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Established in the landmark case of Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corporation (1948), the principle holds that a decision made by a public authority must not be so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could have made it.
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v Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KB 223 is an English law case that sets out the standard of unreasonableness in the decision of a public body, which would ...
Sep 22, 2021 · The test laid down in this case, in all three limbs, is known as “the Wednesbury test”. The term “Wednesbury unreasonableness” is used to ...
Of course unreasonableness has to be established but it is for the court to exercise its own judgment on the facts established. No reasonable authority could ...
A standard of unreasonableness used in assessing an application for judicial review of a public authority's decision. A reasoning or decision is Wednesbury ...
Oct 21, 2022 · Wednesbury Rule of arbitrariness and unreasonableness are often interpreted by the courts in a manner that when the “Court finds that the ...
A governmental decision that is Wednesbury-unreasonable may be quashed by the High Court. This type of unreasonableness of public body decisions was laid down ...
The Court held that when assessing a discretionary decision made by a public authority, the court would only interfere with the decision where it was so ...
Sep 19, 2019 · Historically, the unreasonableness ground of review was reserved for decisions whose outcome was manifestly arbitrary, vague, or irrational: so ...
Dec 11, 2021 · The Wednesbury principle developed after the judgement given in the famous case of Associated Provincial Picture House v. Wednesbury Corporation ...