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UKSC in X v Lord Advocate: No Crown vicarious liability for Scottish sheriffs; 'the Crown' in CPA 1947 clarified; judicial independence defeats employment-akin relationship; statute 'always speaking'

Published on: 10 December 2025

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X v Lord Advocate [2025] UKSC 44

Background

In this appeal, the Supreme Court was invited to determine whether the Crown bears vicarious responsibility for civil wrongs said to have been carried out by John Brown while he was a sheriff (a member of the Scottish judiciary). The pursuer, a practising lawyer, maintains that Mr Brown is liable in delict (the Scots law counterpart to the English law concept of tort) for assaulting her on three separate occasions. Two incidents allegedly took place in the court building where he sat as a sheriff, and a third occurred on a train. After she complained about his behaviour, he also attempted to contact her on her mobile phone. The pursuer further contends that the sheriff is liable for those assaults and, treating the four incidents together, for harassment contrary to the Protection from Harassment Act 1997. The factual issue of whether the sheriff committed the alleged delicts remains unresolved. That is because the courts were first tasked with addressing a preliminary issue: whether the Crown can be fixed with vicarious liability for any delicts by the sheriff, should they be established at trial...

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