In his elegant and informative chapter (Chapter 20), Lord Walker covers a great deal of ground. I highlight two topics which emerge from it: (1) similarities in the legal reasoning involved in the application of equity and human rights lawFootnote 1 and (2) areas where the law of equity draws on human rights law directly.Footnote 2 I also comment on a case study chosen by Lord Walker – Pitt v. HoltFootnote 3 – which illustrates some of the points which arise.
Equity reasoning and human rights reasoning
Lord Walker emphasises two common features of equitable and human rights law: (a) ‘each is superimposed on an existing body of law as a modifying or ameliorating influence’; and (b) their use of ‘evaluative standards’ rather than ‘rigid counter-rules’.
Equity as a set of rules or principles grew out of the jurisdiction of the Lord Chancellor to modify and soften the stringent application of the common law to do justice in the circumstances of the individual case.Footnote 4 This is a reflection of Aristotelian thinking, employing his concept of epieikeia (equity) to supplement and work partial modification of legal rules at their point of application.Footnote 5
The need for a separate body of law to achieve this weakens as the common law itself has come to be seen as the direct bearer of justice values and as something amenable to correction and modification through judicial legislation,Footnote 6 and also as increasing areas of activity come to be regulated by statute and by contracts subject to more purpose-oriented rules of construction.Footnote 7 The old idea of the equity of a statute – the capacity for a statute to be interpreted according to its spirit, to accommodate unexpected situations or to avoid unwelcome consequences – itself drawn from Aristotle’s epieikeia,Footnote 8 has revived in this modern form. Something similar has happened with the common law. A sense of justice has increasingly come to be seen as something which infuses the law itself, and it has come to be accepted that the law can be adjusted to accommodate the perceived demands of justice without need to supplement it by appeal to separate doctrines of equity. Accordingly, the scope for development of distinct equitable doctrines has narrowed. Also, the relationship between equity and the common law has come under fresh pressure,Footnote 9 as each area of doctrine seeks to develop its own conception of just responses to particular fact situations. For example, the law relating to mistaken payments, recently addressed in the Supreme Court judgment in Pitt v. Holt, is discussed by Lord Walker in his chapter and commented on below.
At the same time, the availability of recourse to an active legislature, combined with the increasing normative force of democratic ideology from the twentieth century, has also reduced the perceived legitimacy of an active court of equity to amend the application of the common law.Footnote 10
A further factor is that equitable principles tended to build up as accretions around the law of property. This is an area in which there is a particularly pressing demand for legal certainty and predictability, so that individuals know where they stand and can plan their affairs. Accordingly, after an initial period of freedom in the development of doctrine in the courts of equity, emphasis came to be placed on precedent and settled rules equity itself resembled more closely the common law it supplemented. Decisions according to the length of the Lord Chancellor’s foot met with disapproval.
The Convention rights under the Human Rights Act 1998 (UK) also operate to influence existing standards of domestic law, but they operate in a more active way and do so by a significantly different process, through a double filter. First, one tests whether the domestic legal rule (statutory, common law or equitable) operates at its point of application in a manner compatible with Convention rights. Secondly, if it does not, one has to assess whether domestic law should be modified in its application by reference to those rights, by applying section 6 of the Act (imposing a duty on public authorities to act compatibly with Convention rights) and section 3 of the Act (imposing on courts an interpretive obligation). If it is not ‘possible’ to interpret legislation compatibly with convention rights, the remedy is a declaration of incompatibility under section 4.
These filters allow for practical compromise between democracy and human rights in a pan-European context at the first stage (in particular, through the operation of the doctrine of the margin of appreciation)Footnote 11and then for a balance between the authority of Parliament and the courts in a United Kingdom context at the second.Footnote 12
At the second stage, the division between the use of section 3 and resort to section 4 is a sensitive one, which maps the courts’ perception of the proper dividing line between law and politics specifically in the United Kingdom context. In broad terms, one can agreeFootnote 13 that reasons why resort to section 3 is not considered appropriate are that an amended, Convention-compliant interpretation would be contrary to a fundamental aim of the statute or that it would involve the court in an essentially legislative function. But both reasons are complex. In assessing whether a section 3 interpretation would go with the grain of the statute, difficult questions arise regarding how one identifies ‘the grain of the statute’ as a purpose separate from its wording.Footnote 14 Issues arise regarding the level of abstraction at which it is appropriate to ask that question and the forms of evidence which are relevant. In assessing whether it is legitimate for the interpreting court to produce an amended, Convention-compliant interpretation, rather than leaving it to the government and legislature to produce a new compliant law, a range of factors come into play: democratic legitimacy, the range of persons who should have a right of access to the decision-making process, the polycentricity of the issues to be resolved,Footnote 15 the expertise appropriate to the subject matter, and the need for detailed regulation and provision extending beyond the resolution of the particular case.
It is by no means always the case that the government will wish to argue for use of section 3 rather than section 4, where a problem of incompatibility is found to exist.Footnote 16 To do so involves surrendering the initiative regarding the detail of the amendment required to render a statute compatible with Convention rights to the courts (which might be difficult to revise), rather than allowing the government to retain the power to produce a solution which satisfies its own policy objectives, using the Henry VIII power to revise legislation which comes with a declaration of incompatibility.Footnote 17
It is also not really correct to say that a declaration under section 4 means that the claimant fails to obtain relief.Footnote 18 First, in almost every case where a declaration of incompatibility is made, Convention-compatible amending legislation is brought forward. Secondly, even if it is not, or where the amending legislation is not fully retrospective,Footnote 19 a declaration of incompatibility by the domestic courts provides a powerful platform for an individual application to the European Court of Human Rights. It is important to remember the international dimension, which lies behind and greatly increases the force of the Human Rights Act.
These differences mean that the parallel between equity and human rights as supplementary law can only really be drawn at a relatively high level of abstraction. The institutional and intellectual contexts in which they each operate are very different. What is common in their approach is that when the existing rules fail to give adequate respect to a set of values which may be partially reflected in them, but which in some sense provide a vantage point standing outside the rules themselves from which their application can be criticised, they provide in their different ways for modification of the existing rules by reference to that broader frame of reference. For equity, the framework is one of natural law or broad conceptions of justice, used to modify stricter, more rigid and reified common law norms. For human rights, the framework is that of formulated, partially determinate rights set out in the European Convention on Human Rights and informed in an increasingly specific and determinate way by the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights.Footnote 20
Similarity in the practical operation of equity and human rights law may be illustrated in relation to actions for possession of land. In the case of a mortgage, the borrower will be protected by the equity of redemption; in the case of a lease, by relief against forfeiture. Even prior to the Human Rights Act, a public authority seeking to recover land could be restricted by public law norms.Footnote 21 The duty under the Human Rights Act to act compatibly with Convention rights has opened up new scope for public law defences to be put forward against public authorities, based on breach of human rights in taking action to recover possession.Footnote 22
Turning to the issue of standards versus rules, this is a tension which underlies wide areas of law.Footnote 23 As Lord Walker points out, a preference for resort to standards tends to be prominent in both equity and human rights law.Footnote 24 The reason is essentially the same, a desire to remain open to balancing a range of often incommensurate factors and moral considerations in specific contexts before arriving at the appropriate or just solution in the particular case, which is entailed by appeal to wider, more abstract principles than are encapsulated in rigid legal rules. For equity, Lord Walker gives a range of examples to illustrate this approach.Footnote 25 The court is required to make an evaluative judgment in application of a broadly framed norm of assessment of conduct. In making such judgments, courts draw on what they identify as standards of inter-personal and commercial morality, while also seeking to avoid creating power for unmerited exploitative behaviour by the relief granted.Footnote 26
Although proportionality is a term which can be apt to describe what equity seeks to do in certain situations – in the sense that equity seeks to ensure that the remedies it gives are proportionate to the legitimate interests of the claimant – it is questionable whether this is comparable with proportionality in human rights analysis, which involves a structured method of seeking to balance public interest against private interest.Footnote 27 The proportionality framework of analysis employed in human rights litigation is directed to achieving a fair balance between collective public interests and private interests, and any attempt to introduce it into the operation of the law of equity (which is concerned with balancing competing private interests) would be likely to have a seriously distorting effect. So, again, the comparison between equity and human rights law can be made, but at such a high level of abstraction as not to provide helpful guidance for the development of doctrine to be applied in cases.
It is also difficult to regard the presence of an equitable overlay for the common law as contributing in itself to satisfaction of the fair trial obligation in article 6.Footnote 28 Generally, article 6 is neutral regarding the content of rights in domestic law, requiring only that there be a fair trial to apply such rights as domestic law provides.Footnote 29 Article 6 does not itself require that equitable standards be applied in domestic law.
For human rights law, it is primarily the margin of appreciation and proportionality which, in combination, provide for solutions which are sensitive to both institutional factorsFootnote 30 and the precise balance of moral or social factors between claimant, state and third persons. The complexity of these factors can lead the courts into decisions involving very fine-grained balancing of different factors.Footnote 31
Use of standards rather than rules places a premium on the judgment in court, that is, at the point of application of the norm. A price is paid in terms of predictability when people plan their affairs; the ability of the parties to resolve their dispute without going to court; and the shifting of practical decision-making power from a legislature which promulgates clear rules to judges. Therefore, both systems of law face pressures in the opposite direction, in favour of a more rule-based approach, in the interests of rule of law values.
In the context of equity, the tension is particularly acute at the interface between commercial law (with its traditional emphasis upon the value of certainty) and equitable doctrine. There is a desire not to allow equity to create undue disruption of bargains freely made or settled property rights, around which persons have planned their affairs.Footnote 32
The standards approach favoured by equity often has a particular association with the way in which the conscience of a defendant may be found to be affected in the context of a long-term relationship. Here again the connection with a sense of Aristotelian epieikeia comes through. The more remote a decision-point is from the particular circumstances plainly contemplated and legislated for by the parties to a contract or relationship, the easier it will be to say that a particular matter to be decided falls outside their real intentions and foresight and that the outcome should be governed by a more flexible, open-textured standard of justice or fair-dealing and that judgment is to be exercised by the court in light of all the circumstances of the case at the point its decision falls to be made.
The pressure for an outlet for epieikeia in a long-term relational context is such that in the paradigm case of the relationship between members in a company (especially a company which is characterised as a quasi-partnership), a standard-based control against exploitative behaviour and abuse of rights within the relationship amounting to unfairly prejudicial behaviour has been created in various forms by the legislature.Footnote 33 Legislative intervention has expanded the narrow scope for relief in equity, based on the concept of fraud on a powerFootnote 34 and fraud on the minority.Footnote 35 But in this context, again, one sees familiar pressure to try to constrain within reasonable limits what might otherwise be an overly wide and unpredictable judicial discretion.Footnote 36
In the human rights context there is a similar tension between the values advanced by favouring a rule-based approach and a standards approach, but here it is also strongly affected by institutional factors relating to the proper balance of authority and practical decision-making power between the courts, the executive and Parliament.Footnote 37 The human rights provisions used to assess the acceptability of existing domestic law themselves use standards for evaluation. The application of those standards tends to require domestic law itself to use standards allowing for flexible application by the courts. But sometimes it may be found to be legitimate and compatible with Convention rights for Parliament to legislate to create a ‘bright line’ rule, notwithstanding that its application may produce harsh decisions at the margins.Footnote 38 In this way, the tension between rules and standards is sometimes manifest in the rhetoric of argument regarding the acceptability of a particular statutory rule as a ‘bright line’ rule (good) or a ‘blanket’ rule or prohibition (bad).
The balance between flexibility and predictability in application of a legal norm can be struck in different ways along a spectrum. In the human rights context, for example, the minority in Kay argued for a defence to possession actions on human rights grounds which would apply only in exceptional cases, while the majority held that there should be no scope for such a defence. Even the minority, therefore, wished to avoid a high degree of disruption of ordinary property rights of local authorities. In the dialogue with the Strasbourg court mapped in Pinnock, the European Court of Human Rights favoured the view of the minority in Kay, and that is where the domestic law has now ended up, through the operation of the Human Rights Act.
Equity appeals to moral standards worked out in a determinate way over time with an increasing degree of predictability. The format of reasoning for deciding whether, say, specific performance should be granted has become largely settled, with clearer identification of relevant factors. It still requires an evaluative judgment to be made by the court, but the specification of relevant factors makes it easier to predict the outcome. A broadly similar process of articulation of relevant factors is occurring in the human rights jurisprudence, but the sheer variety of situations in which human rights law falls to be applied and the wide range of incommensurable considerations which fall to be accommodated means that outcomes often remain more uncertain.
There is also a sense in which an appeal to broad standards of justice or fairness can contribute in some ways to rule of law values, in making the general operation of the law perhaps more accessible and predictable than might be the case if left to highly detailed, but hard to understand, rigid rules. As Jeremy Waldron notes in his essay, ‘Thoughtfulness and the Rule of Law’,Footnote 39 flexibility and appeals to widely shared moral standards may promote a level of general predictability of the operation of the law which allows individuals to plan their affairs with more confidence.
Ultimately, provided the standards of commercial and inter-personal morality that the courts will apply are reasonably determinate and are generally understood by those entering relationships, this sort of approach can provide greater practical support for predictability of likely outcomes as at the point of contracting or establishing binding legal instruments, and hence for party autonomy and ability to legislate for themselves which is at the heart of contract and the law of trusts. If there is rigid adherence to the literal text of a contract or trust instrument at a later point in time when action under the contract or trust is required or litigation occurs, there is a risk that capricious, unpredicted and (judged at the time the contract or trust was actually established) unintended outcomes might occur, simply because the parties did not foresee the way in which events happen to have turned out. So recourse to equity and business common sense/equitable interpretations is itself an appeal to a conception of legal certainty and predictability.
Waldron refers to Hayek’s view, late in life, that he may have been wrong to think that clear codified legislation would always increase the predictability of the law. Rather, Hayek came to think that
[J]udicial decisions may in fact be more predictable if the judge is also bound by generally held views of what is just, even when they are not supported by the letter of the law.
Waldron comments:
Thinking through the abstract issue of what a fair order of mutually-adjusted intentions would involve so far as the settlement of the instant case is concerned may enable the judge to come up with a result more congruent to the expectations of the parties than his application of some enacted rule according to its terms.Footnote 40
The same reasoning applies in relation to private legislation in the form of contracts and trust instruments.
Finally in this section, turning to the married woman’s equity,Footnote 41 it is doubtful whether this history of equity’s protection for women’s property interests really represents an infusion of equity with human rights thinking. It appears more to have reflected the developing mores of the propertied classes, particularly in the context of the transition of a woman from the dominion of her family of birth to the dominion of her husband.Footnote 42 One strains to see a human rights dimension in this. Despite the agitation of J.S. Mill, to which Lord Walker refers, the rights afforded by equity to a married woman were not given in virtue of her status as a human being. Nor does this development of the law appear to have contributed to a wider acceptance of the rights of women in society or the law. However, what this history does illustrate is the relative openness of equityFootnote 43 to social influences and arguments by appeal to wider social standards in fashioning its doctrines and their application. This indicates a pattern of reasoning in the same family as that in relation to application of human rights standards, as human rights came increasingly to be accepted as legitimating social standards in the period after the Second World War.
Human rights as a ground for development of equity
There are three distinct processes by which human rights can provide a basis for the development of legal and equitable doctrine. First, section 6(1) of the Human Rights Act imposes an obligation on public authorities to act in a manner which is compatible with Convention rights. This obligation applies to courts pursuant to section 6(3). So if a court finds that to enforce legal rights in a particular way would involve a violation of Convention rights,Footnote 44 the court is obliged to refuse to enforce those rights. This is straightforward when the person seeking to enforce the rights is a public authority, where there is vertical enforcement of Convention rights by citizen (defendant) against public authority (claimant). Is there scope for horizontal enforcement of Convention rights between private persons, in such a way as will defeat the ordinary legal rights of one party?
I suggest that the answer lies in the law of positive obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights.Footnote 45 The court is a state authority, which is being asked to intervene in a dispute regarding the respective rights in private law of two private parties. If what is said to make the difference to the outcome of that dispute is the Human Rights Act, it seems reasonable to frame the conditions under which it should make a difference by reference to the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on positive obligations, where it holds that the state has a positive obligation to intervene in relations between private persons. A useful way of looking at this is to ask whether the values and interests protected by a Convention right are so strong as to justify disruption of ordinary patterns of rights and property in domestic law. Since property and contract rights are themselves protected interests under article 1 of Protocol 1, the margin of appreciation to refuse to override those rights is often likely to be wide, and where this is so the courts do not have legitimate authority to act to disrupt those rights. Therefore, in general, the scope to intervene may be expected to be narrow.
Where the court does intervene, relying on its obligation under section 6, does this involve development of ordinary domestic law, or just simple compliance with a supervening statutory duty? There is a curious ambiguity in the authorities about this. In A v. B plc,Footnote 46 the Court of Appeal responded to what it perceived to be a deficiency in protection of Convention rights under ordinary domestic law by modifying the action for breach of confidence to incorporate the requirements of articles 8 and 10. So perhaps the best analysis is that the courts have used human rights as external standards to inform and legitimate a change in domestic legal rules, inferring from section 6 that they have been given special licence by the legislature to modify the general common law.
Secondly, human rights may be treated as a type of a wider class of what Eisenberg calls ‘social propositions’,Footnote 47 that is, social standards which are capable of informing the development of the common law and equity as they adapt to changing demands and expectations in society. This seems to be the best explanation of what occurred in Campbell v. MGN Ltd.Footnote 48 The Human Rights Act’s reference to human rights standards might be said to have unblocked a log-jam in the development of equity and the common law to recognise privacy interests as protectable in their own right apart from confidentiality. Some might say that this was a long over-due development of domestic law.Footnote 49 But this sort of approach is capable of wider use, as recent case law makes clear.Footnote 50 Convention rights can be used to inform the content of standards and rules in ordinary domestic law.
Thirdly, as a weaker form of the second point, human rights may be regarded as relevant considerations for the courts in the exercise of more discretionary choices or in the application of broad evaluative standards.Footnote 51 This is as yet an under-explored area of the law in relation to equitable doctrines, despite their relative openness to influence by wider social standards.
The case of Pitt v. Holt
This caseFootnote 52 involved analysis of the controversial so-called ‘rule in Hastings-Bass’ (concerning the extent of legitimate equitable intervention for failure by trustees to take into account relevant considerations) and of the equitable jurisdiction to rescind a voluntary transaction for mistake. The Supreme Court corrected a mis-development of the law in relation to the former (significantly restricting the scope for transactions to be unwound on the grounds of mistake by trustees) and elucidated the ambit of the latter.
On the first issue, the decision is itself a salutary warning against over-ready recourse in private law to public law style analysis, which the statement of the rule in Hastings-Bass appeared to draw upon. The contexts are in fact very different. Unlike public officials, trustees are not charged with acting in the public interest,Footnote 53 but with acting within the scope of their duties to private persons; and unlike public officials, trustees have obligations to pay compensation or restore a trust fund if they have breached their duty. So the balance of interests is different in the two situations, and one cannot simply transpose the public law standard to the private.
On the second issue, an important feature of Lord Walker’s judgment in Pitt v. Holt is his unwillingness to close off the cases in which equity might intervene where a mistake has been made in making a voluntary disposition by a rigid rule. Instead, very much in line with the traditional equitable approach, he leaves the question to be governed by an evaluative standard: a voluntary transaction will only be rescinded if the mistake is of sufficient gravity to make it unconscionable to deny relief.
This is an area where equity now finds itself in competition with the equity of the common law. The common law has developed its rules for reversing payments made by mistake, balancing an expansion of the basis for a claim in unjust enrichmentFootnote 54 with a defence of good faith change of position to create what is perceived overall to be a just balancing of competing interests. The following question now comes into focus: what is the relationship between the equitable jurisdiction to set aside a voluntary transaction for mistake and common law claims in unjust enrichment, grounded on mistake?Footnote 55 Perhaps, it is the effect on third parties (in Pitt v. Holt, the tax authorities) which provides a basis for reverting to the (in some respects) narrower equitable jurisdiction: when what is sought is not just a repayment of money paid by mistake, but a more complete unwinding of the transaction so that it is treated as never having been made at all (to avoid a tax liability in that case), a narrower doctrine of mistake may be appropriate. But as in many areas, the relationship between equitable doctrine and common law rules continues to be hazy and unclear. A principled integration of equity and a dynamic common law remains elusive.
Perhaps we should be referring more explicitly to the idea of epieikeia as a potential important organising criterion across both common law and equity. From this perspective, there is a continuum across the two systems. The need for some sense of flexibility in application of rules to meet the particular justice of a case, while taking into account the institutional reasons why rules laid down by the law-giver (whether contracting parties, legislature or superior court) should be respected, is general across law. Where the parties have made a clear (private) legislative choice in a contract or other instrument, their decision governs.Footnote 56 But the further one moves from that paradigm case, the greater the scope there is for the law to supplement what the parties have provided for in order to do practical justice between them and to meet (in a residual and generalised sense) their expectations that fair outcomes will be achieved. So, the more open-textured and unspecific the language used in a contract, the more contractual interpretation will allow for operation of business common sense (according to norms of commercial expectations of fair-dealing). In relation to implied terms in contract, the scope for implication is narrower the more clearly the parties have made explicit provision to cover the situation which has arisen.Footnote 57 Where a contract governs a long-term relationship and provides for discretionary powers for one or other party to enable adaptation within the scope of the relationship to unforeseen events, good faith and reasonableness standards may be implied to govern the exercise of those powers.Footnote 58 Flexibility in the availability of equitable remedies, especially for particularly powerful ones such as injunctions and specific performance, allows for factors which may not have been foreseen or provided for to be taken into account in producing a just result overall. Where a contractual arrangement may have significant effects on third parties who have not had an opportunity to bargain for protection, a reasonable standard of care will be imposed.Footnote 59 Where a fiduciary relationship is created, so that a principal’s property or affairs are managed by the fiduciary according to his discretion and outside specific rules stipulated in the governing instrument, the justification for equitable control according to open-textured standards becomes stronger still, but on a continuum from controls of contractual discretions according to these other techniques.Footnote 60
At the same time, the law of unjust enrichment and equity operate to produce just outcomes where party agreement is subverted or incomplete in important respects. Here again, one is remote from or there is good reason not to treat as binding a rule legislated by the parties. Pitt v. Holt is illustrative of one dimension of this. Another area of equitable intervention is in relation to imperfect agreements concerning property, where the device of the constructive trust is important.Footnote 61 It is because both the law of unjust enrichment and equity have important roles to play in protection of property rights and reasonable expectations outside rules laid down in a contract that the relationship between them is somewhat fraught at the moment, and why their coherent amalgamation and integration is a pressing issue for the courts.