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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Martin Corey, Re for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland) [2013] UKSC 76 (4 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2013/76.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 479, [2013] 3 WLR 1612, [2014] 1 AC 516, [2014] 1 All ER 863, [2013] UKSC 76, [2014] AC 516 |
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Michaelmas Term
[2013] UKSC 76
In the matter of an application by Martin Corey (AP) for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland)
Appellant Karen Quinlivan QC Andrew Moriarty BL (Instructed by Peter Murphy Solicitors) |
Respondent Gerald Simpson QC Robert Palmer (Instructed by Crown Solicitor's Office) |
|
Respondent (written submissions only) Nicolas Hanna QC Donal Sayers BL (Instructed by Carson McDowell) |
LORD KERR (with whom Lord Clarke, Lord Hughes and Lord Toulson agree)
The appellant's arguments
The inherent jurisdiction of the High Court of Northern Ireland
The nature of inherent jurisdiction
Did the High Court have inherent jurisdiction to grant bail in this instance?
"Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful."
"This court is concerned only with the fairness of the determination and the process used to come to it …" (emphasis added)
"The Commissioners shall not give a direction [that the prisoner should be released] unless-
(a) …
(b) the Commissioners are satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public from serious harm that the prisoner should be confined."
The hearing before the Court of Appeal
"As the court is required to make an informed predictive assessment at the date of sentence, and the justification for detention beyond the tariff period is found in the judgment of the court that an IPP is indeed necessary, I respectfully disagree with the views expressed by Laws LJ in the Divisional Court in R (Wells) v Parole Board [2008] 1 All ER 138, para 46 that what he described as 'further detention' after the expiry of the tariff period was
'not at all justified by or at the time of sentence, for the very reason that the extent to which, or the time for which, the prisoner will remain a danger is unknown at the time of sentence ... The justification for detention during the tariff period is of course spent; it is spent the moment the tariff expires.'
For the same reasons I am unable to accept the observations of Moses LJ in R (Lee) v Secretary of State for Justice in the Administrative Court [2008] EWHC 2326, para 22, no doubt reflecting the earlier judgment of Laws LJ, that 'the position of a prisoner whose level of dangerousness cannot be ascertained is the same as one who ceases to be a danger. The original justification for the sentence, namely his dangerousness, has ceased to exist'. In my judgment detention beyond the tariff period is justified just because the sentencing court has decided that the prisoner would continue to be dangerous at the expiry of the punitive element of the sentence. The necessary predictive judgment will have been made."
"In my opinion, the only possible basis upon which article 5(1) could ever be breached in these cases is that contemplated by the Court of Appeal [2008] 1 WLR 1977, paras 61, 69 of their judgment … namely after 'a very lengthy period' without an effective review of the case. The possibility of an article 5(1) breach on this basis is not, I think, inconsistent with anything I said either in R (Noorkoiv) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] 1 WLR 3284 or in R (Cawser) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHRR 101. Cawser, it is important to appreciate, was a case all about treating the prisoner to reduce his dangerousness, rather than merely enabling him to demonstrate his safety for release. To my mind, however, before the causal link could be adjudged broken, the Parole Board would have to have been unable to form any view of dangerousness for a period of years rather than months. It should not, after all, be forgotten that the Act itself provides for two-year intervals between references to the Parole Board."
"It is just possible to conceive of circumstances where the system which the statutes have laid down breaks down entirely, with the result that the Parole Board is unable to perform its function at all. In that situation continued detention could be said to be arbitrary because there was no way in which it could be brought to an end in the manner that the original sentence contemplated."
"I should perhaps add that, like Lord Brown, I should not exclude the possibility of an article 5(1) challenge in the case of a prisoner sentenced to IPP and allowed to languish in prison for years without receiving any of the attention which both the policy and the relevant rules, and ultimately common humanity, require."
James v United Kingdom
"The court is … satisfied that in cases concerning indeterminate sentences of imprisonment for the protection of the public, a real opportunity for rehabilitation is a necessary element of any part of the detention which is to be justified solely by reference to public protection. In the case of the IPP sentence, it is in any event clear that the legislation was premised on the understanding that rehabilitative treatment would be made available to those prisoners on whom an IPP sentence was imposed, even if this was not an express objective of the legislation itself. Indeed, this premise formed the basis upon which a breach of the Secretary of State's public law duty was found and confirmed (see paras 31, 104 and 107 above).The court accordingly agrees with the applicants that one of the purposes of their detention was their rehabilitation."
"… following the expiry of the applicants' tariff periods and until steps were taken to progress them through the prison system with a view to providing them with access to appropriate rehabilitative courses … their detention was arbitrary and therefore unlawful within the meaning of article 5(1)1 of the Convention."
"The court acknowledges that the IPP sentence was intended to keep in detention those perceived to be dangerous until they could show that they were no longer dangerous. The Government have suggested that, in these circumstances, a finding of a violation of article 5(1) as a result of the lack of access to appropriate treatment courses would allow the release of dangerous offenders who had not yet addressed their risk factors. The court accepts that where an indeterminate sentence has been imposed on an individual who was considered by the sentencing court to pose a significant risk to the public at large, it would be regrettable if his release were ordered before that risk could be reduced to a safe level."
LORD MANCE (with whom Lord Clarke, Lord Hughes and Lord Toulson agree)