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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Kirkaldie v Information Commissioner [2006] UKIT EA_2006_001 (04 July 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2007/EA_2006_001.html
Cite as: [2006] UKIT EA_2006_1, [2006] UKIT EA_2006_001

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Information Tribunal                                                              Appeal Number: EA/2006/001
The Environmental Information Regulations 2004
Heard on papers at Procession House London              Decision Promulgated
On 23 June 2006
4th July 2006
Before
JOHN ANGEL
Chairman
PAUL TAYLOR and IVAN WILSON
Lay Members
Between
MALCOLM KIRKALDIE
Appellant
and
THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
Respondent
and
THANET DISTRICT COUNCIL
Additional Party
Decision
The Tribunal finds that the Appellant made a valid request under the Environmental
Information Regulations 2004 (EIR) and that the legal professional privilege exception
does not apply.
The Tribunal, therefore, requires that Thanet District Council allow the Appellant to view
and examine the legal Opinion dated 12 January 2005 given by Toby Davey at their offices
in Cecil Street Margate Kent CT9 1XZ within 10 working days of the date of this decision
(the substituted Decision Notice).
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
Reasons for Decision
The Background
1.     The request the subject of this appeal was submitted to Thanet District Council
(TDC) by Mr Kirkaldie by email on the 5 January 2005. The request, which was one
of a series relating to Kent International Airport (KIA), asked for access to “…view
the legal advice that TDC sought regarding the night flying policy at KIA [Kent
International Airport] – also known as Manston Airport”.
2.     On 18 January 2005, Mr Daniel Aramide (Mr Aramide) the Legal Services Manager
at TDC, issued a refusal notice by email claiming that although the information in
question did indeed exist, that:
“… Under the common law that advice would be subject to legal professional
privilege… S.42 of the Act ensures that the communication between lawyer and
client is protected. The Council will not be willing to disclose legal advice
obtained in this matter”.
3.     Mr. Aramide also set out TDC’s decision regarding the application of the public
interest test in relation to this exemption –
“… given the very substantial public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of
legal proceedings and the fact that the Council’s decision could still be
challenged in court, these facts clearly outweigh the public interest in
disclosure”.
4.     An internal review regarding the decision not to disclose the information was
subsequently requested by Mr. Kirkaldie by email dated 19 January 2005.
5.     Following an internal review by a Mr Sean Clark (Mr Clark) the Head of Resources
at TDC, the initial decision not to disclose was upheld. In an email to Mr Kirkaldie
dated 18 February 2005, Mr Clark explained that: -
“My decision is to uphold the decision not to disclose to you the information you
had requested. I have noted that you did not state any additional reasons for me
to take into account as to why the legal advice should be disclosed to you when
you requested this review. I have reached this decision for the reasons as set
out previously.
Although I have not found in your favour in this case, I have made a fresh
decision on the matter.”
6.     On 31 May 2005 Mr Kirkaldie complained by email to the Information Commissioner
(IC). Following an investigation by the IC’s Complaints Resolution Officer under
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
s 50(1) of FOIA Mr Kirkaldie’s complaint was dismissed. The IC’s Decision Notice
dated 30 November 2005 (the Decision Notice) sets out the reasons for this
outcome and concludes that -
“After careful consideration of all the relevant facts of this case, the
Commissioner concludes that the Section 42 exemption is valid and that the
public interest in maintaining this exemption currently overrides the public
interest in disclosing the requested information… Therefore, Thanet DC is not
obliged to disclose the information requested.
Material Facts
7.     The legal advice at the centre of this case surrounds KIA. In particular, the
implications of proposed night-time flights on an existing agreement under s.106 of
the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. The particular subsections of this section
which are relevant to this case are as follows:
(1)     A local planning authority may enter into an agreement with any
person interested in land in their area for the purpose of restricting or
regulating the development or use of the land, either permanently or during
such period as may be prescribed by the agreement.
(2)    Any such agreement may contain such incidental and consequential
provisions (including financial ones) as appear to the local planning authority to
be necessary or expedient for the purposes of the agreement.
8.     The agreement in question was entered into on a voluntary basis between TDC and
the commercial owners of KIA, Wiggins plc, on the 14 September 2000. The
agreement ran for a term of three years. On expiry of the agreement (i.e.
September 2003), a request was made by TDC to the airport operator (then known
as Planestation) to extend this on a voluntary basis. This was agreed and the
arrangement was in operation at the time of the submission of the request, the
subject of this appeal, by Mr. Kirkaldie on 5 January 2005.
9.     In a report prepared by Mr Brian White (Mr White) Head of Environmental Services
at TDC for the full Council meeting of 21 October 2004, in relation to the proposed
new draft of the agreement, it described the purpose of the s.106 Agreement as
follows:
…to build on this successful foundation by ensuring that the current and
medium term operational plans (of) the operator achieve a balance between
economic and environmental factors in such a way that the best interests of
local communities are protected.
” (Item 1.3).
10.    The agreement in question sets out the obligations of the operator and TDC in the
Second Schedule. These are referred to under the following headings:
1.  Night-time Flying Noise Policy
2.  General Noise Limitations
3.  Dwelling Insulation Scheme
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
4.  Preferred Departure Runway
5.  Noise Abatement Routes
6.  Noise Monitoring Terminals
7.  Pollution Monitoring
8.  Noise Monitoring
9.  Engine Testing
10. Green Travel Strategy
11. Environmental Statement
12. Payments
13. Third Parties
11.   At a meeting of the TDC Cabinet on 16 December 2004 (December Cabinet
meeting), a report was presented by Mr White outlining a request from the airport
operator dated 13 December 2004. This request involved a proposal to incorporate
several scheduled flight arrivals each week beyond the time of 23:00 hours into the
operator’s programme for April to September 2005. It also covered these flights
being considered in the context of the s.106 agreement between Planestation and
TDC, which under paragraph 1 of the Second Schedule required a night-time flying
policy to be prepared and a copy lodged with TDC before any regular night flying
operations took place.
12.   Item 4.2.1 of the minutes of the December Cabinet meeting, under the heading of
Legal Implications”, recorded that -
Variation of the existing Section 106 Agreement will be investigated and
implemented, if the recommendations in this report are approved
.”
It appears that it was in this context that the legal advice (Legal Advice), the subject
of the request in this appeal, was sought.
Which law applies
13.   Under Regulation 2 of the EIR “environmental information has the same meaning
as in Article 2(1) of the Directive, namely any information in written, visual, aural,
electronic or any other material form on –
(a)   the state of the elements of the environment, such as air and
atmosphere, water, soil, land, landscape and natural sites including
wetlands, coastal and marine areas, biological diversity and its components,
including genetically modified organisms, and the interaction among these
elements;
(b) factors, such as substances, energy, noise, radiation or waste, including
radioactive waste, emissions, discharges and other releases into the
environment, affecting or likely to affect the elements of the environment
referred to in (a)
(c)   measures (including administrative measures), such as policies,
legislation, plans, programmes, environmental agreements, and activities
affecting or likely to affect the elements and factors referred to in (a) and (b)
as well as measures or activities designed to protect those elements;
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
(f) the state of human health and safety, including the contamination of the
food chain, where relevant, conditions of human life, cultural sites and built
structures inasmuch as they are or may be affected by the state of the
elements of the environment referred to in (a) or, through those elements, by
any of the matters referred to in (b) and (c).”
14.   The Legal Advice, which was provided to the Tribunal in confidence, related to the
enforceability of the s.106 Agreement, land usage and other planning matters. The
Tribunal finds that for the purposes of Regulation 2(c) EIR this agreement was an
“environmental agreement” under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 and
Local Government Act 1972. Entering into and extending such an agreement is the
sort of measure envisaged by the rule which is “likely to affect the elements and
factors referred to in (a) and (b) as well as measures or activities designed to
protect these elements.” In particular the elements of the environment covered by
the agreement are land, air and atmosphere and the factors covered are noise and
emissions. Also noise and emissions could affect the state of human health and
safety.
15.   It follows that we find that the request is caught by the EIR and that it is not a
request under FOIA as found by the IC. It should be pointed out that where a
request for information is made under FOIA there is an exemption under s.39 where
the EIR apply, and the public authority is obliged to deal with the request under EIR.
In this case Mr Kirkaldie did not state under which provision he was making his
request and he is under no duty to do so. However in communications with TDC
and the IC he raised the possibility that it was an EIR request. Although TDC
considered both provisions they incorrectly concluded that it was a FOIA request,
as did the IC.
Whether there is a valid request
16.   The request was made by email dated 5 January. The legal advice to which it refers
is dated 12 January 2005. Therefore it appears that the request was made before
the information was held by TDC. It had become known to Mr Kirkaldie that TDC
was taking legal advice from counsel, hence his request. No doubt instructions had
been given and the advice was in the process of being prepared but it was not until
12 or 13 January that it was received by TDC. TDC did not take this point when
dealing with the request and on 18 January issued a refusal notice confirming that it
held the information, which of course it did by then. The point was also not taken by
the IC.
17.   This appeal is to be considered under the EIR. Under Regulation 5(1) “a public
authority that holds environmental information shall make it available on request”.
Under Regulation 5(2) “information shall be made available under paragraph (1) as
soon as possible and no later than 20 working days after the date of receipt of the
request”. TDC confirmed it held the information within the 20 day time limit,
although it claimed an exemption under FOIA. It is not clear from the EIR whether
the information has to be held by the public authority at the date of receipt of the
request or whether it has to be held at the date when, say an exception is claimed,
within the 20 day time limit. It would not make much sense for a public authority to
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
respond that it did not hold the information when it had just received it before
sending the response. Also the public authority would no doubt be under a duty to
advise and assist the applicant under Regulation 9 EIR that the information was not
in its possession at the time the request was received although knowing that it was
about to be received so that the applicant could then make a new request, if
necessary, when the information was then held by the public authority. Alternatively
the public authority could take the sensible and pragmatic approach and accept the
request under the EIR and deal with it accordingly. This is what TDC did in this
case, albeit under FOIA, and therefore we find that it was a valid request.
Legal professional privilege
18.   TDC refused to provide the information requested by Mr Kirkaldie on the grounds
that the Legal Advice was exempt as legal professional privilege under s.42 FOIA
and that the public interest in maintaining the exemption outweighed the public
interest in disclosing the information. The IC, in effect, agreed with this position.
19.   The first question the Tribunal needs to consider is where a refusal notice issued
under the wrong legislative provision still enables the public authority to claim an
exemption or exception under the correct law, particularly where the exemption or
exception is the same or similar. Under Regulation 12(1) EIR
A public authority may refuse to disclose environmental information requested if
(a) an exception to disclose applies under paragraphs ..(5); and
(b) in all the circumstances of the case, the public interest in maintaining
the exception outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information.
20.   Under Regulation 12(5) EIR a public authority may refuse to disclose information to
the extent that the disclosure would adversely affect -
(b) the course of justice, the ability of a person to receive a fair trail or the ability
of a public authority to conduct an inquiry of a criminal or disciplinary nature;
21.   The purpose of this exception is reasonably clear. It exists in part to ensure that
there should be no disruption to the administration of justice, including the operation
of the courts and no prejudice to the right of individuals or organisations to a fair
trial. In order to achieve this it covers legal professional privilege, particularly where
a public authority is or is likely to be involved in litigation.
22.   Therefore this exception is similar to the exemption under s.42 FOIA.
23.   For the moment let us assume that TDC is allowed to switch to the Regulation
12(5)(b) EIR exception. This Tribunal in the case of Bellamy v Information
Commissioner and Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
May 2006 sets out the
various authorities relating to legal professional privilege and describes it as “a
fundamental condition on which the administration of justice as a whole rest”.
Waiver of the privilege
24.   However privilege can be waived in a number of ways. The most obvious is where
one party to legal proceedings seeks to rely on material that is privileged and
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
therefore discloses it. Where all the material relating to the matter in issue is
disclosed, no real difficulty arises. The position is more complicated where some
material that attracts privilege is disclosed but other material relating to the same
matter is not. Although the courts recognise that each party is free to choose
whether and to what extent he or she waives privilege they also recognise that
there is an obvious unfairness if the parties to litigation are allowed to “cherry-pick”
the material they choose to disclose (the phrase used in R v Secretary of State for
Transport, ex parte Factortame Ltd
[1997] 9 Admin LR 591).
25. The general rule is that if a party voluntarily seeks to put part of a privileged
document or part of a sequence of privileged documents before a court, he or she
must also put before the court the rest of the document or sequence of documents to
ensure fairness to his/her adversary: “A party cannot deliberately subject a
relationship to scrutiny and at the same time seek to preserve its confidentiality. He
cannot pick and choose, disclosing such incidents of the relationship as strengthen
his claim for damages and concealing from forensic scrutiny such incidents as
weaken it” (Lord Bingham in Paragon Finance Plc vFreshfields [1999] 1 WLR 1183 at
p.1188 F-G).
26. The test for waiver is whether the contents of the document in question are being
relied on. A mere reference to a privileged document is not enough, but if the
contents are quoted or summarised, there is waiver (Dunlop Slazenger International
Ltd v Joe Bloggs Sports Ltd
[2003] EWCA Civ 901). Publication of privileged
information to the general public will deprive the information of any privilege which
previously existed. So, for example, any press release which makes use of privileged
information will almost certainly result in a waiver of that privilege (Chandris Lines v
Wilson & Horton Ltd
[1981] 2 NZLR 600).
Whether waiver applies in this case
27. One of the contentions in Mr Kirkaldie’s appeal is that TDC waived legal professional
privilege by publicly disclosing the Legal Advice. In the Decision Notice the IC
concluded that -
“In determining whether legal professional privilege continues to apply to the
requested information, the Commissioner has carefully considered whether
Thanet DC has waived legal professional privilege by publicly disclosing the
legal advice. Thanet DC has provided an assurance that the advice has not
been disclosed to the public. The Commissioner is satisfied with this assurance
and believes that privilege has not been waived.”
The Tribunal has considered this TDC assurance and the further evidence provided
on this matter.
28. It was first raised by Mr Stephen Middleton (Mr Middleton) for the IC in a letter
dated 28 June 2005 to Mr Clark at TDC. One of the questions in Mr Middleton’s
letter was
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
Whether information already disclosed …I would appreciate it if you would
clarify whether any part of the legal advice has been disclosed publicly, e.g. at
meetings, in minutes, etc.”
29. Having received no response from Mr Clark on this point, despite reminders, Mr
Middleton put the question again, in exactly the same words, to Mr Aramide in the
Legal Department at TDC, in an email dated 21 September 2005. Following a
further reminder, Mr Aramide replied some five weeks later, on 26 October 2005, in
the following terms:
“The contents of the legal opinion have not been disclosed to members or
subject of a report to the members.”
30. The Tribunal notes that this reply did not deal directly or specifically with Mr
Middleton’s question. The Tribunal has seen no further evidence or exchange on
this matter between the IC and TDC until the Decision Notice.
31. Mr Kirkaldie appealed to the Tribunal on 3 January 2006. The IC’s reply served on
8 February 2006 in accordance with rule 8 of the Information Tribunal (Enforcement
Appeals) Rules 2005, maintained the IC’s position on this issue in the following
terms:
iv. That the legal advice had been shared with other local authorities and/
or the new owners.
While information may cease to be privileged if it is shared widely with third
parties, there is no evidence that this has occurred in this instance and the
Appellant is put to strict proof thereof. The Commissioner did consider the
issue as to whether privilege had been waived by the Council by disclosing the
advice and was satisfied that the advice in question has not been disclosed.”
32. Mr Kirkaldie commented on this conclusion in his reply received by the Tribunal on
24 February 2006
The information has ceased to be privileged as it has been shared widely with
third parties. Evidence that this has occurred in this instance is being furnished
in strict proof.”
33. On 14 March 2006, following a Directions Hearing, the Tribunal ordered TDC to be
joined as a party to the appeal. The Tribunal also ordered, inter alia, that TDC
should provide a copy of the minutes and/or notes taken at the public meeting held
at Ramsgate in late 2004/early 2005 as part of the s106 consultation, if any. In
addition the Tribunal ordered, in effect, that Daniel Aramide, the Legal Services
Manager of TDC and possibly Brian White, Head of Development Services at TDC
should provide witness statements, which they duly did.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
34. Mr Aramide’s witness statement addressed the point in relation to waiver of
privilege in the following way –
“The legal opinion in question has not been disclosed to any member of the
Council. It has not been a subject of a report to committee or cabinet. For
example, a Councillor requested for the Legal Opinion to be disclosed to him
but his request was refused.”
35. Mr Aramide’s evidence appears to be at variance with the evidence of Mr White,
who, in his witness statement, in referring to the public question and answers session
of the full Council meeting held in public on 13 January 2005, said -
Mr Britton’s question queried the status of the airport in planning law with the
introduction of night time flying. To address this issue and others the council
had to take the step of taking Counsel’s advice. The advice was received on
the 13th January, the same day as the meeting of the Full Council, and was
used by Councillor Kirby, who is the Cabinet Member for Development Services
in his reply to Mr Britton.”
36. Mr White attached to his statement a transcript of part of this Council meeting which
the Tribunal accept as compliance with the Direction Order referred to above.
37. Mr Kirkaldie, in his final response dated 16 May 2006, picked up the point:
4. In Brian White’s witness statement in paragraph 7 he confirms that the
advice was used publicly at a meeting where the public attended and in fact the
entire council (excepting those that did not attend) listened to Councillor Kirby
elaborate on the legal advice obtained.
5. The appellant has submitted the minutes of this meeting as evidence and the
fact that TDC in relying on this as part of their witness statement means they
can be assumed as an accurate reflection of what was stated at this meeting.”
38. In a further document dated 5 June, headed “Reply To The Appellant’s Paragraph 4
of the Final Response”, Mr Aramide stated:
“The Cabinet Member for Development Services with responsibility for the
airport was made aware of the contents of the legal opinion received and the
line taken in public by the authority was in accordance with the advice obtained.
Councillor Kirby’s answered questions in public with respect to the use of the
airport in line with numerous legal advice obtained.”
39. The Tribunal found it difficult to reconcile this evidence, which appears to support Mr
White’s witness statement, with the earlier evidence of Mr Aramide. The Tribunal
notes that the IC appears to have based his Decision Notice finding that legal
privilege had not been waived solely upon this earlier assurance of Mr Aramide.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
40. The transcript of the public session of the Full Council on 13 January stated -
Councillor Kirby Thank you Chairman. Thank you Mr Britton for your question.
The Council has taken legal advice on this matter and whether or
not the introduction of the 11 night time arrivals constitutes a change
of use requiring planning permission. The advice is that
it may as a matter of fact and degree. Officers recommend prior
approval is not required because – three points actually – the degree
of the proposal for a policy enabling 11 arrivals each week, only four
of which are between midnight and 0055 and with nothing beyond that
time. The arrivals are sought for a six months period and nothing
more. Comprehensive consultations are about to commence on the
existing 106 Agreement, and the success of the 106 Agreement will
shape the framework and develop the airport. The officers report that
their conclusion that a planning application is not required for this
degree of activity was not a borderline decision. It is clear that only a
limited change in terms of degree and time scale is proposed.”
41. The Tribunal has compared Councillor Kirby’s reply with the full text of Counsel’s
Advice provided to the Tribunal in confidence. The Tribunal finds that the basis on
which the advice had been sought and the main opinion given in that advice, were
mentioned by Councillor Kirby at the public meeting.
42. Waiver is an objective not subjective principle. Whether a party intended to waive
privilege in a particular document is not the question. What matters is an objective
analysis of what the party has done (Great Atlantic Insurance Co v Home Insurance
Co
[1981] 1 WLR 529). Appling the test set out in the Dunlop Slazenger
International Ltd case referred to above, by providing a summary of the legal advice
at a full Council meeting on 13 January 2005 followed by the recording of the
disclosure in the minutes of the meeting, the Tribunal finds that the legal
professional privilege exception had indeed been waived by TDC.
43. So if the exception is, in effect, waived then there is no need to apply the public
interest test under Regulation 12(1)(b) EIR and the information must be disclosed.
The transfer of exemptions/exceptions between jurisdictions
44. If TDC is not able to transfer to the EIR exception because it, in effect, backed the
wrong horse in the first place, then again the information must be disclosed. The
legislation is complicated and public authorities can easily mistake which legislative
provision applies. Even the IC did so in this case and he issues well considered
guidance in the area which no doubt has been subject to legal scrutiny. Therefore
we would be reluctant to find that a public authority could not argue that a similar
exemption or exception could not be applied under the correct legal instrument.
However we would not necessarily extend this finding to other exemptions or
exceptions which had no relationship to the original exemption or exception
claimed.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0001
Validity of the refusal notice
45. It should be noted that the initial refusal notice from TDC dated 18 January 2005 did
not comply with the prescribed format set out under s.17 (7) FOIA (which was at the
time the statutory access framework considered by TDC to be invoked).
46. The notice did not include any detail as to the internal appeal procedure offered by
TDC (or absence thereof) or that a complaint could be made to the IC under s.50 of
FOIA
47.  It would have been prudent for Mr Middleton on behalf of the IC to have included
reference to this in his letter of the 28 June 2005 addressed to Mr Clark of TDC.
However as this appeal has been considered under the EIR we do not intend to
make any finding in relation to the matter, but only to point out the inadequacies of
the refusal notice.
Signed                                                                             Date 4th July 2006
JOHN ANGEL
Chairman
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2007/EA_2006_001.html