R (on the application of Majera (formerly SM (Rwanda)) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent)
[2021] UKSC 46
Michaelmas Term
[2021] UKSC 46
On appeal from: [2018] EWCA Civ 2770
Appellant
Amanda Weston QC
Anthony Vaughan
Gordon Lee
(Instructed by Birnberg Peirce Ltd)
Respondent
Sarabjit Singh QC
Jim Duffy
(Instructed by The Government Legal Department)
Intervener (Bail for Immigration Detainees)
Raza Husain QC Laura Dubinsky
Shane Sibbel
(Instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP (London))
LORD REED: (with whom Lord Sales, Lord Leggatt, Lord Burrows and Lady Rose agree)
1. This appeal raises a question of constitutional importance: whether the
Government (or, indeed, anyone else) can lawfully act in a manner which is inconsistent with an order of a judge which is defective, without first applying for, and obtaining, the variation or setting aside of the order.
The factual background
2. The appellant is a national of Rwanda who came to the United Kingdom as a
child and was granted indefinite leave to remain. In 2006 he was convicted of serious
offences, and an indeterminate sentence for public protection was imposed, with a
minimum of seven years to be served. It was recommended that he should be
deported. In November 2012 the Secretary of State made a deportation order. That
order has never been implemented. An application to the Secretary of State for the
revocation of the order, made in March 2015, remains outstanding.
3. During 2013 the appellant was transferred to open prison conditions, and
undertook voluntary work in the community. During 2014 and 2015 he worked as a
volunteer at a charity shop. On 30 March 2015 the Parole Board directed his release on
licence. He was however immediately detained by the Secretary of State under
paragraph 2 of Schedule 3 to the Immigration Act 1971 (“the 1971 Act”).
4. In July 2015 the appellant applied to the First-tier Tribunal for bail under
paragraph 22 of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act. The application was heard by First-tier Tribunal Judge Narayan on 30 July 2015. Having heard submissions on behalf of the appellant and the Secretary of State, the judge decided that bail should be granted, with the appellant’s mother acting as surety in respect of a specified sum of money. In
relation to the conditions to be attached to bail, the judge decided that the appellant must not enter employment, paid or unpaid. The judge decided not to impose a prohibition on unpaid work.
should report to his offender manager. Another issue concerned the appellant’s
voluntary work. He wished to continue working as a volunteer at the charity shop. The
5. The judge’s decision was recorded in a notice of decision (“the bail order”) of
the same date. Amongst other matters, it recorded the “primary condition of bail” as
follows:
“The applicant is to appear before his offender manager.”
The order next listed a number of “secondary conditions of bail”. They included that “Bail is granted in the same terms as the licence”, that “The applicant is also required to comply with the terms of his licence”, and that he “Must not enter paid employment, or engage in any business or profession”. The order was signed by the judge below the following declaration:
“I certify that I have granted/continued bail to the applicant
subject to the conditions set out above and have taken the
recognisance of the applicant and the first and second
surety.”
6. As I have explained, the bail order incorporated the terms of the appellant’s
licence under the Criminal Justice Act 2003. The licence required him to report to his
supervising officer (the offender manager to whom the bail conditions referred) at the
offices of the National Probation Service in London before 3pm on 31 July 2015. It also
required him to undertake only such work (including voluntary work) as was approved
by his supervising officer. It also imposed a curfew between 8pm and 7am.
7. Later on 30 July 2015, shortly after the hearing before the judge, an immigration
officer gave the appellant a notice notifying him that “the Secretary of State has
decided that you should not continue to be detained at this time but, under paragraph
2(5) of Schedule 3 to the Immigration Act 1971, she now imposes the following
restrictions on you”. The restrictions included, first, that “[y]ou may not enter
employment, paid or unpaid”, and secondly, the imposition of a curfew between 8pm
and 7am. The appellant was released.
8. The appellant’s solicitors subsequently wrote to the Secretary of State,
maintaining that she had no power to impose the restrictions and asking that they be withdrawn. They contended that the appropriate course, if the Secretary of State was dissatisfied with the conditions imposed by the judge, was either to seek a variation of the conditions or to challenge the judge’s decision in proceedings for judicial review,
there being no right of appeal. In response, the Secretary of State wrote on 19 October 2015 that “your client is no longer on immigration judge bail and is now on restrictions imposed by the Home Office”. In subsequent correspondence, the Secretary of State
adopted the position that the bail order had ceased to have effect when the appellant inconsistent with the notice of restrictions. Neither of those positions is now maintained on behalf of the Secretary of State.
reported to his supervising officer. Subsequently, it was argued on behalf of the
9. A further request for the prohibition of voluntary work to be withdrawn,
supported by the appellant’s supervising officer, was refused by the Secretary of State
on 3 December 2015. A request by the appellant’s supervising officer for the curfew
restriction to be altered to 11pm to 6am, so as to correspond to the hours which were
then considered appropriate for the appellant’s licence, was also refused on 4 January
2016. The appellant then applied for judicial review of those two decisions.
The relevant statutory provisions
(i) Immigration detention
10. The powers of immigration detention relevant to these proceedings are
contained in paragraph 2 of Schedule 3 to the 1971 Act. The provision has been subject
to frequent amendment. As it stood at the relevant time, it provided, so far as
material:
“(3) Where a deportation order is in force against any person, he may be detained under the authority of the
Secretary of State pending his removal or departure from theUnited Kingdom …
…
(4A) Paragraphs 22 to 25 of Schedule 2 to this Act apply in relation to a person detained under sub-paragraph (1), (2) or (3) as they apply in relation to a person detained under
paragraph 16 of that Schedule.
(5) A person to whom this sub-paragraph applies shall be
subject to such restrictions as to residence, as to his
employment or occupation and as to reporting to the police
or an immigration officer as may from time to time be
notified to him in writing by the Secretary of State.
(6) The persons to whom sub-paragraph (5) above applies are - …
(b) a person liable to be detained under sub- paragraph (2) or (3) above, while he is not so
detained.”
11. The appellant was a person to whom sub-paragraph (3) applied, by virtue of the
deportation order made in November 2012. He was detained under that provision
between 30 March and 30 July 2015.
(ii) Bail provisions
12. The bail provisions relevant to these proceedings are contained in paragraph 22
of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act. They applied to the appellant by virtue of paragraph
2(4A) of Schedule 3 (para 10 above). As has been explained, the appellant was,
following his detention by the Secretary of State on 30 March 2015, a person who was
detained under paragraph 2(3) of Schedule 3, and was therefore, by virtue of sub-
paragraph (4A), a person to whom paragraph 22 of Schedule 2 of the 1971 Act applied.
13. Paragraph 22 of Schedule 2, as it stood at the relevant time, provided, so far as
material:
“(1) The following namely -
(a) a person detained under paragraph 16(1) above pending examination; (aa) a person detained under paragraph 16(1A) above pending completion of his examination or a decision on whether to cancel his leave to enter; and
(b) a person detained under paragraph 16(2) above pending the giving of directions, may be released on bail in accordance with this paragraph.
(1A) An immigration officer not below the rank of chief immigration officer or the First-tier Tribunal may release a immigration officer at a time and place named in the recognizance or bail bond or at such other time and place as may in the meantime be notified to him in writing by an immigration officer.
person so detained on his entering into a recognizance or, in
…(2) The conditions of a recognizance or bail bond taken under this paragraph may include conditions appearing to the immigration officer or the First-tier Tribunal to be likely
to result in the appearance of the person bailed at the
required time and place; and any recognizance shall be with
or without sureties as the officer or the First-tier Tribunal
may determine.”
14. Rule 43 of the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Rules 2014 (SI 2014/2604), provides:
“The person having custody of the bail party must release the
bail party upon - (a) being provided with a notice of decisionto grant bail …”
The history of the proceedings
15. The appellant sought judicial review of the Secretary of State’s decisions dated 3
December 2015 and 4 January 2016. When granting permission, the Upper Tribunal stayed the proceedings in order to permit the Secretary of State to consider whether to make an application to the First-tier Tribunal for variation of the bail order, but the Secretary of State declined to do so.
16. In the statement of the grounds for judicial review, it was argued on behalf of
the appellant that the decisions in issue were ultra vires, since the Secretary of State
had no power to attach additional conditions to bail which a bail judge had declined to
order, and were in any event an irrational and disproportionate restriction of the
appellant’s liberty. In response, the grounds of defence filed on behalf of the Secretary
of State contended (in contrast to the position previously adopted, noted at para 8
above) that the bail order did not comply with paragraph 22(1A) of Schedule 2 to the
1971 Act (para 13 above), as it failed to require the appellant to appear before an
immigration officer at a specified time and place. As has been explained, it required
him instead to appear before his offender manager by a specified time and at a
specified place. In those circumstances, it was argued, the purported grant of bail was
void. On that basis, it was argued that it had been open to the Secretary of State to
impose restrictions on the appellant under paragraph 2(5) of Schedule 3 (para 10
above). It was, however, conceded that the Secretary of State had no power to impose
a curfew, having regard to the decision of the Court of Appeal in R (Gedi) v Secretary of
State for the Home Department [2016] EWCA Civ 409; [2016] 4 WLR 93.
17. The Upper Tribunal (Upper Tribunal Judge Peter Lane) quashed the decisions of
3 December 2015 and 4 January 2016, and granted a declaration that the appellant
remained on bail granted by the First-tier Tribunal on 30 July 2015: R (Majera) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department (bail conditions: law and practice) [2017]
UKUT 00163 (IAC). The tribunal observed at para 46 of the judgment:
“The respondent’s contention that the judge’s grant of bail was a nullity does not mean that a person may ignore a bail decision of the tribunal which he or she considers invalid. As a judicial action (albeit by a body of limited jurisdiction) the
tribunal’s order has effect unless and until a court or tribunal
seized of jurisdiction in respect of the matter decides that it
was invalid.”
18. The tribunal went on to note that a finding that a grant of bail was of no legal
been Parliament’s intention that defects in the grant of bail should render it void.
effect was liable to have serious consequences, and inferred that it could not have the judge on its being drawn to his attention, as the Secretary of State should immediately have done. Since the grant of bail on 30 July 2015 was valid, albeit defective, it remained in force. Its defective nature could be remedied by the First-tier Tribunal. It followed that the restrictions purportedly imposed by the Secretary of State were of no effect.
19. The tribunal also observed, expressly obiter (para 64), that the judge could not
properly impose a bail condition relating to employment, as it fell outside the purpose of paragraph 22(2) of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act (para 13 above); that paragraph 2(5) of Schedule 3 (para 10 above) applied to the appellant following his release on bail;
and that the Secretary of State had the power under that provision to restrict the
appellant’s employment or occupation while on bail.
20. The Secretary of State appealed against that decision so far as it related to the decision dated 3 December 2015. The Court of Appeal (Underhill, Asplin and Haddon- Cave LJJ) allowed the Secretary of State’s appeal, quashed the declaration granted by the Upper Tribunal, and made a declaration that the purported grant of bail by the
First-tier Tribunal on 30 July 2015 was void and a nullity: Secretary of State for the
Home Department v SM (Rwanda) [2018] EWCA Civ 2770; [2019] Imm AR 714.
21. In the view of the Court of Appeal, the central issue in the proceedings was not
the validity of the Secretary of State’s decision, which was the subject of the
application for judicial review, but the validity of the bail order, as Haddon-Cave LJ
made clear in the opening sentence of his judgment:
“The issue in this appeal is whether a failure by a First-tier of Schedule 2 of the Immigration Act 1971 when granting bail to a detained person rendered that grant of bail invalid and of no effect in law.”
| 45, that “[a]n administrative act or order which is a nullity is, by definition, void, ie | That was thought to be the central issue on the view, as Haddon-Cave LJ stated at para nullity’”. | |
| ||
| basis that (1) non-compliance with the provisions of paragraph 22(1A) of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act rendered the grant of bail unlawful, and (2) the speeches of Lord Diplock in F Hoffmann-La Roche & Co AG v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry [1975] AC 295, 365 (“Hoffmann-La Roche”) and Lord Irvine of Lairg LC in Boddington v British | ||
| Transport Police [1999] 2 AC 143, 158 (“Boddington”) established that, as Haddon-Cave be unlawful, it is then recognised as having had no legal effect at all”. | ||
| 23. Proceeding on that basis, the appellant’s argument that orders of the court are binding until set aside or varied was regarded as “academic” (para 74): |
“The matter is now before this superior court which is properly seized of the issue. An order has been sought declaring the FTT’s grant of bail a nullity. If such an order is
made … this court’s order will necessarily declare the FTT’s
grant of bail void ab initio. In these circumstances, there
would have been no failure by the SSHD to respect the order
of the FTT because it was a nullity and there would ex
hypothesi have been no order to respect.”
In relation to the second sentence, it should be noted that the Secretary of State was the defendant to an application for judicial review of her own decision. She had made no application for judicial review of the bail order, nor does she appear to have made any other form of application for relief.
24. Haddon-Cave LJ added that, when it became apparent that there was an issue
as to the validity of the bail order, it would have been “good practice” for the Secretary
of State to have brought the matter back before the First-tier Tribunal for appropriate
resolution, rather than simply asserting her right to impose restrictions on the
appellant in the face of the extant order (para 76).
25. The other members of the court agreed. Underhill LJ observed at para 79 that
the implication of the court’s decision (issued on 11 December 2018) was that the
appellant had been unlawfully at large since his release on 30 July 2015. He and Asplin
LJ also agreed that the matter had not been “handled well” by the Secretary of State
(paras 80 and 82).
26. The appellant now appeals against the decision of the Court of Appeal. Put
shortly, counsel for the appellant argues that the First-tier Tribunal’s order had to be
obeyed until it was varied or set aside, regardless of whether it was defective. A
decision by the Secretary of State which was inconsistent with it was necessarily
unlawful. The appellant’s arguments are supported by submissions on behalf of the
intervener, Bail for Immigration Detainees, which the court has found of assistance.
The Secretary of State supports the reasoning of the Court of Appeal (preferring that of
Underhill LJ, in so far as it differed from that of Haddon-Cave LJ in relation to the
correct approach to the construction of paragraph 22 of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act;
Asplin LJ expressed no view on that matter).
The legal issues
(i) Are unlawful acts or decisions incapable of having legal effects?
27. The Court of Appeal’s approach to the present case, based on the
characterisation of invalid administrative acts and decisions as null and void, was as I describe unlawful administrative acts and decisions, it has nevertheless been recognised that the notion that such acts and decisions are utterly destitute of legal effect, as if they had never existed at all, is subject to important qualifications.
shall explain inapposite to the order of a court or tribunal such as the First-tier
Tribunal. But it is also worth explaining why, even in relation to administrative acts and
subordinate legislation, Haddon-Cave LJ’s statement that “when an act or regulation
has been pronounced by the court to be unlawful, it is then recognised as having had
no legal effect at all” is, with great respect, an over-simplification of the position.
28. Although Haddon-Cave LJ’s dictum was confined to the situation where there
has been a judicial pronouncement - which I take to mean an order, since it is orders,
not the reasons given for them in judgments, which have legal effects - determining
that an act or regulation is unlawful, it is illuminating to consider first the position
before such a pronouncement is made. A significant point was made by Lord Radcliffe
in Smith v East Elloe Rural District Council [1956] AC 736, 769-770, where he
considered an argument that an ouster clause preventing a compulsory purchase order
from being challenged after the expiry of a time limit must be construed as applying
only to orders made in good faith, since an order made in bad faith was a nullity and
therefore had no legal existence. Describing the argument as “in reality a play on the
meaning of the word nullity”, Lord Radcliffe observed:
“An order, even if not made in good faith, is still an act
capable of legal consequences. It bears no brand of invalidity
upon its forehead. Unless the necessary proceedings are
taken at law to establish the cause of invalidity and to get it
quashed or otherwise upset, it will remain as effective for its
ostensible purpose as the most impeccable of orders.”
29. Accordingly, if an unlawful administrative act or decision is not challenged
before a court of competent jurisdiction, or if permission to bring an application for judicial review is refused, the act or decision will remain in effect. Equally, even if an unlawful act or decision is challenged before a court of competent jurisdiction, the
court may decline to grant relief in the exercise of its discretion, or for a reason In that event, the act or decision will again remain in effect. An unlawful act or decision cannot therefore be described as void independently of, or prior to, the court’s intervention.
unrelated to the validity of the act or decision, such as a lack of standing (as in
30. The courts have long been aware of this point. In Calvin v Carr [1980] AC 574,
for example, Lord Wilberforce observed at pp 589-590, in relation to a contention that
an appeal could not lie against a decision which was void, that until a decision was
declared to be void by a competent body or court, “it may have some effect, or
existence, in law”. He added that “[t]his condition might be better expressed by saying
that the decision is invalid or vitiated”. In the context of a question as to whether an
appeal lay, “the impugned decision cannot be considered as totally void, in the sense
of being legally non-existent”. So to hold, he said, “would be wholly unreal”. The
decision in question, to disqualify a racehorse owner, was a fact, and its existence had
serious consequences for the plaintiff, because the Jockey Club complied with it by
preventing him from entering his horses for races. As that example illustrates, the law
has to address the fact that unlawful acts can have legal consequences.
31. Even where a court has decided that an act or decision was legally defective,
R v Soneji [2005] UKHL 49; [2006] 1 AC 340). Or the result of treating the decision as legally non-existent may be inconsistent with legal certainty or with the public interest in orderly administration: it may, indeed, result in administrative chaos, or expose innocent third parties to legal liabilities (as where they have acted in reliance on the apparent validity of the unlawful decision). In some such circumstances, the act or decision may be held to have had some legal effects in accordance with principles of the common law (as, for example, where police officers are held to have acted lawfully in arresting and detaining individuals in pursuance of byelaws which are subsequently held to be invalid: see Percy v Hall [1997] QB 924). In other circumstances, the court may be able to secure an appropriate outcome through the exercise of statutory powers (as, for example, in Salvesen v Riddell [2013] UKSC 22; [2013] HRLR 23), or through the exercise of its discretion in granting relief (as, for example, in Fishermen and Friends of the Sea v Minister of Planning, Housing and the Environment [2017] UKPC 37). Lord Phillips, giving the judgment of the Privy Council, observed in Mossell (Jamaica) Ltd (t/a Digicel) v Office of Utilities Regulations [2010] UKPC 1, para 44:
that does not necessarily imply that it must be held to have had no legal effect. As the treat the decision as a nullity would be inconsistent with the legislation under which it was made (see, for example,
“There may be occasions when declarations of invalidity are made prospectively only or are made for the benefit of some but not others. Similarly, there may be occasions when
executive orders or acts are found to have legal
consequences for some at least (sometimes called ‘third
actors’) during the period before their invalidity is recognised
by the court - see, for example, Percy v Hall [1997] QB 924.”
32. These considerations have led judges to be critical of the description of unlawful
administrative acts or decisions as “null” or “void”, and have sometimes led them to
speak of voidness as a “relative” concept (see, for example, R (New London College Ltd)
v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Migrants’ Rights Network intervening)
[2013] UKSC 51; [2013] 1 WLR 2358, paras 45-46). The language of voidness and
nullity, drawn from the law of contract, can be useful for some purposes in
administrative law, but it depends upon an analogy between defective contracts and
defective administrative acts which is inexact. The complexity and variability of the
practical consequences of unlawful administrative acts necessitate a more flexible
approach than is afforded by a binary distinction between what is valid and what is
void. Judges have therefore expressed reservations not only about the use of words
such as “void” and “null”, but more importantly about reasoning in the field of
administrative law which allows the logic of those concepts to override important
values underpinning the court’s supervisory jurisdiction, such as the public interest in
legal certainty, orderly administration, and respect for the rule of law.
33. In that regard, the speech of Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone LC in London &
Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen District Council [1980] 1 WLR 182, 189-190, has been
particularly influential. The Lord Chancellor noted that in reported decisions in the field
of administrative law “there is much language presupposing the existence of stark
categories such as ‘mandatory’ and ‘directory’, ‘void’ and ‘voidable’, a ‘nullity’, and
‘purely regulatory’.” He accepted that such language was useful, but observed that “I
am not at all clear that the language itself may not be misleading in so far as it may be
supposed to present a court with the necessity of fitting a particular case into one or
other of mutually exclusive and starkly contrasted compartments, compartments
which in some cases (eg ‘void’ and ‘voidable’) are borrowed from the language of
contract or status, and are not easily fitted to the requirements of administrative law”.
He continued (ibid):
“… though language like ‘mandatory’, ‘directory’, ‘void’, convenient exposition … I do not wish to be understood in the field of administrative law and in the domain where the courts apply a supervisory jurisdiction over the acts of subordinate authority purporting to exercise statutory powers, to encourage the use of rigid legal classifications. The jurisdiction is inherently discretionary and the court is frequently in the presence of differences of degree which merge almost imperceptibly into differences of kind.”
‘voidable’, ‘nullity’ and so forth may be helpful in argument,
it may be misleading in effect if relied on to show that the
courts, in deciding the consequences of a defect in the
exercise of power, are necessarily bound to fit the facts of a
particular case and a developing chain of events into rigid
legal categories or to stretch or cramp them on a bed of
34. The authorities cited by Haddon-Cave LJ in the present case are not inconsistent
Hoffmann-La Roche
with that approach. The case of concerned an application by the the determination of proceedings in which the validity of the order was challenged. The sole issue arising was whether the Crown should be required to give a cross- undertaking in damages. It was held that it should not. Lord Reid observed at p 341 that “an order made under statutory authority is as much the law of the land as an Act of Parliament unless and until it has been found to be ultra vires”. He went on to state that “the order which the appellants seek to annul is the law at present and if an interim injunction is refused that means that the law is not to be enforced and the appellants are to be at liberty to disregard it” (p 342). Similar observations were made by the other members of the majority.
35. Lord Diplock, whose speech was cited by Haddon-Cave LJ, commented at p 366 that “it leads to confusion to use such terms as ‘voidable’, ‘voidable ab initio’, ‘void’ or ‘a nullity’ as descriptive of the legal status of subordinate legislation alleged to be ultra vires for patent or for latent defects, before its validity has been pronounced on by a
court of competent jurisdiction”. These were, he said, “concepts developed in the
private law of contract which are ill-adapted to the field of public law”. All that could
usefully be said, in his view, was “that the presumption that subordinate legislation is
intra vires prevails in the absence of rebuttal, and that it cannot be rebutted except by
a party to legal proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction who has locus standi
to challenge the validity of the subordinate legislation in question”.
36. In an earlier passage in his speech, Lord Diplock also said that it would be
“inconsistent with the doctrine of ultra vires … if the judgment of a court in
proceedings properly constituted that a statutory instrument was ultra vires were to
have any lesser consequence in law than to render the instrument incapable of ever
having had any legal effect upon the rights or duties of the parties to the proceedings”
(p 365). That was the passage relied upon by Haddon-Cave LJ in the present
proceedings. It was, however, obiter, since the case did not concern the effects of an
instrument which had been held to be ultra vires.
37. Haddon-Cave LJ also relied upon the speech of Lord Irvine in Boddington. The
issue in that case was whether a defendant who was prosecuted for the breach of a
byelaw could raise, in his defence before the criminal court, the question whether the
byelaw was invalid. The House of Lords held that he could, following authorities going
back to the classic decision in Kruse v Johnson [1898] 2 QB 91. In the course of his
speech, Lord Irvine entered into a discussion of the question raised in some earlier
cases of whether the unlawfulness of an administrative act rendered it void or
voidable, and the impact upon that debate of the decision in the Anisminic case, as
interpreted in R v Hull University Visitor, Ex p Page [1993] AC 682. He concluded by
stating that, where subordinate legislation or an administrative act is impugned as
unlawful, “the legislation or act which is impugned is presumed to be good until
pronounced to be unlawful, but is then recognised as never having had any legal effect
at all” (p 155).
38. A number of observations may be made about this dictum. First, it was
unnecessary for the decision of the case, which was concerned solely, in this regard, explained, that passage was obiter. Thirdly, and most importantly, a majority of the appellate committee dissociated themselves from Lord Irvine’s statement of the law.
with the question whether a person could be convicted in criminal proceedings of
violating subordinate legislation which was held to be unlawful. Secondly, Lord Irvine
relied, in support of his statement of the law, upon the passage in the speech of Lord
39. In that regard, Lord Browne-Wilkinson stated at p 164 that he agreed with the speech of Lord Irvine but for one point:
“I am far from satisfied that an ultra vires act is incapable of
having any legal consequence during the period between the
doing of that act and the recognition of its invalidity by the
court. During that period people will have regulated their
lives on the basis that the act is valid. The subsequent
recognition of its invalidity cannot rewrite history as to all the
other matters done in the meantime in reliance on its
validity. The status of an unlawful act during the period
before it is quashed is a matter of great contention and of
great difficulty.”
Lord Browne-Wilkinson concluded that he preferred to express no view on the point.
40. Lord Slynn of Hadley stated at p 165:
“I consider that the result of allowing a collateral challenge in
proceedings before courts of criminal jurisdiction can be
reached without it being necessary in this case to say that if
an act or byelaw is invalid it must be held to have been
invalid from the outset for all purposes and that no lawful
consequences can flow from it. This may be the logical result
and will no doubt sometimes be the position but courts have
had to grapple with the problem of reconciling the logical
result with the reality that much may have been done on the
basis that an administrative act or a byelaw was valid. The
unscrambling may produce more serious difficulties than the
invalidity.”
Lord Slynn pointed out that “the effect of invalidity may not be relied on if limitation periods have expired or if the court in its discretion refuses relief, albeit considering that the act is invalid”. He acknowledged that those situations were different from
those where a court had pronounced subordinate legislation or an administrative act
to be unlawful, or where the presumption in favour of their legality had been
overruled by a court of competent jurisdiction. But, he added:
“… even in these cases I consider that the question whether
the acts or byelaws are to be treated as having at no time
had any effect in law is not one which has been fully explored
and is not one on which it is necessary to rule in this appeal
and I prefer to express no view upon it. The cases referred to
in Wade and Forsyth, Administrative Law, 7th ed (1997), pp
323-324, 342-344 lead the authors to the view that nullity is
relative rather than an absolute concept (p 343) and that
‘void’ is meaningless in any absolute sense. Its meaning is
‘relative.’ This may all be rather imprecise but the law in this
area has developed in a pragmatic way on a case by case
basis.”
41. Lord Steyn stated that he accepted “the reality that an unlawful byelaw is a fact
and that it may in certain circumstances have legal consequences” (p 172). The
remaining member of the committee, Lord Hoffmann, agreed with both Lord Irvine
and Lord Steyn.
42. It is unnecessary in this appeal to embark upon a detailed consideration of the
legal consequences of administrative measures which have been held to be unlawful. It
is necessary to focus only upon the question whether it is a defence to a challenge to
the lawfulness of the Secretary of State’s decision, on the basis that it was inconsistent
with the order of the First-tier Tribunal, to establish that the order was unlawful.
(ii) The duty to obey court orders
43. As I have indicated, the Court of Appeal were mistaken in treating cases such as
Hoffmann-La Roche and Boddington as governing the present case. Those cases were concerned with subordinate legislation, and also considered administrative acts and decisions. The present case is concerned with the order of a court or tribunal. That aspect of the case gives rise to different issues, with the consequence that it is governed by different principles.
44. It is a well established principle of our constitutional law that a court order must
overruled by legislation). The principle was authoritatively stated in Chuck v Cremer
(1846) 1 Coop temp Cott 338; 47 ER 884, in terms which have been repeated time and
again in later authorities. The case was one where the plaintiff’s solicitor obtained an
attachment against the defendant in default of a pleaded defence, disregarding a court
order extending the period for filing the defence, which he considered to be a nullity.
be obeyed unless and until it has been set aside or varied by the court (or, conceivably, parties, but had mistakenly allowed the defendant longer to file a defence than had been agreed. The Lord Chancellor, Lord Cottenham, set aside the attachment, and stated at pp 342-343:
“A party, who knows of an order, whether null or valid, not be disobeyed.”
regular or irregular, cannot be permitted to disobey it … It
would be most dangerous to hold that the suitors, or their
solicitors, could themselves judge whether an order was null
or valid - whether it was regular or irregular. That they should
come to the Court and not take upon themselves to
determine such a question. That the course of a party
knowing of an order, which was null or irregular, and who
might be affected by it, was plain. He should apply to the
45. Three important points can be taken from this passage. First, there is a legal
duty to obey a court order which has not been set aside: “it must not be disobeyed”. good practice. Secondly, the rationale of according such authority to court orders, as explained in the second and third sentences, is what would now be described as the rule of law. As was said in R (Evans) v Attorney General (Campaign for Freedom of Information intervening) [2015] UKSC 21; [2015] AC 1787, para 52, “subject to being overruled by a higher court or (given Parliamentary supremacy) a statute, it is a basic principle that a decision of a court is binding as between the parties, and cannot be ignored or set aside by anyone, including (indeed it may fairly be said, least of all) the executive”. This principle was described (ibid) as “fundamental to the rule of law”. Thirdly, as the Lord Chancellor made clear in Chuck v Cremer, the rule applies to orders which are “null”, as well as to orders which are merely irregular. Notwithstanding the paradox involved in this use of language, a court order which is “null” must be obeyed unless and until it is set aside.
46. This rule was applied by the Court of Appeal in Hadkinson v Hadkinson [1952] P 285. In a well-known passage, Romer LJ stated at p 288:
“It is the plain and unqualified obligation of every person
against, or in respect of whom, an order is made by a court of
competent jurisdiction, to obey it unless and until that order
is discharged. The uncompromising nature of this obligation
is shown by the fact that it extends even to cases where the
person affected by an order believes it to be irregular or even
void.”
Romer LJ then cited Lord Cottenham’s dictum in Chuck v Cremer. That passage in the judgment of Romer LJ was approved by the Privy Council in Isaacs v Robertson [1985] AC 97, 101-102, which in turn was cited with approval by the House of Lords in M v
Home Office [1994] 1 AC 377, 423, and by the Privy Council in Mossell (Jamaica) Ltd
(t/a Digicel) v Office of Utilities Regulations, para 43.
47. This rule was not engaged in the case of Boddington (nor, for that matter, in
Hoffmann-La Roche), since that case was not concerned with a court order. That was one of the grounds on which the Divisional Court correctly distinguished Boddington in Director of Public Prosecutions v T [2006] EWHC 728 (Admin); [2007] 1 WLR 209, where the defendant was charged with breaching an anti-social behaviour order which was alleged to be invalid. Richards LJ cited Boddington and observed, at para 27:
“Very different considerations apply in the present context. that it must be treated as valid and be obeyed unless and until it is set aside. Even if the order should not have been made in the first place, a person may be liable for any breach of it committed before it is set aside.”
The same distinction was also drawn by the Privy Council in Mossell (Jamaica) Ltd (t/a
Digicel) v Office of Utilities Regulations, para 43:
“The Board would reject entirely [the appellant’s] submission suggested analogy between Ministerial Directions and the orders of superior courts which, it is well established (see for example, Isaacs v Robertson [1985] AC 97) must always be obeyed, whatever their defects, until set aside.”
that the principle established in Boddington is relevant only
in the context of criminal prosecutions and not, as here,
48. As Richards LJ pointed out in Director of Public Prosecutions v T at paras 30-31,
although Romer LJ referred in Hadkinson v Hadkinson to “a court of competent
jurisdiction” (para 46 above), and although that case, like Isaacs v Robertson and M v
Home Office, was concerned with a court of unlimited jurisdiction, the rule has also
been applied to courts of limited jurisdiction: see, for example, Johnson v Walton
[1990] 1 FLR 350 and In re B (Court’s Jurisdiction) [2004] EWCA Civ 681; [2004] 2 FLR
741.
49. That is consistent with the rationale of the rule. As explained in para 45 above, it
is based on the importance of the authority of court orders to the maintenance of the
rule of law: a consideration which applies to orders made by courts of limited
jurisdiction as well as to those made by courts possessing unlimited jurisdiction. In the
present case, the First-tier Tribunal was in any event a court of competent jurisdiction:
it possessed jurisdiction under paragraph 22 of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act to hear and
determine applications for bail.
50. It is relevant to note some other recent examples of the application of this
Boddington and Percy v Hall, and concluded at para 36 that even if the county court had no jurisdiction to make the orders in question, the decision of the hospital managers to admit the applicant was valid. As he explained at para 30, if the orders were made by the county court without jurisdiction, then the applicant was entitled to have them quashed, but he was not entitled to a declaration that the decision to admit him was unlawful: that decision could only be quashed if it was ultra vires the hospital managers at the time when it was made, and it was not.
approach, in contexts more closely analogous to that of the present case. First, the
case of R v Central London County Court, Ex p London [1999] QB 1260 concerned the
compulsory detention of a patient in hospital under mental health legislation. The
application for his admission by the hospital managers was made by the local social
services authority, which had been authorised to make the application by orders made
by the county court. The patient subsequently applied for judicial review to quash the
court orders and the compulsory admission based upon them. The Court of Appeal
concluded that the orders were valid, but went on to consider what the position would
be if the county court had no jurisdiction to make them. Stuart-Smith LJ, with whom
51. Another recent example, which also illustrates the point that the rule set out in
Chuck v Cremer is not confined to orders made by courts possessing unlimited jurisdiction, is the decision of the Court of Appeal (Simon Brown, Mummery and Dyson LJJ) in R (H) v Ashworth Special Hospital Authority [2002] EWCA Civ 923; [2003] 1 WLR 127. The case arose out of the decision of a hospital authority to re-detain a patient after a mental health tribunal had ordered his discharge from detention. The hospital authority then applied for judicial review of the tribunal’s order, on the ground that it was unreasonable and unsupported by adequate reasons, and the patient applied for judicial review of the authority’s decision, on the basis that it was incompatible with the tribunal’s order. Both applications succeeded: the tribunal’s order was held to be unlawful and was quashed, but the authority was also held to have acted unlawfully in making a decision which was inconsistent with the tribunal’s order at a time when that order had not been set aside. The mental health tribunal was, of course, a body exercising a limited jurisdiction.
52. Dyson LJ based his reasoning upon article 5(4) of the European Convention on
Human Rights, but it was entirely consistent with the common law. He stated at para
56:
“In the absence of material circumstances of which the
tribunal is not aware when it orders discharge, in my
judgment it is not open to the professionals, at any rate until
and unless the tribunal’s decision has been quashed by a
court, to resection a patient. … To countenance such a course
as lawful would be to permit the professionals and their legal
advisers to determine whether a decision by a court to
discharge a detained person should have effect.”
Simon Brown LJ based his reasoning on the rule of law, stating at para 102:
“… the tribunal’s view must prevail; the authority cannot
simply overrule the discharge order. Court orders must be
respected - the rule of law is the imperative here.”
The authority’s decision was therefore unlawful, notwithstanding the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that the tribunal’s order was also unlawful and had rightly been quashed by the court below.
53. Reference might also be made to the judgment of the Court of Appeal in R
(Lunn) v Governor of Moorland Prison [2006] EWCA Civ 700; [2006] 1 WLR 2870, which
concerned an error in a warrant of imprisonment. Moore-Bick LJ, giving the judgment
of the court, stated at para 22:
“It is an important principle of the administration of justice
that an order of a court of competent jurisdiction made in
the exercise of that jurisdiction, as it was in this case, is valid
and binding until it is varied or set aside, either on appeal or
in the proper exercise of the court’s own jurisdiction. (It is
unnecessary in this case to consider the position in relation
to an order which is unlawful on its face or which is made in
excess of jurisdiction, though, as appears from the
authorities, an order which is valid on its face is binding even
if it was made in excess of jurisdiction and is therefore liable
to be set aside.) It is necessary that that should be the case,
both in order to preserve the authority of the courts and
thereby the orderly administration of justice and to ensure
that those who have to take action on the basis of the court’s
orders may be confident that they can lawfully do so.”
The sentence in parentheses is supported by a line of authority going back to the 17th century concerned with the execution of warrants issued in excess of jurisdiction, summarised by Lord Alverstone CJ in Demer v Cook (1903) 88 LT 629, 631.
54. Another recent example is the case of Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council v
KW (No 2) [2015] EWCA Civ 1054; [2016] 1 WLR 198, where a judge of the Family Division took the view that a decision of the Court of Appeal was ultra vires. Lord Dyson MR, giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal, stated at para 22:
M v Home Office [1994] 1 AC 377, 423; Isaacs v Robertson [1985] AC 97, 101-103.”
“An order of any court is binding until it is set aside or varied. if there were doubt as to the court’s jurisdiction to make the order:
This is consistent with principles of finality and certainty
which are necessary for the administration of justice: R
(Lunn) v Governor of Moorland Prison [2006] 1 WLR 2870,
para 22; Serious Organised Crime Agency v O’Docherty [2013]
55. A further example is the decision of the Court of Appeal in R v Kirby (John
Martin) [2019] EWCA Crim 321; [2019] 4 WLR 131, which concerned convictions for the breach of a non-molestation order that was subsequently set aside because of a procedural irregularity. The convictions were upheld. Singh LJ, giving the judgment of
the court, based the decision on “a long-standing principle of our law that there is an
obligation to obey an apparently valid order of a court unless and until that order is set
aside. This is a crucial feature of a civilized society which has respect for the rule of
law” (para 13). In that regard, Singh LJ cited Chuck v Cremer, Hadkinson v Hadkinson,
Isaacs v Robertson and M v Home Office, among other authorities, and followed
Director of Public Prosecutions v T in distinguishing the case of Boddington.
56. In the light of this consistent body of authority stretching back to 1846, it is
apparent that the alleged invalidity of the order made by the First-tier Tribunal had no bearing on the challenge to the decision of the Secretary of State. Even assuming that the order was invalid, the Secretary of State was nevertheless obliged to comply with it, unless and until it was varied or set aside. The allegation that the order was invalid was not, therefore, a relevant defence to the application for judicial review of the
Secretary of State’s decision. As there was no other basis on which the Court of Appeal reversed the Upper Tribunal, and the Secretary of State does not ask the court to dismiss the appeal on other grounds, it follows that the appeal should be allowed.
(iii) The procedure followed by the Court of Appeal
57. Before leaving this case, it is appropriate to make some observations about the procedure followed by the Court of Appeal in allowing a challenge by the Secretary of State to the decision of the First-tier Tribunal to be mounted in the form of a defence to an application for judicial review of a decision made by the Secretary of State. As I have explained, that should not have been allowed, because the challenge could not constitute a relevant defence in the light of the principle laid down in Chuck v Cremer.
It was for that reason that challenges to court orders, by way of defence to criminal
proceedings for their breach, were not permitted in Director of Public Prosecutions v T
(para 47 above) and R v Kirby (John Martin) (para 55 above).
58. Even if the defence had been relevant, however, the procedure adopted raises a
number of questions. One way of dealing with such a situation, which could not have given rise to any procedural difficulties or unfairness, would be to have adjourned the appeal, if that was considered appropriate, so as to enable the Secretary of State to
apply for permission to apply for judicial review. In the Ashworth case, for example (para 51 above), there were two separate applications for judicial review of the two decisions in issue, which were considered together by the Court of Appeal. Allowing a
challenge to an act or decision to be mounted instead in the form of a defence to an
application for judicial review of another act or decision raises a number of issues
which require consideration. As those issues do not arise for decision in this case, and
were not fully addressed, this is not the occasion for a detailed consideration of the
matter, but some relevant points can be noted:
(1) It has been established since Boddington that the validity of a byelaw does not fall exclusively within the jurisdiction of the Administrative Court, but
also falls within the jurisdiction of the magistrates’ court when raised as a
defence to criminal proceedings. In reaching that conclusion, their Lordships
were strongly influenced by the consideration that, if precluded from raising the
issue as a defence in the magistrates’ court, the defendant might not otherwise
have a fair opportunity of challenging the measure the breach of which was
alleged to constitute a criminal offence committed by him: see per Lord Irvine at
pp 161-162 and per Lord Steyn at p 173. Their Lordships approved the earlier
decisions in R v Wicks [1998] AC 92 and Quietlynn Ltd v Plymouth City Council
[1988] QB 114, where collateral challenges (as they are known) had not been
allowed. Lord Irvine explained at p 161 that “it was an important feature of both
cases that they were concerned with administrative acts specifically directed at
the defendants, where there had been clear and ample opportunity provided by
the scheme of the relevant legislation for those defendants to challenge the
legality of those acts, before being charged with an offence”. Later cases have
considered the appropriateness of collateral challenges to other types of
decision before other kinds of court.(2) Different considerations apply in the present context. Mr Boddington had no reason to challenge the byelaw prohibiting smoking in railway carriages until he was prosecuted for contravening it. In the present case, on the other hand,
Boddington were therefore absent.
the Secretary of State was party to the proceedings before the First-tier appellant from detention on the conditions set out in it. She had every opportunity to challenge the order if she considered that it was defective: the Court of Appeal accepted that she could, and should, have raised the matter with the First-tier Tribunal in order to have the defect corrected, and she could alternatively have applied to the Upper Tribunal for permission to apply for judicial review. In addition, she was not exposed to the risk of a criminal conviction. The policy considerations which influenced the House of Lords in
(3) Subject to the possibility of a collateral challenge, a bail order made by
only be challenged by means of a claim for judicial review, since no appeal lies
against such a decision. Such claims must be commenced in or transferred to
the Upper Tribunal, by virtue of section 31A(2) of the Senior Courts Act 1981
taken together with the Lord Chief Justice’s direction under section 18(6) of the
Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (“the 2007 Act”), “Jurisdiction of
the Upper Tribunal under section 18 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement
Act 2007 and Mandatory Transfer of Judicial Review Applications to the Upper
Tribunal under section 31A(2) of the Senior Courts Act 1981”, 21 August 2013.
the First-tier Tribunal under paragraph 22 of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act can that there was no need to comply with the direction.
(4) By virtue of section 16(2) of the 2007 Act, an application to the Upper Tribunal for judicial review can be made only if permission has been obtained from the tribunal. Allowing a collateral challenge to be instituted in the Court of
Appeal meant that there was no need for such permission to be obtained.
(5) By virtue of section 16(4) and (5) of the 2007 Act, the Upper Tribunal may refuse to grant permission for the making of the application, or may refuse to grant any relief, where it considers that there has been undue delay in making the application, and that granting the relief sought on the application would be likely to cause substantial hardship to, or substantially prejudice the rights of,
any person or would be detrimental to good administration. Those issues would
have been relevant if an application for judicial review of the bail order had
been made. Delay would have been a relevant factor. The implications of
granting relief would also have merited consideration: by the time of the Court
of Appeal’s decision, more than three years had passed since the order was
made. The implication of holding the order to have been void would seemingly
have been that the appellant had been unlawfully at large throughout the
intervening period. The Court of Appeal’s comments on good practice, echoing
rather more forcefully expressed criticisms by the tribunal, indicate that good
administration would also have been a live issue. Those issues were not
considered, in the context of the granting of permission or of relief, either by
the tribunal or by the Court of Appeal, since neither permission nor relief was
applied for.
Conclusion
59. For the reasons summarised at para 56 above, I would allow the appeal.
| JUDGMENT |
R (on the application of Majera (formerly SM
(Rwanda)) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for the
Home Department (Respondent)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Sales
Lord Leggatt Lord Burrows
Lady Rose
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
20 October 2021
Heard on 10 May 2021
1
6
0