Legal action

Ensuring the Human Rights Act is applied correctly

Published: 14 February 2018

Last updated: 18 July 2018

What countries does this apply to?

Case details

Types of equality claim Other
Court or tribunal Supreme Court
Decision has to be followed in England, Scotland, Wales
Law applies in England, Scotland, Wales
Case state Concluded
Our involvement Intervention (section 30 of the Equality Act 2006)
Outcome Judgment
Human Rights law Article 8: Respect for your private and family life, home and correspondence
International framework Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)

Case name: W & Anor v London Borough of Hackney

Background

The case mainly concerned the limits of a local authority’s powers and duties to provide accommodation to children in need under s.20 of the Children Act (CA) 1989. The appellants argued breach of their rights under Article 8 of the HRA on the basis that the London Borough of Hackney had unlawfully accommodated their children under s.20 CA. The children had been placed in 72 hour emergency foster care after police inquiries revealed the family home to be in an unhygienic condition unfit for habitation by children. The appellants argued that they were not informed of their right, under s.20(7) CA, to object to the children’s continued accommodation beyond 72 hours, nor of their right under s.20(8) to remove them at any time. The children remained in the local authority’s care for 8 weeks.

The Commission did not make any submissions about the facts of the case. Our intervention focused solely on the correct approach to the question of proportionality in human rights cases.

Why we were involved

This case comes within our core aim to uphold the system of equality and human rights protections. 

What we did

The Commission intervened at the Supreme Court, only to correct what we considered to be the Court of Appeal’s (CoA) incorrect treatment of the proportionality analysis in regard to Article 8 of the HRA. Under the HRA, public authorities can interfere with the right to respect for private and family life. But this is only allowed where the authority can show that its action is lawful, necessary and proportionate. Left uncorrected, the CoA ruling may have had significant regressive impact.

What happened

The Supreme Court judgment re-affirmed the correct application of the justification/proportionality test under the Human Rights Act.

Who will benefit

By affirming the correct approach to the proportionality analysis in cases under Article 8 HRA, the ruling clarifies the law and helps ensure that there is no regression from existing human rights protections. 

Date of hearing

14 February 2018

Date concluded

18 July 2018

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Advice and support

If you think you might have been treated unfairly and want further advice, you can contact the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS).

The EASS is an independent advice service, not operated by the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

Phone: 0808 800 0082
 

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