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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 >> Moss v The Royal Borough of Kingston-Upon-Thames & Anor [2023] EWCA Civ 1438 (30 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1438.html Cite as: [2024] 1 WLR 2869, [2024] WLR 2869, [2023] EWCA Civ 1438, [2023] WLR(D) 510 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE FARBEY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PHILLIPS
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
____________________
DEREK MOSS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE ROYAL BOROUGH OF KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES (2) THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
Respondent |
____________________
Philip Coppel KC and John Fitzsimons (instructed by South London Partnership) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 19 October 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewis:
INTRODUCTION
THE STATUTORY FRAMEWORK
"Obstruction etc."
(1) If any person is guilty of any act or omission in relation to proceedings before the Tribunal which, if those proceedings were proceedings before a court having power to commit for contempt, would constitute contempt of court, the Tribunal may certify the offence to the High Court or, in Scotland, the Court of Session.
(2) Where an offence is so certified, the court may inquire into the matter and, after hearing any witness who may be produced against or on behalf of the person charged with the offence, and after hearing any statement that may be offered in defence, deal with him in any manner in which it could deal with him if he had committed the like offence in relation to the court."
"61 Appeal proceedings
(1) Tribunal Procedure Rules may make provision for regulating the exercise of rights of appeal conferred by sections 57(1) and (2) and 60(1) and (4).
…..
(3) Subsection (4) applies where—
(a) a person does something, or fails to do something, in relation to proceedings before the First-tier Tribunal on an appeal under those provisions, and
(b) if those proceedings were proceedings before a court having power to commit for contempt, the act or omission would constitute contempt of court.
(4) The First-tier Tribunal may certify the offence to the Upper Tribunal.
(5) Where an offence is certified under subsection (4), the Upper Tribunal may—
(a) inquire into the matter, and
(b) deal with the person charged with the offence in any manner in which it could deal with the person if the offence had been committed in relation to the Upper Tribunal.
(6) Before exercising the power under subsection (5)(b), the Upper Tribunal must—
(a) hear any witness who may be produced against or on behalf of the person charged with the offence, and
(b) hear any statement that may be offered in defence.
….."
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Mr Moss's Request for information
"to provide advice and assistance to enable a reformulation of the request that falls within the appropriate limit. This must include provision of Part 4 and be done within 30 days."
The Applications for a Contempt Order and for Certification
Proceedings before the FTT
"DECISION AND CERTIFICATE: We certify an offence by the Royal Borough of Kingston-upon-Thames to comply with the terms of the Tribunal's decision in EA/2016/0250, dated 20 March 2017."
Proceedings in the High Court
The Judgment of the High Court
THE APPEAL
"1. In holding the Appellant responsible for prosecuting the First Respondent's contempt, the Judge failed to give effect to a binding decision of a superior court, disregarded a relevant statutory provision, and misunderstood or misconstrued the law.
2. In deciding that the court should start from scratch and determine whether the First Respondent was guilty of the offence of contempt which the First tier Tribunal found it guilty of and certified to the court, the Judge failed to give effect to a binding decision of a superior court, disregarded a relevant statutory provision, and misunderstood or misconstrued the law."
THE PROPER ROLE OF THE HIGH COURT - GROUND 2
Submissions
Discussion
Conclusion
THE ROLE OF THE APPELLANT IN THE PROCEEDINGS - GROUND 1
Submissions
Discussion
CONCLUSION
Lord Justice Phillips:
68. The FTT's express statutory power is that it may certify an offence where any act or omission "would constitute contempt of court" if the proceedings were before a court having the power to commit for contempt of court. Lewis LJ interprets that provision as requiring the FTT to determine whether "an act or omission occurred … which may call for a sanction" [43], but not to consider whether the act or omissions would constitute a contempt. Instead, on Lewis LJ's interpretation, the FTT may certify if the act or omission is "capable by its nature of constituting contempt" [43]. On this analysis, the FTT need not and should not concern itself with issues of service or notice of an order, nor whether the alleged offender had the requisite mens rea [44].
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
"105. … Before the High Court may inquire into the charge, the FTT must consider whether the act or omission of the putative contemnor "would constitute contempt of court." In my judgment, when read in context, those words do not refer to an act or omission proved as a contempt in the Tribunal but to the kind of act or omission that may permissibly form the subject matter of a certification to the court.
106. …The certification has – in effect – the same function as a charge in criminal proceedings: it enables the putative contemnor to know the case against him."
This correctly encapsulates the nature of the FTT's certification function under subparagraph 8(1) and subsection 61(4). The test is identified by Lewis LJ, namely whether the act or omission appears to the FTT to be capable of constituting a contempt. I also agree with Farbey J and Lewis LJ that there is no unfairness in such a procedure, nor any breach of Article 6, because an applicant has an opportunity to press their case and a respondent has an opportunity to defend themselves in the High Court or UT.
"Certification
7A.—(1) This rule applies to certification cases.
(2) An application for the Tribunal to certify an offence to the Upper Tribunal must be made in writing and must be sent or delivered to the Tribunal so that it is received no later than 28 days after the relevant act or omission (as the case may be) first occurs.
(3) The application must include— (a) details of the proceedings giving rise to the application; (b) details of the act or omission (as the case may be) relied on; (c) if the act or omission (as the case may be) arises following, and in relation to, a decision of the Tribunal, a copy of any written record of that decision; (d) if the act or omission (as the case may be) arises following, and in relation to, an order of the Tribunal under section 166(2) of the Data Protection Act 2018 (orders to progress complaints), a copy of the order; (e) the grounds relied on in contending that if the proceedings in question were proceedings before a court having power to commit for contempt, the act or omission (as the case may be) would constitute contempt of court; (f) a statement as to whether the applicant would be content for the case to be dealt with without a hearing if the Tribunal considers it appropriate, and (g) any further information or documents required by a practice direction.
(4) If an application is provided to the Tribunal later than the time required by paragraph (2) or by any extension of time under rule 5(3)(a) (power to extend time)— (a) the application must include a request for an extension of time and the reason why the application was not provided in time, and (b) unless the Tribunal extends time for the application, the Tribunal must not admit the application.
(5) When the Tribunal admits the application, it must send a copy of the application and any accompanying documents to the respondent and must give directions as to the procedure to be followed in the consideration and disposal of the application.
(6) A decision disposing of the application will be treated by the Tribunal as a decision which finally disposes of all issues in the proceedings comprising the certification case and rule 38 (decisions) will apply."
This rule sets out the practical steps that must accompany an application for certification and states at sub-rule (5) that the tribunal must give directions as to the procedure to be followed in the consideration and disposal of the application. If Parliament believed that the FTT would have to make formal findings of fact as part of any certification process, the rule would surely have reflected this. Instead, Rule 7A bears out Farbey J's description of a process designed to enable a respondent to know the case against them.
"Requirements of a contempt application
81.4
(1) Unless and to the extent that the court directs otherwise, every contempt application must be supported by written evidence given by affidavit or affirmation.
(2) A contempt application must include statements of all the following, unless (in the case of (b) to (g)) wholly inapplicable—
(a) the nature of the alleged contempt (for example, breach of an order or undertaking or contempt in the face of the court);
(b) the date and terms of any order allegedly breached or disobeyed;
(c) confirmation that any such order was personally served, and the date it was served, unless the court or the parties dispensed with personal service;
(d) if the court dispensed with personal service, the terms and date of the court's order dispensing with personal service;
(e) confirmation that any order allegedly breached or disobeyed included a penal notice;
(f) the date and terms of any undertaking allegedly breached;
(g) confirmation of the claimant's belief that the person who gave any undertaking understood its terms and the consequences of failure to comply with it;
(h) a brief summary of the facts alleged to constitute the contempt, set out numerically in chronological order;
(i) that the defendant has the right to be legally represented in the contempt proceedings;
(j) that the defendant is entitled to a reasonable opportunity to obtain legal representation and to apply for legal aid which may be available without any means test;
(k) that the defendant may be entitled to the services of an interpreter;
(l) that the defendant is entitled to a reasonable time to prepare for the hearing;
(m) that the defendant is entitled but not obliged to give written and oral evidence in their defence;
(n) that the defendant has the right to remain silent and to decline to answer any question the answer to which may incriminate the defendant;
(o)that the court may proceed in the defendant's absence if they do not attend but (whether or not they attend) will only find the defendant in contempt if satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of the facts constituting contempt and that they do constitute contempt;
(p) that if the court is satisfied that the defendant has committed a contempt, the court may punish the defendant by a fine, imprisonment, confiscation of assets or other punishment under the law;
(q) that if the defendant admits the contempt and wishes to apologise to the court, that is likely to reduce the seriousness of any punishment by the court;
(r) that the court's findings will be provided in writing as soon as practicable after the hearing; and
(s) that the court will sit in public, unless and to the extent that the court orders otherwise, and that its findings will be made public."
CPR 81 also includes mandatory stipulations about service and publicity. It overlaps with Rule 7A(5) to the extent that the alleged contempt must be specified, but it then goes on to emphasise important procedural aspects of contempt proceedings. As noted above, the FTT Rules are silent about that, with the inference that Parliament did not consider that the FTT is engaged in a shadow contempt process.
1) The enforcement process would be pointlessly onerous for applicants, who would be put to prove the same thing twice. That is likely to be undesirably discouraging to applicants, who are usually individuals facing institutions.
2) Although the interpretation is presumably considered to offer a layer of protection to respondents, it in fact deprives them of the protections inherent in the contempt process. There is a difference between allegations and findings, and we do not and should not recognise a process that allows for adverse findings without the protections that apply in courts with a contempt jurisdiction. Moreover, the suggestion that the FTT might adopt a streamlined procedure leading to a reasoned decision that a contempt of a higher court would have occurred is unworkable. It is unclear what streamlining might involve, but if respondents are faced with the prospect of shadow findings of contempt, they may with good reason resist an abbreviated procedure and it might, to say the least, be unfair to impose one upon them. In any case, a process that might loosely be described as 'contempt-lite' is, as I have said, objectionable in principle.
3) From the point of view of the administration of justice, duplication of effort would be unavoidable and conflicting findings an ever-present possibility. If ever a case demonstrated the unsatisfactory results of the alternative statutory interpretation, the present case is it.