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High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Queen's Bench Division Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Queen's Bench Division Decisions >> PL, Re Judicial Review [2019] NIQB 64 (14 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIHC/QB/2019/64.html Cite as: [2019] NIQB 64 |
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Ref: McC11005
Neutral Citation No: [2019] NIQB 64
Judgment: approved by the Court for handing down
(subject to editorial corrections)*
Ex tempore
Delivered: 06 & 14/06/2019
MCCLOSKEY J
REMEDIES
PART 1 [06 June 2019]
"Arrangements will be made for the convening of a separate hearing for the purpose of considering argument on the interrelated issues of final order and remedies together with that of costs".
"The Commission's approach to and treatment of representations made in response to the consultation invitation during the second of the statutory engagement periods is expressed unambiguously. It proceeded on the basis of a self - denying stratagem of a general rule and an exception. It failed to appreciate the full extent of what the statutory provisions permitted it to do or what was required of it by the common law. It considered itself bound in some way, but not absolutely, by the proposals published in the RPR. The Commission therefore fettered it's broad discretion and simultaneously the decision making process was vitiated by procedural unfairness as the common law right of all consultees to have their views considered fully and conscientiously and on the basis of a level playing field was frustrated".
Reading on and summarising, the court concluded:
"In consequence of this approach the Commission at one and the same time fettered the demonstrably broad discretion conferred on it by the legislature and acted in contravention of the common law principles".
PART 2 [14 June 2019]
"The relationship between Parliament and the courts is a working relationship between two constitutional sovereignties".
In the case of Morgan-Grampian [1991] 1 AC 1 Lord Reid stated at page 48E:
"The maintenance of the rule of law is in every way as important in a free society as the democratic franchise. In our society the rule of law rests upon twin foundations, the sovereignty of the Queen and Parliament in making the law and the Sovereignty of the Queen's courts in interpreting and applying the law".
There are further comparable pronouncements.