Jurisdiction The judicial business of the House of Lords was regulated by the
Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876. The Law Lords did not have the power to exercise
judicial review over Acts of Parliament, and in general only important or particularly complex appeals came before the House of Lords. There was no further appeal from the House of Lords. However, in 1972 the United Kingdom signed the
Treaty of Rome and became a member of the
European Economic Community, and with this accepted European law to be supreme in certain areas, so long as Parliament does not explicitly override it (see the
Factortame case). The doctrine of
Parliamentary sovereignty still applied – under British constitutional law, Parliament could at any time have unilaterally decided to dismiss the supremacy of European law, but in common with other courts in the European Economic Community (which later became the European Union), the Law Lords referred points involving European law to the
European Court of Justice. After 1998, the Lords could also declare a British law to be inconsistent with the
European Convention on Human Rights pursuant to section 4 of the
Human Rights Act 1998. Whilst this power was shared with the Court of Appeal, the High Court, the
High Court of Justiciary, the
Court of Session, and the
Courts-Martial Appeal Court, such declarations were considered so important that the question would almost inevitably be determined in the House of Lords on appeal. However, the challenged law in question was not struck down, and the courts are required to enforce them; it remained up to Parliament to amend the law. While the United Kingdom was subject to all European law, there was a further appeal from the House of Lords to the European courts (the
European Court of Justice or the
European Court of Human Rights), but then only in matters concerning either
European Community law or the
European Convention on Human Rights. In civil cases, the House of Lords could hear appeals from the
Court of Appeal of England and Wales, the
Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland and the Scottish
Court of Session. Alternatively, cases raising important legal points could
leapfrog from the
High Court of England and Wales or
High Court in Northern Ireland. In England, Wales or Northern Ireland; leave (or permission) to appeal could be granted either by the court whose decision is appealed or the House of Lords itself. Leave to appeal is not a feature of the
Scottish legal system and appeals proceeded when two
Advocates certified the appeal as suitable. In criminal cases, the House of Lords could hear appeals from the Court of Appeal of England and Wales, the
High Court of England and Wales, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland, and the
Courts-Martial Appeal Court, but did not hear appeals from the
High Court of Justiciary in Scotland. In addition to obtaining leave to appeal, an appellant also had to obtain a certificate from the lower court stating that a point of general public importance was involved. The effect of this was that, in criminal matters, the House of Lords could not control its own
docket.
Procedure Selection of appeals Permission to appeal could be granted by an Appeal Committee. The Committee consisted of three Lords of Appeal or Lords of Appeal in Ordinary. Appeal Committees normally convened fifteen to twenty times per year, and their members were selected by the Principal Clerk of the Judicial Office of the House of Lords. Then the Secretary would put together the Appellate Committees for the appeals to be heard in the upcoming term, while keeping in mind that the Law Lords would also be hearing Privy Council appeals. Only five Appellate Committees ever comprised nine members. Three of these occurred after 2001. The determination of each Appellate Committee was normally final, but the House of Lords (in common with the Court of Appeal and High Court of England and Wales) retained an inherent jurisdiction to reconsider any of its previous decisions; this includes the ability to vacate that decision and make a new one. It was exceptional for the House of Lords to exercise this power, but a number of important cases such as
Dimes v Grand Junction Canal (a seminal case on bias in England and Wales) proceeded in this way. A recent example of the House of Lords reconsidering an earlier decision occurred in 1999, when the
judgment in the
case on the extradition of
Augusto Pinochet, the former
President of Chile, was overturned on the grounds that one of the Lords on the committee,
Lord Hoffmann, was a director of a
charity closely allied with
Amnesty International, which was a party to the appeal and had an interest to achieve a particular result. The matter was reheard by a panel of seven Lords of Appeal in Ordinary. The tradition that appeals should be heard by Appellate Committees and not by the full House of Lords developed relatively late, after the
Second World War. Historically, appeals were heard in the House of Lords Chamber by a full sitting of the House of Lords (although the Law Lords were doing the actual work). The Lords would sit for regular sessions after four in the evening, and the judicial sessions were held prior to that time. When the Commons Chamber was bombed in 1941, the Commons began to conduct their debates in the Lords Chamber, and the Lords moved into the King's Robing Room. The manner in which the Appellate Committees conducted their hearings was agonizingly slow, as observed by an American lawyer in 1975. In an appeal in a
patent infringement case, it took almost seven days to go through opening argument because counsel for the appellant was expected to read out loud all relevant portions of the
Court of Appeal opinion and the trial court record (all of which had already been provided in advance to the Committee in hard copy format), while interpolating extensive comment and argument, and digressing into lengthy exchanges with the Committee members. Next, the respondent delivered their response and then the appellant delivered their rebuttal, while again digressing into back-and-forth exchanges with the Committee members. The actual reading of full speeches before the House was abandoned in 1963, after which it became possible for a deceased Law Lord to give a speech. These sittings were traditionally held at 10:30 a.m. in the morning, while legislative and deliberative business was dealt with in the afternoons. The House of Lords' staff would notify counsel that judgment was imminent about five or six days before the relevant sitting, and provide advance copies of the Committee's written report (the Lords' written speeches) and the House minutes (in plain English, a script of the
pro forma questions to be raised and voted upon) to counsel when they arrived for the sitting. By the time the judicial functions of the House of Lords were abolished, the standard procedure was to hold such sittings at 9:45 a.m. on Wednesday mornings and to provide counsel with the Law Lords' speeches in advance on the preceding Friday. Only the Law Lords on the relevant Appellate Committee spoke, but other Lords were free to attend, although they rarely did so. In plain English, the point of this "quaint ceremony" was that the Law Lords who had just heard the case as an Appellate Committee were reporting back to themselves, formally sitting as the House of Lords, and voting to adopt their own report on the matter. By the 1970s, the procedure had become such an arid formality that the same Law Lord who presided over the Appellate Committee also presided over the full sitting in which judgment was given. Thus, he would repeatedly move away from the
Woolsack to make a motion in his capacity as a member of the Appellate Committee, and then move back to the Woolsack in his capacity as the presiding officer of the House of Lords to recite the traditional formula which meant that a majority had voted for the motion: "As many as are of that opinion will say 'Content', to the contrary, 'Not Content'. The contents have it." After the abandonment of reading speeches in full, each Law Lord who had heard the appeal would rise only to acknowledge they "have had the advantage of reading the speech" (or speeches) prepared by the other Law Lords on the Appellate Committee, and to state they would allow the appeal or would dismiss the appeal for the reasons given in their own speech or in another Law Lord's speech. After all five members of the Committee had spoken, the question was put to the House: "That the report from the Appellate Committee be agreed to." The House then voted on that question and on other questions related thereto; the decisions on these questions constituted the House's formal judgment. In theory, the full House was voting on the recommendations of the Appellate Committee, but by custom only the Law Lords on the Appellate Committee actually voted, while all other Lords (including all other Law Lords) always abstained. If the House of Lords was in recess, the Lord Chancellor or Senior Lord of Appeal in Ordinary could recall the House to give judgment. Judicial sittings could occur while Parliament was prorogued, and, with the authorisation of the Sovereign, dissolved. In the latter case, the meeting was not of the full House, but was rather of the Law Lords acting in the name of the full House. Judgment could not be given between the summoning of a Parliament and the
State Opening. No Parliamentary business is conducted during that time, except the taking of oaths of allegiance and the election of a Speaker by the House of Commons.
Related courts The
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, which included the twelve Lords of Appeal in Ordinary (now the Justices of the Supreme Court) as well as other senior judges in the Privy Council, has little domestic jurisdiction. The Committee hears appeals from the appellate courts of many independent
Commonwealth nations and crown dependencies. The Judicial Committee's domestic jurisdiction was very limited, hearing only cases on the competency of the
devolved legislatures in Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales. Precedents set in devolution cases, but not in other matters, are binding on all other courts, which included the House of Lords. The 'devolution issues' were transferred from the Privy Council to the
Supreme Court of the United Kingdom; however, the former continues to hear Commonwealth appeals. ==Trials of peers==