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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 >> Sanneh, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWHC 800 (Admin) (13 April 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/800.html Cite as: [2018] 4 WLR 76, [2018] WLR(D) 218, [2018] EWHC 800 (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 :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of WANDY SANNEH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Emily Wilsdon instructed by the Government Legal Department for the Defendant
Hearing date 27 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Michael Kent QC :
The Issues before the Court
a. 17 November 2016 when the Claimant began his judicial review in the Upper Tribunal challenging the certification under section 94B
b. 31 March 2017 when he made a fresh claim;
c. 14 June 2017 when the Supreme Court handed down judgment in Kiarie v SSHD;
d. 7 August 2017 when the Defendant conceded an in-country right of appeal to the Claimant.
The effect of the section 94B certificate
(1) This section applies where a human rights claim has been made by a person ("P").
(2) The Secretary of State may certify the claim if the Secretary of State considers that, despite the appeals process not having been begun or not having been exhausted, refusing P entry to, removing P from or requiring P to leave the United Kingdom, pending the outcome of an appeal in relation to P's claim, would not be unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 (public authority not to act contrary to Human Rights Convention).
(3) The grounds upon which the Secretary of State may certify a claim under subsection (2) include (in particular) that P would not, before the appeals process is exhausted, face a real risk of serious irreversible harm if refused entry to, removed from or required to leave the United Kingdom.
"It is one thing further to weaken an appeal which can already be seen to be clearly unfounded. It is quite another significantly to weaken an arguable appeal: such is a step which calls for considerable justification. The Home Secretary argues that, by definition, the foreign criminal will have been in prison, perhaps also later in immigration detention, in the United Kingdom and so he will already have suffered both a loosening of his integration, if any, in United Kingdom society and, irrespective of any prison visits, an interruption of his relationship with family members. I agree; but in my view the effect of his immediate removal from the United Kingdom on these two likely aspects of his case would probably be significantly more damaging than that of his prior incarceration here."
"The claimants undoubtedly establish that the certificates represent a potential interference with their rights under article 8. Deportation pursuant to them would interfere with their rights to respect for their private or family lives established in the United Kingdom and, in particular, with the aspect of their rights which requires that their challenge to a threatened breach of them should be effective. The burden then falls on the Home Secretary to establish that the interference is justified and, in particular, that it is proportionate: specifically, that deportation in advance of an appeal has a sufficiently important objective; that it is rationally connected to that objective; that nothing less intrusive than deportation at that stage could accomplish it; and that such deportation strikes a fair balance between the rights of the appellants and the interests of the community: see R (Aguilar Quila) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (AIRE Centre intervening) [2012] 1 AC 621, para 45."
"There was little to corroborate the claimed relationship before the Respondent but I have considered supporting evidence that was available in the form of letters from friends and family members. They do not live together and the Applicant is prevented by a restraining order from having direct contact with his 11-year-old daughter. The relationship between the Applicant and his minor child is very weak indeed. The relationship between the Applicant and his adult children does not have any compelling features and there is no element of dependency beyond normal emotional ties. There is very little evidence regarding the Applicant's wife. In any event they do not live together."
"In published guidance to her case-workers the Home Secretary has made clear that there is no need to consider certification of a claim under section 94B if it can be certified under section 94, as to which see para 14 above. So, as exemplified in the cases of Mr Kiarie and Mr Byndloss, a certificate under section 94B is of a human rights claim which is not clearly unfounded, which in other words is arguable. In my view therefore, the public interest in a foreign criminal's removal in advance of an arguable appeal is outweighed unless it can be said that, if brought from abroad, the appeal would remain effective…"
Was the section 94B certificate material to the claimant's detention?
"To summarise, therefore, in cases such as these, all that the claimant has to do is to prove that he was detained. The Secretary of State must prove that the detention was justified in law. She cannot do this by showing that, although the decision to detain was tainted by public law error in the sense that I have described, a decision to detain free from error could and would have been made."
"It is not every breach of public law that is sufficient to give rise to a cause of action in false imprisonment. In the present context, the breach of public law must bear on and be relevant to the decision to detain. Thus, for example, a decision to detain made by an official of a different grade from that specified in a detention policy would not found a claim in false imprisonment. Nor too would a decision to detain a person under conditions different from those described in the policy. Errors of this kind do not bear on the decision to detain. They are not capable of affecting the decision to detain or not to detain."
"71 In short, there are some procedural requirements, failure to comply with which renders the detention unlawful irrespective of whether or not the substantive grounds for detention exist, and some procedural requirements, failure to follow which does not have this effect. If the requirement is laid down in legislation, it will be a matter of statutory construction into which category it falls. A clear distinction can be drawn between a requirement which goes to whether or not a person is detained and a requirement which goes to the conditions under which a person is detained. If the grounds exist for detaining a person in a mental hospital, for example, and the procedures have been properly followed, it is not unlawful to detain him in conditions of greater security than are in fact required by the nature and degree of his mental disorder.
72 The same analysis applies to requirements which are imposed, not by statute, but by the common law. There are some procedural requirements which go to the legality of the detention itself and some which do not. The common law imposed a requirement that an arrested person be told, at the time, the real reason why he was being arrested. It did so for the very good reason that the arrested person had to know whether or not he was entitled to resist arrest. Mr Leachinsky was told that he was being arrested under the Liverpool Corporation Act 1921, but this Act gave the police officers no power to arrest him without a warrant. They did have power to arrest him on reasonable suspicion of having committed a felony. But, as they had not told him this, his detention was unlawful and he was entitled to damages for false imprisonment: see Christie v Leachinsky [1947] AC 573. As Lord Simonds put it, at p 592, 'if a man is to be deprived of his freedom he is entitled to know the reason why'.
73 It is not statute, but the common law, indeed the rule of law itself, which imposes upon the Secretary of State the duty to comply with his own stated policy, unless he has a good reason to depart from it in the particular case at the particular time. Some parts of the policy in question are not directly concerned with the justification and procedure for the detention and have more to do with its quality or conditions. But the whole point of the regular reviews is to ensure that the detention is lawful. That is not surprising. It was held in Tan Te Lam [1997] AC 97 that the substantive limits on the power to detain were jurisdictional facts, so the Secretary of State has to be in a position to prove these if need be. He will not be able to do so unless he has kept the case under review. He himself has decided how often this needs to be done. Unless and until he changes his mind, the detainees are entitled to hold him to that. Just as Mr Leachinsky's detention was unlawful even though there were in fact good grounds for arresting him, the detainees' detention is unlawful during the periods when it has not been reviewed in accordance with the policy, irrespective of whether or not the review would have led to their release. In my view, Munby J was right to hold that the reviews were 'fundamental to the propriety of the continuing detention' and 'a necessary prerequisite to the continuing legality of the detention': see [2008] EWHC 98 (Admin) at [68]."
Other grounds for saying the detention was unlawful
The overall period of detention
Hardial Singh third principle
"Even when all the material submitted is considered at its highest, no reasonable Judge would find that the Article 8 submissions advanced have realistic prospects of success."
Other grounds for challenging the maintenance of detention
"Given a knife was used to stab the victim and she (possibly through some coercion and certainly under some pressure) is being encouraged to re-establish the relationship the risk of serious harm is correctly assessed as high";
"He has given various versions events that all conflict with each other".
The Claimant's wife "has some mental health issues which compounds her vulnerability from Wandy Sanneh"
"She has given a statement stating that she will not stand up against her husband in court as she fears for her personal safety as he threatened to kill her"
"She has already received a threatening message from Wandy's sister."
"It is my view that the victim is under duress… [and] is unlikely to be making choices of her own free will and will thereby not protect herself or her children"
"I remain concerned about the risks to his wife and children from his abusive behaviour"
"Should he return to the family home there would be a significant concern about risks posed to both his wife and their children"
Conclusion