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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 >> The Secretary of State for the Home Department v The Special Immigration Appeals Commission & Ors [2015] EWHC 681 (Admin) (18 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/681.html Cite as: [2015] 1 WLR 4799, [2015] EWHC 681 (Admin), [2015] WLR(D) 132, [2015] INLR 670 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
LADY JUSTICE MACUR DBE
and
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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AHK, AS, FM, AM, SN/MA, and HABIB IGNAOUA |
Interested Parties |
____________________
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Stephanie Harrison Q.C., Amanda Weston and Edward Grieves
variously for the 1st, 2nd, 4th and 6th Interested Parties (instructed by Birnberg Pierce & Partners, Wilsons Solicitors, Bates Wells Braithwaite and Fountain Solicitors)
Ramby de Mello (instructed by Broudie, Jackson & Cantor) for the 3rd Interested Party
Judith Farbey Q.C. and Martin Goudie
(instructed by the Special Advocates Support Office) as Special Advocates
Hearing date : 10th-11th February 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Brian Leveson P:
"...the impossibility or the improbability of a claimant succeeding in a judicial review of this kind in the absence of a closed material procedure."
Background
The legal framework
"In determining whether the decision should be set aside, the Commission must apply the principles which would be applied in judicial review proceedings."
"...by reference to the principles which would be applied in an application for judicial review, the grounds for applying for a review."
(1) When exercising its functions, the Commission shall secure that information is not disclosed contrary to the interests of national security, the international relations of the United Kingdom, the detection and prevention of crime, or in any other circumstances where disclosure is likely to harm the public interest.
(2) Where these Rules require information not to be disclosed contrary to the public interest, that requirement is to be interpreted in accordance with paragraph (1).
(3) Subject to paragraphs (1) and (2), the Commission must satisfy itself that the material available to it enables it properly to determine proceedings.
"part of a process which enables issues which would not otherwise have been fairly triable to be reviewed by judges. This advances rather than restricts judicial oversight of the lawfulness of executive acts."
"This development [judicial review] has created a new relationship between the courts and those who derive their authority from public law, one of partnership based on a common aim, namely the maintenance of the highest standards of public administration … The analogy is not exact, but just as the judges of the inferior courts when challenged on the exercise of their jurisdiction traditionally explain fully what they have done and why they have done it, but are not partisan in their own defence, so should be the public authorities."
"there is ... a very high duty on public authority respondents, not least central government, to assist the court with full and accurate explanation of all the facts relevant to the issue the court must decide. The real question here is whether in the evidence put forward on his behalf the Secretary of State has given a true and comprehensive account of the way the relevant decisions in the case were arrived at."
The SIAC decisions
"This is an appropriate safeguard as in conventional judicial review proceedings, given that much of the important factual information is withheld from the Claimant. The facts cannot be tested as easily as in conventional judicial review proceedings by either the Claimant, who does not have all the information, or the Special Advocates, who may not be able to get instructions in response to the CLOSED material. For that reason, we regard the responsibility on the Commission to review the facts with care as clear."
"The real substance is: is the content of the summary rational, based on the material available to the writer of the summary? If SIAC is to review the substance of the SSHD decision, then our provisional view is this can only be done if the Commission reviews the material available to the writer of this summary. We bear closely in mind R4(3) where because of the unusual procedures in SIAC, there is placed a positive duty on SIAC to satisfy itself that the material available to it enables it properly to determine the proceedings."
"36. … It will not be sufficient for the Commission and Special Advocates to be shown only a summary prepared for the Home Office official, plus any other documents not before the summary writer but taken into account by the Home Office official taking the decision in the name of the Minister.
37. We indicate that the same principle will apply in respect of decisions reviewed by SIAC which have been taken by a Minister. Anxious scrutiny of the facts is only possible where the Commission is possessed of the evidence."
"Moreover, without access to the material available to the writer of the assessment and recommendations, the rationality of the assessment and recommendation is untestable. This is not a case where information which happened to be held elsewhere in a government department might have altered the view taken, or arguably should have been taken into account. Here the information which was available and underpinned the critical advice to the Secretary of State is not provided to the Commission."
"Even in the context of a statutory review, applying conventional judicial review principles, a closed procedure is justifiable only where the Commission has all the evidence needed to test the rationality and legality of the decisions under review. Anything less would be, in our judgment, wrong in principle and open to challenge. We would regard it as a breach of Rule 4(3)."
"Accordingly, … we direct that all relevant material available to the summary writer, author of any relevant assessment upon which the Secretary of State relied at the time of the decisions in this case, must be disclosed within the closed material procedure in SIAC. We indicate that, absent some particular reason for a variation of that approach, it must be followed in other cases of statutory review of exclusion decisions under s. 2C of the SIAC Act 1997."
The challenge
"… will affect not just these but all the other naturalisation cases. It makes sense … for the issue of disclosure to SIAC to be dealt with before rather than after the appealable decision in view of the amount of disclosure to SIAC which would be involved, the use which SIAC expects to make of it in its judgments and the possibility of argument over the test to be applied by SIAC to onward disclosure to the Claimants in the SIAC proceedings of that material."
Nature of review and disclosure
Conclusion
Lady Justice Macur :
Mr Justice Ouseley :