Skip to content

Court Judgments and Legal Authorities

Key cases and legal materials

The judgments and legislation listed on this page are the most directly relevant legal authorities for the issues examined on this site. Each entry includes a plain English summary of what was decided and why it matters.

Daly v HM Advocate and Keir v HM Advocate [2025] UKSC 38

The most significant recent judgment in Scottish criminal law for the purposes of this site. The UK Supreme Court found that the approach taken by Scottish courts to section 275 applications had in some cases been too restrictive and incompatible with the right to a fair trial under Article 6 ECHR. The judgment has direct implications for cases decided under the same restrictive approach and prompted a rewrite of the Scottish Bench Book guidance to judges.

Plain English summary — accused.scot/daly-keir-uksc-38-scotlandPrimary source — www.supremecourt.uk

Cadder v HM Advocate [2010] UKSC 43

The Supreme Court found that the Scottish practice of questioning suspects without access to legal advice was incompatible with Article 6 ECHR. The ruling prompted immediate legislative change and established the right of suspects in Scotland to have a solicitor present during police questioning. Significant for this site because it demonstrates that the Supreme Court has previously found aspects of Scottish criminal procedure incompatible with Convention rights and that the appropriate response is legislative change.

Primary source — www.supremecourt.uk

HM Advocate v Moorov 1930 JC 68

The original case from which the Moorov doctrine takes its name. The High Court of Justiciary held that where a series of offences disclosed a systematic course of conduct the evidence of each complainer could provide corroboration for the evidence of the others. The doctrine has been applied in Scottish courts ever since and is covered in detail in the Moorov doctrine page in the Understanding the Law section.

Plain English summary — accused.scot/moorov-doctrine-scotland-foi-no-recorded-evidence

Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, sections 274 and 275

The primary legislative provisions governing the admissibility of sexual history evidence in sexual offence cases in Scotland. Section 274 creates the general prohibition. Section 275 creates the exception. Both are covered in detail in the Understanding the Law section of this site.

Section 274 — www.legislation.gov.ukSection 275 — www.legislation.gov.uk

Victims, Witnesses, and Justice Reform (Scotland) Act 2025

The legislation that abolished the not proven verdict, introduced the complainer transcript scheme, and made a number of other significant changes to Scottish criminal procedure. The Act has been the subject of significant debate about its compatibility with fair trial rights and its implications for the accused in serious criminal cases. The not proven verdict page in the Understanding the Law section covers the abolition and its implications in detail.

Primary source — www.legislation.gov.uk

Criminal Justice and Licensing (Scotland) Act 2010, Part 6

The statutory framework governing disclosure in Scottish criminal proceedings. Part 6 placed the disclosure obligations of the Crown on a formal legislative footing and introduced the requirement for a defence statement. Covered in detail in the Disclosure and Evidence section of this site.

Primary source — www.legislation.gov.uk

Pages in this section

Key Documents and FOI MaterialThe parent section — overview of all pages.
FOI DisclosuresFreedom of information responses obtained by Accused.scot.
Court Judgments and Legal AuthoritiesKey judgments relevant to Scottish criminal procedure.
Parliamentary MaterialDebates, questions, and committee material from Holyrood.
External Reports and PublicationsIndependent reports and publications cited by the site.
Complaints and AccountabilityRoutes for raising concerns about conduct in the justice system.
Scottish Parliament and Human Rights RoutesParliamentary and human rights mechanisms.

Plain English summaries

Where Accused.scot has published a detailed plain English analysis of a judgment that is linked alongside the primary source. The primary source link goes to the official text of the judgment or legislation.