Workingman wrote:Remember it is dealing with a world first, is under the microscope, and has to publish the reason(s) for its decision.
Looking at an article on the judgement of the Scottish court in the
UK constitutional Law association, it would appear that the petition was allowed to proceed to the CJEU for one reason and one reason only. That UK MP's are going to vote on the deal with the EU when the UK exits the EU and to have an EU article which is unclear, at the time of that vote, would not, constitutionally, serve the people.
Essentially, were it not for that fact, the appeal courts would have rejected the petition out of hand.
Have a read of the
judgement which allowed this petition to go to the CJEU for Preliminary Ruling.
It has been decided that the case is "live" because of a very narrow hair splitting in the law. In fact it does address the original reason for refusal
The only plea-in-law on the merits is in entirely bland, and
thus almost meaningless, terms, viz. that the UK Government’s “position” on revocability is
“unlawful et separatim wrong in law”.
Hardly a recommendation for the CJEU to make a ruling.
However, reading the judgement, I note that virtually everything in it is about UK law cases. When the case gets to the CJEU, the body of law on which it will be judged as "pertinent" will be EU law and not UK law. In fact it seems that the ONLY reason that the case was forwarded to the CJEU was on precedent in law of the fact that hurdle to submission should be "extremely low".
It is quite probable that the CJEU will agree with the original judgement, namely that the case is not "live". It is not sure that the hurdle to be surmounted for the CJEU is as low as the Scottish Courts.
It does not help that the latest judgement says things like.
This central proposition of the petitioners’ alternative case is remarkable, in the context of a
petition otherwise peppered with precedent, in being devoid of authoritative support.
Or things like
This petition is almost 40 pages long. It contains 115 paragraphs. It is hampered by
the inclusion of aphorisms derived from isolated judicial dicta. It is dotted with references to
over 50 cases, which, if the court were actually expected to look at them in any meaningful
way, would take days to absorb.
In their final statement, they court says
For reasons which will be evident from this decision, there ought to be
a period of adjustment to enable the petitioners to plead their case in the manner stipulated
in Somerville v The Scottish Ministers (supra).
In other words, re-write it in the standard form, not the mess that it is currently in.
We shall see what the CJEU says, but don't hold your breath.