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Boddington v British Transport Police

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Decided
  
2 April 1998

Location
  
United Kingdom

Appealed from
  
Divisional Court

End date
  
April 2, 1998

Boddington v British Transport Police

Full case name
  
Boddington v British Transport Police

Citation(s)
  
[1998] UKHL 13[1999] 2 AC 143[1998] 2 All ER 203[1998] 2 WLR 639

Judges sitting
  
Lord IrvineLord Browne-WilkinsonLord SlynnLord SteynLord Hoffmann

Court
  
Judicial functions of the House of Lords

Judge sittings
  
Derry Irvine, Baron Irvine of Lairg

Boddington v British Transport Police [1998] UKHL 13 is an important case in English administrative law which established the possibility of a "collateral challenge" to an allegedly unlawful administrative action.

Contents

Facts

Mr Boddington was caught smoking in a railway carriage where smoking was prohibited. He was convicted and fined by a magistrate under a by-law made under the Road Transport Act 1962.

Judgment

On appeal, the question was whether Mr Boddington was entitled to raise, as a defense, the invalidity of the by-law under which he had been convicted. The difficulty was that the normal path for having an administrative action declared unlawful and invalid is an application for judicial review – which Mr Boddington had not brought.

The House of Lords held unanimously that he was entitled to bring a so-called collateral challenge in the criminal proceedings. Lord Irvine, then Lord Chancellor, and Lord Steyn gave the leading speeches. On the facts, however, Mr Boddington's challenge failed, and his appeal against conviction was dismissed.

Legacy

Collateral challenges are an important means, alternative to an application for judicial review, of attacking the validity of an administrative action. Although collateral challenges had been permitted in English law before Boddington, the case is notable for strongly asserting their continuing relevance in modern law and rooting them in liberal values.

Boddington was adopted into South African law by the Supreme Court of Appeal in Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others.

References

Boddington v British Transport Police Wikipedia


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