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This book is now Out of Print.
A new edition has been published, the details can be seen here:
Judicial Review Handbook 7th ed isbn 9781509922833

Judicial Review Handbook 6th ed


ISBN13: 9781849461597
New Edition ISBN: 9781509922833
Previous Edition ISBN: 9781841138244
Published: October 2012
Publisher: Hart Publishing
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: Out of print




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Writing in the fifth edition of this Handbook, author Michael Fordham described his ambition when writing the first edition (and indeed all subsequent editions) of this book as "to read as many judicial review cases as I could and to try to extract, classify and present illustrations and statements of principle".

Behind this aim lay the practitioner's overwhelming need to know and understand the case-law. Without it, as Fordham says "much can be achieved in public law through instinct, experience and familiarity with general principles which are broad, flexible and designed to accord with common sense". But with knowledge of the case law comes the vital ability to be able to point to and rely on an authoritative statement of principle and working illustration.

Knowing the case-law is crucial: "the challenge is to find it". This, the sixth edition of the Handbook, continues the tradition established by earlier editions, in rendering the voluminous case-law accessible and knowable.

This Handbook remains an indispensable source of reference and a guide to the case-law in judicial review. Established as an essential part of the library of any practitioner engaged in public law cases, the Judicial Review Handbook offers unrivalled coverage of administrative law, including, but not confined to, the work of the Administrative Court and its procedures.

Once again completely revised and up-dated, the sixth edition approximates to a restatement of the law of judicial review, organised around 63 legal principles, each supported by a comprehensive presentation of the sources and an unequalled selection of reported case quotations. It also includes essential procedural rules, forms and guidance issued by the Administrative Court.

As in the previous edition, both the Civil Procedure Rules and Human Rights Act 1998 feature prominently as major influences on the shaping of the case-law. Their impact, and the plethora of cases which explore their meaning and application, were fully analysed and evaluated in the previous edition, but this time around their importance has grown exponentially and is reflected in even greater attention being given to their respective roles.

Attention is also given to another new development - the coming into existence of the Supreme Court. Here Michael Fordham casts an experienced eye over the Court's work in the area of judicial review, and assesses the early signs from a Court that is expected to be one of the key influences in the development of judicial review in the modern era.

Subjects:
Judicial Review
Contents:
A. THE NATURE OF JUDICIAL REVIEW: Keys to understanding what the Court is doing
P1 A constitutional guarantee. Judicial review is the rule of law in action: a fundamental and inalienable constitutional protection.
P2 Supervisory jurisdiction. Judicial review is a well-established supervisory role by the Court over public bodies.
P3 Impact. A successful claim does not necessarily guarantee a favourable ultimate outcome, nor a wider knock-on effect.
P4 Materiality. A claim may fail if lacking substance, as where non-material, non-prejudicial, futile, academic or premature.
P5 Targets. A wide range of measures, acts, decisions, policies and omissions can be the subject of a judicial review challenge.
P6 Power sources. Public bodies' powers and duties can arise under or by reference to EU and domestic legislation, common law or prerogative, policy guidance or international law.
P7 Constitutional fundamentals. Core common law principles can constitute fundamentals of the UK's unwritten constitution.
P8 EU law. Domestic statutes, rules and decisions must be compatible with applicable EU legislation and legal principle.
P9 The HRA. Domestic legislation must be read, and public authorities must act, compatibly with HRA:ECHR rights.
P10 Cooperation & candour. The Court will expect from all parties cooperative behaviour and candid disclosure.
P11 Precedent & authority. Judicial precedent can bind or guide the court; academic and comparative analysis may be persuasive.
P12 Reviewing primary legislation. Courts have restricted functions of assessing legal compatibility of Acts of Parliament.
P13 Restraint. Courts adopt a primary self-restraint, preserving for public bodies a latitude for judgment and discretion.
P14 Balancing. Judicial review principles are a careful evolving equilibrium serving the dual imperatives of vigilance and restraint.
P15 The forbidden method. Judges will not intervene as if matters for the public body's judgment were for the Court's judgment.
P16 Hard-edged questions. There are certain matters which the Court considers afresh for itself, imposing its own judgment.
P17 Evidence and fact. Judicial review is generally conducted on written evidence and regarded as an unsuitable forum for resolving factual disputes, though this can be appropriate and necessary.
P18 Costs. Generally, the loser must pay the winner's costs
P19 Making the claim. Where pre-claim correspondence fails, claims are to be made and acknowledged in the prescribed way.
P20 Interim remedies. The Court can make orders securing a particular state of affairs pending fi nal resolution of the claim.
P21 Permission. The claimant must obtain permission for judicial review, by prompt and candid papers disclosing an arguable case.
P22 Substantive hearing. At the hearing the Court decides whether there are grounds for intervening and whether to grant a remedy.
P23 Appeal. An appeal lies from the Administrative Court's decisions (except the grant of permission).
P24 Remedies. The Court has discretionary power to quash, mandate, prevent and clarify.
P25 Monetary remedies. Judicial review embraces damages, debt and restitution, HRA "just satisfaction" and EU reparation; but a broader financial response to aladministration awaits development.
B. PARAMETERS OF JUDICIAL REVIEW: Further dominant themes shaping the law and practice
P26 Delay. Claims must be prompt (3 months in an EU case); undue delay can be fatal to permission or (if prejudicial) a remedy.
P27 Public/private. Judicial review is the (normally non-exclusive) application of "public law" principles to "public" functions.
P28 Ouster. Head-on statutory exclusion of judicial review is theoretically possible but constitutionally dubious.
P29 Interpretation. Discerning the true meaning of legislative and other relevant sources is vital to effective judicial review.
P30 Function. It is essential to understand the role and responsibilities of the decision-maker under review.
P31 Context. Context being everything, the Court will always respond to the nature and circumstances of the individual case.
P32 Modified review. Matters may involve part-availability of judicial review; or restricted or enhanced grounds.
P33 Flux. Judicial review is dynamic: new faiths emerge, old ones decay; the general trend being towards empowering the Court.
P34 Reviewability/non-reviewability. Judicial review applies to the exercise of "public" functions, with few forbidden areas.
P35 Principle of legality. Public power may not be exercised to abrogate fundamental common law values, at least unless abrogation is required or empowered by clear primary legislation.
P36 Alternative remedy. Judicial review is a last resort and generally inappropriate where suitable alternative safeguards exist.
P37 Proportionality template. Proportionality requires State-proven appropriateness and necessity to achieve a legitimate aim.
P38 Standing. The claimant must have a sufficient interest in the subject-matter, and be a victim if relying directly on the HRA.
P39 Discretion/duty. Judicial review supervises discretionary powers entrusted to, and duties imposed on, public bodies.
P40 Inalienability. Public bodies' basic powers and duties are to be respected, preserved and not compromised.
P41 Legitimate expectation. Promises or practices may raise expectations incapable of unfair or unreasonable dishonour.
P42 Onus. It is for the judicial review claimant to establish grounds for intervention, but on many issues the public body bears the onus.
P43 Severance. A measure may be partially upheld if, shorn of vitiated parts, the substantial purpose and effect remain intact.
P44 Nullity. In principle, any material public law wrong will vitiate the impugned act of the public body so that it is a "nullity".
C. GROUNDS FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW: Public law wrongs justifying the Court's intervention
P45 Classifying grounds. Inapt for rigid categorisation, grounds fit broadly within unlawfulness, unreasonableness and unfairness.
P46 Ultra vires. A body must not exceed received powers or breach duties, from higher authority, as properly interpreted.
P47 Jurisdictional error. A body must understand the scope and limits of its jurisdiction.
P48 Error of law. A body must not make a material error of law.
P49 Error of fact. A body must not make errors of precedent fact, fundamental factual errors or findings unsupported by evidence.
P50 Abdication/fetter. A body must not surrender its function, as by: (a) acting under dictation; (b) improperly delegating its powers; or (c) operating an inflexible policy.
P51 Insufficient inquiry. A body must sufficiently acquaint itself with relevant information, fairly presented and properly addressed.
P52 Bad faith/improper motive. A body must not act in bad faith or have an improper object or purpose.
P53 Frustrating the legislative purpose. A body must act so as to promote the purpose for which the power was conferred.
P54 Substantive unfairness. A body must not act conspicuously unfairly, nor so unfairly as to abuse its power, nor in unjustified breach of a legitimate expectation.
P55 Inconsistency. A body should ensure equal treatment, certainty of approach and no legally relevant unjustified departures.
P56 Relevancy/irrelevancy. A body must have regard to all, but to only, legally relevant considerations.
P57 Unreasonableness. A body must not act unreasonably.
P58 Proportionality. Certain contexts require a body's response to be appropriate and necessary to achieve a legitimate aim.
P59 HRA-violation. A body must not act incompatibly with Convention rights protected by the HRA.
P60 Procedural unfairness. A body must adopt a fair procedure, giving those
affected a fair and informed say.
P61 Bias. A body must not have a direct interest in the outcome of a decision, or show actual bias or a real possibility of bias.
P62 Reasons. Public Bodies are often required to give reasons, and always required to make the reasons they do give adequate.
P63 External wrongs. Judicial review may occasionally lie against a blameless body, for a third party wrong or external injustice.
D. MATERIALS: Key sources of rules and procedure
64.1 Senior Courts Act 1981, ss.31& 31A
64.2 Civil Procedure Rules Part 54
64.3 CPR Part 54 Practice Directions 54A & 54D
64.4 Administrative Court Office Notes for Guidance
64.5 Judicial Review Pre-Action Protocol
64.6 Judicial Review Urgent Cases Procedure
64.7 Human Rights Act 1998
64.8 Form N461
64.9 Form N462
64.1 Form N463
64.1 List of articles