Saturday, February 21, 2026

HRA: Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) — Summary of a Landmark Case Where Human Rights Law and National Security Collided

HRA: Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) — Summary of a Landmark Case Where Human Rights Law and National Security Collided

When post-9/11 national security measures directly clashed with the Human Rights Act 1998, on what basis did the House of Lords decide? The Belmarsh case is the key precedent that shows the answer.


HRA: Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) — Summary of a Landmark Case Where Human Rights Law and National Security Collided

Hello! I’m studying the tension points between UK public law—especially the HRA—and national security. Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) is a case that, every time I read it, makes me seriously reconsider “how far courts will accept national security and how far they will defend human rights.” At first, this case felt complicated because it pits counter-terrorism policy against human rights law, but following the judgment step by step makes the importance of the “limits of rational proportionality” and the “principle of non-discriminatory detention” very clear. Today, per your request to summarize Belmarsh, I’ll keep the essentials crisp while structuring it so the full picture is easy to grasp.

Background: Post-9/11 Security Policy and Belmarsh Detention

The starting point of Belmarsh lies in the UK government’s Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 (ATCSA), introduced after 9/11. This law allowed the indefinite detention of non-UK national terror suspects on the basis of a “specific risk,” and they were held at Belmarsh prison in London. The problem was that this detention did not rest on criminal trial procedures. In other words, people were detained “without charge” and “without trial,” based solely on a risk assessment. Detainess therefore brought proceedings under the Human Rights Act 1998, arguing that “this detention violates Article 5 (liberty) and Article 14 (non-discrimination).”

Aware that ATCSA detention could violate Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR),
the UK government invoked HRA Section 15 (derogation) to justify restrictions on liberty during an emergency. Belmarsh boils down to three core issues:

Issue Explanation
Article 5 (liberty) violation Indefinite detention without charge or trial → clear restriction of liberty
Article 14 (non-discrimination) violation Applied to non-nationals only, not UK nationals → discrimination issue
HRA Section 15 derogation Declaration of public emergency and the requirements of “necessity & proportionality”

House of Lords’ Reasoning: Proportionality Review Coupled with Discrimination Analysis

The Lords accepted that “national security is a compelling public interest,” but found that ATCSA’s detention regime did not meet the proportionality standard. To detain the “truly dangerous,” the UK should have regulated UK nationals in the same way; there was insufficient rational basis to detain only non-nationals indefinitely.

  • Proportionality: Were there less intrusive means to achieve the same objective?
  • Discrimination: Was there a reasonable basis to detain only non-nationals?
  • Necessity of liberty restriction: Mismatch between the declared “public emergency” and the actual measures

Ultimately, the House of Lords held that the ATCSA measures were discriminatory and failed proportionality, and issued a declaration of incompatibility for parts of the legislation.

Assessing the Lawfulness of the UK’s HRA Section 15 Derogation

In Belmarsh, the UK defended ATCSA’s constitutionality by invoking an ECHR Article 5 derogation on grounds of “public emergency.” But the Lords concluded the derogation failed key requirements. The central question was whether the measures were truly proportionate to the emergency.

Review Criterion House of Lords’ View
Existence of an emergency National security threat acknowledged
Necessity of the measures Detaining only non-nationals could not be justified as necessary
Proportionality Excessive relative to the aim → less intrusive alternatives existed

In short, the Lords found that the derogation itself was unlawful and parts of ATCSA were incompatible with human rights law.

Aftermath: Overhaul of Terror Legislation and Changes in HRA Operation

Following Belmarsh, the UK government reassessed the legal framework. Once it became clear that “indefinite detention without charge” could not satisfy human-rights standards, Parliament enacted the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005, introducing a system of control orders. These replaced detention with relatively less intrusive restrictions on movement, communication, and so on.

Area Affected Change
Terror legislation Indefinite detention → shift to control orders
HRA interpretation Stricter review under Articles 5 & 14; tighter approach to derogation
Policy design Weakening of the justification for measures that target “non-nationals only”

Practice & Study Points: Lessons from Belmarsh

Belmarsh is indispensable for anyone studying the HRA. It’s central to understanding how courts proceed when the structure “national security vs human rights” arises.

  • Proportionality review applies even in the national-security domain.
  • Measures that target only non-nationals carry a very high risk of Article 14 violation.
  • Derogation is not automatically accepted even where there is an emergency.
  • When restricting rights, exploring “less intrusive alternatives” is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q Why is Belmarsh so important under the HRA?

Because it is a rare case where a liberty restriction (Article 5) justified by national security and discrimination against non-nationals (Article 14) were both at issue. It is assessed as a leading authority reaffirming the reach of human rights law.

Q What made ATCSA problematic?

It allowed non-national terror suspects to be detained indefinitely without charge or trial. This raised a serious liberty issue and a strong possibility of discrimination against non-nationals.

Q Why did the House of Lords find the UK’s derogation unlawful?

While the emergency itself was acknowledged, detaining only non-nationals could not be justified as necessary, and less intrusive alternatives existed. In short, proportionality failed.

Q What message does Belmarsh send for national-security policy?

That “national security” does not automatically justify restrictions on rights. Courts still review measures through the lenses of proportionality and equality.

Q What legal changes followed Belmarsh?

The indefinite detention regime was scrapped and replaced by less intrusive control orders. Since then, terror legislation has been drafted with proportionality constraints in mind.

Q How is this case used for exam prep?

It’s a near-mandatory example for questions on Articles 5 & 14 and derogation. It’s especially useful for explaining “proportionality in national security” and the risks of measures targeting only non-nationals.

Wrap-Up and Summary

Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) shows most clearly the principles courts seek to uphold when national security collides with human rights. The finding that indefinite detention targeting only non-nationals was neither proportionate nor consistent with equality prompted a complete redesign of the UK’s approach at the time. When I first studied this case, I expected courts to step back in the face of the sweeping rationale of “national security,” but I was struck by how closely they examined necessity and discriminatory effects. Belmarsh set the baseline for subsequent terror legislation and HRA practice, cementing the principle of “less intrusive alternatives.”

If you’d like to dig deeper into Articles 5/14 or the HRA’s scope during public emergencies, say the word. I can also map the follow-on trajectory from control orders to the TPIM framework.

Friday, February 20, 2026

R (Evans) v. Attorney General (UKSC, 2015): The Clash Between Royal Confidentiality and the Principle of Openness

R (Evans) v. Attorney General (UKSC, 2015): The Clash Between Royal Confidentiality and the Principle of Openness

“Right to know vs. royal confidentiality” — the Evans case sat at the center when two traditions of the UK constitution collided head-on.


R (Evans) v. Attorney General (UKSC, 2015): The Clash Between Royal Confidentiality and the Principle of Openness

Hello, everyone! Today we’re looking at one of the most intriguing cases in UK public law, R (Evans) v. Attorney General (2015). This dispute began when Guardian journalist Rob Evans requested disclosure of the then-Prince of Wales’s (now Charles III) letters to government departments — the so-called “black spider memos.” Under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and the Environmental Information Regulations (EIR), disclosure was ordered, but the Attorney General exercised a special veto to overturn that order. Whether that exercise of power was lawful became the core issue. When I first read this case, I wondered, “Can the executive really overturn a court’s decision like that?” The Supreme Court’s conclusion makes very clear where the UK constitution stands on the rule of law and transparency. In STEP 1, here’s the table of contents so you can see the big picture at a glance!

Case Overview: The start of the dispute over disclosure of the “spider memos”

The Evans case began when Guardian journalist Rob Evans sought disclosure of letters the Prince of Wales sent around 2004–2005 to various government ministers — personal and policy views known as the “black spider memos.” Relying on FOIA and the EIR, the Information Commissioner decided that most of the documents should be disclosed, and the Court of Appeal agreed. However, the Attorney General then exercised FOIA’s “special veto” (the certification power) to overturn the courts’ disclosure order. Whether the executive can effectively neutralise a judicial decision triggered a constitutional debate that reached the Supreme Court.

Key Issues: Scope of FOIA’s special veto and the force of court judgments

The central question was whether the executive could rely on section 53 of FOIA to nullify a judicial decision already ordering disclosure. The Supreme Court acknowledged that the provision exists but examined closely how far it extends and what standards prevent its abuse. The table below structures the core issues addressed in Evans.

Issue Explanation
Legal limits of the special veto Can the executive overturn a court’s decision? If so, to what extent?
Rule of law and separation of powers Is executive nullification of judicial judgments compatible with constitutional principles?
Scope of protecting royal neutrality How far can the tradition of shielding royal papers prevail over the principle of disclosure?

The Supreme Court’s Judgment: Limiting abuse of the executive veto

By a 5–2 majority, the Supreme Court held that the special veto cannot be used in a way that effectively overturns a court’s determination, ruling in Evans’s favor. The majority stated that to nullify a judicial disclosure order, the executive would need exceptionally compelling, rational, and objective grounds. Key points emphasized by the Court:

  • A mere disagreement by the executive with a judicial decision is not a lawful basis to overturn it.
  • FOIA’s special veto must be exercised only in truly exceptional circumstances and very narrowly.
  • Royal neutrality is a relevant factor, but it cannot override the core principles of the rule of law.

Significance: Re-articulating royal neutrality, transparency, and the rule of law

R (Evans) is not merely a disclosure case; it clarified key constitutional principles — the rule of law, the authority of the judiciary, royal neutrality, and transparency in government records. The Supreme Court criticized the Attorney General’s use of the veto because it effectively nullified a judicial order, reaffirming that “the executive cannot stand above judicial determinations.” It also emphasized that protecting royal neutrality is not an unlimited exception and that the public’s right to know about matters of public interest reflects FOIA’s fundamental spirit. This judgment has significantly influenced policy-making and day-to-day practice surrounding disclosure in the UK.

Evans — Evaluation and Critique Table

Although widely welcomed by scholars and the media, some argue that the judgment unduly narrowed the intended purpose of the veto and the executive’s discretion. The table below summarizes major points of praise and criticism.

Praise/Critique Details
Strengthening judicial authority Clarifies that the executive cannot overturn court rulings, protecting separation of powers
Preventing abuse of the veto Sets strict thresholds for invoking FOIA section 53
Debate over narrowed executive discretion Some criticize the Court for intruding too far into policy judgments

Practical Implications for public records, royal papers, and administrative review

Evans significantly shifted the long-standing practice of treating royal papers as confidential by default. To protect royal-related documents or other sensitive public records in the future, the executive must show legal grounds and objective necessity — not mere political preference. In FOIA and EIR practice, using a veto to “overturn a court order” has become virtually impossible, and refusals must be justified within a much narrower scope. Here are key practitioner takeaways:

  • The government’s special veto should be used only in truly exceptional circumstances.
  • Even royal papers can be disclosed where transparency and the rule of law demand it.
  • In information-rights reviews and judicial review, Evans remains a leading authority.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Why is the Evans case considered so important?

Because it addressed a fundamental constitutional question: can the executive overturn a court’s decision? The Supreme Court safeguarded the rule of law by tightly limiting the veto.

Was FOIA’s special veto (section 53) abolished?

No. But after Evans, it is interpreted so narrowly that, in practice, it is almost never usable.

Are royal papers non-disclosable by default?

Historically they were often withheld, but after Evans, transparency and public interest carry greater weight, and disclosure can follow judicial scrutiny.

How did Evans affect FOIA practice?

The executive’s discretion under section 53 was drastically curtailed, and public authorities must now provide much more rigorous reasons to justify refusal.

Is the case connected to separation of powers?

Very much so. Executive efforts to neutralise judicial decisions undermine separation of powers; the Supreme Court firmly checked that.

Were the “black spider memos” actually disclosed after the ruling?

Yes. Following the Supreme Court’s decision, most of the memos were released, prompting significant public discussion and media coverage.

Conclusion: Evans’s message for a “transparent constitutional order”

R (Evans) v. Attorney General gets more interesting the more you study it. It was never just about whether to disclose royal papers; it asked the foundational question: “Can the executive stand above judicial judgment?” In the end, the Supreme Court sided with transparency and the rule of law, re-affirming the direction of UK public law. Keep this case in mind — it helps you navigate complex themes like information rights, separation of powers, and royal practice. If you’d like related cases to read together (e.g., Privacy International, Miller, Cherry), tell me and I’ll connect the dots!

Thursday, February 19, 2026

AXA General Insurance v. HM Advocate (UKSC, 2011) — Limits of the Scottish Parliament’s Legislative Power and the Standard of Judicial Review

AXA General Insurance v. HM Advocate (UKSC, 2011) — Limits of the Scottish Parliament’s Legislative Power and the Standard of Judicial Review

If insurers sue the Scottish Parliament itself saying “this is virtually unconstitutional,” how far can the UK Supreme Court put on the brakes?


AXA General Insurance v. HM Advocate (UKSC, 2011) — Limits of the Scottish Parliament’s Legislative Power and the Standard of Judicial Review

Hello! I’ve been redrawing my mental map by organizing UK–Scottish public law cases one by one. Among them, AXA General Insurance v. HM Advocate (UKSC, 2011) keeps drawing me back because it squarely tackles a near-constitutional question: “How far can courts tinker with legislation itself by judicial review?” Asbestos damages, the insurance industry, the Scottish Parliament’s legislation, and Human Rights Act/devolution issues all collide at once—so at first glance you might wonder, “Where do I even start?” Rather than studying this like an exam outline, I’ll walk through the points that confused me and step-by-step explain why this case matters.

Case Background: Asbestos Damages and the Scottish Damages Act

The starting point of AXA is whether “asbestos-related conditions” are legally compensable. In particular, **pleural plaques** leave physical changes but were long considered to cause little to no symptoms, so UK courts had treated them as “negligible damage” and denied recovery. The Scottish Parliament, however, reached a completely different conclusion. It enacted the **Damages (Asbestos-related Conditions) (Scotland) Act 2009**, declaring that certain asbestos-related conditions, including pleural plaques, constitute compensable “damage.” For insurers, this was a true game-changer, prompting a highly unusual situation where AXA and other major insurers sued the Scottish Parliament directly.

Understanding the Scottish Parliament’s Powers and Legislative Context

To understand AXA, you first need to place the Scottish Parliament in context. Scotland has a devolved legislature with broad powers, but they are strictly constrained by the Scotland Act 1998. The insurers argued that the 2009 Act was legislation that had “overstepped” rational bounds and was “arbitrary legislation” exceeding legitimate intervention.

Issue Details
Scope of parliamentary powers Exercised within limits set by the Scotland Act 1998
Purpose of the Damages Act Protect asbestos victims and widen the legal recognition of “damage”
Insurers’ argument An “arbitrary” expansion of the concept of legal damage → breaches proportionality/rationality

Standard of Judicial Review: “Irrationality” and the Limits on Controlling Legislation

The most interesting question here was, “How far can courts review Acts of the Scottish Parliament?” AXA argued the law was “irrational,” “arbitrary,” and “disproportionate,” but the Supreme Court set a very high threshold. It emphasized that legislative acts, unlike administrative acts, enjoy an extremely wide margin.

  • A legislature possesses democratic legitimacy.
  • Courts therefore intervene only where a law is “manifestly unreasonable.”
  • Mere policy misjudgment is not justiciable by judicial review.

Property Rights and Human Rights Act Issues

AXA was not just about administrative/legislative control—it also raised whether insurers’ **property rights (Article 1 of Protocol 1, A1P1)** were infringed. Insurers claimed that the Damages Act forced them to pay substantial compensation for losses they previously had no liability for, amounting to a de facto “deprivation of property.” The Supreme Court, however, viewed the Scottish Parliament’s objective as a legitimate public-interest intervention and found the increased burden on insurers **within the bounds of proportionality**.

Issue Holding
A1P1 property rights violation? Economic burden alone does not amount to a violation
Legitimate public interest? Clear public interest in restoring asbestos victims’ rights
Proportionality Measures not excessive in the circumstances

Accordingly, the Court also rejected the Human Rights Act claims. This decision is often cited to refute a simplistic equation of “higher economic burden = property rights violation.”

Impact on the Insurance Industry and Shifts in Cost Structures

AXA left substantial ripples across the insurance market—especially “unexpected changes in cost structure,” a key practical issue. While the 2009 Act broadened compensable asbestos harms to better protect victims, insurers faced new categories of liability.

Impact Factor Explanation
Expanded scope of damages Pleural plaques recognized as legal damage → new liabilities
Premium repricing Need to reflect long-term risk → upward pressure on premiums
Increase in mass claims Growth in asbestos-related group actions and claims

Ultimately, AXA is a textbook example of how legislative change can upend insurance risk structures.

Practice & Study Points: What to Take from AXA

AXA addresses the core theme of “judicial review of legislation” and spans public law, insurance law, and human rights law—a rare combination. It’s essential when examining how to evaluate the Scottish Parliament’s powers within the devolution framework.

  • Judicial review over legislation is extremely limited.
  • An insurer’s increased economic burden is not, by itself, a property rights violation.
  • The Scotland Act 1998 framework and the interpretation of devolved legislative competence are central.
  • The public-interest aim of protecting asbestos victims underpins the law’s legitimacy.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q Why did insurers sue the “Parliament” directly?

Because the 2009 Act imposed liabilities insurers previously did not bear. Recognizing pleural plaques as damage opened the door to historical claims and massive costs, so insurers challenged the legislation itself via judicial review.

Q Why can courts conduct only “very limited” review of legislation?

Because legislatures derive authority from democratic legitimacy. Unlike administrative bodies, parliaments are directly accountable through elections, so courts intervene only when a law is clearly unreasonable or ultra vires.

Q Why was the A1P1 property rights claim rejected in AXA?

Because increased costs for insurers do not automatically equal “deprivation of property.” The Court found a strong public interest in protecting asbestos victims and deemed the legislative measures not disproportionate.

Q How does AXA describe the constitutional status of the Scottish Parliament?

It recognizes the Scottish Parliament not as a mere local authority but as a democratic institution within the constitutional order—entitled to a broad legislative discretion. This became an important principle in subsequent devolution cases.

Q Why was the 2009 Damages Act criticized as “arbitrary legislation”?

Because it overturned prior case law (notably Rothwell) and treated medically “mostly asymptomatic” pleural plaques as compensable damage. The Supreme Court, however, held that Parliament can reflect new social standards through legislation.

Q How is this case used in UK public law practice going forward?

It’s frequently cited as severely limiting the possibility of judicial review against legislation itself. It underscores that “democratically sanctioned legislative decisions are for the legislator to judge,” setting a key boundary line.

Wrap-Up and Summary

AXA General Insurance v. HM Advocate is one of the clearest UK public law authorities on the judicial review of legislation. It confirms that even laws enacted by a democratically constituted Scottish Parliament can be subjected to judicial review—but on a far narrower and stricter basis than administrative decisions. Studying this case made me reflect on how broadly “legislative rationality” is recognized and how restrained courts must be in intervening. In the end, AXA reaffirmed Scotland’s constitutional status while recalibrating the separation of powers between legislation and adjudication.

If you’re curious about linked devolution cases (e.g., Imperial Tobacco, Salvesen v. Riddell), let me know. Seeing the follow-on line of authority makes the structure even clearer!

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

R (UNISON) v. Lord Chancellor (UK, 2017): The Landmark Judgment that Safeguarded Access to Justice

R (UNISON) v. Lord Chancellor (UK, 2017): The Landmark Judgment that Safeguarded Access to Justice

“Can access to the courts be limited by money?” The UK Supreme Court left a firm answer to this question.


R (UNISON) v. Lord Chancellor (UK, 2017): The Landmark Judgment that Safeguarded Access to Justice

Hello! Today I’m introducing an essential case for anyone studying administrative or constitutional law: R (UNISON) v. Lord Chancellor (2017). The issue was whether the UK Government’s high fees for using the Employment Tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal were lawful. The trade union UNISON argued that the scheme effectively infringed workers’ access to justice and brought judicial review. When I first read this case, I wondered, “How does a fee policy amount to a fundamental rights violation?” But the Supreme Court’s judgment makes clear that this is a basic question about whether the executive can use economic barriers to block people from exercising their rights. In STEP 1, here’s a table of contents so you can see the entire structure at a glance!

Case Overview: Introduction of Employment Tribunal fees and background

In 2013, the UK Government introduced a fees regime for the Employment Tribunal (ET) and the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT), claiming it would reduce abusive litigation and help meet court operating costs. The problem was that the fees were far from modest. Although tiered, some claims exceeded several hundred pounds, effectively blocking access for low-paid workers and those bringing discrimination claims. Statistics showed that claims in the Employment Tribunal fell to less than half of previous levels. UNISON argued that this fee structure “erects economic barriers that prevent the effective exercise of legal rights,” breaching constitutional principles, and the issue ultimately reached the UK Supreme Court.

Core Legal Issues: Access to justice and separation of powers

The key question was whether executive-imposed fees can restrict access to justice. While parliamentary sovereignty is central to the UK constitution, courts must remain open for people to vindicate their rights. UNISON argued that fees were so high that workers with meritorious claims were deterred from bringing them, thereby weakening the courts’ function and disturbing the separation of powers. The table below structures the core issues in this case.

Issue Explanation
Whether access to justice was infringed Whether excessive costs made court use practically impossible
Maintenance of separation of powers Whether executive policy encroached upon the courts’ constitutional function
Equality/non-discrimination Whether vulnerable groups bore a disproportionate burden

The Supreme Court’s Judgment: Declaration of the fees’ unlawfulness

The Supreme Court found for UNISON, holding that the Employment Tribunal fees regime “restricted access to justice in a way that cuts to the very essence of a constitutional right,” and was therefore unlawful. The Court particularly emphasised:

  • Access to the courts is a core element of the rule of law and cannot be curtailed at will by the state.
  • The fee increases caused an absolute reduction in users of the courts and were disproportionate to the policy aims.
  • A structure that disproportionately harms vulnerable groups cannot be justified.

Meaning of the Decision: Strengthening the constitutional order and rights protection

UNISON is a landmark decision that reaffirmed foundational principles of the UK’s constitutional order, not merely an administrative regulation case. The Supreme Court held that “access to justice is central to democracy and the rule of law, and is itself a constitutional value.” Importantly, even where Parliament has delegated powers to the executive, the courts can control their exercise if they infringe access to the courts, a right of constitutional character. The Court also underlined that blocking workers and vulnerable people from realistically reaching the courts is not a mere fees policy issue but one of substantive equality, thereby tightening the standards for assessing the legitimacy of public policy. Consequently, UNISON stands as the Supreme Court’s formal declaration that access to justice in the UK constitution is not a “formal” right but a “practical and effective” one.

UNISON: Evaluation and critique table

While widely welcomed, UNISON has not ended all debate. Questions remain about the extent of judicial intervention in policymaking. The table below summarises representative points of praise and critique.

Praise/Critique Details
Strengthened access to justice Clearly protects access to justice as a constitutional value
Expansion of judicial review over policy discretion Critique that the judiciary intervened too deeply in executive policy
Protection of vulnerable groups Highlights the real impact of economic barriers on the exercise of fundamental rights

Implications for administrative, labour, and constitutional practice

UNISON extends well beyond labour cases, affecting all administrative fee regimes, licensing schemes, and gatekeeping mechanisms. In designing public policy, it is now essential to check whether a measure risks restricting “access to justice” or imposes a disproportionate burden on socio-economically disadvantaged groups. Here are key practice takeaways:

  • Administrative fees and licensing schemes must be designed not to infringe access to justice.
  • Regimes that disproportionately disadvantage socio-economically vulnerable groups may be constitutionally suspect.
  • The judiciary can, from a separation-of-powers perspective, check excessive executive limitations on court access.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Why is UNISON called a “constitutional” case?

Because the Supreme Court framed access to the courts as inherent to the rule of law and declared it to have constitutional status.

Was the mere existence of fees unconstitutional?

Not simply “having a fee.” The regime was unlawful because the amounts were so high that they effectively blocked access in practice.

On what basis did the Supreme Court recognise access to justice?

The UK constitutional tradition, the rule of law, and the courts’ constitutional function require a practical avenue for people to vindicate rights.

Does this case affect only labour claims?

Not at all. It provides a standard for assessing whether “economic barriers” in any administrative fees or licensing regimes restrict fundamental rights.

Is there criticism that the judiciary interfered too much in policy?

Yes. Some argue UNISON extends judicial review into the policy sphere and could chill executive discretion.

What happened to the fees regime after the judgment?

Immediately after the decision, the Employment Tribunal fees regime was quashed, and fees already paid were set to be refunded.

Conclusion: UNISON’s final message on access to justice

R (UNISON) v. Lord Chancellor was more than the abolition of a policy; it forcefully confirmed that the rule of law exists only if people can use the courts. Every time I revisit this case, the Supreme Court’s clear message resonates: the state cannot control the exercise of rights through litigation costs. In particular, UNISON emphasised that access to justice is not a mere abstract principle or declaratory norm but a right that must be real and effective—leaving crucial implications for today’s administrative, labour, and constitutional practice. I hope this post helped you grasp why this case is so central to the modern UK constitutional framework. If you’d like, I can expand to connected authorities on access to justice (judicial review principles, Leech, Witham, etc.).

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

R v. Ghosh (UK, 1982) — The Historic Case That Set the English Criminal Law Standard for “Dishonesty”

R v. Ghosh (UK, 1982) — The Historic Case That Set the English Criminal Law Standard for “Dishonesty”

How does English criminal law assess dishonesty? We take a deep look at the Ghosh test, which served as the benchmark for 35 years.


R v. Ghosh (UK, 1982) — The Historic Case That Set the English Criminal Law Standard for “Dishonesty”

Hello! Lately I’ve been enjoying revisiting and organizing English criminal law cases step by step. R v. Ghosh (1982) is a decision I personally reread many times. That’s because this case marked the historic moment when the courts created a two-stage Ghosh test to answer the fundamental question, “What is dishonesty?” While studying it, I remember thinking, “Amazing—courts are structuring the concepts of honesty/dishonesty like this!” Today, let’s retrace that flow in the clearest way possible together.

Case Background and Core Facts

R v. Ghosh (1982) is a leading case that emerged as courts grappled with how to set the standard for dishonesty in English criminal law. The defendant, Ghosh, was a surgeon accused of improperly claiming fees for medical procedures he had not performed. The key question was whether he himself recognized that his conduct was dishonest. Sensing potential conflict between subjective awareness and an objective standard, the court sought to establish a new framework for dishonesty. Every time I revisit this case, I’m impressed by how the law translated the abstract notion of “what someone knew in their own mind” into a legal structure.

Ghosh was pivotal because the legal concept of “dishonesty” was highly ambiguous. The court concluded that existing precedents could not resolve the confusion and designed a new framework. The table below summarizes the core issues at the time.

Core Issue Explanation
Objective standard vs. subjective awareness Was the conduct itself dishonest? Did the defendant know that?
Lack of consistency in English criminal law Different tests across prior cases led to ongoing confusion
Need for jury directions No clear benchmark for dishonesty → risk of erroneous verdicts

Structure of the Ghosh Test: Two-Stage Standard Explained

The Ghosh test became the central benchmark for judging dishonesty in English criminal law for the next 35 years. It comprised two stages, combining objective and subjective elements.

  • **Stage 1 (objective):** Was the conduct dishonest by the standards of ordinary decent people?
  • **Stage 2 (subjective):** Did the defendant realize that what he did was dishonest by those standards?

This structure was distinctive in insisting that we consider both “society’s moral yardstick” and “the individual’s actual appreciation.”

Post-Case Critiques and Problems in Application

Although the Ghosh test long served as the core standard, criticisms mounted over time. In particular, the second stage (“Did the defendant know it was dishonest by that standard?”) proved very difficult to apply in practice. For example, if a defendant claimed, “I didn’t know that was dishonest,” it was often hard for juries to evaluate this credibly. In the end, critics argued that the test reduced predictability rather than enhancing legal certainty.

Another critique was that the Ghosh structure risked over-weighting the defendant’s own moral compass. Instead of preserving legal objectivity, it could place undue emphasis on the “offender’s subjective appreciation.”

The 2017 Ivey Decision Overruling the Ghosh Test

In 2017, the UK Supreme Court in Ivey v Genting Casinos formally overruled the Ghosh test. The Court held that a subjective element is not required to determine dishonesty and articulated a new, single objective standard. This was a major turning point in English criminal law.

Old Standard (Ghosh) New Standard (Ivey)
Two stages: objective + subjective Single objective standard
Focus on whether the defendant knew it was dishonest Assessment by the objective standards of ordinary decent people
High weight on subjective awareness No deference to the defendant’s personal moral code

Since Ivey, English courts have assessed dishonesty far more clearly and consistently around an objective benchmark.

Practice & Study Points: Lessons from Ghosh

Although ultimately overruled, Ghosh remains a valuable study in how English criminal law tried—and struggled—to legally define a moral concept like “honesty.”

  • Limits and risks when translating moral concepts into legal standards
  • How combining objective and subjective elements can reduce predictability
  • Why the Supreme Court shifted to an objective standard in Ivey
  • Tracing the evolution of “dishonesty” within offense elements

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q Why is R v. Ghosh so famous?

Because it established the first clearly articulated two-stage test for dishonesty, which guided English criminal law for more than 35 years.

Q Why was the Ghosh test criticized?

The requirement to assess the defendant’s “subjective awareness” was the major problem. If a defendant said, “I didn’t know it was dishonest,” juries found that very hard to evaluate reliably.

Q What happened to the Ghosh test after Ivey?

The Supreme Court overruled it in 2017. Now the English standard for dishonesty is unified under a single objective test.

Q What exactly were the two stages of Ghosh?

(1) Was the conduct dishonest by the standards of ordinary decent people? (2) Did the defendant realize that his conduct was dishonest by those standards? Both elements had to be satisfied.

Q Is Ghosh still worth studying today?

Absolutely. Though overruled, it remains an important resource for understanding the challenges of legalizing moral/ethical concepts in criminal law.

Q Which standard is generally considered better—Ghosh or Ivey?

The consensus favors Ivey for clarity. It’s easier for juries to apply and improves predictability by not hinging on a defendant’s subjective moral sense.

Wrap-Up and Summary

R v. Ghosh is a landmark for understanding how the concept of “dishonesty” was shaped in English criminal law, even though the standard was later overruled. At first, the two-stage test can seem quite reasonable, but its application shows just how hard it is to legally verify moral awareness. Each revisit prompts reflection on how much subjectivity law should allow—and where to insist on objectivity. Ivey ended the Ghosh era, but the questions it raised will continue to inform doctrinal interpretation.

If you’re curious about other dishonesty cases or real-world applications of the Ivey standard, let me know. If there’s another case you’d like to explore, we can organize it together!

HRA: Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) — Summary of a Landmark Case Where Human Rights Law and National Security Collided

HRA: Belmarsh (UKHL, 2004) — Summary of a Landmark Case Where Human Rights Law and National Security Collided When post-9/11 national se...