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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 >> LS, R (On the Application Of) v Warrington Borough Council [2024] EWHC 2872 (Admin) (12 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2872.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2872 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING (ON THE APPLICATION OF LS) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WARRINGTON BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
____________________
MICHAEL PAGET (instructed by WARRINGTON BOROUGH COUNCIL LEGAL SERVICES) for the DEFENDANT
Hearing dates: 21st May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SWEETING :
Introduction
The Legal Framework
5. A judicial review claim challenging a local authority's assessment of age may thus be on various grounds. Some of them may be orthodox judicial review grounds. But the core challenge is likely in most cases to be a challenge to the age which the local authority assessed the claimant to be. Thus most of these cases are now likely to require the court to receive evidence to make its factual determination. It is therefore understandable that Mr Hadden, for the respondent local authority in the present appeal, submitted that orthodox judicial review challenges are likely to be subsumed in the court's factual determination of the claimant's age. If the claimant succeeds on his factual case, the orthodox judicial review challenges fall away as unnecessary.
6. Claims for judicial review require the court's permission to bring the claim. If the claim challenges the local authority's assessment of age as a fact, the court has to apply an appropriate test in deciding whether to give permission. The parties presently before the court agree that the claimant is not entitled to permission simply because he asserts that the local authority's assessment was wrong. It is evident that the Supreme Court did not contemplate that permission would be given in every case irrespective of any consideration of the merits. In one sense, the parties to the present appeal agree what that test should be. They agree that it is that formulated by Holman J in R (F) v Lewisham London Borough Council [2010] PTSR CS 13; [2010] 1 FLR 1463 to the effect that the test is whether there is a realistic prospect or arguable case that the court would reach a conclusion that the claimant was of a younger age than that assessed by the local authority.
…
9. We consider that at the permission stage in an age assessment case the court should ask whether the material before the court raises a factual case which, taken at its highest, could not properly succeed in a contested factual hearing. If so, permission should be refused. If not, permission should normally be granted, subject to other discretionary factors, such as delay.
Background
"It's unlikely the NDFU would be able to say much about either documents as they are not official government produced documents. I have seen a fair few cases where Eritreans produce baptism and / or school certificates as proof of age rather than something that would actually be able to confirm their age with certainty (e.g. a passport or birth certificate)."
The Proceedings
"1. These grounds are prepared on a preliminary basis. Following pre-action correspondence dated 21 February 2024, the Defendant responded to the proposed grounds of claim on 5 March 2024 maintaining the decision under challenge.
2. The Claimant is a national of Eritrea. She claims to be a child with the date of birth of 12 September 2006.
3. Following an age assessment, the Defendant has assessed her with the DOB of 12 March 1998.
4. The Defendant has agreed that following procedural improprieties relating to the service of the decision that the date of decision under challenge is 6 December 2024.
5. The Claimant therefore issues this claim on a protective basis in order to ensure that the Claimant can challenge the unlawful decision within the relevant window. She has identified counsel and will seek judicial review funding on an emergency basis at the earliest opportunity.
6. The Claimant seeks to apply to amend grounds once funding has been granted."
"It is appropriate, and in the interests of justice, to allow the Claimant to file evidence, and for both parties to file their amended pleadings and responses, to enable them to present their respective cases, and to assist the Court in understanding the competing arguments at the permission and interim relief hearing."
Age Assessment - Conclusions
Timing of the Claim
a. Stage 1: An assessment of the seriousness of the breach.
b. Stage 2: Consider the explanation provided for the non-compliance.
c. Stage 3:Evaluate the overall context, including the need for efficient litigation and enforcement of rules.
a. Stage 1: A statement of facts and grounds is mandatory; the Claimant's initial form did not explicitly articulate legal grounds of challenge, but merely referenced pre-action correspondence containing those grounds. A breach of this sort is properly to be regarded as serious in my view.
b. Stage 2: The Claimant's explanation was that the omission was an oversight motivated by a desire to minimise costs, anticipating counsel would draft comprehensive grounds later. This was not in my judgment a sufficient explanation for the delay in setting out a proper case. It is evident from the pre-action protocol correspondence that the Claimant could have articulated a proper basis for a public law challenge but equally that did not mean that the Claim Form could simply be used as a placeholder for grounds that would come later. If an extension was needed it could have been applied for in time although that would have raised an obvious question as to why more time was needed. The solution was not however to issue a plainly insufficient Claim Form.
c. Stage 3: The overriding objective is to ensure just and efficient resolution of the claim. Even though the breach was a serious one I have come to the view that refusing permission to rely on the amended grounds or denying the Claimant an extension of time would be disproportionate and risk injustice in this case. The Claimant's initial Claim Form lacked explicit grounds, it is nevertheless true that the Defendant had been informed of those grounds in pre-action correspondence. The Claimant then filed the amended grounds promptly. The relief that the Claimant requires is an extension of time. I therefore grant the Claimant relief from sanctions, in the form of an extension of time which in turn allows her to rely on the amended grounds.
Interim Relief
END