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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for the Home Department v Smith [2022] EWCA Civ 1445 (02 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1445.html Cite as: [2023] 1 WLR 637, [2022] EWCA Civ 1445, [2022] WLR(D) 426 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION
MR JUSTICE JAY, UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE PITT, MRS J BATTLEY
SC/169/2020
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
LORD JUSTICE DINGEMANS
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LISA SMITH |
Respondent |
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Robin Tam KC and Natasha Barnes (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Appellant Secretary of State
Hearing date: 27 October 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
"(1) The relevant law officer may appoint a person to represent the interests of an appellant in any proceedings before the Special Immigration Appeals Commission from which the appellant and any legal representative of his are excluded.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) above, the relevant law officer is—
(a) in relation to proceedings before the Commission in England and Wales, the Attorney General,
(b) in relation to proceedings before the Commission in Scotland, the Lord Advocate, and
(c) in relation to proceedings before the Commission in Northern Ireland, the Advocate General for Northern Ireland.
(3) A person appointed under subsection (1) above—
(a) if appointed for the purposes of proceedings in England and Wales, shall have a general qualification for the purposes of section 71 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990,
(b) if appointed for the purposes of proceedings in Scotland, shall be
(i) an advocate, or
(ii) a solicitor who has by virtue of section 25A of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980 rights of audience in the Court of Session and the High Court of Justiciary, and
(c) if appointed for the purposes of proceedings in Northern Ireland, shall be a member of the Bar of Northern Ireland.
(4) A person appointed under subsection (1) above shall not be responsible to the person whose interests he is appointed to represent."
As I understand it the office of Advocate General for Northern Ireland is occupied by HM Attorney General (of England and Wales) ex officio.
"(1) The appellant may act in person or be represented by—
(a) a person having a qualification referred to in section 6(3) of the 1997 Act;
…
(c) with the leave of the Commission, any other person, provided that the person referred to in sub-paragraph (a) or (c) is not prohibited from providing immigration services by section 84 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999.
(2) The Secretary of State and the United Kingdom Representative may be represented by any person authorised by them to act on their behalf."
Rule 34 deals with the appointment of the special advocate. Its terms are not material for present purposes.
"23. I begin with the plain words of s. 6(2) and (3), which deal with the appointment of special advocates. These subsections rely on a distinction between "proceedings before the Commission in England and Wales", "proceedings before the Commission in Scotland" and "proceedings before the Commission in Northern Ireland". Applying their ordinary meaning, these words distinguish between proceedings by reference to the part of the UK where the Commission is sitting, not to some broader concept such as the place with which the proceedings have the closest connection. Paragraph 4 of Schedule 1 to the 1997 Act provides that the Commission may sit in such places as the Lord Chancellor may direct. To date, the Lord Chancellor has not directed that the Commission should sit in any place outside England and Wales, which means that these and all other proceedings to date are and have been "proceedings before the Commission in England and Wales."
24. If there were any doubt about the proper construction of s. 6(2)-(3), those provisions must in my judgment be read together with s. 7, which deals with appeals. Here, the wording is, if anything, even clearer. It provides that the "appropriate appeal court" is the Court of Appeal of England and Wales in cases where the determination appealed from is "made by the Commission in England and Wales". This language very clearly fixes on the place where the Commission members are sitting when they make their determination as the deciding factor.
25. It makes sense that the special advocate appointed to appear before the Commission should be someone who is entitled as of right to appear before the appropriate appeal court. If the special advocate could not appear on appeal, particular practical difficulties would ensue. A new special advocate or advocates would have to be appointed and they would have to acquaint themselves with the open and closed material. This might inevitably give rise to delay and would certainly be wasteful of costs, which are met by the Crown. Unless there had been a timeconsuming handover process, the new special advocates would inevitably be less well-placed than the original ones to assist the appeal court in understanding how the decisions taken in the closed part of the proceedings on matters such as disclosure.
26. All these considerations make it likely that Parliament intended a simple delineation of proceedings based on the physical location where those proceedings take place. Although the wording used in s. 6(2)-(3) is not identical with that used in s. 7, Parliament appears to have assumed that, if proceedings take place before the Commission in England and Wales, that is where the Commission will make its decision and any appeal will lie to the Court of Appeal of England and Wales. In that case, the relevant law officer for the purpose of appointing a special advocate is the Attorney General for England and Wales (s. 6(2)(a)) and the person appointed must have a general qualification for the purposes of s. 71 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 (s. 6(3)(a))." [emphasis added]
"7 – Appeals from the Commission
(1) Where the Special Immigration Appeals Commission has made the final determination of an appeal any party to the appeal may bring a further appeal to the appropriate appeal court on any question of law material to that determination.
...
(2) An appeal under this section may be brought only with the leave of the Commission, or if such leave is refused, with the leave of the appropriate appeal court.
(3) In this section ... the appropriate appeal court" means –
a) in relation to a determination made by the Commission in England and Wales, the Court of Appeal;
b) in relation to a determination made by the Commssion in Scotland, the Court of Session;
c) in relation to a determination made by the Commission in Northern Ireland, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland."
"In my opinion the facts (1) that the petitioner was resident in Scotland at the time when the determinations were made, (2) that their harmful effects were liable to be felt by him in Scotland and (3) that the determinations were made in the exercise of a statutory jurisdiction which extends throughout the United Kingdom, taken together, indicate that there is a sufficient connection with Scotland for the supervisory jurisdiction to be exercised. I would repel the plea of no jurisdiction."
"100. In the present case, the mere fact that the Vice President of the Appeal Tribunal was sitting in London when he refused Mr Tehrani's application for leave to appeal does not mean that his decision is the decision of an English tribunal. The Appeal Tribunal was the creature of the 1999 Act which extends to the whole of the United Kingdom. Under para 6(1) of Schedule 2 to that Act, the Tribunal had to sit anywhere that the Lord Chancellor directed. Until 2002, it was indeed in the habit of sitting outside London - in Cardiff and in Glasgow, for instance - when that was convenient to the parties and their advisers. In 2002, in order to save time and to improve the efficiency of its operations, the tribunal adopted the practice of sitting in London and using video links to take submissions from representatives in other centres, such as Glasgow. But, equally, in theory at least, the tribunal could have set up its main offices in, say, Aberystwyth or Aberdeen and conducted the bulk of its hearings by video link to centres in England. However it arranged its operations and wherever it sat, the Appeal Tribunal remained the same and the law which it applied remained exactly the same. It was, in essence, a United Kingdom body, capable of sitting throughout the United Kingdom and applying exactly the same law throughout the United Kingdom based on a statute extending to the whole of the United Kingdom. Since the law applied by the Appeal Tribunal is just as much part of the law of Scotland as part of the law of England, when called upon to do so, the Court of Session is fully equipped to carry out the core function of judicial review, which is to ensure that the decision-maker acts within, and in accordance with, his legal powers. In that situation it would be much too crude an approach for the Court of Session to regard the Appeal Tribunal as a foreign tribunal for purposes of judicial review simply because it took a decision in London or Cardiff, but as a Scottish tribunal, within the scope of the court's jurisdiction, simply because it took a decision in Glasgow."
101. If it would be wrong to rely simply on the place where the Appeal Tribunal took its decision as determining the jurisdiction of the Court of Session, it would be equally wrong to go to the opposite extreme and to assert that in all cases all the United Kingdom courts enjoy concurrent jurisdiction to review the decisions of the tribunal just because the tribunal could sit and apply the same law in all parts of the United Kingdom. So, for instance, where the asylum seeker was given limited leave to enter at an English port, was living in England, appealed to an adjudicator sitting in England, was refused leave to appeal by the Appeal Tribunal in England and was liable to be removed from England, there would be no basis for saying that the Court of Session had power to interfere in such wholly English proceedings by judicially reviewing the decision of the Appeal Tribunal."
"i) In the present case, the Respondent is an Irish national who lives very close to the Irish border.
ii) The Respondent has sought to instruct Northern Irish lawyers. Some of those lawyers have appeared at SIAC while physically located in Northern Ireland.
iii) The connection between Northern Ireland and the proceedings is abundantly clear from SIAC's judgment, which required consideration of the Good Friday Agreement, the right of those in Northern Ireland to exercise their rights of self-identification and the significance of the oath of allegiance to the crown for those who have to register as British citizens.
iv) SIAC had to determine an issue of Northern Irish law when it made the costs order."
Submissions for the Secretary of State
Discussion
"(a) if the appeal is from the determination of an adjudicator made in Scotland, the Court of Session; and
(b) in any other case, the Court of Appeal."
Since the statute was entirely prescriptive the previous decision of this court in Mr Gardi's case had to be set aside.
Lady Justice Nicola Davies:
Lord Justice Dingemans: