and would not enter into the contract. D had a number of meetings with the ambassador to Saudi Arabia, who told him that “British lives on British streets” would be at risk if Saudi Arabia carried out its threat. D decided that continuing to investigate B would not be in the public interest. The respondent public interest organisations (C) applied for judicial review of D’s decision, and the judge concluded that D’s decision had been unlawful as he had submitted to a threat, contrary to the rule of law, and had not taken sufficient steps to divert the threat.
D submitted that his decision was lawful and in accordance with the Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions 1997 (OECD) art.5, but maintained that even if it had not been in accordance with art.5, he would still have made the same decision to protect the lives of British people. CH submitted that D had interpreted art.5 incorrectly and that his decision should be quashed. The Divisional Court quashed his decision (Sir alan Moses) relies on the rule of law:
*‘The rationale for the court’s intervention is its responsibility to protect the rule of law. … The surrender of a public authority to a threat or pressure undermines the rule of law.’ *
*‘…submission to a threat is lawful only when it is demonstrated that there was no alternative open to the decision-maker.’ *
- The Director had not independently exercised the powers under the 1987 Act and
- The Director had not sufficiently appreciated the damage to the rule of law by submitting to the threat
- The Director can only submit to such threats if left with no other choice
Associated Picture House v Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KB 223
JR on the grounds of illegality (ultra vires) - irratioanlity
Defined the Wednesbury unreasonableness
Greene MR Relied on Harman v Butt (a wartime case). Arguably did not pay attention to the context of this case, which was different.
* The local authority’s decision was reasonable and took into account relevant considerations
Lord Greene :
“The court is entitled to investigate the action of the local authority with a view to seeing whether they have taken into account matters which they ought not to take into account, or, conversely, have refused to take into account or neglected to take into account matters which they ought to take into account. Once that question is answered in favour of the local authority, it may be still possible to say that, although the local authority have kept within the four corners of the matters which they ought to consider, they have nevertheless come to a conclusion so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could ever have come to it’
In the present case, the defendants imposed the following condition in their licence:
Sunday entertainments act 1932 s 1(1) : local authorities may allow cinemas to open on Sundays, ‘subject to such conditions as the authority thinks fit to impose.’
WC gave the permission under condition that no children 15- were to be allowed on the premises even accompanied by an adult on Sundays
The cinema sought a declaration that the condition was unlawful bc it was unreasonable.
Wheeler v Leicester City Council
judicial review - irrationality
=> not an isolated example of the court’s more interventionist approach
HoL = held that the council acted unlawfully ( a badly reasoned judgment ?)
Roskill LJ:
* Procedural impropriety (even though this had not been argued by the club)
* Wednesbury unreasonable (even though accepted the council’s argument)
Lord Templeman;
Unlawful bc it punished the club when they haven’t done nothing wrong
Members of the rugby club wanted to go on a tour in South Africa. The Labour-controlled Leicester City Council asked the club to stop its members to go on tour. The club condemns apartheid but insists taht there was reasonable disagreement over the best way to oppose iy.
The council suspended the club’s use of municipal ground, (on the grounds of the race relations Act 1976, s 71 = imposes a duty to promote good races relations)
Wheeler sought JR.
Court of appeal
- The majority reasoned along Wednesbury lines to conclude that the council’s decision was lawful—i.e., it was not so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could have come to it.
- The majority emphasised the statutory duty to promote race relations and the ethnic mix of the community
Browne-Wilkinson LJ dissented.
- The council’s decision was not ‘perverse’, but…
- The ban unjustifiably infringed the fundamental right to free speech and conscience.
- Browne-Wiklinson LJ did not cite any authority for the existence of this right in English law.
- The reliance on fundamental rights in this case was an early sign of later common-law developments.
Education secretary v Tameside MBC [1977] AC 1014
judicial review - irrationality
HoL = the SoS decision was unlawful bc the council’s action was not so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could have come to it.
Lord Diplock
*‘The very concept of administrative discretion involves a right to choose between more than one possible course of action upon which there is room for reasonable people to hold differing opinions as to which is to be preferred.’ *
*‘[T]he question for the court is, did the Secretary of State ask himself the right question and take reasonable steps to acquaint himself with the relevant information to enable him to answer it correctly.’ *
= allows the choice for the local authority but not to the central (Labour) govt => Parodoxical
=> decision described as an overtly political one
The (Labour) govt ordered a (Conservative) local education authority to change a school from a selective grammar into a comprehensive.
Education Act 1944, s 68 empowered the Secretary of State to intervene if he was ‘satisfied… that any local education authority… have acted or are proposing to act unreasonably’
‘Fares Fair’ case : Bromley London Borough Council v Greater London Council [1983] 1 AC 768
judicial review - irrationality
The HoL: held that the GCL had acted unlawfully
- Their Lordships (except for Lord Keith) held that the GLC ‘fiduciary duty to taxpayers’
- Is it the judiciary’s place to make judgments abt public spendings ?
=> narrow conception of reasonableness
(Labour) GLC implemented a manifesto commitment to cut fares on the Ldn underground – a cost met through rates (local govt taxes)
Puhlhofer v Hillington London Borough Council [1986] AC 484
judicial restraint - irrationality
The HoL judgement (Lord Brightman) = upheld the judgment of the CA
- ‘I am troubled at the prolific use of judicial review for the purpose of challenging the performance by local authorities of their functions under the [Housing (Homeless Persons) Act 1977].’
- The courts should only intervene in the discretionary judgments of public bodies if they act ‘perversely’.
- ‘Parliament plainly, and wisely, placed no qualifying adjective before the word “accommodation”. … The word “appropriate” or “reasonable” is not to be imported.’
Married couple with two children lived in one room at a guesthouse, with no cooking facilities, no meals
They applied to the local authority for housing under the Housing (Homeless Person Act 1977).
Application refused on the grounds that they weren’t homeless:
Divisional Court (won) but overruled by the CA
Rotherham MBC Case
see pptx
R v Home Secretary, ex parte Simms [1999] UKHL 33, [2000] 2 AC 115
judicial review - the legality principle
This case laid down the principle of legality, which states that common law fundamental rights cannot be overridden by general or ambiguous words in Acts of Parliament
Thus, fundamental rights can only be overridden expressly, not impliedly, by Acts of Parliament
appeal allowed
The Home Secretary placed a blanket ban on prisoners giving interviews to journalists, purportedly pursuant to Rule 33 of the Prison Rules 1964, a piece of subordinate legislation
Simms and another appellant (both life sentence prisoners) brought forward a judicial review proceeding against the Home Secretary
The appellants argued that this infringed on their right to free speech in common law.
Ex Parte Bugdaycay
judicial review - legality pincipe - Fundamental human rights
The HoL held that => the refusal of the HS unlawful
=> When a value of fundamental importance, such as right to life, is interfered with, more will be required to justify the administrative decision.
Bugdaycay => An Asylum seeker sought JR of the Home Secretary’s refusal. He argued that if he returned to Kenya, he would be removed to Uganda and would be killed.
Brind
Leech
R (UNISON) v Lord Chancellor
judicial review- fundamental rights
see semester 1
The UKSC : unanimously held that the fees were unlawful
Decided primarily on common law grounds and constitutional right of access to justice.
The degree of intrusion in this constitutional right was greater than was justified by the legitimate objectives (i.e., transferring cost to users, incentivizing earlier settlement, disincentivizing weak or vexations claims).
UNISON sought JR bc employment tribunal fees were restricting access to justice
R (B) v Cambridge Health Authority [1995] EWCA Civ 43
judicial review - fundamental human rights
The Court of Appeal overturned the decision; did not even mention human rights
The father of a seriously ill girl sought JR of the reasonableness of the heath authority’s decision to refuse expensive experimental treatment.
In the Divisional Court, Sir John Laws held that the authority had acted irrationally:
‘Where a public body enjoyed a discretion whose exercise might infringe a fundamental right, such as the right to life, it should not be permitted to perpetuate any such infringement unless it could show substantial objective justification for doing so on public interest grounds.’
=> When there is a fundamental right involved, the Wednesbury threshold is reduced
R v Ministry of Defence, ex p. Smith [1996] QB 517
judicial review - fundamental human rights
The CA : All 3 judges accepted Pannick’s submission. But held that the MoD’s decision was within the range of reasonable responses.
=> The Wednesbury is lower in HR cases but it is still a high threshold.
=> However, did the Court of Appeal fail to apply the variable (proportionality-style) Wednesbury test, which required greater justification for the MoD’s policy to be lawful?
MoD’s policy to ban homosexuals in the armed forces.
David Pannick QC’s submission => presents a test in the court of appeal.
‘The court may not interfere with the exercise of an administrative discretion on substantive grounds save where the court is satisfied that the decision is unreasonable in the sense that it is beyond the range of responses open to a reasonable decision-maker. But in judging whether the decision-maker has exceeded this margin of appreciation the human rights context is important. The more substantial the interference with human rights, the more the court will require by way of justification before it is satisfied that the decision is reasonable.’
Smith and Grady v UK
fundamental human rights
=> wins the case
The judgment of the ECHR:
Breach of article 8 of the ECHR (private life)
Breach of article 13 ECHR (‘everyone whose rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before national authority’)
Modified Wednebury was inadequate for the protection of rights protected by the ECHR.
smith goes to the ECHR
R (Daly) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001] 2 AC 532
fundamental human rights - proportionality vs irrationality
= appeal allowed, the policy infringed upon D’ common law righst
At [27], Lord Steyn argued that the intensity of review is greater under proportionality as it rquires to assess the balance, not merely the reasonableness.
Even the heightened scrutiny test applied in Smith is insufficient to protect human rights as it fails to consider weight and balance, following Smith and Grady v UK
However, he was keen to stress at [28] that proportionality review does not amount to a merits review by the court, that its intensity will depend on context, stating that “[i]n law context is everything.”
The Home Secretary issued a document requiring prisoners to be removed from their cells during routine searches, including examination of legal correspondence on the suspicion that the contents are criminal
Daly applied for judicial review on the basis that these searches breached his common law right that the confidentiality of privileged legal correspondence
Note that this case did not in fact involve Convention rights, has the HRA had not been in effect at the time of the facts of this case, thus the comments on proportionality were strictly obiter.
Pham [2015] UKSC 19; Keyu v Foreign Secretary [2015] UKSC 69.
fundamental rights - proportionality test
= the court supported teh view of proportionality becoming a free-standing ground of review
Huang v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] UKHL 11
proportionality - fundamental human rights
The correct test for human rights matters is proportionality, not Wednesbury or heightened scrutiny
An additional 4th limb was added the the 3 limb de Freitas test for proportionality
Giving weight to the assessment of decision makers does not amount to deference, but rather a recognition that the decision maker might have some specialised knowledge to aid its assessment
Huang was a Chinese citizen who had a daughter, son-in-law and two grandsons who were British citizens living in the UK.
H applied for indefinite leave to remain as a dependant on her daughter
The Secretary of State refused on the grounds that H did not qualify under the Statement of Changes in Immigration Rules (1994) (HC 395), such as the requirement of being 65 or over.
Under s65 Immigration and Asylum Act 1999, H appealed to an adjudicator on the grounds that H’s removal would infringe article 8 ECHR – the right to family life.
The adjudicator granted H’s claim, but the Immigration Appeal Tribunal denied it on appeal it applied Wednesbury review and thought that it should defer to the government
H appealed to the Court of Appeal, which applied proportionality testing and held that insufficient weight had been accorded to article 8
The Home Secretary appealed to the House of Lords
British Oxygen Co Ltd v Minister of Technology [1971] AC 610
unlawfully fettering discretion ) illegality
The House of Lords accepted that the department was entitled to make a rule or policy, if it was prepared to listen to arguments for the exercise of individual discretion. On the facts, it was entitled to refuse the application.
Appeal dismissed
s13 Industrial Placements Act gave the Minister of Technology discretionary power to issue grants to industrial plants
The Minister made a policy of not reimbursing products under £25
British Oxygen Co applied for grants for their gas cylinders which cost £20 each; their application was refused
British Oxygen Co applied for judicial review on the grounds that it was unreasonable to disregard the application simply because the cylinders were under £25 each
R v Monopolies and Mergers Commission, ex parte South Yorkshire Transport [1993] 1 WLR 23
= The court does not interfere with the decision of a public body based on an interpretation of legislation unless the interpretation was irrational.
The MMC decided that a merger of bus companies in the South Yorkshire area might operate contrary to the public interest, considering that the reference area is ‘a substantial part of the United Kingdom’ under s64(3) of the Fair Trading Act 1973
The company applied for judicial review, questioning the jurisdiction of the MMC
The MMC interpreted ‘substantial’ as ‘something real or important as distinct from something merely nominal’ The MMC argued that the relevant area in this case contained important features
The Court of Appeal found for the applicant, and the MMC appealed to the House of Lords