Judicial Review and The Rule of Law: Who Is in Control?
Judicial Review and The Rule of Law: Who Is in Control?
Judicial Review
and the Rule of Law
Who is in Control?
Amy Street
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND
THE RULE OF LAW
WHO IS IN CONTROL?
Amy Street
2 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Contents
Codified constitution 50
Lord Chancellors oath and duties 51
Conclusion 53
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 5
Acknowledgements
Grateful thanks to Richard Gordon QC for invaluable support
and The Constitution Society for commissioning this paper.
6 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Introduction
Summary
This report steps back from the controversy of the current
proposals to reform judicial review and explores the wider
constitutional context. It seeks to generate and contribute to
wider debate about the potential constitutional consequences.
Such debate has relevance for informed decisions by the
government and Parliament.
8 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Executive summary
5 Lord Bingham referred to the thin and thick definitions: Bingham, Tom, The
Rule of Law, Allen Lane, 2010, pp6667
6 The significance of the rule of law goes beyond judicial review. Other claimed
elements of the rule of law include the accessibility of, and equality before, the law.
See generally Bingham, Tom, op cit
7 Craig, Paul, The Rule of Law, paper included as Appendix 5 to House of Lords,
Select Committee on the Constitution, 6th Report of Session 20062007, Relations
between the executive, the judiciary and Parliament (2007), p101. The principles
behind the constraints imposed on government under judicial review include
legality, procedural propriety, participation, fundamental rights, openness,
rationality, relevancy, propriety of purpose, reasonableness, equality, legitimate
expectations, legal certainty and proportionality.
14 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
8 Regina (Alconbury Developments Ltd and Others) v Secretary of State for the
Environment, Transport and the Regions [2003] 2 AC 295, paragraph 73 per Lord
Hoffmann
9 Regina v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex parte Pierson [1998] AC
539, 591F per Lord Steyn
10 Bingham, Tom, op cit, p60
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 15
11 The role of rights in the rule of law is controversial, but a core of rights, including
the right to life, may be thought likely to be accepted for present purposes.
16 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
12 Paragraph 21
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 17
what the courts have in fact done and said, and is thus part of our
common law. Generally, upholding the rule of law will include
upholding the will of Parliament. However, if Parliament were to
legislate in a way which the courts considered to be contrary to
the rule of law, the courts may on this competing theory consider
that their primary obligation to the constitutional principle
of the rule of law justified them in not applying Parliaments
will. This theory thus elevates the power of the judiciary over
Parliament in extreme circumstances.
This competing theory has been strongly criticised and whether
it has force is the subject of intense debate.17 But whichever
theory is correct, it may be thought sensible to take this debate
into account when imagining how the judiciary might respond
in extreme circumstances.
The further reform consultation paper raises the real possibility
that the government may introduce legislation restricting judicial
review which may be thought by the judges to contravene the
rule of law in that it prejudices the ability of the courts to hold
the executive fully to account. That raises the following questions
which will be explored in this paper:
Do the further reform proposals undermine the rule of law?
Could Parliament legislate contrary to the rule of law?
How might the judiciary respond to legislation contrary to
the rule of law?
What are the wider constitutional consequences?
Summary
The courts ability to subject decisions of the executive to an
independent review of lawfulness defines our constitutional
climate. There is debate over the meaning of the rule of law; but
it may be thought to have a core meaning for the judiciary in
the context of judicial review. There is debate too over whether
it is the will of Parliament (as traditionally understood) or the
constitutional principle of the rule of law (as more recently and
controversially suggested by some) which provides the theoretical
justification for the courts judicial review jurisdiction. It may
be thought sensible to take this debate into account whichever
justification for judicial review may be favoured: if Parliament
were to legislate in a way which the courts considered to be
contrary to the rule of law, the courts would need to confront
whether they consider their primary obligation to be to the will
of Parliament, or to the constitutional principle of the rule of law.
If the courts were to conclude the latter, they may feel justified in
not applying Parliaments will.
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18 Launched on 2 October 2013, the Review aims to issue an interim report by the
end of 2013 and a final report in early 2014. See www.biicl.org/binghamcentre/
JRinquiry/
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 21
Further reforms
23 Paragraph 7
24 Paragraph 19
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 23
Standing
A key proposal in the consultation is to change the standing
rule which determines whether a particular claimant may bring
a judicial review claim or not. Parliament has simply stated that
a claimant must have sufficient interest in the matter to which
27 Section 31(3) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 states: No application for judicial
review shall be made unless the leave of the High Court has been obtained in
accordance with rules of court; and the court shall not grant leave to make such
an application unless it considers that the applicant has a sufficient interest in the
matter to which the application relates.
28 Auburn et al, op cit, paragraphs 24.1524.30
29 Auburn et al, op cit, paragraph 24.30. See, in relation to the rule of law, R v Inland
Revenue Commissioners, ex parte National Federation of Self-Employed and Small
Businesses Ltd [1982] AC 617 at 644E per Lord Diplock: It would, in my view, be
a grave lacuna in our system of public law if a pressure group, like the federation,
or even a single public-spirited taxpayer, were prevented by outdated technical
rules of locus standi from bringing the matter to the attention of the court to
vindicate the rule of law and get the unlawful conduct stopped.
30 AXA General Insurance Ltd and others v HM Advocate and others [2012] 1 AC
868 at paragraphs 169170. This is a Scottish case but nevertheless helpfully
illuminates an approach to standing based on the rule of law.
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 25
31 Paragraph 67 onwards
32 R (Medical Justice) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWCA
Civ 1710
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 27
A clear case can be made out that this state of affairs would
contravene the rule of law as understood by the judiciary, because
it would put some unlawful executive action, which the courts
would currently review, beyond the reach of the courts. It may
not be difficult to see how this would threaten the rule of law in
the sense understood by the judiciary, in the light of Lord Reeds
statement above, particularly where he emphasises that:
33 Public Law Project, Judicial review: proposals for further reform briefing paper,
October 2013
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Procedural defects36
Currently, where the defendant argues that a remedy should not
be granted (or a claim should be dismissed) because the outcome
would have been the same even if the unlawful conduct had not
occurred, the defendant must show that the outcome would
inevitably have been the same. The government is proposing
lowering the threshold to highly likely. This proposal may risk
interfering with the both the rule of law as understood by the
judiciary, and the separation of powers.
In relation to the rule of law, the relevant concern may be thought
to be that the proposal inevitably contemplates that some cases
of unlawful action where the outcome might have been different
would not be allowed to proceed. That may be thought to create
another category of cases, in addition to the category created by
the standing proposal (of claims where the claimant has no direct
interest), where unlawful executive action, even that which might
have made a difference to the outcome, would be put beyond the
reach of the courts.
Further, in relation to the separation of powers, this concept
dictates, in this context, that the courts do not stray into the
decision-making territory which is the remit of the executive.
That boundary may be threatened by the lowering of the threshold
if it were to require the court to stray from its proper province
of reviewing the propriety of the decision making process into
the forbidden territory of evaluating the substantial merits of
the decision (Smith v North East Derbyshire Primary Care Trust
[2006] EWCA Civ 1291, paragraph 10).
Further analysis
A question arises whether the government understands the rule
of law to mean the same as that understood by the judiciary.
The answer is not clear. The government makes two statements
which may be thought to support a core understanding of
the rule of law as it applies to judicial review, which is in line
with the core judicial understanding and societal consensus
postulated above, suggesting that it supports a thick rather
than thin version of the rule of law in this context. Those
statements are:
that judicial review is a largely judge-developed procedure
and can be characterised as the rule of law in action42 and
that the government wants to ensure that judicial review is
readily available where it is necessary in the interests of justice
in holding the executive to account, but that it cannot be used
simply to campaign against, frustrate or delay decisions.43
However, it is difficult to assess whether the government agrees
with judicial dicta that a wide notion of standing may be
necessary in order to uphold the rule of law. The governments
proposals may be said, as outlined above, to be contrary to
this understanding of the rule of law, but there are perhaps
two alternative interpretations of the position: first, that the
government does disagree with the judiciary; or second that the
government may not disagree but has not fully considered the
implications for the rule of law of its proposal.
As outlined above, judicial review is intrinsically related to
the balance of power between the component parts of the
constitution. The governments proposal may be seen as seeking
42 Paragraph 21
43 Paragraph 8
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 33
44 Gordon, op cit
34 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
45 Paragraph 80
46 Paragraph 78
47 Paragraph 79
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 35
Summary
The courts have developed a liberal test for standing so that a
judicial review claim may proceed depending on a number of
factors, even if the claimant has no direct interest. A rationale
36 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Summary
There may be a case for the government to use primary rather
than secondary legislation to implement proposals which
may be thought by the judiciary to threaten the rule of law.
Even if Parliament sought to pass primary legislation which is
widely thought to be contrary to the rule of law, there are no
constitutional requirements for such legislation to be treated
differently from other legislation, during its passage. Under
a traditional understanding of Parliamentary sovereignty,
Parliament may pass whatever laws it likes. However, an answer
to the question whether Parliament could legislate contrary
to the rule of law may in substance be incomplete without
addressing the question of how the judiciary might respond to
such legislation.
40 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
49 5 March 2004
50 See the account of the debate over the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of
Claimants, etc) Bill 2004 in Wade, op cit, p617, fn 279
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 43
51 5 U.S. 137
52 Eg Edlin, Douglas,Will Britain Have a Marbury?UK Const. L. Blog (7th June
2013) (available athttp://ukconstitutionallaw.org)
44 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Summary
Under a traditional understanding of Parliamentary sovereignty,
legislation will be applied by the courts and there is no reason
to question this most of the time. However, there is some
judicial support for the proposition that while the supremacy
or sovereignty of Parliament is still the general principle of our
59 For example, this was Lord Binghams eighth sub-rule in his analysis of the rule of
law: Bingham, op cit, p110
60 Of a kind which may, for example, be introduced following a careful review as
outlined above.
50 JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW
Parliamentary sovereignty
Codified constitution
There are several reasons why the purported implementation of
a measure in primary legislation widely thought to be contrary
to the rule of law may tend to trigger further consideration of the
prospect of a codified constitution.
The notion that primary legislation cannot, according to a
traditional model of Parliamentary sovereignty, be judged against
fundamental constitutional principles including human rights,
may be seen to become increasingly unattractive if Parliament
has shown its willingness to legislate contrary to such principles.
If the judiciary shows itself to be willing to disobey Parliament
in order to uphold the constitutional principle of the rule of law,
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 51
there may be a powerful case for saying that this power of the
judiciary should be regulated, rather than left to develop ad hoc.
That could be a case which a government and Parliament may
favour because it may be politically and constitutionally more
acceptable to be constrained by a judiciary that is acting on the
basis of codified constitutional principles, than to be constrained
by a judiciary exercising apparently free power.
Summary
Legislation restricting judicial review which is thought by the
judiciary to be contrary to the rule of law has potentially wide
further constitutional consequences including:
Detracting attention from any less controversial proposals
which may be suggested to make the judicial review process
more efficient.
Potentially triggering action by the courts which might make
the constitutional position in relation to the continuing
significance of Parliamentary sovereignty less certain.
Making the case for a codified constitution against which
primary legislation could be reviewed seem more attractive,
if the potential alternative may be unregulated disobedience
by the courts of Parliaments will.
Potential challenges to and questions about the role of
the Lord Chancellor.
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 53
Conclusion
The following table sets out possible courses of action for the
government and Parliament, along with potential constitutional
implications.
Summary
Proposals to restrict judicial review have the potential to
significantly alter the constitutional balance of power. Such
reform proposals have the potential to alter the constitutional
balance in ways which the government and Parliament may
not have anticipated. The result could be a constitutional crisis
of uncertain effect and proportions. Reform of judicial review
could properly form the terms of reference for an independent
inquiry which could be used to inform the government and
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND THE RULE OF LAW 57
Amy Street