The Human Rights Act places a duty on all courts and tribunals in the
United Kingdom to interpret legislation so far as possible in a way compatible with the rights laid down in the
European Convention on Human Rights (
section 3(1)). If that is not possible, the court may issue a "declaration of incompatibility". The declaration does not invalidate the legislation but permits the amendment of the legislation by a special fast-track procedure under section 10 of the act as well. As of September 2006, 20 declarations had been made, of which six were overturned on appeal. The Human Rights Act applies to all public bodies within the United Kingdom, including central government, local authorities, and bodies exercising public functions. However, it does not include Parliament when it is acting in its legislative capacities.
Section 3 Section 3 is a particularly wide provision that requires courts to interpret both
primary and
subordinate legislation so that their provisions are compatible with the articles of the
European Convention on Human Rights which are also part of the Human Rights Act. This interpretation goes far beyond normal
statutory interpretation, Courts have applied this through three forms of interpretation: "reading in", inserting words where there are none in a statute; "reading out", where words are omitted from a statute; and "reading down", where a particular meaning is chosen to be in compliance. They do not interpret a statute so as to give it a meaning that would conflict with
legislative intent, and courts have been reluctant in particular to "read out" provisions for this reason. If it is not possible to so interpret, they may issue a declaration of incompatibility under section 4. Section 3 does not apply to the
Illegal Migration Act 2023.
Sections 4 and 10 Sections 4 and 10 allow courts to issue a
declaration of incompatibility where it is impossible to use section 3 to interpret primary or subordinate legislation to be compatible with the articles of the European Convention on Human Rights, which are also part of the Human Rights Act. In these cases, interpretation to comply may conflict with
legislative intent. It is considered a measure of last resort. A range of
superior courts can issue a declaration of incompatibility. Section 4 therefore achieves its aim through political rather than legal means. Section 10 gives a government minister the power to make a "remedial order" in response to either • a declaration of incompatibility, from which there is no possibility of appeal, or • a ruling of the European Court of Human Rights A remedial order may "make such amendments to the legislation as [the Minister] considers necessary to remove the incompatibility". Remedial orders do not require full legislative approval, Remedial orders may have retroactive effect, but no one may be guilty of a criminal offence solely as the result of the retroactive effect of a remedial order. Section 10 has been used to make small adjustments to bring legislation into line with Convention rights although entirely new pieces of legislation are sometimes necessary. As of December 2014, 29 declarations of incompatibility have been issued, of which • 8 have been struck down on appeal • 1 is pending appeal, as of December 2014 • 16 have been remedied through the ordinary legislative process (including amendment or repeal of the offending legislation). • 3 have been addressed through remedial orders • 1 has not been remedied. The one case not to have been remedied, as of December 2014, is
Smith v. Scott, concerning
the right of serving prisoners to vote in the UK.
Sections 6 to 9 Although the act, by its own terms, applies only to
public bodies, it has had increasing influence on private law litigation between individual citizens leading some academics to state that it has
horizontal effect (as in disputes between citizens) as well as
vertical effect (as in disputes between the state and citizens). This is because section 6(3) of the Human Rights Act defines courts and tribunals as public bodies. That means their judgments must comply with human rights obligations of the state, whether a dispute is between the state and citizens, or between citizens, except in cases of declarations of incompatibility. Therefore, judges have a duty to act in compatibility with the Convention even when an action is a private one between two citizens. The way that public duty is exercised in private law was dealt with in a June 2016 decision McDonald v McDonald & Ors [2016 UKSC 28 (15 June 2016)] where the UK Supreme Court firstly considered the question
"... whether a court, when entertaining a claim for possession by a private sector owner against a residential occupier, should be required to consider the proportionality of evicting the occupier, in the light of section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 and article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights" The Supreme Court decided (paragraph 46) that
"there are many cases where the court can be required to balance conflicting Convention rights of two parties, eg where a person is seeking to rely on her article 8 rights to restrain a newspaper from publishing an article which breaches her privacy, and where the newspaper relies on article 10. But such disputes arise not from contractual arrangements made between two private parties, but tortious or quasi-tortious relationships, where the legislature has expressly, impliedly or through inaction, left it to the courts to carry out the balancing exercise". Therefore, In cases
"where the parties are in a contractual relationship in respect of which the legislature has prescribed how their respective Convention rights are to be respected" then the Court decided, as set out in paragraph 59
"In these circumstances, while we accept that the Strasbourg court jurisprudence relied on by the appellant does provide some support for the notion that article 8 was engaged when Judge Corrie was asked to make an order for possession against her, there is no support for the proposition that the judge could be required to consider the proportionality of the order which he would have made under the provisions of the 1980 and 1988 Acts. Accordingly, for the reasons set out in paras 40–46 above, we would dismiss this appeal on the first issue." Paragraph 40 supposed that
"... it is not open to the tenant to contend that article 8 could justify a different order from that which is mandated by the contractual relationship between the parties, at least where, as here, there are legislative provisions which the democratically elected legislature has decided properly balance the competing interests of private sector landlords and residential tenants." The duty of state judges to apply Convention rights to disputes between citizens is therefore about determining relationships between them, and applying domestic legislation accordingly. If the duty is carried out then it is likely there is
Article 6 compliance. Section 7 limits a right to bring proceedings under section 6 only to victims (or potential victims) of the unlawful act of the public authority. Section 8 provides a right for a court to make any remedy they consider just and appropriate. A remedy under the act is therefore not limited to a
Declaration of incompatibility possibly taking into account the equitable maxim
Equity delights to do justice and not by halves. Section 9 provides a right to challenge the compliance of judicial acts made by the UK, but only by exercising a right of appeal as set out by the
Access to Justice Act 1999 (although not precluding a right to judicial review). For example, whether a judicial act properly applies legislation, or not.
Other sections Section 8 says that UK judges can grant any remedy that is considered just and appropriate. Section 19 requires a minister introducing a bill to parliament to make a statement of compatibility or, if unable to give such an assurance, a statement that the government wishes to proceed anyway. The statement is normally published with (immediately before) the text of the bill. ==Rights protected==