An innovative invocation of substantive legitimate expectations in Singapore

Publication Type

Blog Post

Publication Date

10-2022

Abstract

The Singapore Court of Appeal, the final appellate court in Singapore, has in Tan Seng Kee v Attorney-General [2022] SGCA 16 (“Tan Seng Kee”) recently revisited the vexed question of the constitutionality of section 377A in Singapore’s Penal Code—a provision which criminalises homosexual acts between men whether such acts are committed in public or private. In addition to Tan Seng Kee’s obvious socio-political significance, a point that will be of interest to the readers of this blog is that the crux of the decision rested on a novel invocation of the common law doctrine of substantive legitimate expectations. Indeed, Tan Seng Kee marked the debut of the substantive legitimate expectations doctrine in the Singapore Court of Appeal, albeit with a carefully-circumscribed scope of application. This post will briefly describe the decision in Tan Seng Kee and will critically evaluate the Court of Appeal’s application of the substantive legitimate expectations doctrine.

Discipline

Asian Studies | Law and Society | Sexuality and the Law

Research Areas

Private Law

Publisher

Hong Kong Law Journal Ltd.

Additional URL

https://adminlawblog.org/2022/10/18/kenny-chng-an-innovative-invocation-of-substantive-legitimate-expectations-in-singapore/

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