THE COURT OF APPEAL- Its own decisions (civil) & Criminal division Flashcards
What is the first rule of the CoA’s own decisions?
that decisions by one division of the Court of Appeal will not bind the other division
What rule comes from the case of Young v Bristol Aeroplane 1944?
that decisions made within each devision are normally binding in the Civil division
Briefly, what are the 3 exceptions that the Young v Bristol Aeroplane 1944 case allow ?
1) When there are conflicting decisions in Court of Appeal cases, the court can choose which one to follow and which to reject
2) When there is a decisions of the Supreme Court/HOL which overrules a Court of Appeal decision, the Court of Appeal must follow the decision of the UKSC or HOL
3) Where the decision was made per incuriam (in error) because a relevant Act of Parliament or other regulation had not been considered by the court
In what case was Young V Bristol Aeroplane 1944 confirmed?
Davis v Johnson 1997
Outline the facts of Davis V Johnson 1997
CoA refused to follow a decision made only days earlier by the HOL regarding the interpretation of the Domestic Violence and Matrimonial Proceedings Act 1976
How did the Law Lords to the CoA’s refusal in the case of Davis v Johnson 1997?
Although they agreed with the actual interpretation of the law, ruled that the CoA had to follow the HOL’s previous decisions
When was the last case to challenge the rule in Young V Bristol Aeroplane 1944
Davis v Johnson 1997
What part of the 3 exceptions allowed by the Young Case is frequently used in cases?
decisions made per incurium
In what case did the court refuse to to follow previous decisions because these had been based on a misunderstanding of the County Court rules dealing with procedure fro committing to prison those who break court undertakings
Williams V Fawcett 1986
Outline the facts of Rickards v Rickards 1989
the court refused to follow a case it had decided in 1981 as the previous case had misunderstood the effect of a HOL’s decision
What did Lord Donaldson say about Rickards v Rickards 1989?
that courts can only not follow a previous decision in ‘rare and exceptional cases’
Why was Rickards v Rickards considered a ‘rare and exceptional case’ ?
because the mistake was over the critical point of whether the court had the power to hear that particular case
Can the Criminal division use the exceptions from Young case?
yes
When can the Criminal decisions also refuse to follow a past decision as well as the Young case exceptions?
when the law has been ‘misapplied or misunderstood’
Why are the Criminal division allowed to refuse to follow a past decision when the law has been ‘misapplied or misunderstood’?
because in criminal cases, peoples liberty is invovled