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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 >> AVB & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) [2021] EWHC 2013 (Admin) (19 July 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/2013.html Cite as: [2021] Imm AR 1689, [2021] ACD 100, [2021] EWHC 2013 (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 :
____________________
The Queen on the application of (1) MS AVB (2) MISS ACB |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER) |
Defendant |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Interested Party |
____________________
The Defendant was not represented
The Interested Party was not represented
Hearing date: Friday 9 July 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Ellenbogen DBE:
Introduction and material facts
a) If you are given permission to appeal by the Upper Tribunal, do you want the appeal to be dealt with at an oral hearing?
b) Do you want this application for permission (as opposed to the appeal itself) to be considered at an oral hearing?
'The appellants were unrepresented and did not make an appearance at the hearing. The clerk made enquiries and no messages had been received. Notice of the proceedings appeared to have been correctly served. There was no explanation for the non-attendance of the appellants. [The respondent's representative] had no updated information about the whereabouts of the appellants. In all the circumstances I was satisfied that it was appropriate to proceed with the hearing under Rule 38 and that it was in the interests of justice to do so.'
a) apparent bias: it was said that the appellants had applied for the matter to be determined 'on the papers'. Instead, it had been determined at a hearing, at which the respondent's representations had been taken into account and which had been unfair because the appellants had been unable to be heard. Although entirely possible that this had resulted from a mistake, the Tribunal had been unduly influenced by the respondent and given rise to an appearance of bias;
b) irrationality: the Tribunal's finding, at paragraph 3 of the 2018 Decision that, '... the appellant had in the case of a previous application submitted a false United States of America passport and birth certificate claiming that the second appellant was a citizen of the United States when in fact she was a Nigerian national' had been based upon 'the totally unsubstantiated claim of the respondent'. The Tribunal had undertaken no independent analysis of the relevant documents and, accordingly, its conclusion was one which no properly directed tribunal could have reached. [I interpose to observe that, in fact, paragraph 3 of the 2018 Decision was, on its face, an account of the SSHD's reasons for refusing the appellants' human rights claim, not the Upper Tribunal's independent assessment of the relevant documentation, or summary of the respondent's submission.]; and
c) unlawful conduct: the Tribunal's assessment of the impact on the child had been entangled with the conduct of her mother and no assessment had been made of how reasonable it would be for the second appellant to remain in the UK without her mother; '…in the absence of any clear process of balancing the proportionalities of the child's best interests against that of the public interest in removing those without leave to remain the Tribunal has failed to properly assess the best interests of the child and then properly balance those interests against any wrongdoing of the parent in light of the law as it stood at the time of decision.'
'The appellants are mother and daughter. They did not attend the hearing before the Upper Tribunal which was then determined in their absence.
The grounds argue that it was unfair for the Tribunal to have proceeded without the appellants and to have heard arguments from the respondent because this gives the appearance of bias. It is also argued that the decision was irrational in that the Tribunal found that the appellant had presented a false US passport in a previous application. It is maintained that there was no evidence that the passport was false. Thirdly, it is argued that the best interests of the child appellant were not properly considered.
There is no arguable merit in the arguments made. In the absence of the appellants and their failure to provide any explanation for their non-appearance, it was open to the judge to proceed without them under Rule 38. The grounds fail to provide any explanation for their failure to attend. Contrary to what is argued, the best interests of the child were fully considered. As the first appellant has several convictions and prison sentences for offences involving fraud, including the use of false documentation, the judge was entitled to make the findings that he did.
The appeal does not raise any important point of principle or practice and there is no other compelling reason for it to be heard.'
The claim for judicial review
a) The Claimants' application had been for an order setting aside a decision under Rule 43, whereas the tribunal had refused a purported application to appeal to the Court of Appeal, under rule 44 of the Rules, which had not been made;
b) The tribunal had stated that no explanation had been provided for the Claimants' non-attendance on 13 November 2018, yet it had been apparent from their application notices that the Claimants' rationale had been their election not to have an oral hearing.
'I consider that there is an arguable point here. It is true, as Yip J said, that the UT has the right by r 48 UTR to treat a r43 application to set aside as if it were an application for permission to appeal. That might no doubt be a reasonable thing to do in many cases where there had been a procedural irregularity but the UT thought it had had no significant impact on the decision. But here the ground for the r 43 application was that the applicant had asked for – and so no doubt expected – her case to be dealt with on the papers. That arguably gave her a good reason for not appearing at the hearing, although the UT does not seem to have appreciated this, and hence asking for a re-hearing. In such a case there seems to me a real prospect of success in the argument that to treat the r 43 application as an application for permission to appeal puts an additional hurdle in her way as requiring her to satisfy the more stringent test for a second appeal, or at least that if the UT is to do this it should (a) do so expressly and (b) say why…'
Directions and disclosure prior to the substantive hearing
a) any notice of hearing sent to the parties by the Upper Tribunal in connection with the hearing which took place before Upper Tribunal Judge Warr, on 13 November 2018; and
b) all correspondence passing between (1) the parties; and (2) any party and the Upper Tribunal, in relation to the need for and/or listing of that hearing (whether pre- or post-dating the notice of hearing referred to at sub-paragraph (a) above).
'6. By 4:00pm on Thursday 1 July 2021, the Claimants shall file and serve, electronically:
a. an updated indexed and paginated hearing bundle, to include, in chronological order:
i. a single copy of all documentation provided by one or more of the parties in accordance with paragraphs 3 to 5, above;
ii. a full copy of the notice of appeal and attachments respectively lodged by each Claimant on 13 June 2018;
iii. the permission to appeal granted by the Upper Tribunal on 19 September 2018, together with all attachments to that document;
iv. a copy of (a) the reserved judgment of Upper Tribunal Judge Warr, promulgated on 3 December 2018, and (b) the judgment of the First Tier Tribunal to which it related;
b. an indexed and paginated bundle of relevant authorities and materials, to include a copy of:
i. the Tribunal Procedure (Upper Tribunal) Rules 2008; and
ii. (at least) Chapter 2 of Part 1 of, and Schedule 15 to, the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007,
in each case as they stood between 3 June 2018 and 7 March 2019.'
The copy documents subsequently lodged and served in response to the 17 June Order included those following
a) two notices of decision, each in identical terms and dated 12 October 2018, sent by the Defendant to the relevant Claimant and the Interested Party, informing them that the application for permission to appeal had been granted; enclosing the Upper Tribunal's decision and directions regarding the appeal; and stating that notification of the date of any Upper Tribunal hearing would be sent to them in due course; and
b) a notice of hearing, also dated 12 October 2018, sent to the First Claimant and the Interested Party, informing them that the appeal would be heard on 13 November 2018, at 10:00am.
The Rules
a) Rule 34:
(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), the Upper Tribunal may make any decision without a hearing.
(2) The Upper Tribunal must have regard to any view expressed by a party when deciding whether to hold a hearing to consider any matter, and the form of any such hearing.
…
b) Rule 36:
(1) The Upper Tribunal must give each party entitled to attend a hearing reasonable notice of the time and place of the hearing…
…
c) Rule 40:
…
(2) … the Upper Tribunal must provide to each party as soon as reasonably practicable after making a decision (other than a decision under Part 7) which finally disposes of all issues in the proceedings…—
(a) a decision notice stating the Upper Tribunal's decision; and
…
(3) … the Upper Tribunal must provide written reasons for its decision with a decision notice provided under paragraph (2)(a) unless—
(a) the decision was made with the consent of the parties; or
(b) the parties have consented to the Upper Tribunal not giving written reasons.
(4) The Upper Tribunal may provide written reasons for any decision to which paragraph (2) does not apply.
…
d) Rule 43 (within Part 7 of the Rules):
(1) The Upper Tribunal may set-aside a decision which disposes of proceedings, or part of such a decision, and re-make the decision or the relevant part of it, if—
(a) the Upper Tribunal considers that it is in the interests of justice to do so; and
(b) one or more of the conditions in paragraph (2) are satisfied.
(2) The conditions are –
…
(c) a party, or a party's representative, was not present at a hearing related to the proceedings; or
(d) there has been some other procedural irregularity in the proceedings.
e) Rule 44 (within Part 7 of the Rules):
(1) … a person seeking permission to appeal must make a written application to the Upper Tribunal for permission to appeal.
…
f) Rule 45 (within Part 7 of the Rules):
…
(4) If the Upper Tribunal refuses permission to appeal it must provide with the record of its decision –
(a) a statement of its reasons for such refusal; and
(b) …
(5) The Upper Tribunal may give permission to appeal on limited grounds, but must comply with paragraph (4) in relation to any grounds on which it has refused permission.
g) Rule 48 (within Part 7 of the Rules):
The Upper Tribunal may treat an application for a decision to be corrected, set-aside or reviewed, or for permission to appeal against a decision, as an application for any other one of those things.
The 2007 Act
(1) For the purposes of subsection (2), the reference to a right of appeal is to a right to appeal to the relevant appellate court on any point of law arising from a decision made by the Upper Tribunal other than an excluded decision.
(2) Any party to a case has a right of appeal, subject to subsection (14).
(3) That right may be exercised only with permission…
(4) Permission… may be given by -
(a) the Upper Tribunal, or
(b) the relevant appellate court,
on an application by the party.
(5) An application may be made under subsection (4) to the relevant appellate court only if permission… has been refused by the Upper Tribunal.
(6) The Lord Chancellor may, as respects an application under subsection (4) that falls within subsection (7) and for which the relevant appellate court is the Court of Appeal in England and Wales or the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland, by order make provision for permission (or leave) not to be granted on the application unless the Upper Tribunal or (as the case may be) the relevant appellate court considers–
(a) that the proposed appeal would raise some important point of principle or practice, or
(b) that there is some other compelling reason for the relevant appellate court to hear the appeal.
(7) An application falls within this subsection if the application is for permission …to appeal from any decision of the Upper Tribunal on an appeal under section 11[1].
(8) For the purposes of subsection (1) an "excluded decision" is -
(a) any decision of the Upper Tribunal on an appeal under section 27(3) or (5), 79(5) or (7) or 111(3) or (5) of the Data Protection Act 2018 (appeals against national security certificate),
(b) any decision of the Upper Tribunal on an appeal under section 60(1) or (4) of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (c. 36) (appeals against national security certificate),
(ba) any decision of the Upper Tribunal under section 88, 89(3) or 92(3) of the Tax Collection and Management (Wales) Act 2016 (anaw 6) (approval for Welsh Revenue Authority to issue certain information notices),
(bb) any decision of the Upper Tribunal under section 108 of that Act (approval for Welsh Revenue Authority to inspect premises),
(bc) any decision of the Upper Tribunal under section 181E or 181F of that Act (appeals relating to postponement requests),
(c) any decision of the Upper Tribunal on an application under section 11(4)(b) (application for permission or leave to appeal),
(d) a decision of the Upper Tribunal under section 10—
(i) to review, or not to review, an earlier decision of the tribunal,
(ii) to take no action, or not to take any particular action, in the light of a review of an earlier decision of the tribunal, or
(iii) to set aside an earlier decision of the tribunal,
(e) a decision of the Upper Tribunal that is set aside under section 10 (including a decision set aside after proceedings on an appeal under this section have been begun), or
(f) any decision of the Upper Tribunal that is of a description specified in an order made by the Lord Chancellor.
…
(14) The Lord Chancellor may by order make provision for a person to be treated as being, or to be treated as not being, a party to a case for the purposes of subsection (2).
…'
Submissions
a) Whilst section G of the appeal forms submitted by the Claimants was worded in terms of a request, the general rule is that such a request cannot be refused, alternatively, that a refusal of the request will attract a right of oral renewal: MD (Afghanistan) v SSHD [2012] EWCA Civ 194, per Stanley Burnton LJ, at paragraph 21;
b) The First Claimant's evidence (witness statement, paragraph 4) in support of her application to set aside the 2018 Decision was, 'Of course, I was not there to represent myself, because I asked not to have a hearing.' That afforded a good reason for the Claimants' absence, being their reasonable expectation that the matter would be dealt with on the papers;
c) Rules 40 and 45 require the Upper Tribunal to give reasons for the decisions to which each refers. Whilst the former does not apply to Part 7 of the Rules, it is further illustrative of the duty to give reasons incumbent upon a judge of the Upper Tribunal when refusing permission to appeal. That duty was identified by Lord Carnwath JSC as being aligned to fairness and the need to provide an aggrieved party with an effective means of redress: Dover District Council v CPRE Kent [2017] UKSC 79, at paragraph 51;
d) The Upper Tribunal's apparent decision to refuse the Claimants' application to set aside the 2018 Decision, and to treat it, instead, as being an application for permission to appeal, is inscrutable, in the absence of reasons. It leaves open the possibility that it arose by mistake and denies the Claimants an opportunity to challenge its substantive basis;
e) The failure of the receipting officer to have recorded the nature of the application in fact being made is consistent with the Tribunal having made a mistake;
f) The consequence of considering the application under rule 44 was that a more stringent test applied, to what was treated as being a second appeal. Thus, the Tribunal asked itself whether the appeal raised an important point of principle or practice, or some other compelling reason for it to be heard, whereas the test on an application to set aside was whether the Tribunal considered it to be in the interests of justice to do so. To treat the application in such a way as to require the satisfaction of a more stringent test, without giving reasons for so doing, would have been capricious. This, too, supported the most likely explanation for the Tribunal's approach being that it had misunderstood the nature of the application before it, in circumstances in which applications to set aside are less commonplace than are those for permission to appeal. Any deliberate decision ought to have been made explicit and supported by reasons;
g) The relief sought by the Claimants is the quashing of the 2019 Decision; a decision in the Claimants' favour; and remission of the matter to the Upper Tribunal, for a re-hearing of the appeal filed on 13 June 2018 (from which it follows that the pleaded order sought against the Interested Party is not pursued);
h) As to the Defendant's and Interested Party's position that the Claimants had not exercised their statutory right of appeal to the Court of Appeal, and acknowledging that such a right exists under the 2007 Act:
(1) The errors challenged are collateral to the substance of the Claimants' appeal in the Upper Tribunal and originate from the latter, rather than from the FTT. Accordingly, it is more correct to view the challenges made by the applications to set aside the 2018 Decision and to bring proceedings for judicial review as first-order challenges, rather than as a 'second appeal' relating to the substance of the Claimants' appeal from the decision of the FTT;
(2) The test on a second appeal to the Court of Appeal from the Upper Tribunal is set out at CPR 52.7(2): the Court of Appeal will not give permission unless it considers that— (a) the appeal would— (i) have a real prospect of success; and (ii) raise an important point of principle or practice; or (b) there is some other compelling reason for the Court of Appeal to hear it. As noted by the Upper Tribunal in the concluding paragraph to the 2019 Decision, that test is not met here, nor is it likely to be met in the circumstances in which rule 43 of the Rules is most likely to be exercised, namely where there has been an administrative error. Whilst the possibility cannot be discounted, it is unlikely that an administrative error would raise an important point of principle or practice. The Claimants should not have to meet the test applicable to a second appeal on a first-order challenge; and
(3) The Claimants should not have to exhaust a right to a second appeal on a matter which does not go to the substance of their appeal from the FTT. Essentially, theirs is a challenge to administrative errors which originated in the Upper Tribunal.
a) By paragraph 4 of the 28 June Document, 'objection is taken to that part of [the 17 June Order] that provides for the disclosure of material not relevant to [the 2019 Decision]. That, it is submitted, is:
a) All material provided for at 6.a.ii. of the order excepting the IAUT-1 Application for Permission to Appeal 13.06.2018;
b) All material provided for at 6.a.iii. of the order excepting the standard directions attached to the grant of permission to appeal 12.10.2018[2] ;
c) All material provided for at 6.a.iv of the order excepting the first two pages of the reserved judgment of Upper Tribunal Judge Warr 03.12.2018.'
b) The above objection was advanced on the basis that the proceedings for judicial review do not go to the substance of the appeals, respectively, before, and from the decision of, the FTT, or to the substance of the Upper Tribunal's decision on the latter appeal. The claim for judicial review had been brought and issued under CPR 54.5, not under CPR 54.7A. It did not touch upon the merits of the Claimants' case before the Upper Tribunal, or the FTT. Accordingly, material going to the merits was irrelevant. Whilst a legitimate question might arise as to the evidence of the procedure followed by the Upper Tribunal prior to reaching the 2019 Decision, questions relating to material which ventured into the substance of the Claimants' case were irrelevant. The only evidence falling within the former category was: a) the Claimants' applications for permission to appeal from the decision of the FTT, dated 13 June 2018; b) the directions attached to the grant of permission to appeal, dated 12 October 2018; c) the notice of hearing of the same date; and d) that part of the 2018 Decision which had related to the Upper Tribunal's decision to proceed with the hearing on 13 November 2018 in the Claimants' absence (being paragraph two). All other material disclosed pursuant to the 17 June Order ought to be excluded from consideration, as being irrelevant. Mr Read acknowledged that this court could not and should not ignore that which the Upper Tribunal had been asked to decide by the Claimants' application to set aside the 2018 Decision, that is the three bases upon which it had been advanced.
c) The additional ground of review for which permission was sought (as refined in the course of oral submissions) was that 'The Upper Tribunal, in its decision of 7 March 2019, failed to make any determination as to the fact of whether or not the Claimants received the notice of hearing dated 12 October 2018.' The application to amend the claim form had arisen from a consideration of the 17 June Order, which had 'shone a light' on an area of the order made by the Court of Appeal on 10 November 2020, 'which had not been illuminated to that point'. (I observe that that submission had not been made in the 28 June Document, paragraph 5 of which had asserted that the application had been made 'in light of the issues arising above on the order [of] 17.06.2021'.) Implicit in whether the Claimants had had a reasonable expectation that their appeal would be addressed on paper was whether the notice of hearing dated 12 October 2018 had been received by the Claimants; a matter which the Upper Tribunal ought to have considered.
Discussion and disposal
The application to amend the claim form
The objection to part of the 17 June Order
The pleaded ground of review
Jurisdiction
Judicial review as remedy of last resort
a) Whether or not the alleged errors challenged are 'collateral to the substance of the Claimants' appeal in the Upper Tribunal', they are subject to a statutory right of appeal which, if granted, would afford the Claimants a convenient and effective remedy and would relate to the Upper Tribunal's own error, rather than the FTT's substantive decision;
b) An application under rule 43 of the Rules is a procedural challenge to the Upper Tribunal's own handling of the relevant matter; it does not encompass a challenge on the basis of asserted substantive judicial errors (see, for example, SK v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (AA) [2016] UKUT 529 (AAC)). In my judgment, properly analysed, only the challenge relating to apparent bias amounted to an attack on the Upper Tribunal's own procedure. The remaining grounds asserted judicial error in the Upper Tribunal's substantive findings and conclusions, which could only be advanced by way of appeal, in accordance with rule 44 of the Rules, to be considered in accordance with rule 45. Accordingly, the Upper Tribunal was right to have approached those grounds as constituting, in substance, an application for permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal. Following its refusal of that latter application, the route by which the Claimants could pursue their second and third grounds of challenge was that prescribed by CPR 52.7(1), which provides (materially):
'Permission is required from the Court of Appeal for any appeal to that court from …a decision of the Upper Tribunal which was made on appeal from a decision of the First-tier Tribunal on a point of law where the Upper Tribunal has refused permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal.'
The test on a second appeal to the Court of Appeal from the Upper Tribunal is as set out at CPR 52.7(2):
'(2) The Court of Appeal will not give permission unless it considers that—
(a) the appeal would—
(i) have a real prospect of success; and
(ii) raise an important point of principle or practice; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason for the Court of Appeal to hear it.'
There can be no legitimate objection to the application of that test in the circumstances in which it applies, namely where a challenge is being made to the Upper Tribunal's substantive conclusions on appeal from the FTT. No second appeal to the Court of Appeal in relation to the relevant grounds has been brought in this case.
c) Ground one of the Claimants' challenge to the 2018 Decision (apparent bias), did, in principle, constitute a proper basis for an application under rule 43 of the Rules. That being a challenge to the Upper Tribunal's own procedure (as distinct from its substantive conclusions on an appeal from the FTT), its express or implicit refusal by the Upper Tribunal gave rise to a first appeal (on that ground only), within the meaning of CPR 52.6 (set out, in material part and with emphasis added, immediately below). That provides for a less stringent test and, thus, would not have required the Claimants 'to meet the test applicable to a second appeal on a first-order challenge', or 'to exhaust a right to a second appeal on a matter which does not go to the substance of their appeal from the First Tier Tribunal':
'(1) Except where rule 52.7 applies, permission to appeal may be given only where –
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason for the appeal to be heard.
…'
Here again, there can be no objection to the need to establish one or other of the disjunctive limbs of the above test. In discussion, Mr Read told me that (1) he could produce no authority to establish that an appeal from the Upper Tribunal's decision refusing a challenge to its own procedure would give rise to a second appeal; and that (2) were it to give rise to a first appeal, with its less stringent test for permission, he would not retain a concern over the need to follow that route.
d) Whilst not a submission advanced by Mr Read, I have considered whether the fact that an appeal to the Court of Appeal would now be out of time itself indicates that such a remedy would not be adequate, alternatively constitutes an exceptional circumstance which would have justified the exercise of my discretion to grant judicial review, in the presence of an alternative remedy which ought to have been pursued. I have concluded that it does not. First, it would be open to the Court of Appeal to grant an extension of time, even at this stage, were it to consider that to be the appropriate course. In any event, any time-bar is the product of the Claimants' own election to bring proceedings for judicial review and to pursue them in the face of two acknowledgements of service which noted the existence of a statutory right of appeal. Like Lambert J, in R (Chaudry), and Black J, in R (Carnell) v Regents Park College and the Conference of Colleges Appeal Tribunal [2008] EWHC 739, I consider that the alternative remedy would have been adequate and available had the Claimants made different choices and that to grant judicial review in such circumstances would be to 'license claimants to make use of delay to bring themselves within the scope of judicial review when they would otherwise have been confined to their statutory or other alternative remedy' (Carnell, paragraph 32).
Merits
'It is a general rule of our civil procedure that, in the absence of any order or legislation to the contrary, a party who has applied for an order which has been refused by a judge on the papers, without oral argument, has the right to renew his application orally before a judge of co-ordinate jurisdiction. Thus, where a party applies in the Administrative Court for urgent interim relief which is refused on the papers, he has the right to renew his application orally to a High Court judge…It is only if an oral renewal is unsuccessful that the claimant may consider an application to a judge of the Court of Appeal…'
There is no evidence in this case of any order on the papers refusing the Claimants' request (not application) that their appeal be decided without a hearing, such that no right of oral renewal arose by that route.
The Upper Tribunal's duty to give reasons
'Public authorities are under no general common law duty to give reasons for their decisions; but it is well-established that fairness may in some circumstances require it, even in a statutory context in which no express duty is imposed (see R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Doody [1994] 1 AC 531; R v Higher Education Funding Council, Ex p Institute of Dental Surgery [1994] 1 WLR 242, 263A-D; De Smith's Judicial Review 7th ed, para 7-099). Doody concerned the power of the Home Secretary (under the Criminal Justice Act 1967 section 61(1)), in relation to a prisoner under a mandatory life sentence for murder, to fix the minimum period before consideration by the Parole Board for licence, taking account of the "penal" element as recommended by the trial judge. It was held that such a decision was subject to judicial review, and that the prisoner was entitled to be informed of the judge's recommendation and of the reasons for the Home Secretary's decision:
"To mount an effective attack on the decision, given no more material than the facts of the offence and the length of the penal element, the prisoner has virtually no means of ascertaining whether this is an instance where the decision-making process has gone astray. I think it important that there should be an effective means of detecting the kind of error which would entitle the court to intervene, and in practice I regard it as necessary for this purpose that the reasoning of the Home Secretary should be disclosed. If there is any difference between the penal element recommended by the judges and actually imposed by the Home Secretary, this reasoning is bound to include, either explicitly or implicitly, a reason why the Home Secretary has taken a different view …" (p565G-H, per Lord Mustill)
It is to be noted that a principal justification for imposing the duty was seen as the need to reveal any such error as would entitle the court to intervene, and so make effective the right to challenge the decision by judicial review.'
At paragraph 54, the Supreme Court continued:
'…Doody itself involved such an application of the common law principle of "fairness" in a statutory context, in which the giving of reasons was seen as essential to allow effective supervision by the courts. Fairness provided the link between the common law duty to give reasons for an administrative decision, and the right of the individual affected to bring proceedings to challenge the legality of that decision.'
'…
(2A) The High Court—
(a) must refuse to grant relief on an application for judicial review, and
(b) may not make an award under subsection (4) on such an application,
if it appears to the court to be highly likely that the outcome for the applicant would not have been substantially different if the conduct complained of had not occurred.
(2B) The court may disregard the requirements in subsection (2A)(a) and (b) if it considers that it is appropriate to do so for reasons of exceptional public interest.
(2C) If the court grants relief or makes an award in reliance on subsection (2B), the court must certify that the condition in subsection (2B) is satisfied.
…
(5) If, on an application for judicial review, the High Court quashes the decision to which the application relates, it may in addition–
(a) remit the matter to the court, tribunal or authority which made the decision, with a direction to reconsider the matter and reach a decision in accordance with the findings of the High Court, or
(b) substitute its own decision for the decision in question.
(5A) But the power conferred by subsection (5)(b) is exercisable only if–
(a) the decision in question was made by a court or tribunal,
(b) the decision is quashed on the ground that there has been an error of law, and
(c) without the error, there would have been only one decision which the court or tribunal could have reached.
(5B) Unless the High Court otherwise directs, a decision substituted by it under subsection (5)(b) has effect as if it were a decision of the relevant court or tribunal.
…
(8) In this section "the conduct complained of", in relation to an application for judicial review, means the conduct (or alleged conduct) of the defendant that the applicant claims justifies the High Court in granting relief.'
Apparent bias
a) I have previously noted the absence from the Claimants' application under rule 43 of the Rules of any challenge to the Upper Tribunal's statement (at paragraph 2 of the 2018 Decision) that notice of the proceedings appeared to have been correctly served. That was the premise upon which the Upper Tribunal was considering the application before it.
b) By witness statement dated 28 June 2021, served in these proceedings in support of the application to amend the Claimants' grounds of review and post-dating disclosure of the relevant documents, the First Claimant stated that she did not receive the Defendant's notice of hearing and that the post boxes located on the ground floor of the block of flats in which she has lived for nine years are not secure. She made no reference to the earlier notice of decision and its enclosures, sent to the same address; being the address to which the 2019 Decision was also sent. There is no witness statement (regarding the receipt or otherwise of any relevant document) from the Second Claimant. It was clear, from (at least) paragraphs 7 to 9 of the Upper Tribunal's directions, that the appeal would be considered at a hearing, on a date to be notified. Even accepting the First Claimant's latest evidence at its highest, no written objection to a hearing was lodged, by either Claimant, upon receipt of the notice of decision, from which it would have been clear that their request that the matter be determined on paper had been rejected.
c) The time at which to have challenged the listing of a hearing and/or to have explained why the Claimants did not intend to attend any such hearing was upon receipt of the notice of decision and directions, not after the hearing to which they referred had taken place and judgment had been promulgated. Having been served with those documents, even if the later notice of hearing was not received by the First Claimant, it is difficult to see how the Claimants may be said to have had a reasonable expectation that the matter would be dealt with on the papers. Both the First Claimant's witness statement in support of her application to set aside the 2018 Decision, made on 18 December 2018, and her witness statement made on 2 May 2019, in support of the Claimants' application for permission to bring proceedings for judicial review, were silent as to such matters. The 2019 Decision was sent to and arrived safely at the same address.
d) It is one thing for a tribunal to refuse a hearing to a party who has requested one; it is another to allow all parties the opportunity to appear at an oral hearing at which their submissions may be fully ventilated and tested. In any event, in my judgment, the material before me, and, more particularly, before the Upper Tribunal on 13 November 2018, was not such as to establish that the reason for the Claimants' non-attendance on that date was their earlier request, made by section G of each application for permission to appeal, or to explain their lack of communication with the Upper Tribunal following its decision to list a hearing, contrary to that request.
e) The nature of the appeal from the decision of the FTT was such that an oral hearing was clearly appropriate. As I have already observed, whilst the Upper Tribunal is obliged to have regard to a party's expressed view, it is not obliged to bow to it. There was no 'apparent bias' in the Tribunal's listing of a hearing to which no subsequent objection was raised by the Claimants, or in its receipt of submissions from the Interested Party following the Claimants' unexplained failure to attend that hearing, in the circumstances set out at paragraph 2 of the 2018 Decision.
Irrationality
f) This ground was misconceived, for the reason which I interposed when summarising it, at paragraph 7(b), above. In short, paragraph 3 of the 2018 Decision simply recited the reasons given by the Interested Party, from whose decision the Claimants had appealed to the FTT; it did not constitute an independent finding by the Upper Tribunal. Furthermore, as is evident from paragraphs 22 to 24 of the decision of the FTT (cited at paragraph 7 of the 2018 Decision, and below), the First Claimant's extensive criminal behaviour was a matter of record and her further deceptive conduct the subject of findings by that tribunal which did not fall within the scope of the bases upon which permission to appeal to the Upper Tribunal had been granted, on 19 September 2018:
'22. Turning to the first Appellant, her criminal behaviour was described at some considerable length, at paragraphs 6 to 12 by Judge Greasley. There has been no challenge to the entries made in the PNC printout. At page 1 of the printout there is a summary of her convictions as follows: one offence against property; six fraud and kindred offences; 18 theft and kindred offences; six offences relating to police/courts/prisons. In giving evidence today the first Appellant referred to having reached an understanding as to why she committed offences. She acknowledged that notwithstanding conditional discharges and community orders she was sentenced to 8 months imprisonment on 22 March 2017. Although she has now had the benefit of completing her LLB there is no credible evidence that she is reformed person.
23. The offence for which she was imprisoned in March 2017 was, she has stated in evidence, for a matter which related to the commencement of her employment in 2015. She used false documentation. It is significant and revealing as to her character that she has apparently learned nothing from her experiences and the comments made by Judge Greasley in 2014 at paragraphs 28 and 29 which is in the following terms:
"Whilst the offences in themselves may not be individually serious, collectively the Appellant's conduct over a period of time, does, in my judgment reflect a serious and determined willingness to commit offences of dishonesty. The fact that the Appellant when apprehended has on different occasions used an alias adds to the deceptive nature of these matters. Eight different aliases are noted in police records. She has shown a blatant disregard for the immigration laws of the UK and a cavalier attitude to the criminal laws of the UK ... Indeed it is clear from the oral evidence that the Appellant has not notified her employers of the immigration appeal hearing she has secured a character reference letter from her employer which makes no reference to her criminal past and who has been given the false impression that the letter was required as a character statement for alternative employment. I find that this further demonstrates the extent to which the Appellant is prepared to deceive and mislead others ... I find that the Appellant has committed offences of dishonesty over a prolonged period with repeated use of an alias she has committed other allied offences and has done so whilst as a visitor in the United Kingdom, the host country I find that she has also shown a willingness to deceive her current employers recently in relation to the reference letter produced before the tribunal."
On the evidence before me she clearly went on to deceive yet another employer following the hearing in 2014.
24. She attempted to explain her behaviour by claiming that in doing so, and receiving a benefit by deception, she avoided claiming state benefits which would have been paid out of the national funds. This however entirely misses the point that she has committed further acts of dishonesty without any apparent aptitude to change her ways. She added when giving her evidence that she always challenged the decisions of the Respondent and the tribunal, presumably in relation to fact-finding and other matters, to enable her to remain longer in the United Kingdom or as she put it 'to regularise her stay.'
Unlawful conduct
g) The alleged unlawful conduct was said to lie in the entanglement of the Upper Tribunal's assessment of the impact on the Second Claimant with the conduct of the First Claimant and the absence of any assessment of how reasonable it would be for the Second Claimant to remain in the UK in the absence of her mother. That contention was unarguable in light of the Upper Tribunal's findings, at paragraphs 11 and 12 of the 2018 Decision:
'11. [The Respondent's representative] referred to the recent decision of the Supreme Court in KO (Nigeria). While the sins of the parents should not be visited upon the children "the record of the parents may become indirectly material" as is pointed out in paragraph 18 of the judgment. In this case the behaviour of the appellant's mother is of course deplorable and it is summarised in the judge's conclusions which I have set out above. As the judge noted there was no credible evidence that the first appellant was a reformed person. However it is important to note that at the conclusion of paragraph 21 the judge discounted any of the criminal behaviour of the first named appellant in his consideration when concluding that the child's best interests would be maintained by being accompanied by her mother to Nigeria.
12. The judge in my view did not err in his consideration of the case in the light of the authorities then available and his decision would have been no different had he had the benefit of the recent Supreme Court decision. He explored exhaustively the issue of the best interests of the child noting, for example, her ability to adapt during her mother's recent imprisonment. In paragraph 27 the judge refers to his finding that there will be no substantial impact on her educational development, progress and opportunities. He confirmed that he had considered the child's interests without reference to the immigration status of her mother. The case referred to in the grant of permission was decided before the recent Supreme Court case. The Tribunal in MT and ET refers to the "present state of the law" in paragraph 33 of its decision. It is very doubtful that the Tribunal in the case of MT would have described the behaviour of the first appellant in the instant case as being that of a "somewhat run of the mill immigration offender...". As the Supreme Court makes clear the record of the first appellant becomes indirectly material and one needs to focus on the position "in the real world" - see the extract from EV (Philippines) v Secretary of State referred to in paragraph 19 of the decision of the Supreme Court.'
h) In short, as the Upper Tribunal found in the 2019 Decision, the best interests of the Second Claimant had been fully considered.
Summary of overarching conclusions
Costs
Note 1 Section 11 of the 2007 Act confers a right to appeal to the Upper Tribunal on any point of law arising from a decision made by the FTT, other than an “excluded decision” as defined by subsection 11(5). [Back] Note 2 In fact, as is clear from an e-mail sent by those representing the Defendant, dated 28 June 2021 (15:47), in reply to an earlier enquiry by Mr Read, ‘…there are no Upper Tribunal standard directions issued at present and this was also the case during late 2018. Each case is dealt with and managed on its own circumstances.’ [Back] Note 3 Paragraph 22 of his skeleton argument, dated 27 May 2021, refers. [Back]