R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union

R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the EU
Court Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
Full case name
  • R (on the application of Miller and another) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union
  • R (on the application of the Attorney General for Northern Ireland) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union and the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, ex parte Agnew and others (Northern Ireland)
  • R (on the application of McCord) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union and the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Northern Ireland)
Argued 5–8 December 2016
Decided 24 January 2017
Neutral Citation [2017] UKSC 5
Reported at
  • [2016] EWHC 2768 (Admin)
  • [2016] NIQB 19
Case history
Prior action(s) Referred from:
  • For the McCord application:
    Court of Appeal (Northern Ireland) (NICA)
  • For the application by the Attorney General for Northern Ireland:
    Divisional Court (Queen's Bench Division) of the High Court (Northern Ireland) (NIQB)
Holding
Court membership
Judge(s) sitting Neuberger, Hale, Mance, Kerr, Clarke, Wilson, Sumption, Reed, Carnwath, Hughes, Hodge
Case opinions
Majority Neuberger, Hale, Mance, Kerr, Clarke, Wilson, Sumption, Hodge
Dissent Reed, Carnwath, Hughes (all dissented on royal prerogative point, all concurred on devolution point)
Area of Law

R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union [2017] UKSC 5 is a legal case decided by the United Kingdom Supreme Court on 24 January 2017, which ruled that the UK Government (the executive) may not initiate withdrawal from the European Union by formal notification to the Council of the European Union as prescribed by Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union without an Act of the UK Parliament permitting the government to do so. Two days later, the government responded by bringing to Parliament the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Bill 2017 for first reading in the House of Commons on 26 January 2017. The case is informally referred to as "the Miller case"[1] or Miller's case.[2]

The Supreme Court's decision was given on appeal from the High Court's ruling[3] that the Crown's foreign affairs prerogative, which is exercised by the government led by the Prime Minister, may not be used to nullify rights that Parliament has enacted through primary legislation. The case was seen as having constitutional significance in deciding the scope of the royal prerogative in foreign affairs.[4] The Supreme Court also ruled that devolved legislatures in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have no legal right to veto the act.[5]

The government's appeal was against the High Court order dated 7 November 2016 that formally declared: "The Secretary of State does not have power under the Crown's prerogative to give notice pursuant to Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union for the United Kingdom to withdraw from the European Union." The Supreme Court heard the appeal from 5 December 2016 to 8 December 2016, and, by a majority of 8–3, upheld the High Court ruling, finding that authorisation by Parliament was required for the invocation of Article 50.[6]

The case was intervened by the Lord Advocate and the Counsel General for Wales for the Scottish and Welsh governments (respectively as the Scottish and Welsh Ministers), and applicants for judicial review in Northern Ireland also had their three separate applications considered together with this case, all of whom argued that the Scottish Parliament, the National Assembly for Wales and the Northern Ireland Assembly all had to consent to the invocation of Article 50. In each case this was unanimously rejected by the court.[6]

Facts

Following a referendum held on 23 June 2016, in which 51.9% of votes cast were in favour of leaving the EU, the UK government stated its intention to invoke Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (the formal procedure for withdrawing) on 29 March 2017. A week after the referendum, a columnist for The Times, David Pannick QC, asked whether parliamentary approval was needed before notification could lawfully be given of the UK's intention to leave, and answered that an Act of Parliament is required.[7] The government argued that the use of prerogative powers to enact the referendum result was constitutionally proper and consistent with domestic law whereas the opposing view was that prerogative powers could not be used to set aside rights previously established by Parliament.[8]

Arguments

Any Member State may decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.

Article 50(1) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU), as amended (Treaty of Maastricht, as amended by the Treaty of Lisbon)

Gina Miller and other claimants had sought permission to bring an action in the High Court for judicial review on whether the UK government was entitled to notify an intention to leave the European Union under Article 50 of the Treaty of the European Union (TEU), as amended (the Maastricht and Lisbon Treaties), without a vote or deliberative debate in Parliament.

The Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union David Davis argued that the possibility to trigger article 50 was based on the royal prerogative and so any consultation of elected members of parliament was unnecessary.[9] Miller contended that, if notification under Article 50 were to be invoked to leave the European Union, it would effectively nullify a series of Acts of Parliament.[9] It was a constitutional principle that Acts of Parliament could not be changed without the consent of Parliament.[10]

The Secretary of State did not contend that the Referendum Act 2015 supplied a statutory power for the Crown to give notice under Article 50.[11] The Court observed that he was right not to do so, because any argument to that effect would have been untenable as a matter of statutory interpretation of the 2015 Act[12] and stated:

... a referendum on any topic can only be advisory for the lawmakers in Parliament unless very clear language to the contrary is in the referendum legislation in question. No such language is used in the 2015 Referendum Act. Further, the 2015 Referendum Act was passed against a background including a clear briefing paper to parliamentarians explaining that the referendum would have advisory effect only.

Miller and Santos v. Secretary of State [2016] EWHC 2768 (Admin), para. 105–6[13]

High Court judgment

Background

There was dispute over whether the decision to invoke Article 50 was the prerogative of the government, as the Cameron government argued,[14] or whether it required Parliamentary approval.[15][16] Article 50 states that "Any Member State may decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements".

As Professor Kenneth Armstrong (Professor of EU law at Cambridge University) points out[17] this is a decision solely for domestic law: whether constitutional requirements have been met is a matter solely for the domestic law of member states. The UK's constitutional requirements for the valid invocation of Article 50 was the entire basis of this litigation, even though this was undertaken without explicit reference to that phrase as in Art 50(1) in the judgments. As will be seen below, it was held that the UK constitutional requirements were that an Act of Parliament needs be passed in order to bestow the power on the Secretary of State to invoke Article 50, as the European Communities Act 1972 had displaced the Royal prerogative to take the UK outside of the EU treaties.

The first of the parties to lodge a complaint in the proceedings against the government's intention to trigger Article 50 without a parliamentary vote was Deir Dos Santos, who launched his action four days after the referendum of 23 June.[18] Miller's claim form was served on 29 July 2016.[19] The law firm Mishcon de Reya announced that it had been retained by a group of clients to challenge the constitutionality of invoking Article 50 without Parliament debating it.[20][21] However a spokesman for the law firm would not name any other businesses or individuals who were said to be backing her claim.[22] In the proceedings, all parties accepted that withdrawal from the European Union will have profound consequences in terms of changing domestic law in each of the jurisdictions of the United Kingdom.[23]

At the preliminary hearing on 19 July 2016 Sir Brian Leveson, President of the Queen's Bench Division, stated that the court gave leave to Dos Santos to stay his proceedings and join as an interested party in Miller's case, and others, such as a group of unnamed clients who were separately represented, would have the option to be interested parties in the claim or interveners.[19] At the hearing lawyers for the government confirmed that the government would not issue an Article 50 notification before the end of 2016.[24] In the court proceedings, the government contended that it would be constitutionally impermissible for the court to make a declaration in terms that the government could not lawfully issue notification under Article 50 unless authorised by an act of Parliament, and stated that the declaration now being opposed would trespass on proceedings in Parliament.[25]

Questions were also raised over the impartiality of Lord Neuberger by Brexit MPs and The Daily Telegraph and the Daily Mail, as his wife had made a series of tweets criticising Brexit.[26][27] These allegations were countered by his spokesman, who said that Neuberger's wife's personal views had no effect on Neuberger's ability to interpret the law.[28]

Hearing

At the full hearing in October, before three judges sitting as a divisional court (the Lord Chief Justice, the Master of the Rolls and Lord Justice Sales), it was argued for the lead claimant (Miller) that notification under Article 50 would commit the UK to the removal of rights existing under the European Communities Act 1972 and later ratification acts, and that it is not open to the government, without Parliament's approval, to use the prerogative power to take action affecting rights which Parliament had recognised in that way.[29] An argument put for the "expat" Interveners at the hearing was that by the 1972 Act, Parliament had conferred a legislative competence on the EU institutions, and in that way had changed the constitutional settlement in the UK.[30]

Responding in the opening submissions for the government, the Attorney-General (Jeremy Wright) outlined how the decision had been reached. In support of the contention that when passing the 2015 Act Parliament well knew of the Article 50 procedure for leaving the European Union if that was voted for in the referendum, he said that Parliament had previously dealt with it when the Lisbon Treaty was included in domestic law by the 2008 Act, and he took the court through the legislation dealing with the European Union and its predecessor, namely:

In further submissions for the government, the lead claimant's primary argument was said by Treasury Counsel (James Eadie) to be that it is not open to the executive to use the prerogative power in such a way as to affect or change current economic law, principally statute law;[33] but the government contended that the leading case Attorney General v De Keyser's Royal Hotel meant that the question about the use of the royal prerogative depended on Parliament's legislative intention.[34] The treaty ratification provisions of the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 were in force from 11 November 2010,[35] that is, after the Lisbon Treaty, including Article 50, was ratified for UK on 16 July 2008,[36] and had come into force on 1 December 2009.[37] While the Act describes "treaty" as an agreement between states, or between states and international organisations, which is binding under international law, including amendments to a treaty, and defines "ratification" as including acts (such as notification that domestic procedures have been completed) which establish as a matter of international law the United Kingdom's consent to be bound by the treaty, ratification of an amendment to a European Union treaty may involve compliance with the European Union (Amendment) Act 2008, and there are further provisions under the European Union Act 2011.[38] The Lord Chief Justice described the statutory procedure as "of critical importance".[39]

The hearing was concluded on 18 October, when the Lord Chief Justice said the judges would take time to consider the matter and give their judgments as quickly as possible.[40]

In the meantime, the applications of other parties challenging the government in legal proceedings in Northern Ireland's High Court were dismissed on 28 October, but the court was prepared to grant leave to appeal in respect of four out of the five issues.[41]

Judgment

The court's unanimous judgment was delivered and published on 3 November. The decision was against the government's contention that the Crown's prerogative allowed giving Article 50 notice, and the court would later decide on the form of declaration it would make. The court described the passing of the European Communities Act 1972 as the major step of "switching on the direct effect of EU law in the national legal systems", and reasoned that it is implausible that Parliament's intention was that the Crown should be able to switch it off unilaterally by exercise of its prerogative powers.[42]

The judgment stated that the question for the court's decision involved the constitutional law of the United Kingdom: it was whether the Crown's executive government is entitled to use the Crown's prerogative powers to give notice under Article 50 for the United Kingdom to cease to be a member of the European Union.[43] The court held that Parliament had the exclusive right to trigger notification under article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU), because it would result in a series of rights being nullified that were created by Acts of Parliament. The principle of parliamentary sovereignty required that only Parliament could overturn an Act of Parliament. This is expressed in the Case of Proclamations (1608), the Bill of Rights 1688 section 1, and continually confirmed since in cases including Burmah Oil Co Ltd v Lord Advocate,[44] and R (Jackson) v Attorney General.[45] The Crown has no power to alter domestic law through prerogative power.[46]

Three categories of rights were

(i) rights that could be replicated by UK law (e.g. 28 days paid holidays under the Working Time Directive 2003),
(ii) rights of UK citizens in other EU member states (e.g. the right to work abroad, or set up a business, under TFEU articles 45 and 49) and
(iii) rights that could not be replicated in UK law (e.g. the right to vote in the EU Parliament or petition the EU Commission to enforce competition law or environmental law standards in the UK).[47]

While the Secretary of State accepted that category (iii) rights would be nullified, the High Court also ruled that all rights in categories (i) and (ii) would also be jeopardised in their effectiveness.[48]

The case had come before the court as a "rolled up" hearing,[49] so that both the application for permission to seek judicial review and the substantive merits of the claim were considered at the hearing. Formally, this meant that permission for full judicial review on the substantive merits was granted.[50]

The High Court order dated 7 November 2016 declared: "The Secretary of State does not have power under the Crown's prerogative to give notice pursuant to Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union for the United Kingdom to withdraw from the European Union."[51]

Press reaction

The front pages of (clockwise from top-right) The Sun, The Daily Telegraph, The Daily Express and The Daily Mail on 4th November 2016, the day after the High Court decision.

The High Court decision was met with mixed views in the daily press. The Daily Telegraph commented that the High Court ruling increased the prospect of an early general election,[52] while the Financial Times and The Guardian reported the case as a "blow" or a "setback" to the UK government plans. The financial markets reacted by an increasing exchange rate for the pound sterling against the euro and the dollar, on speculation of a delayed or softer Brexit.[53]

Other news media attacked the presiding judges and questioned their impartiality, the Daily Mail calling them "enemies of the people",[54][55] and on its website describing one judge as "an openly gay ex-Olympic fencer".[56] The Guardian reported that MPs condemned newspaper attacks on the judges after their Brexit ruling.[57]

Shadow Justice Secretary Richard Burgon condemned personal attacks from newspapers on the judges, describing them as "hysterical", and called on Lord Chancellor Liz Truss to speak out and protect them.[57] Former attorney general Dominic Grieve described the attacks as "entirely unjustified", and said that "[t]here seems to be a paranoid hysteria around that this is being done [to reverse] the referendum. But it's simply that there has to be a process followed if parliament is to give effect to and express the wish of the electorate."[57] Brendan Cox, widower of Jo Cox, also expressed concern.[57] The General Council of the Bar also called on Truss to condemn the attacks.[58]

The oath of office (prescribed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005) obliges a Lord Chancellor to respect the rule of law and defend the independence of the judiciary.[59] On 5 November 2016, Truss issued a statement in which she said: "The independence of the judiciary is the foundation upon which our rule of law is built and our judiciary is rightly respected the world over for its independence and impartiality."[58] Her statement was in turn criticised as belated and inadequate.[60] The oath of office for judges obliges them to "well and truly serve" the Queen and "do right to all manner of people after the laws and usages" of the realm "without fear or favour, affection or ill will".[61]

The Telegraph, in an editorial on 5 December 2016, expressed its regret that the High Court had heard the application at all, "instead of deciding that it was not the business of the judiciary to get involved in what is essentially a political matter" and its concern that "by upholding the lower court's ruling, the Supreme Court justices could find themselves dictating to Parliament – an inversion of the normal constitutional order, with potential consequences for the notion that Parliament is sovereign and thus supreme".[62] The Guardian commented on 5 December 2016 that the unprecedented number of the panel of eleven justices who would be hearing the appeal and deciding the case was recognition of the constitutional significance and political sensitivity of the appeal.[63]

Appeal to Supreme Court

The case, involving the government's appeal from the High Court of England and Wales and two references from Northern Ireland, was the first ever to be heard en banc by the full court (eleven justices, there being one vacancy).[9] The Court scheduled the four days between 5 and 8 December 2016 for the hearing.[64][65] Judgment was delivered on 24 January 2017. By a majority of the justices, the Supreme Court, with three dissenting, dismissed the government's appeal from the High Court, finding that an Act of Parliament was required to invoke Article 50.[6][10]

In advance of appeal hearing

For the Scottish government, Scotland's First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, told the Lord Advocate to apply to join the case. Sturgeon maintained it "simply cannot be right" for EU rights to be "removed by the UK Government on the say-so of a Prime Minister without parliamentary debate, scrutiny or consent". She argued further that "legislation should be required at Westminster and the consent of the Scottish Parliament should be sought before Article 50 is triggered".[66] On 18 November the Supreme Court announced that the Attorney General for Northern Ireland had made a reference to the court regarding devolution issues relating to that jurisdiction and that the court had granted the applications of four interveners to take part in the appeal, namely:

The BBC reported that the Lord Advocate would be addressing the court on Scots law, and the Welsh Counsel General's submissions would be addressing the court on the rule of law and parliamentary sovereignty.[68]

Speaking on 9 November, Lady Hale, deputy president of the Supreme Court, stated that the issue in the case to be heard on appeal by the Court in December was whether giving Article 50 notification was within the Crown's prerogative powers for the conduct of foreign relations or whether the prerogative cannot be used in a way that undermines an act of the United Kingdom Parliament.[69]

In the appeal the government argued that, while Parliament's enactment of the European Communities Act 1972 was necessary to prevent the UK breaching the EEC treaties when they came into force on 1 January 1973, the 1972 act was a legal precondition neither for the signature nor for the ratification of the Treaty of Accession, nor for the treaty coming into force in respect of the UK.[70]

Intervening for the Scottish government, the Lord Advocate stated as background that the UK "acceded to the constitutional order of the Communities" when joining on 1 January 1973[71] and argued that "[t]he purported giving of notification under Article 50 TEU by unilateral act of [the UK government] would be unlawful" because it would (inter alia)

  • be contrary to provisions of the Acts of Union of 1706 and 1708; and
  • circumvent the requirements of established constitutional convention.[72]

Before the hearing, the Supreme Court invited the public to view video footage of the entire proceedings, and provided on its website a page headed "Article 50 'Brexit' Appeal" with multiple links, giving a brief explanation of the issues to be considered and other information, and stating that in addition to live video feeds and 'on demand' catch-up video of each court session, transcripts would be available at the website on a half-daily basis (morning session by 4 pm, afternoon session around 7 pm).[73][74][75]

The government's written case, prepared in advance of the hearing of the appeal, and subscribed by the Attorney General for England and Wales and the Advocate General for Scotland,[76] included footnotes referring to legal comment, critical of the High Court's judgment, on pages of UK Constitutional Law Association and two other websites:

  • footnotes 7 p. 22 and 10, p. 24: John Finnis, Terminating Treaty-based UK Rights, 26 October 2016; and Terminating Treaty-based UK Rights: A Supplemantary Note, 2 November 2016.
  • footnote 11, p. 25: Adam Tomkins, Brexit, Democracy and the Rule of Law, republished 6 November 2016 at Verfassungsblog.
  • footnote 13, p. 26: M. Elliott and H. J. Hooper, Critical reflections on the High Court's judgment, 7 November 2016.
  • footnote 14, p. 27: David Feldman, Brexit, the Royal Prerogative, and Parliamentary Sovereignty, 8 November 2016.
  • footnote 21, p. 39: John Finnis, 'Intent of Parliament' unsoundly Constructed, Judicial Power Project Blog, 4 November 2016.

A Daily Mail article published on 2 December[77] drew attention to the part of the government's appeal case (paragraph 86) which stated that the reasoning of the High Court's judgment was wrong "to relegate, almost to a footnote, the outcome of the referendum and to dismiss it as merely 'a political event' which was of no significance to the question" before the court. The next day The Daily Telegraph commented that ministers had accused the judges of relegating the referendum vote to a footnote and backing the claim that a vote from the House of Commons and House of Lords was now needed before UK and EU talks began.[78] An opinion stated in a BBC website article (3 December 2016) was that there was little expectation of the High Court's ruling being reversed by the Supreme Court.[79] Another BBC webpage summed up the Scottish government's contention, against the UK government's appeal, as arguing that the triggering of Article 50 will affect Scotland in a way that requires the involvement of the Scottish Parliament in the process.[80]

Appeal and references heard together

The Supreme Court listed the appeal as R (on the application of Miller and Dos Santos) (Respondents) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union (Appellant) to be heard together with Reference by the Attorney General for Northern Ireland – In the matter of an application by Agnew and others for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland) and Reference by the Court of Appeal (Northern Ireland) – In the matter of an application by Raymond McCord for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland). The daily sessions of the hearing began on Monday, 5 December.

In the UK government's appeal from the High Court, the UK law officers and others, acting for the Secretary of State as the appellant, were instructed by the Government Legal Department; and the two respondents, Miller and Dos Santos, were represented by barristers and solicitors acting for them separately. Others listed as participating in the hearing were:

  • Attorney General for Northern Ireland
  • lawyers acting in NI Reference (Agnew and others)
  • lawyers acting in NI Reference (SoS Northern Ireland) instructed by Crown Solicitor’s Office
  • lawyers acting in NI Reference (McCord)
  • 1st interested party, Pigney and others
  • 2nd Interested Party, AB and others
  • 1st Intervener, Birnie and others
  • 2nd Intervener, Lord Advocate instructed by Scottish Government Legal Directorate
  • 3rd Intervener, Counsel General of Wales Instructed by Welsh Government Legal Services Department
  • 4th Intervener, TWGB (written submissions only)
  • 5th Intervener, Lawyers of Britain (written submissions only).

The Court published a table setting out the time allotted for the hearing of the oral arguments of the parties' advocates in the four days, Monday 5 to Thursday 8 December:[81]

  • First day, and morning of second day: for the Appellant (Attorney-General, Jeremy Wright; Treasury Counsel, James Eadie; Advocate General for Scotland, Lord Keen of Elie),
  • Second day, afternoon: for the NI Attorney General (on reference from NI High Court), followed by for Respondent Miller.
  • Third day: for Respondent Miller (continued), followed by for Respondent Dos Santos, followed by for Applicants Agnew and McCord, followed by for the Scottish government.
  • Fourth day: for the Scottish government (continued), followed by for the Welsh government, followed by for Interested Parties Graham Pigney and others, followed by for Interested Parties AB, KK, PR and children, followed by for George Birnie and others, followed by for the Appellant in reply.

The hearing

Before calling on the Attorney General to open the case for the government as Appellant, the Supreme Court President stated the justices were aware of the strong feelings associated with the many wider political questions surrounding the United Kingdom's departure from the European Union, but the appeal was concerned with the legal issues, and their duty was to consider those issues impartially and decide according to the law. He mentioned that all the parties involved in the proceedings had been asked whether they wished any of the justices to stand down, and each of them had stated that they had no objection to any of the eleven sitting on the appeal.[82]

At the start of the government's oral submissions, the Attorney-General said the claimants had brought High Court proceedings perfectly properly and it was now perfectly proper for the Supreme Court to decide the appeal.[83] The Appellant's submissions, apart from devolution issues to be addressed later by the Advocate General for Scotland,[84] were summed up on the morning of the second day in a series of points:

  • As Parliament knows today and knew in 1972, the Crown prerogative to make and unmake or withdraw from treaties exists as a key part of the UK constitution.
  • Parliament has deliberately regulated some parts of those prerogative powers, expressly and in detail, but it has not touched the power to give Article 50 notice.
  • There is no basis for imposing a hidden legislative presumption on Parliament's intention: the rights in question in this case are created on the international plane, and then recognised by UK law; EU rights on that plane are altered and removed through the Crown's prerogative powers, and that is a "significant step along the road to finding the intention in relation to withdrawal".
  • The courts should be wary of going over the line between interpretation of legislation and judicial legislation, in a way which would impose "a new control of a most serious kind in a highly controversial and, by Parliament, carefully considered area".
  • The 2015 Act and the referendum emphatically undermine a suggestion that giving Article 50 notice by use of the prerogative power could be other than consistent with the will of Parliament.[85]

Following on, the Advocate General for Scotland ended his oral submissions for the Appellant by saying that if an exercise of the royal prerogative to take the UK out of the EU were seen as an abuse of power after the 1972 Act, there could be no such abuse after the Referendum Act 2015 and the result of the referendum was known: "It is simply a question of whether it would be proper and appropriate for the executive to exercise the prerogative in particular circumstances, and the circumstances that we have to address are those which exist today in light of the 2015 Act, which is of considerable constitutional importance and the decision made in the referendum, knowing that if Parliament wanted to intervene and limit the exercise of that prerogative right, it is free to do so and has chosen to remain silent."[86]

For the Respondent Miller it was argued that the Court should not accept that the legal limits on ministers' powers are to be left to or influenced by political control, or parliamentary control, short of an act of Parliament.[87] For the Respondent Dos Santos it was submitted that the legislature could easily have said what effect the 2015 referendum was if it wanted to tell us, but it has not told us, and the courts should not try and guess what the legislature intended, but instead leave it to the legislature to decide; and that, as there is no parliamentary authorisation for the loss of rights resulting from withdrawal from the EU, whether under the 2015 Act, or any other legislation which has been passed by Parliament, the government's appeal should be dismissed.[88] The Welsh Government submitted that the UK Government's proposed Article 50 notification would be an unlawful dispensation by the Crown of the provisions establishing the competence of the Welsh Assembly.[89]

In response to submissions of parties opposing the appeal and questions put by the Justices, it was said for the government that the question before the court was about "the present state of the division of responsibility between our pillars of state, legislative, executive, and indeed judicial, and that demands a current answer and not a historic one"; and that parliament's legislation was to implement UK treaty obligations, not to control the government's exercise of the royal prerogative on the international plane.[90]

Closing the hearing, the Court President said that the appeal raised important constitutional issues, and the Justices would take time to give full consideration to the many arguments presented to them, orally and in writing, and they would do their best to resolve the case as quickly as possible.[91]

Judgment

The Supreme Court held by eight judges to three that only Parliament could authorise a notification under TEU Article 50 to be given to the European Commission, upholding the High Court.[92] However, all judges found unanimously that neither the Sewel Convention, nor the Northern Ireland Act 1998 and the Good Friday Agreement, legally required the consent of the Scottish Parliament, the National Assembly for Wales or the Northern Ireland Assembly to trigger article 50.[93]

The majority judgment said the following.

Significance

Government bill

After the government's appeal was dismissed, the Secretary of State for Exiting the EU formally introduced in Parliament, on 26 January 2017, a bill that, on 16 March, was enacted without amendment as the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Act 2017. The act's long title is To Confer power on the Prime Minister to notify, under Article 50(2) of the Treaty on European Union, the United Kingdom's intention to withdraw from the EU. The act's two sections are to confer on the Prime Minister the power of giving the notice that the Treaty requires to be given when a member state decides to withdraw.[94]

See also

  • Brexit, Article 50, and other articlesWikipedia book

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  38. Justice, Ministry of; Office, Cabinet; Office, Foreign and Commonwealth; Treasury, HM. "Explanatory Notes to Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010".
  39. -: Transcript, 18 October 2016, p. 5
  40. -: Transcript, 18 October 2016, p.161
  41. R (on the application of Agnew and others) v Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union.
  42. "R (Miller) -v- Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union".
  43. [2016] EWHC 2768 (Admin).
  44. [1965] AC 75
  45. [2005] UKHL 56, [9]
  46. [2016] EWHC 2768, [86]-[88]
  47. [2016] EWHC 2768, [58]-[61]
  48. [2016] EWHC 2768, [63]-[66]
  49. Judicial Review Guidance,Section 3: Judicial Review Process
  50. [2016] EWHC 2768, [110]
  51. In the Supreme Court, Written Case for Birnie and others (the "Expat Interveners") para. 2.
  52. Hughes, Laura (3 November 2016). "Prospect of early general election increases after High Court rules Government cannot trigger Article 50 without parliamentary approval". The Daily Telegraph.
  53. Duarte De Aragao, Marianna (3 November 2016). "Pound Jumps as Court Brexit Ruling, BOE Deliver Double Boost". Retrieved 3 November 2016. The U.K. currency climbed on speculation the High Court ruling will delay or soften the terms of the nation's exit from the EU.
  54. Phipps, Claire (4 November 2016). "British newspapers react to judges' Brexit ruling: 'Enemies of the people'". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  55. Slack, James (3 November 2016). "Enemies of the people: Fury over 'out of touch' judges who have 'declared war on democracy' by defying 17.4m Brexit voters and who could trigger constitutional crisis". Daily Mail. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  56. Duffy, Nick (3 November 2016). "The Daily Mail is very upset because an 'openly gay judge' ruled on Brexit". Pink News.
  57. 1 2 3 4 Bowcott, Owen; Stewart, Heather (4 November 2016). "MPs condemn newspaper attacks on judges after Brexit ruling". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  58. 1 2 "Bar Council urges Liz Truss to condemn attacks on judges". BBC News. 5 November 2016. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  59. "Constitutional Reform Act 2005".
  60. "Liz Truss breaks silence on judiciary but fails to mention Brexit ruling backlash". The Independent. 5 November 2016. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  61. "Oaths".
  62. "Whatever the Supreme Court decide, the case for Brexit is strong. Theresa May should make it stronger still". Telegraph View. The Telegraph. 5 December 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  63. Bowcott, Owen; Walker, Peter (5 December 2016). "Senior judges prepare to hear Brexit supreme court appeal". The Guardian. The panel of 11 justices is the largest ever assembled for a single case since the law lords were created in 1876. Such judicial mass mobilisation is recognition of the constitutional significance and political sensitivity of the hearing.
  64. Theresa May issues a staunch defence of the free press after media coverage of Brexit ruling   The Daily Telegraph, 6 November 2016.
  65. Brexit court ruling appeal date set for 5 December   BBC, 8 November 2016
  66. Nicola Sturgeon launches plan to stop Theresa May overturning Brexit legal challenge   The Independent, 10 November 2016'
  67. Supreme Court, R. (on the application of Miller & Dos Santos) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union
  68. "Scots and Welsh can have say in Brexit court case". 18 November 2016 via www.bbc.co.uk.
  69. The Supreme Court: Guardian of the Constitution? Lecture, Kuala Lumpur 9 November 2016.
  70. Appellant's Case, para. 19
  71. Written Case of Lord Advocate, para. 1
  72. Written Case of Lord Advocate, paras. 87 and 89
  73. Court, The Supreme. "Court 1 -Supreme Court Live".
  74. Court, The Supreme. "Article 50 Brexit Appeal - The Supreme Court".
  75. Access to the Supreme Court building: Article 50 'Brexit' case, 5–8 December 2016.
  76. Appellant's Case
  77. The Daily Mail, Why the judges got it so wrong, 22:01, 2 December 2016.
  78. The Telegraph, Government warns Brexit vote must not be relegated to a 'footnote' ahead of Supreme Court hearing, 9.42 am 3 December.
  79. BBC, What next if the government loses its Brexit appeal?
  80. BBC, Court showdown: Should Holyrood play a role in Article. 50?
  81. Court, The Supreme. "Article 50 Brexit Appeal - The Supreme Court".
  82. SC Transcript, 5 December 2016, p. 3-4
  83. SC Transcript, 5 December 2016, p. 5
  84. SC Transcript, 6 December 2016, from p.74
  85. SC Transcript, 6 December 2016, p.72-74 (Eadie)
  86. SC Transcript, 6 December 2016, p.116
  87. SC Transcript, 7 December 2016, p.51(Pannick)
  88. SC Transcript, 7 December 2016, p.110-111 (Chambers)
  89. Case of Counsel General for Wales, para. 20
  90. SC Transcript, 8 December 2016, p.172-176 (Eadie)
  91. SC Transcript, 8 December 2016, p.204
  92. See in the media, "Four versions of Brexit law prepared as Government braced for Supreme Court defeat in Article 50 case".
  93. This rejected the arguments of the Lord Advocate (also known in the Scottish courts as Her Majesty's Advocate or HM Advocate, for the Scottish Government, as the Scottish Ministers), the Counsel General for Wales (for the Welsh Government, as the Welsh Ministers) and the Northern Ireland applicants for judicial review (in Northern Ireland) (Agnew and others (Stephen Agnew, Colum Eastwood, David Ford, John O'Dowd, Dessie Donnelly, Dawn Purvis, Monica Wilson, The Committee on the Administration of Justice, The Human Rights Consortium), and Raymond McCord.
  94. Explanatory Notes, Prepared 25 January 2017.
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