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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 >> Sathanantham & Ors, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department & Anor [2016] EWHC 1781 (Admin) (21 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/1781.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1781 (Admin), [2016] WLR(D) 413 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of SUTHAKAR SATHANANTHAM VO BARZAI ALI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE |
Interested Party |
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Robin Tam QC, and Tom Poole (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 and 30 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edis :
4. Accommodation.
(1) The Secretary of State may provide, or arrange for the provision of, facilities for the accommodation of persons—
……………
(c) released on bail from detention under any provision of the Immigration Acts.
i) Ground 1: Breach of the statutory provisions. This ground contains two otherwise unrelated propositions:a) the current operation of the power is illegal because it is not consistent with the purpose for which the power was granted; andb) this interferes with the right of access to an independent court to review the justification for administrative detention.ii) Ground 3: Unacceptable risk of unfairness in bail applications by "high risk" applicants. Without a bail address the claimants cannot apply to the FTT for bail. This involves very similar considerations to the second part of Ground 1. I shall consider all of these arguments under this ground.
iii) Ground 5:
a) The delay systemically in providing bail addresses to high risk offenders is so grave that it is unlawful and unreasonable.b) The delay in providing a bail address in each of the three cases, individually, is such that the SSHD has self-evidently acted unlawfully in the three individual cases.
i) A duty to provide bail accommodation on request, if satisfied that the claimant will have nowhere to go unless this is done if bail is granted; orii) A duty to make reasonable efforts to provide bail accommodation on request, if satisfied that the claimant will have nowhere to go unless this is done if bail is granted; or
iii) A duty to determine any application for such accommodation fairly and rationally[2]; or
iv) No duty in respect of the s.4(1)(c) power at all.
The system
i) Initial Accommodation (IA), or Level 1 accommodation. This is usually hostel type accommodation which is short term. People stay in such accommodation while more suitable long term accommodation is found. This can be used for bail applicants, but is not suitable for offenders who present a high risk, as shown by a conviction for a violent, sexual or serious drug offence or a MAPPA category 1, 2 or 3, level 2 & 3[3]. This means that such people are handled outside the mainstream of the system. An early decision must be made that they are not suitable for Level 1 and whether Level 2 or 3 is appropriate. I will call this the "threshold decision".ii) Standard Dispersal Accommodation, or Level 2 accommodation. This is longer term accommodation which is provided by third party contractors to the SSHD. It may be shared accommodation and may be unsuitable for people who present a particular level of risk.
iii) Level 3 or Complex Bail Dispersal Accommodation. The UKVI s.4 Policy says that "in the rare event the applicant is assessed as being unsuitable for Standard Dispersal Accommodation Home Office case workers should assess whether Complex Bail Dispersal Accommodation is suitable". The UKVI s.4 Policy says that this will usually only be the case when the Offender Manager[4] has identified specific licence conditions which could not be met in Standard Dispersal Accommodation. This implies that Level 3 applicants will "usually" be subject to licence after release while still serving a prison sentence. In such cases, an arrangement will usually already be in place to regulate the offender once released from immigration detention, and that will include a restriction on where s/he can live. The accommodation provided under s.4 at Level 3 will usually be a single occupancy flat which means that the occupant does not present a risk to those with whom s/he shares premises. Its location must be suitable also, and properties near schools and parks will not be judged suitable for some offenders.
"If IA and Standard Dispersal Accommodation are assessed by the Home Office case worker as not being appropriate, and Complex Bail Accommodation which satisfies the accommodation requirements is not available, case workers should refuse the application on the basis that the Home Office is not in a position to provide the applicant with a suitable s.4 bail address within the cohort of accommodation available."
"There is only a very finite supply of Complex Bail Accommodation. In addition, this type of accommodation is more costly than Standard Dispersal Accommodation. As a result the Home Office caseworkers are expected to fully outline in the pro-forma why the use of this type of accommodation is required.
"If an applicant is assessed as being unsuitable for Standard Dispersal Accommodation and suitable Complex Bail Accommodation cannot be found, the s.4 Bail Team may refuse the application for a bail address under s 4(1)(c). Please note that any decision to refuse support may be challenged at an appeal to the Tribunals Service-Asylum Support and/or at Judicial Review at which the validity of accommodation recommendations made by Home Office Caseworkers must be substantiated."
"Occasionally, the Police may express concern or ask to be consulted about the location of where bail accommodation is offered. There is no requirement to ask the Police to approve bail accommodation, but every effort should be made to listen to their concerns and take appropriate action."
"To apply for bail a foreign national offender (FNO) must give an address to be granted bail to live at. Not all FNOs applying for bail require s.4 accommodation addresses, but where a bail application is made and no address is given on the prison licence, the FNO must be asked to complete a s.4 application form."
The evidence about the operation of the system since 2010
i) Slow processing of applications by UKVI and others involved.ii) The threshold decision as to the type of accommodation which was required was 6.61 weeks against a policy goal of 10 days. This involves the completion of the pro-forma by the Home Office caseworker and is the first stage since the COMPASS provider could not be asked to propose accommodation until this was done.
iii) There were delays by COMPASS providers. COMPASS contractors took an average of over three weeks to source a bail address, which is longer than the contractual requirement of, normally, 9 working days.
iv) Level 2 offer times averaged 25 weeks where NOMS approval was required and 8 weeks where licence checks were not required. This suggests that NOMS Offender Managers were taking over 4 months to perform their part of the process.
v) Reasons for risk attribution to applicants were not given which meant errors could not be challenged and corrected.
a) That the length of time between application and offer in Level 2 cases has worsened significantly over that time. The average time between application and offer in 2014 was 62 days, in 2015 84 days and in the short year to May 2016 it was 136 days. The number of offers made remained very approximately stable during 2014 and 2015 but fell sharply in 2016. Without further information it is not possible to assess whether the reduced number of offers in 2016 is a consequence of the slower processing of applications or a consequence of a reduced number of applications or a reduced number of suitable properties. All three factors, and others, may be at work.
b) The number of offers of Level 3 accommodation is very small. Statistical extrapolation from such a small dataset is not likely to be useful. Each case is a separate problem which requires a bespoke solution. Solutions are not likely to be easily found. This cohort is comprised largely of criminals who have been released from custodial sentences and whose deportation on public safety grounds is being attempted by the SSHD. It is likely to be very difficult to find accommodation for them which is regarded by all relevant agencies as safe. The figures show that the average time between application and offer was 91 days in 2014, 190 days in 2015 and 283 days in 2016. This, again, shows a slowing in process. It is not likely that the difficulty of locating accommodation is a major factor in the increase since that might be expected to be constant. If there has been a surge in the number of applications, the resources available for processing them may be stretched and this might lead to a slowing in the allocation of accommodation.
The three cases
Sathanantham
VO
Barzai Ali
Current status of claimants
The Claimants' submissions
Ground 1: the Padfield point
"Likewise, the statute does not contemplate, and proceeds on the basis that, if the applicant is assessed as eligible under s.4(1), the accommodation will be provided and as such is an entitlement: Salih v. SSHD [2003] EWHC 2273 (Admin) at [49]."
"Furthermore, although the hard cases policy defines eligibility for, rather than a right to, support, in practice all those who are eligible and claim section 4 accommodation receive it, and there is nothing to suggest that any factors are taken into account that are not stated in the policy itself. In other words, as in the case of Part VI support, eligibility is in practice treated as an entitlement."
Ground 3: the Bail Application
i) Sathanantham made 3 applications for bail in 2014 without success when he had no bail address. He had made no application at all after his application for s.4 accommodation in October 2014. He was released in May 2016 because his detention had become unlawful, in that his deportation could not be achieved within a reasonable period because of the lack of an ETD.ii) VO has never made a bail application.
iii) Ali made 2 applications, both unsuccessful. The second was on 25th January 2016 when he had been offered s.4 accommodation. He was released on the following day by the SSHD despite the failure of the application.
Ground 5: delay as a breach of a duty to act reasonably
The SSHD's submissions
Ground 1
Ground 3
Ground 5: delay
Discussion
Ground 1
Ground 3
Ground 5
"The court cannot however specify what resources must be devoted to administering the scheme, or what delay in general is lawful and what delay is not. A further consideration is that the court must avoid making a declaration that does not respond to changes in circumstances or the facts of individual cases."
"For the reasons that I have given the FTR are systemically unfair and unjust. The appeal must, therefore, be dismissed. The object of the SSHD in placing appeals in the fast track is the entirely laudable one of dealing with them quickly……….But the consequences for an asylum seeker of mistakes in the process are potentially disastrous. That is why section 22(4) of the 2007 Act recognises that justice and fairness should not be sacrificed on the altar of speed and efficiency….It is too heavily weighted in favour of [speed and efficiency] and needs to be adjusted. Precisely how that is done is a matter for the Tribunal Procedure Committee and Parliament."
"This would have enabled resources to have been concentrated more effectively, rather than on what often turned out to be nugatory work, since alternative addresses offered by COMPASS providers were often objectionable to either NOMS or the police……..The point at which it becomes clear that further attempts to identify satisfactory accommodation are unlikely to be successful, however, is in my view very difficult to assess."
"(e) reside permanently at an address approved by the supervising officer and obtain the prior permission of the supervising officer for any stay of one or more nights at a different address;"
Note 1 The Immigration and Asylum (Provision of Accommodation to Failed Asylum-Seekers) Regulations 2005 2005/930. [Back] Note 2 In submissions following the distribution of this judgment in draft an issue arose as to whether the duty should be expressed in this way (the preferred formulation of the SSHD) or whether it should read “fairly and reasonably”. For the purposes of the definition of a public law duty the difference between the two words is minimal and they are for practical purposes interchangeable. It is not a duty to ensure that decisions are taken by someone who is rational in a medical sense. It is a duty to take decisions in a way which is objectively reasonable or, in that sense, rational. My formulation of the duty should be understood in this way wherever it appears. [Back] Note 3 Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangement. The terms of such an arrangement may include a requirement that an offender lives in Approved Premises, formerly known as bail or probation hostels. [Back] Note 4 A person employed by NOMS, for which the Secretary of State for Justice is responsible. Now called a “Supervising Officer” this person is responsible for dealing with prisoners released on licence. [Back] Note 5 Commercial and Operational Managers Providing Asylum Support Services. The providers are each responsible for a geographical area. [Back] Note 6 In the case of Ali he was released with a restriction to an address which he says is not available to him with the result that he is street homeless. How this happened is a matter of dispute between him and the SSHD, see below. [Back] Note 7 This is what the evidence says. However the appropriate period would appear to have been 10 years, see Sexual Offences Act 2003 s.80. [Back] Note 8 See R (Lumba) v. SSHD [2012] 1 AC 245 [22] per Lord Dyson JSC for the statement of these 4 principles. [Back]