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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 >> Ismail, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWHC 3192 (Admin) (26 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3192.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3192 (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 High Court Judge)
____________________
The Queen (on the application of Shirko Ismail) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
SSHD |
____________________
Robin Tam QC and Ms Julie Anderson (instructed by the Government Legal Department)
Hearing dates: 17 & 18 October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Ms Margaret Obi:
This judgment is divided into nine sections as follows:
II. Preliminary Issue – Duty of Candour: paras [5-8]
III. Application to Amend: paras [9-12]
IV. Factual Background and Procedural History: paras [13-20]
V. Legal Framework: paras [21-28]
VI. Submissions: paras [29-35]
I. Introduction
i. Declaring the Claimant's detention unlawful;
ii. Damages;
iii. Costs;
iv. Any other remedy the Court thinks fit.
II. Preliminary Issue – Duty of Candour
III. Applications to Amend Particulars of Claim
The Applications and Submissions
Decision
IV. Factual Background and Procedural History
i. On 2 June 2017, the Claimant's solicitors wrote a pre-action protocol letter before claim concerning the lawfulness of the Claimant's detention.
ii. On 5 June 2017, the Claimant's solicitors wrote another pre-action protocol letter before claim concerning the lawfulness of his removal from association for the alleged assault.
iii. On 6 June 2017, the Claimant's solicitors issued the present proceedings on two grounds; Ground 1: detention is in breach of Article 28 Dublin III Regulation and Ground 2: The Hardial Singh principles were not satisfied. The Claimant also made an application for interim relief. On the same day, O'Farrell J refused the Claimant's application for interim relief and refused permission to apply for judicial review. The Judge considered that the Claimant had no arguable case:
a. On the basis of the Claimant's immigration history, there was a clear risk of absconding, given that many applications for asylum had been made in different countries but the Claimant had not waited for a determination of them; the Claimant had entered the UK illegally; and the Claimant had been in possession of a false passport.b. There was no arguable breach of the Hardial Singh principles as the Claimant's removal was intended within 2 or 3 weeks.
iv. On 7 June 2017, the Claimant issued further judicial review proceedings concerning the lawfulness of his removal from association.
v. On 13 June 2017, an interim relief hearing took place in and was adjourned to 15 June 2017 for disclosure of documents relating to the Claimant's removal from association. (This hearing was subsequently vacated because the Claimant had been returned to free association.)
vi. On 14 June 2017, the Claimant applied within the present proceedings to renew his application for permission to apply for judicial review. On 15 June 2017, the Claimant was medically certified as fit to fly. However, it was noted that a pre-action protocol response in relation to the Claimant's removal from association remained outstanding. Instructions were given for the pre-action protocol response, notices of liability for removal and refusal of the asylum claim to be prepared. Thereafter, a flight to Ireland was to be booked.
vii. On 19 June 2017, the Claimant applied to the First-tier Tribunal ('FTT') for bail. The application was received by the FTT on 20 June 2017.
viii. On 20 June 2017, the pre-action protocol response in relation to the Claimant's removal from association was sent to his solicitors.
ix. On 27 June 2017, the Claimant's bail application was received by the SSHD. On 28 June 2017, because of the time being taken to resolve the removal from association matter, an 'extra time' letter was sent to Ireland, extending the removal deadline to 6 December 2017.
x. On 30 June 2017, C was granted bail by the FTT, and was released on the same day.
xi. On 7 July 2017, Swift J ordered that the removal from association matter be stayed pending the outcome of R v (Muasa) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWHC 2267 (Admin). On 29 November 2017, by consent the Court ordered that the present proceedings be stayed pending the outcome of R v (Omar) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWHC 687 (Admin).
xii. On 11 April 2018, the Claimant's solicitors wrote to the SSHD asserting that because the Claimant had not been removed to Ireland by 24 November 2017, the UK now bore responsibility for considering the Claimant's asylum claim. The solicitors requested confirmation that the Claimant's asylum claim would be dealt with by the UK.
xiii. On 13 August 2018, the SSHD replied to the Claimant's solicitors reiterating that the Claimant's case continued to be being dealt with under the Dublin III Regulation with a view to removing the Claimant to Ireland where he had claimed asylum. However, because of the continuing judicial review proceedings, removal directions had been suspended.
xiv. On 8 May 2019, at a hearing before Clive Sheldon QC (sitting as a deputy High Court judge), the Claimant was granted permission to apply for judicial review on Ground 1 alone. The Claimant was refused permission to apply for judicial review on Ground 2, relating to the Hardial Singh principles.
V. Legal Framework
EU Law
Dublin III Regulation and Article 28
'1. Member States shall not hold a person in detention for the sole reason that he or she is subject to the procedure established by this Regulation.
2. When there is a significant risk of absconding, Member States may detain the person concerned in order to secure transfer procedures in accordance with this Regulation, on the basis of an individual assessment and only in so far as detention is proportional and other less coercive alternative measures cannot be applied effectively.
3. Detention shall be for as short a period as possible and shall be for no longer than the time reasonably necessary to fulfil the required administrative procedures with due diligence until the transfer under this Regulation is carried out.
Where a person is detained pursuant to this Article, the period for submitting a take charge or take back request shall not exceed one month from the lodging of the application. The Member State carrying out the procedure in accordance with this Regulation shall ask for an urgent reply in such cases. Such reply shall be given within two weeks of receipt of the request. Failure to reply within the two-week period shall be tantamount to accepting the request and shall entail the obligation to take charge or take back the person, including the obligation to provide for proper arrangements for arrival.
Where a person is detained pursuant to this Article, the transfer of that person from the requesting Member State to the Member State responsible shall be carried out as soon as practically possible, and at the latest within six weeks of the implicit or explicit acceptance of the request by another Member State to take charge or to take back the person concerned or of the moment when the appeal or review no longer has a suspensive effect in accordance with Article 27(3).
When the requesting Member State fails to comply with the deadlines for submitting a take charge or take back request or where the transfer does not take place within the period of six weeks referred to in the third subparagraph, the person shall no longer be detained. Articles 21, 23, 24 and 29 shall continue to apply accordingly.
4. As regards the detention conditions and the guarantees applicable to persons detained, in order to secure the transfer procedures to the Member State responsible, Articles 9, 10 and 11 of Directive 2013/33/EU shall apply.'
Domestic Law
"If there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that a person is someone in respect of whom [removal] directions may be given …, that person may be detained under the authority of an immigration officer pending –
(a) a decision whether or not to give such directions;
(b) his removal in pursuance of such directions."
2017 Regulations
'These Regulations apply where an asylum seeker, P, is liable to detention under Schedule 2 to the Immigration Act 1971 and—
(a) P's fingerprint data has been processed in accordance with [the recast EURODAC Regulation] and a comparison with data held by another participating State is to be undertaken;
(b) evidence or information listed in Annex II to Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1560/2003 [the Dublin Implementation Regulation] has been identified which suggests that, in accordance with the Dublin III Regulation, another participating State may be responsible for examining P's application for international protection;
(c) P is the subject of an information sharing request made by the United Kingdom to another participating State under Article 34 of the Dublin III Regulation; or
(d) P is the subject of a take charge or take back request made by the United Kingdom to another participating State under Sections II and III of Chapter VI of the Dublin III Regulation—
(i) which has yet to be determined, or
(ii) which has been accepted and arrangements are being made for P's transfer from the United Kingdom to another participating State.'
VI. Submissions
The Claimants Submissions
i. Text. The scope of the Dublin III Regulation is much wider than the transfer of asylum seekers between Member States and detention within the context of those transfer arrangements. Article 1 refers to the 'criteria and mechanisms for determining the Member State responsible for examining an application for international protection.' Article 20 is entitled 'Start of the Procedure' and makes it clear that the 'process' starts as soon as an application for asylum is lodged. Article 28 refers to the person 'subject to the procedure'; not the person subject to transfer. The Explanatory Note to the 2017 Regulations uses the same language as Al Chodor and confirms that the SSHD recognised that it applied to asylum seekers 'whose application is subject to the Dublin III Regulation procedure.' The scope of Article 28 is the same as the Dublin III Regulations, in that, Article 28 continues to apply as long as the SSHD is taking action which is required or authorised by the Dublin III Regulations, including a decision under Article 17(1) to examine an application which is not its responsibility.
ii. Context. When an individual is detained under Article 28(3) the Member State must submit a 'take charge' or 'take back' request within one month. Therefore, Article 28(3) contemplates detention even before a request for transfer has been submitted.
iii. Purpose. In the initial proposal which ultimately led to the Dublin III Regulation (COM (2008) 820 final), the EU Commission proposed the introduction of a new provision 'recalling the underlying principle that a person should not be held in detention for the sole reason that he/she is seeking international protection' and 'in order to ensure that detention of asylum seekers under the Dublin procedure is not arbitrary, limited specific grounds for such detention are proposed'. The provision by which those 'limited specific grounds' are imposed is Article 28 which, in its final form, also includes detention time limits and further restrictions on the power to detain. Furthermore, in Al Chodor, the CJEU noted that the Dublin III Regulation as a whole was intended to 'make the necessary improvements […] not only to the effectiveness of the Dublin system but also to the judicial protection enjoyed by asylum seekers.' It 'places significant limitations on the power of the member states to detain a person' and provides a 'limitation on the exercise of the fundamental right to liberty enshrined in art 6 of the Charter [of Fundamental Rights]', and therefore pursues the objective (amongst other things) of 'protecting the individual from arbitrariness', and detention pursuant to it is 'subject to compliance with strict safeguards, namely the presence of a legal basis, clarity, predictability, accessibility and protection against arbitrariness.'
iv. Principle. Article 28 improves the protection against deprivation of liberty by imposing limitations on Member States. It should be broadly construed and therefore should apply if the context, language and purpose permits.
v. Precedent. In Hassan v Préfet du Pas-de-Calais (Case C-647/16) the CJEU held that it is '…clear from article 28(2)(3) of that Regulation that the member states are authorised to detain persons concerned even before the request to take charge or take back is submitted to the requested member state, when the conditions laid down by that article are met, the notification of the transfer decision not being a prerequisite for such a placement.'
vi. SSHD's own regulations. Article 3 of the 2017 Regulations 'Persons to whom these Regulations apply' sets out the routes that will trigger an examination of an individual's asylum claim under the Dublin III Regulation. They are not conjunctive.
vii. SSHD's own practice. The 21 Day Detention Review demonstrates that, as of 31 May 2017, when the Claimant was not yet subject to a transfer, the caseworker was applying the 2017 Regulations. Application of the Dublin III Regulation at a very early stage (subject to the triggering events) causes the SSHD no operational difficulty. If in practice the SSHD invoked the Dublin III Regulation at the end of the process, once transfer arrangements were in place to effect a transfer to another Member State, a witness statement to that effect would have been provided.
'Article 28(2) […] applies in the circumstances covered by article 28(1), namely where the detention was solely for the purpose of a removal under Dublin III and not when the detention is authorised under some free-standing domestic law provision.' (§64).
The SSHD's Submissions
i. The scope of application of Article 28(1) must be a pure question of law. It follows that arguments about the meaning of the SSHD's paperwork will not provide any illumination on the application of Article 28(1) in principle;
ii. The Claimant misstates the SSHD's approach and that of Garnham J in Khaled (no.2). Article 28 simply does not apply to detention unless and until the individual is subject to Dublin III Regulation transfer arrangements after agreement is reached to effect a transfer to another Member State. In summary: (a) Garnham J did not hold that in an Article 28 case, a domestic law power to detain can displace Article 28; (b) John Howell QC misunderstood this part of Garnham J's judgment (analysed as Garnham J's second relevant conclusion), although he joined the wide consensus that Garnham J's first relevant conclusion (that Article 28 only applies where detention is solely for the purpose of a removal under the Dublin III Regulation; it does not apply if the detention is justified on other grounds) is correct; (c) Sales LJ's explanation of John Howell QC's misunderstanding was clearly correct; (d) The majority of the Court of Appeal did not disagree with Sales LJ, and the agreed assumption on which Hemmati was decided meant that they did not implicitly overrule Garnham J; (e) None of this, therefore, sheds any light on the question of when an individual is detained solely for the purpose of a Dublin III Regulation removal.
iii. The use of the Dublin III Regulation transfer mechanism is optional. Member States can always choose not to use the transfer mechanism in some cases.
iv. Even if the above submissions are rejected it is clear that the terms of Article 28 can only apply in a case with a cross border element. Article 28 is in Section V ('Detention for the purposes of transfer') of Chapter VI ('Procedures for taking charge and taking back'). The words 'taking charge' and 'taking back' show that Chapter VI can only operate in a case in which the Article 18(1) obligation is triggered, namely a case with a cross border element. Therefore, the argument that Article 28 applies at the outset must be incorrect. The location of Article 28 within the Dublin III Regulation shows that its scope must be more limited by reference to transfer, even if other parts of the Dublin III Regulation were (contrary to the SSHD's submission) to be construed to be wider in scope.
v. It is not part of the SSHD's case that there was a 'contingent warrant' or a 'contingent authority to detain' (based on the phrase 'contingent intention' used by Sales LJ in Hemmati to describe a different point).
VII. Issues
i. Did the Claimant's detention fall within the scope of Article 28 of the Dublin III Regulation?
ii. If so, was the Claimant's detention in violation of the provisions within Article 28 and the 2017 Regulations?
VIII. Analysis
Issue (1) – Did the Claimant's detention fall within the scope of Article 28 of the Dublin III Regulation?
'The Immigration Act 1971 provides that a person who does not have current valid leave to remain is subject to administrative removal. The Claimants fall into that category. As noted above, the 1971 Act gives powers of detention provided by paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 2. That was the power exercised in the case of these Claimants. The fact that the SSHD then decided to employ the Dublin III provisions to effect removal to Bulgaria does not affect the legality of the detention. Article 28 governs and conditions the exercise of powers to detain when Dublin III is the source of the power to detain and remove; it does not abolish the pre-existing power under English domestic law to detain a non-UK citizen with no right to enter or remain in the UK pending their removal by whatever lawful means are available to the SSHD.'
'I say this is my provisional view because ultimately we did not hear argument on this, despite the ruling of Garnham J in Khaled. After debate at the start of the hearing before us in which the court sought to clarify what issues arose for its decision, Mr Swift told us that in the case of each appellant we should proceed on the assumption that the sole reason he was detained was that the Secretary of State wished to remove him using the Dublin III procedure (ie if he was not removed using that procedure, the Secretary of State would simply accept his asylum claim here without further examination and would not seek to remove him to his country of origin). Ms Lieven agreed. We were not told the reason for this concession by the Secretary of State. I assume it was made in order to present the court with a simplified set of cases in order to seek its guidance in relation to a situation in which article 28 is applicable. It is not usual for a court to examine a case on the basis of assumed facts, but since it became evident that no party or counsel was prepared to argue the case on any other basis we agreed to proceed on the basis of this assumption.'
'...paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 2 to the Immigration Act 1971 confers a discretion to detain persons liable to be removed from the United Kingdom pending a decision whether or not to give directions for removal and pending removal in pursuance of such directions, and it was that discretion which was purportedly exercised in respect of all the appellants. The detention of the appellants was unlawful because it was purportedly pursuant to the policy in the EIG which was in itself unlawful insofar as it failed to give effect to article 28(2) and article 2(n) […] Although the CJEU, at paras 36 and 41 [of Al Chodor] described the effect of article 28(2) as a limitation on the fundamental right to liberty, its direct effect in the United Kingdom operated as a limitation on the exercise of the statutory discretion to detain pursuant to paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act' [emphasis added].
'EURODAC and screening completed - potential TCU case. Detention to be maintained to effect removal under Dublin Regs if there is TCU interest.
If there is no further TCU interest, subject should be routed via NAAU and released on reporting.'
Issue (2) – Was the Claimant's detention in violation of the provisions within Article 28 and the 2017 Detention Regulations?
Summary