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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> QX v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2022] EWCA Civ 1541 (22 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1541.html Cite as: [2022] WLR(D) 465, [2023] KB 472, [2023] 2 WLR 1103, [2022] EWCA Civ 1541 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
The Honourable Mrs Justice Farbey
PTA/10/2019
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
____________________
QX |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Robin Tam KC and Steven Gray (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 1 and 2 November 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing:
Introduction
The issues on this appeal
i. Ground i. of the appeal argues that the Judge erred in law in holding that A was not entitled to disclosure of the kind described in AF (No 3) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] UKHL 28; [2012] 2 AC 269 ('AF( No 3)') in relation to his challenge to Conditions A and B (see further, paragraph 41, below). That depends on whether article 6.1 of the European Convention on Human Rights ('the ECHR') applies to those two challenges. That depends, in part, on two further questions.
1. Is this Court bound by paragraphs 31 and 32 of Pomiechowski v District Court of Legnica, Poland [2012] UKSC 220; [2020] 1 WLR 1604?
2. Would a decision on the challenges to Conditions A and B in any event be decisive for A's civil rights?
3. A further question is whether A is precluded from raising this issue on this appeal because the Judge decided it in judgment 1 and he did not appeal then.
ii. Ground ii. argues that the Judge erred in law in deciding that A was not entitled to cross-examine the Secretary of State's witness on A's challenge to Conditions A and B. The answer to this question depends in part on whether this Court is bound by the reasoning in MB v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] EWCA Civ 1140; [2007] QB 415 and in AL v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 278.
iii. Did the Judge err in law in ordering the Secretary of State to tender a witness for cross-examination on other aspects of A's challenge? Coulson LJ has written a short judgment dealing with this discrete issue. I agree with it.
i. Ground i. is not academic. The Judge has not already decided the relevant question.
ii. It is unnecessary for me to express a view on the effect of paragraphs 31 and 32 of Pomiechowski in this context. For the reasons I give below, a decision on the validity of the TEO would be a decisive determination in relation to A's article 8 rights. Article 6.1 therefore applies to it, and A is entitled, in his challenge to Conditions A and B (see paragraph 41, below) to disclosure complying with AF (No 3).
iii. This Court is not bound by this Court's interpretation of the similar, but not identical, provisions of the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 ('the 2005 Act') when it interprets the relevant provisions of the 2015 Act. The Judge was right not to order cross-examination of a national security witness on A's review of the Secretary of State's decisions that Conditions A and B were met.
The facts in outline
The relevant statutory schemes
Control orders
Decisions concerning the standard of review and disclosure which applied to control orders
MB v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Court of Appeal)
MB v Secretary of State for the Home Department (House of Lords) [2008] 1 AC 440
AF (No 3)
AL v Secretary of State for the Home Department
TPIMs
Temporary exclusion orders
i. The Secretary of State reasonably suspects that P is, or has been, involved in TRA outside the United Kingdom (Condition A).
ii. The Secretary of State reasonably considers that it is necessary, for purposes connected with protecting members of the public in the United Kingdom from a risk of terrorism for a TEO to be imposed on P (Condition B). While the TEO is in force, the Secretary of State must keep under review whether condition B is met (section 2(8)).
iii. The Secretary of State reasonably considers that P is outside the United Kingdom (Condition C)
iv. P has a right of abode in the United Kingdom (Condition D).
v. Other than in urgent cases, the court gives the Secretary of State permission under section 3 of the 2015 Act (Condition E).
The procedural history
A's application for a review
The hearing in March 2020
i. Did article 6 of the ECHR apply to a review, under section 11(2)(d) of the 2015 Act, of a decision by the Secretary of State to impose, by a notice under section 9, two types of obligations on A?
ii. If so, was A was entitled to the level of disclosure described by the House of Lords in AF (No 3)?
iii. If so, had the disclosure by the Secretary of State complied with those principles?
Judgment 1
'In the determination of his civil rights and obligations…everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law'.
The hearing in July 2020
Judgment 2
79. She summarised the Secretary of State's case in paragraph 7-14, by reference to the Secretary of State's OPEN case against A. She then summarised A's case. It was impossible for him to respond to the vague allegation about activities in the United Kingdom which had only been disclosed to him on 5 June 2020 (paragraph 16).
A's conviction
A amends his grounds of challenge
The hearing in November
Judgment 3
Submissions
i. The Judge was bound by Pomiechowski (see paragraph 4.i.1., above) to hold that the right to enter, remain in and leave the United Kingdom is a civil right for the purposes of article 6.1.
ii. Whether or not she was so bound, a challenge to Conditions A and B would be directly decisive of his civil rights.
iii. The Syria allegation was relevant not only to whether Conditions A and B were met initially (and in the case of Condition B, to whether it continued to be met) but also to the necessity for the obligations.
Discussion
Is the appeal academic because the Judge has already decided that A has had, in his challenge to the TEO, disclosure complying with article 6.1?
Ground i.
Should A be prevented from challenging the Judge's view that article 6 did not apply to the imposition of the TEO?
Is A entitled to disclosure complying with AF (No 3) in his challenge to Conditions A and B?
Ground ii.
Did the Judge err in law in not ordering cross-examination of a national security witness on the question whether Conditions A and B were met?
i. Control orders were significantly more intrusive interferences with article 8 rights than are TEOs. Some came very close to detention; a good deal closer than the interferences which can be produced by TEOs (see paragraph 119, above).
ii. Both statutes require the court to give permission before an order can be made. A recognition of that difference in seriousness, however, is the provision in the 2005 Act for automatic supervision by the court; there is no equivalent for TEOs.
iii. So while both measures involved or involve interferences with Convention rights, the statutory context is significantly different.
iv. This Court's reasoning in MB did not turn on, or reflect, the actual words used by Parliament. It turned, instead, to a significant extent, on the court's view that a section 3 reading of the 2005 Act was possible, on what this court saw as the inherent flexibility of judicial review, and on the way in which it considered that judicial review could be adapted in each case so as to comply with the requirements of article 6. This Court interpreted the relevant provisions in a way which, as it acknowledged, differed from their ordinary meaning, in order to achieve a result which it saw as producing compliance with article 6.1 in MB's case.
v. This Court's understanding of the meaning of 'the principles applicable on an application for judicial review' in the context of the 2005 Act cannot stand, in the context of the 2015 Act, with the later reasoning of the Supreme Court in R (Begum) v Special Immigration Appeals Commission. I say more about this point in the next two paragraphs.
vi. There are, of course, great similarities between the words of the relevant provisions of the two Acts. But in the 2015 Act Parliament has chosen not to use the phrase 'reasonable grounds', on which this Court in MB placed considerable emphasis (see paragraphs 26 and 27, above). The focus, more obviously, is the Secretary of State's state of mind: 'reasonably suspects'.
Conclusions
i. The appeal on ground i. is not academic.
ii. The Judge erred in law in holding that A was not entitled, in his challenge to the Secretary of State's decision that Conditions A and B were met, to disclosure in accordance with AF (No 3). I would therefore allow the appeal on ground i.
iii. The Judge was right to refuse to order cross-examination of the Secretary of State's witness on the question whether Conditions A and B were met. I would therefore dismiss ground ii.
Lord Justice Nugee:
Lord Justice Coulson
"The Defendant shall file and serve a witness statement from a person able to speak to the national security case. The maker of the statement should be available for cross-examination at the final hearing of the Claimant's review."
"In an adversarial system such as exists in the United Kingdom, a party is free to withhold information that would help his case if he wishes-perhaps for reasons of delicacy or personal privacy. He cannot be compelled to disclose it against his will" (at 434D)
This and related passages in Air Canada have recently been cited with approval by the Supreme Court in Sainsbury's Supermarkets Ltd v Mastercard Inc [2020] UKSC 24 at [242]. I acknowledge that somewhat different principles may apply to public authorities when they defend applications for judicial review.