Alan S.
Reid, Senior Lecturer in Law, Sheffield Hallam University. The author
welcomes comments on the blog at a.s.reid@shu.ac.uk.
The Cherry/Miller
case ([2019] UKSC
41) reached its zenith on Tuesday morning, with a most newsworthy outcome;
a unanimous decision that Prime Minister Johnson's Prorogation of Parliament
was unlawful, thus a legal nullity and of no legal effect (at para. 69 of the
judgment). The UK Parliament, having been put illegally to sleep, awoke on
Wednesday morning with collective amnesia, and emerged refreshed from a dreich shower like Bobby
Ewing, to get back to work and to normality.
The timing of
the judgment couldn’t have been more fortuitous for purveyors of constitutional
law idioms, anecdotes and folklore - thousands of law freshers at dozens of
university law schools across the four nations of the UK will be treated to a
plethora of twitter feeds, bad puns and embarrassing GIFs of politicians by law
lecturers trying to make sense of it all, all of them feeling a bit smug and
secretly delighted that constitutional law is at last hip, happening and dare
say, even sexy.
As I have
discussed previously, (here,
here
and here)
the Scottish courts and the English High Court received applications from
aggrieved members of the public, legal experts and politicians, extremely
worried about Prime Minister Johnson's received wisdom to prorogue Parliament
for 5 weeks through September and October 2019, at a time of immense constitutional
upheaval and crisis, given the impending deadline of Halloween and the horror
of a No-Deal Brexit. At first instance in Scotland, the petitioners in Cherry lost, Lord Doherty in the Outer
House of the Court of Session deferring to the Prime Minister and the UK
government's lawyer in Scotland view that the matter of prorogation was a
matter of high politics, not law and thus beyond the purview of the courts. Similar
sentiments furth of the Forth, led the English High Court, unanimously, to hold
that Gina Miller's Judicial Review application was also asking an impertinent, essentially
non-justiciable question.
Legal orthodoxy
seemed to point to these claims being closed down on this well-established
maxim of non-justiciability. Case(s) closed.
On appeal in
Scotland to the Inner House of the Court of Session, the triumvirate of Lord
Carloway, Brodie and Drummond-Young, (now colloquially known in legal circles
as the Inner House 3) unanimously overturned the opinion of Lord Doherty in the
lower Outer House. The egregious nature of the Prime Minister's decision meant
that the matter was justiciable. It was a legal question: The questioning of an
improper use of the royal prerogative.
The Supreme
Court has largely vindicated the view of the Inner House 3, albeit with some
differences of opinion (see Professor Mark Elliot's blog here).
The Supreme Court, in a very rare show of absolute solidarity, made all the
more amazing by the fact that the decision was made by an 11-strong bench, decided
unanimously that the Prime Minister had acted unlawfully in advising the
monarch to prorogue Parliament.
It is fair to
say that the judgment, like Brexit itself (although the case is only indirectly
concerned with Brexit), has divided the legal community, the general population
and the politicians. It has polarised opinion like no other case before it.
At any level,
the judgment is a remarkable one. However, its remarkableness is difficult to
define and pin down, however the main reasons the opinion is remarkable are as
follows.
First, as
mentioned already, the judgment was a unanimous decision by 11 of the most
eminent justices this country has produced. In the only other 11-strong bench
case, the related case of Miller 1 ([2017]
UKSC 5), the best the judges could agree on was an 8-3 split, with the
dissenters even divided on their reasons for dissenting. In the Torture Evidence case (A (FC) v Secretary of State for the Home
Department ([2005]
UKHL 71), a seven strong bench of the House of Lords came close to being
unanimous on all aspects of that case. The ability of Lady Hale to get another
10 strong willed, independent jurists to coalesce around a particular view of
the facts and of the law is indeed remarkable.
Second, the
judgment is a document of elegance, clarity and brevity, with a distinctly
narrative feel. For such a constitutionally significant case, the text is
remarkably light in size and in deployment of weighty legal justifications. The
judgment is only 24 pages long and constitutional law academics, if marking
this legal script, would berate the authors for only using the bare bones of
the vast corpus of judicial precedent that was available. The Inner House 3 and
the advocates before that house (and when in the Supreme Court), conversely,
drew on a vast well of legal authorities to justify their stance. That judgment
extended to 68 pages and was replete with judicial and historical precedents. The
Supreme Court was content to produce a narrative judgment, drawing on grand
constitutional principles and expectations.
The question
beget by this brief, elegant and decidedly law-free judgment is why is it structured
so?
The answers are
not hard to discern and determinedly lie in the political sphere.
The Supreme
Court, almost contemporaneously with the Cherry/Miller
case, will celebrate its 10th anniversary in the next few weeks. It began life
on the 1st of October 2009. It is fitting that the Supreme Court made such a
historic judgment on the eve of its 10 year anniversary, for the judgment is a
fine example of the court flexing its constitutional muscles. The Supreme Court
is transforming itself into a Constitutional Court and with the Cherry/Miller case, the court has
burnished its constitutional court credentials.
A defining
feature of any constitutional court is that it decides decidedly political
cases that deal with high politics and the inner workings of the constitution
of that state. To that extent, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom,
absolutely performed a constitutional court function on Tuesday morning.
The judgment had
to have the look and feel that it did for a number of important political reasons.
The judgment had
to be unanimous because in this febrile environment, any dissent in the Supreme
Court would be seized upon by Brexiteers and detractors that the decision was legally
uncertain, incorrect and the will of arch Remainers. Thus, the justices were
determined to present a united front that sent a powerful message that the
highest members of the judiciary were at one on this matter, irrespective of
their political views, of their particular areas of legal expertise and their
longevity on the highest court of the land. The judges chose to put forward a
coherent, decisive legal view to try and provide legal certainty for the whole
country.
Further, these
two cases that were sent to the Supreme Court posed an existential threat to the
United Kingdom. The Scottish Court had unanimously held that the matter was
justiciable and that on forensic investigation, the Prime Minister had acted
unlawfully. Diametrically opposed to that, the English High Court refused to
adjudicate on the matter, citing classic cases on non-justiciability. Scotland
overwhelmingly voted to Remain in the 2016 referendum and England narrowly
voted to Leave. These facts would have played heavily on the minds of the 11
justices. To simply dismiss the Inner House unanimous decision, expressly
overrule that decision and affirm the English High Court view would be to
imperil the unity of the United Kingdom. In such a situation, Scottish
politicians, jurists and the general Scots populace writ large would arguably
be more empowered and more likely to question their place in the United
Kingdom. Remarkably, the Supreme Court drew heavily on the original view of the
Inner House 3, simply stating that the advice of Boris Johnson to the Queen to
prorogue Parliament…' was unlawful, null and of no effect and should be
quashed.' (para. 69 of the judgment). Implicitly, the UK Supreme Court was
simply endorsing the view of the Inner House and adopting the extensive legal
declaratory power and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Scotland. The
judgment, in so doing, managed to cleverly bring the UK jurisdictions closer
together, neatly avoiding legally complex and technical questions on the nature
of remedies north and south of the border.
The narrative
nature of the judgment was also remarkable but entirely reasonable given the
unique background to the case. The three day legal hearing from last week was
eagerly watched by people across the globe and the judgment has been downloaded
thousands of times and it made global news headlines. It was obvious that
people were immensely interested in the case, and as such the justices would
have been keen to make the law as accessible as possible, and the most obvious
way to do so would be to demystify the law and use everyday, ordinary language.
Alongside this imperative, the immense pressure to resolve the case quickly
meant that the justices were under great time constraints, resulting in a pared
down judgment that merely discussed the nub of the arguments. Further, the fact
that the judgment would be desired to be read way beyond Westminster, Whitehall
and the Windsor family, necessitated the rejection of excessive legalese and
obscure references to historical events and laws. The judgment is a masterful, accessible
constitutional lecture on the grand overarching themes, laws, rules and
conventions that constitute the living UK constitution.
The judgment has
its detractors from all sides. It is too simplistic. It is too political. It is
too lite on the law. It is too glib. It is interfering in politics. All of
these criticisms can be legitimately levelled at the judgment. The strongest
criticism is that of interference in politics. However, the judgment can be
defended exactly on that basis. Parliamentary sovereignty was placed at the
apex of the judgment. Alongside parliamentary sovereignty, the court was
concerned to place parliamentary accountability at its side, an equal partner
in the UK constitutional framework. In so doing, the court thus justified its
interference in questions of politics. The current political impasse has
illustrated the ineffectiveness of the parliamentary accountability process in
holding the Prime Minister and the wider executive to account. Therefore, for
the court to simply defer to parliamentary accountability would be a
dereliction of duty, particularly in a situation where it is clear that these
political mechanisms, both currently and in the near future, would manifestly
fail to produce a satisfactory resolution. The court was thereby forced to act
to restore equilibrium to the tripartite separation of powers, the central
tenet of the UK constitution. In so doing, the court also gave powerful effect
to a central tenet of the Leave campaign from 2016: the Supreme Court of the UK
took back control and gave Parliament back its sovereignty.
Barnard &
Peers: chapter 27
Photo credit:
Pamela Ewing