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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Bewley, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Justice [2014] EWHC 4215 (Admin) (11 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4215.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4215 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen (on the application of William Bewley) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Justice |
Defendant |
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Mr T Weisselberg QC (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice William DAVIS:
The public law duty to progress the detention of prisoners subject to an indeterminate sentence was satisfied by the defendant with the regime he introduced in the Consolidated Interim Instructions. Either an IDP would satisfy the exceptional circumstances test or, if not, he would be considered for the new progressive regime within a closed environment.
There was no "blanket" policy as alleged by the claimant in his grounds. The defendant's instructions expressly permitted those with an absconding history to move to open conditions albeit only in exceptional circumstances.
By reason of the decision in R (James) v Secretary of State for Justice [2010] 1 AC 553 no argument based on an alleged breach of Article 5 of the ECHR could possibly succeed. (The claimant's grounds appeared to accept this where it was said that "this Court is bound to reject (the Article 5) argument in light of the House of Lords in James.")
The allegation of unlawful inflexibility was bound to fail given the provision for transfer in exceptional circumstances and for representation to be made on behalf of those in the position of the claimant.
Whilst the defendant initially had accepted the recommendation of the Parole Board to move the claimant to open conditions, his decision not to do so having adopted a new policy could not be described as irrational or unlawful in the absence of any legitimate challenge to the policy itself.
"The decision letter (identifying that the claimant was being considered for the new regime) does not state that the claimant is suitable for such a transfer. Therefore, at the present time he is not progressing in his sentence and this is a breach of his rights under Article 5…."
This element is equally unarguable. Progression in a sentence does not require the defendant to progress a prisoner's sentence forthwith irrespective of the merits of the individual prisoner's case. The defendant has introduced a new policy. It is not unreasonable for the defendant in relation to any given prisoner to take the stepped approach envisaged by the policy i.e. consideration of whether exceptional circumstances exist followed by assessment of suitability for the new progression regime. It may well be the case that the claimant, on the facts of his particular case, has suffered some delay by the introduction of the new policy. That does not mean in the circumstances of this case that the defendant can arguably be said to be in breach of his public law duty and/or acting in breach of Article 5 of the Convention. In any event, no-one currently can say whether the claimant will be accepted in the near future as suitable for the new progression regime and, if so, what effect that will have on his sentence progression.
"35. For the reasons which we have given, we do not think that it is possible to follow the reasoning of the Fourth Section of the ECtHR in James v UK. It appears to us to be based on an over-expanded and inappropriate reading of the word "unlawful" in article 5(1)(a), which would not give rise to a sensible scheme. That does not however mean that we would revert to the House's decision in R (James). The Fourth Section has underlined the link which should be recognised between preventive detention and rehabilitation, and has also concluded that there should be an individual remedy in damages under the ECHR for failure to provide prisoners serving indeterminate sentences with proper means of progression towards release. The House's refusal of a Convention remedy in R (James) was based on a contrary conclusion that the aim of a life or IPP sentence does not include rehabilitation, at least for the purposes of the ECHR, as well as upon the House's view that the continuing causal link between sentence and detention prevented any breach of article 5.
36. We consider that the Supreme Court should now accept the Fourth Section's conclusion, that the purpose of the sentence includes rehabilitation, in relation to prisoners subject to life and IPP sentences in respect of whom shorter tariff periods have been set. We also consider that the Supreme Court can and should accept as implicit in the scheme of article 5 that the state is under a duty to provide an opportunity reasonable in all the circumstances for such a prisoner to rehabilitate himself and to demonstrate that he no longer presents an unacceptable danger to the public. But we do not consider that this duty can be found in the express language of article 5(1). Treating it as an aspect of the duty to avoid "arbitrariness" under article 5(1)(a) has unacceptable and implausible consequences which we have already identified. The Grand Chamber decision in Saadi also remains important authority that arbitrariness has a confined meaning, when used as a test of lawfulness in the context of article 5(1)(a).
37. Article 5(4) would be a more satisfactory home for any duty of the nature identified in the previous paragraph, if its language covered it (which it does not). Article 5(4) gives rise to an ancillary duty on the state, breach of which does not directly impact on the lawfulness of detention. The duty is to make available access to judicial review by a court or here the Parole Board, which will consider whether the information put before it justifies continued detention or release. Speedy access to the Parole Board like reasonable access to proper courses and facilities represents an important aspect of a prisoner's progression towards release. But the language of article 5(4) is in terms confined to access to judicial review by the Parole Board on the basis of the information available from time to time. It does not cover the prior stage of provision of courses and facilities in prison, which gives rise to the information necessary on any Parole Board review.
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41. On that basis the question arises in what precise terms and in particular at what precise level the duty should be put. As a matter of domestic public law, complaint may be made in respect of any systemic failure, any failure to make reasonable provision for an individual prisoner so egregious as to satisfy the Wednesbury standard of unreasonableness or any failure to apply established policy. The question is whether liability for breach of article 5 is similarly limited. In our opinion, it is not. The express rights conferred by article 5 are individual rights. The ancillary right which we identify as existing under article 5 is also a right in favour of each individual prisoner and its satisfaction or otherwise depends upon the particular circumstances of the individual case. Although the ECtHR was concerned in James v UK with circumstances in which there had been systemic failures in the United Kingdom, the ECtHR's decision was based on a careful individual analysis of each applicant's prison history: see e.g. paras 218-222.