BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> AXD v The Home Office (No 2) [2016] EWHC 1617 (QB) (05 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1617.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1617 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
AXD |
Claimant |
|
- and – |
||
THE HOME OFFICE |
Defendant |
____________________
Claire van Overdijk (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27th June 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JAY:
INTRODUCTION
ESSENTIAL FACTUAL MATTERS
"I had lots of problems in detention. I had sex with other prisoners and that is how other prisoners found out that I am gay. Some said bad things about me and bullied me because of this. I felt scared of them. One time I was punched by a group of other prisoners who didn't like me being gay. Other prisoners and officers were talking about me in a bad way behind my back, saying I am gay and a paedophile. I felt they hated me and it made me feel very bad. I used to wake up in the night hearing what they said. When I was given tablets for my mental health it was a little better."
"We agree that [the Claimant's] reoffending at liberty and having resumed drinking alcohol was predicted by Dr Cornish, and in the section 47 assessment if appropriate community support and supervision were not in place.
We agree risk factors for relapse into drinking such social isolation, unstable accommodation, cessation of medication (even if only useful for its anti-anxiety effect) might have been modified but Dr McKay argues that on the balance of probabilities his offending would not have been prevented, particularly as the recent records show further concerns about alcohol abuse and potential predatory behaviour in spite of such support.
We agree that [the Claimant] was considered to be suffering from schizophrenia at the time of release, and that if suffering from schizophrenia, he would have been particularly vulnerable to relapse at this point due to being in the process of changing his medication, It would therefore have been the worst time at which to have a lack of supervision, considering his risk factors of substance abuse and anti-social behaviour."
RELEVANT LEGAL PRINCIPLES
"There is now guidance in the cases as to appropriate levels of awards for false imprisonment. There are three general principles which should be born in mind: 1) the assessment of damages should be sensitive to the facts and the particular case and the degree of harm suffered by the particular claimant: see the leading case of Thompson v Commissioner of Police [1998] QB 498 at 515A and also the discussion at page 1060 in R v Governor of Brockhill Prison Ex Parte Evans [1999] QB 1043; 2) Damages should not be assessed mechanistically as by fixing a rigid figure to be awarded for each day of incarceration: see Thompson at 516A. A global approach should be taken: see Evans 1060E; 3) While obviously the gravity of a false imprisonment is worsened by its length the amount broadly attributable to the increasing passage of time should be tapered or placed on a reducing scale. This is for two reasons: (i) to keep this class of damages in proportion with those payable in personal injury and perhaps other cases; and (ii) because the initial shock of being detained will generally attract a higher rate of compensation than the detention's continuance: Thompson 515 E-F.
In Thompson the court gave specific guidance (515 D-F) to the effect that in a "straightforward case of wrongful arrest and imprisonment" the starting point was likely to be about £500 for the first hour of loss of liberty and a claimant wrongly detained for 24 hours should for that alone normally be entitled to an award of about £3,000. That case was of course decided more than ten years ago and, while not forgetting the imperative that damages should not be assessed mechanistically, some uplift to these starting points would plainly be appropriate to take account of inflation. Mr Singh for the respondent Secretary of State before us commends in particular the decision of Mr Kenneth Parker QC, as he then was, in Beecroft v SSHD [2008] EWHC Admin 3189. That is a helpful decision. It is very different on the facts from the case before us and it is right to say, as indeed Thompson itself makes clear, all these case are fact-sensitive."
"70. Lord Devlin's phrase "oppressive, arbitrary or unconstitutional" must be read, as was made clear by Lord Hutton in Kuddus v Chief Constable of Leicestershire [2002] AC 122 at paragraph 89, in the light of Lord Devlin's further view at page 1128:
"In a case in which exemplary damages are appropriate, a jury should be directed that if, but only if, the sum which they have in mind to award as compensation (which may, of course, be a sum aggravated by the way in which the defendant has behaved to the plaintiff) is inadequate to punish him for his outrageous conduct, to mark their disapproval of such conduct and to deter him from repeating it, then it can award some larger sum."
As Lord Hutton observed, the conduct had to be "outrageous" and to be such that it called for exemplary damages to mark disapproval, to deter and to vindicate the strength of the law.
71. In my view, the guidance given by Sir Thomas Bingham MR and Lord Hutton is sufficient. There is no need for this to be qualified by further looking for malice, fraud, insolence cruelty or similar specific conduct. There is no authority that supports Dr McGregor's view to this effect."
COMPARABLES
"What are the critical factors affecting this case? The unlawful detention carried no "first shock" and no disruption of an otherwise ordinary life in the community. By the time illegality arose, the Claimant had already sustained the effects of a long period of continued detention. I bear in mind that this did include some impact on his mental health, but there is no evidence that the additional 82 days of detention had any identifiable incremental impact in those terms. The unusual situation here was that the Claimant chose detention in the United Kingdom over freedom in Iran. For the reasons I have given that does not impact upon the illegality, however in my judgment it does mean that the appropriate level of damages must be very much lower than in most of the reported authorities and it seems to me should be markedly lower even than the appropriate compensation for a prisoner in the position of Ms Evans.
Doing the best I can I award the Claimant compensation of £75 per day, a total award of £6,150."
THE BASIC AWARD
AGGRAVATED DAMAGES
EXEMPLARY DAMAGES
INTEREST
PERMISSION TO APPEAL
COSTS
CONCLUSION