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  2. R (HS2 Action Alliance Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_(HS2_Action_Alliance_Ltd...

    The Supreme Court held that the UK has constitutional instruments that the courts would not interpret to be abrogated without close scrutiny. [2] Lord Reed observed that the scrutiny of the legislative process required by the EU directive may amount to an impingement "upon long-established constitutional principles governing the relationship between Parliament and the courts" [3] including the

  3. legislation.gov.uk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legislation.gov.uk

    legislation.gov.uk, formerly known as the UK Statute Law Database, is the official Web-accessible database of the statute law of the United Kingdom, hosted by The National Archives. Established in the early 2000s, [ 1 ] it contains all primary legislation in force since 1267 and all secondary legislation since 1823; it does not include ...

  4. R v Horncastle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_v_Horncastle

    [2010] 2 AC 373, [2010] 2 WLR 47, [2010] 2 All ER 359: Case history; Prior history [2009] EWCA Crim 964 (Affirmed in full) Holding; Appeals dismissed, When hearsay evidence was adduced in a way which complied with the statutory regimes, there was no breach of Article 6, notwithstanding that the evidence was the "sole or decisive" basis of a ...

  5. R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte Doody

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_v_Secretary_of_State_for...

    Four prisoners, Stephen Doody, John David Pierson, Elfed Wayne Smart and Kenneth Pegg, [1] serving mandatory life sentences, requested judicial review after the Home Secretary refused to release them after serving their minimum terms, but gave no reason for the decision.

  6. List of judgments of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_judgments_of_the...

    Land law, Statutory Incompatibility: The specific public interest contained in the statutory purpose for which the land was actually held outweighed the public interest in registering the land as a town or village green under the Commons Act 2006. [58] Patel v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Secretary of State for the Home ...

  7. R (Factortame Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_(Factortame_Ltd)_v...

    R (Factortame Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport [1] was a judicial review case taken against the United Kingdom government by a company of Spanish fishermen who claimed that the United Kingdom had breached European Union law (then Community Law) by requiring ships to have a majority of British owners if they were to be registered in the UK.

  8. List of judgments of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_judgments_of_the...

    UK Tax Law, Value Added Tax: Judgment following a referral to the Court of Justice of the European Union [d] (CJEU) in a previous supreme court case (see 2020 UKSC 15). The CJEU had confirmed that a trader could not recover VAT on supplies made to it where the original supplier and HMRC had mistakenly treated the original supplies as exempt ...

  9. English law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_law

    [4] [5] Common law is made by sitting judges who apply both statutory law and established principles which are derived from the reasoning from earlier decisions. Equity is the other historic source of judge-made law. Common law can be amended or repealed by Parliament. [6] [b] Not being a civil law system, it has no comprehensive codification.