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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 >> Mohamed, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWHC 3547 (Admin) (19 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/3547.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3547 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the Application of ALI ABUBAKAR MOHAMED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Naomi Parsons (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 7 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Andrew Henshaw QC:
(3) Application to the present case
(C) GROUND 2: UNLAWFUL DETENTION
(4) Provision of monthly reports
(5) Risk of reoffending and risk of harm to the public
(6) The Claimant's 'character, conduct or associations'
(7) Alleged failure to apply policy: EIG paras 5.3.A and 55.3.1
(A) INTRODUCTION
i) that there has been unlawful delay in determining his application made in 2005 for indefinite leave to remain ("ILR") and his asylum claim made in 2015 ("Ground 1"), and
ii) that his detention since 22 January 2018 has been unlawful ("Ground 2").
i) a mandatory order requiring the Defendant to determine the Claimant's ILR application and asylum claim within 28 days or such other period as the court considers reasonable;
ii) a declaration that his continuing detention is unlawful by virtue of being in breach of common law, of the Defendant's published policies and of Article 5 of the ECHR;
iii) damages for the manifestly excessive delay in determining his ILR application; and
iv) damages for unlawful detention including aggravated and exemplary damages.
(B) GROUND 1: UNLAWFUL DELAY
(1) Facts
"… It may be helpful if I explain that in fairness to all those with outstanding applications, cases are normally dealt with in turn unless there are compelling, compassionate or other exceptional reasons for doing otherwise… The UKBA do consider expediting applications if there are sufficient compassionate circumstances to warrant doing so, but the onus is on the applicant to provide documentary evidence to support such a request. In Master Mohamed's case, however, it was decided that there appeared to be insufficient grounds to take his application out of turn. It is noted that he is now at secondary school and would like his status to be the same as that of his school friends, however, he is not required to leave the United Kingdom whilst his application is under consideration and this is not considered to be a sufficient reason to treat his application exceptionally."
"you struck someone in the back with a blade between 9 and 12 inches long… that knife in the back of a young man could so easily have caused death… I am entirely satisfied that this is a Category 1 offence. Great harm was caused. As far as higher culpability is concerned, of course the use of that dreadful weapon is a huge aggravating factor. Its use in that way could only have risked death. You deliberately, by the choice of that weapon, caused more harm that was necessarily to be caused even by the use of an ordinary knife, and of course you did this when you were surrounded by others… If you were an adult, if you were 21 or 22, then this offence, following a full trial would justify a sentence… of 13 years' imprisonment".
"[The firearms offences] are … enormously serious offences. So much so that Parliament has decided that there should be a minimum sentence imposed upon a defendant… a sentence of five years… I am obviously concerned in your case that the firearm was of a professional military grade, that it had ammunition loaded within the firearm and there was further ammunition which was matched for use with that firearm. So that takes the offence up a notch. … I accept on your basis of plea, you were holding the firearm and ammunition for another in return for an ounce of cannabis, … you knew, or must have known, that it was either that you were holding cannabis or a firearm. But in the circumstances of this case the Crown very fairly have said the feel of it might well have been equally consistent with it being cannabis. So I take that into account as well.
But I must look at your history and your past history is not good… You are aged only 19 now but you have a conviction for wounding with intent. … You are building a substantial criminal record and you now have a history of violence and couple with that a history now of having a firearm and ammunition. It is now an appalling record…"
(2) Law and Policies
"The Secretary of State shall ensure that a decision is taken on each application for asylum as soon as possible, without prejudice to an adequate and complete examination.
Where a decision on an application for asylum cannot be taken within six months of the date it was recorded the Secretary of State shall either:
(a) inform the Applicant of the delay; or
(b) if the Applicant has made a specific written request for it, provide information on the timeframe within which the decision on their application is to be expected. The provision of such information shall not oblige the Secretary of State to take a decision within the stipulated time-frame."
"Your application will usually be decided within 6 months. It may take longer if it's complicated, for example:
- your supporting documents need to be verified
- you need to attend more interviews
- your personal circumstances need to be checked, for example because you have a criminal conviction or you're currently being prosecuted."
"The Act does not lay down specific time-limits for the handling of asylum applications. Delay may work in different ways for different groups: advantageous for some, disadvantageous for others. No doubt it is implicit in the statute that applications should be dealt with within "a reasonable time". That says little in itself. It is a flexible concept, allowing scope for variation depending not only on the volume of applications and available resources to deal with them, but also on differences in the circumstances and needs of different groups of asylum seekers. But (as was recognised by the White Paper) in resolving such competing demands fairness and consistency are also vital considerations."
[i] "This must mean that it is incumbent on the defendant to ensure that one who claims to be a refugee must have his claim dealt with within a reasonable time so that, if it is established, his Convention rights can be exercised. This was recognised by the Court of Appeal in Secretary of State for the Home Department v S [2007] EWCA Civ 546" (§ 7). Collins J quoted the passage from that case set out in § 27 above.
[ii] "The point being made is that what is reasonable will depend on the circumstances. It is not possible for the court to say that a particular period of time should be the limit of what is reasonable. In MM v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] UKIAT 00763, the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal was faced with a not particularly unusual case where a claimant who had fled Kosovo in 1998 had not had his asylum claim dealt with until 2005. At paragraph 7, the Tribunal through Mr Freeman said:—
"The reasonable time-limits for a decision on an asylum claim has been taken in a number of cases by the Tribunal as 12 months."
The appeal related to an initial claim to asylum but, even so, I do not think that 12 months should be regarded as any sort of bench mark. No doubt, delays of 12 months or more in dealing with an initial claim to asylum may well need an explanation, but, provided the approach of the defendant was based on a policy which was fair and applied consistently, such delays could not be regarded as unlawful." (§ 8)
[iii] "Here the question is whether the delay was unlawful. It can only be regarded as unlawful if it fails the Wednesbury test and is shown to result from actions or inactions which can be regarded as irrational. Accordingly, I do not think that the approach should be different from that indicated as appropriate in considering an alleged breach of the reasonable time requirement in Article 6(1). What may be regarded as undesirable or a failure to reach the best standards is not unlawful. Resources can be taken into account in considering whether a decision has been made within a reasonable time, but (assuming the threshold has been crossed) the defendant must produce some material to show that the manner in which he has decided to deal with the relevant claims and the resources put into the exercise are reasonable. That does not mean that the court should determine for itself whether a different and perhaps better approach might have existed. That is not the court's function. But the court can and must consider whether what has produced the delay has resulted from a rational system. If unacceptable delays have resulted, they cannot be excused by a claim that sufficient resources were not available. But in deciding whether the delays are unacceptable, the court must recognise that resources are not infinite and that it is for the defendant and not for the court to determine how those resources should be applied to fund the various matters for which he is responsible." (§ 11)
[iv] "…claims such as these based on delay are unlikely, save in very exceptional circumstances, to succeed and are likely to be regarded as unarguable. It is only if the delay is so excessive as to be regarded as manifestly unreasonable and to fall outside any proper application of the policy or if the claimant is suffering some particular detriment which the Home Office has failed to alleviate that a claim might be entertained by the court." (§ 30)
"… In my judgment, when all the facts of the case and the context in which the delay arises are considered in the round, it can properly be said that there has been an unlawful delay. I have assessed this by applying the high threshold required for Wednesbury unreasonableness. ...
In making this finding I have borne in mind the warning from Collins J in FH at [30] that claims such as the ones he was dealing with are unlikely, save in exceptional circumstances, to succeed. However, as observed by Wyn Williams J in MJ at [34], the judgment of Collins J is specific to the type of claims which he was considering. Collins J made it clear in his judgment that a distinction is to be drawn between incomplete asylum claims and initial claims. Further, none of the claims before Collins J obviously involved unaccompanied minors. In any event I am satisfied that the delay is so excessive as to be regarded as manifestly and Wednesbury unreasonable when the following are considered together: (i) there has been prima facie delay that can properly be described as lengthy or excessive; (ii) the Applicant has been as at the date of his application and continues to be a minor; (iii) his best interests ought to have been treated as a primary consideration when making the decision to place his case on "hold" and the Respondent has been unable to point to any evidence that this has been done at any stage; (iv) there is no evidence to support the submission that the Applicant's case gives rise to complexities and on the contrary it appears to me to be a straightforward asylum claim; (v) the explanations provided by the Respondent for the delay have been deficient and in so far as the Respondent relies upon resources and the large number of applicants to consider, he has failed to provide any evidence to show that the manner in which he has decided to deal with the asylum claims of the "Purnia family children" i.e. by placing them on "hold" and the resources put into the exercise, are reasonable; (vi) there is no evidence that the Respondent has made any meaningful attempt to act upon his own internal timeframes and / or communicate a timeframe for the determination of his asylum claim to the Applicant; (vii) the impact of delay on this Applicant. …" (§§ 61-62)
"106. Ms Anderson [counsel for the Secretary of State] accepted before us that the question of "liability" in cases of this type could properly be framed as it was by Collins J in R (FH & ors.) v SSHD [2007] EWHC 1571 (Admin) at [30] and would turn upon whether "… the delay [was] so excessive as to be regarded as manifestly unreasonable and to fall outside any proper application of the policy or if the claimant is suffering some particular detriment which the Home Office has failed to alleviate…". Both Anufrijeva and FH were quoted by the parties in their pleadings/skeleton arguments before the judge."
"131. I turn to the wider element of this ground of appeal, namely that maladministration alone does not found a claim to substantial damages.
132. I have already noted Ms Anderson's acknowledgement before us that "manifestly excessive" delay and/or delay causing "particular detriment" to the victim can properly give rise to such a claim, as was also accepted in paragraph 16b. of the grounds of appeal."
"(1) The approach to awarding damages for breach of Article 8 rights should be no less liberal than those applied by the ECtHR;
(2) The applicant should be put, so far as possible, in the same position as if his rights had not been infringed;
(3) There is a disinclination to recognise that maladministration resulting in delay engages article 8 at all, "unless this has led to serious consequences";
(4) Awards of damages in tort indicated by the Judicial Studies Board (as it then was) and by the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board and the Ombudsman may provide "rough guidance";
(5) There are good reasons why, where breach arises from maladministration, damages should be modest;
(6) However, awards should not be minimal as this would undermine the respect for Convention rights, but a "restrained or moderate approach to quantum would provide the necessary degree of encouragement to public authorities…"" (§ 134)
"138. In my judgment, without needing to endorse every finding of the judge as to what would have been the consequences of an earlier resolution of the respondents' 2004 applications, it seems to me that the judge was fully entitled to find that what happened in this case crossed the threshold of "mere" maladministration and into "manifestly excessive" delay and that a trial of the causation and other damages issues might give rise to an award of significantly more than "nominal" compensation. I make no decision whether that would be the result or not; I find that the judge was right to make the finding of "liability" and to direct a further trial of the compensation claims."
"especially at first instance, courts dealing with claims for damages for maladministration should adopt a broad-brush approach. Where there is no pecuniary loss involved, the question whether the other remedies that have been granted to a successful complainant are sufficient to vindicate the right that has been infringed, taking into account the complainant's own responsibility for what has occurred, should be decided without a close examination of the authorities or an extensive and prolonged examination of the facts. In many cases the seriousness of the maladministration and whether there is a need for damages should be capable of being ascertained by an examination of the correspondence and the witness statements" (§ 65)
i) the scale and manner of violation can be taken into account (citing Scorey & Eicke, Human Rights Damages, Principles and Practice, para A2-041 and Aksoy v Turkey (1996) 23 EHRR 553, where the applicant had been detained, tortured and finally released without charge); and
ii) the manner in which the violation took place has in some cases been considered sufficiently serious to lead the ECtHR to award damages (e.g. in Halford v United Kingdom (1997) 24 EHRR 523 § 76, where the ECtHR considered the police force's surveillances of the applicant's telephone, to obtain information regarding a sex discrimination claim she was pursuing in the employment tribunal, to be a serious infringement of her rights particularly in the light of the improper use to which the police wished to put the material obtained).
(3) Application to the present case
i) it commenced when the Claimant was a child, about 9 years old;
ii) during the period of the delay the Claimant has developed close ties and bonds with his family including his siblings and stepmother;
iii) following his release from prison on 17 January 2014, the Claimant was made subject to a restriction on employment and on claiming state benefit, and committed the most recent offence – although the commission of that offence cannot be excused – through an attempt to obtain funds and support himself. The Claimant in his witness statement dated 4 May 2018 explains that the uncertainty about his immigration status meant he could not take holidays abroad with his family, and affected his relationship with his girlfriend; he says he "stayed home alone and got wrong companies and got involved with unacceptable activities and these resulted [in] criminal convictions"; and
iv) whilst delay of itself is 'no basis' for obtaining leave to remain (SH (Iran)), the court is entitled to conclude on the balance of probabilities that but for the delay the Claimant would have been granted ILR in line with his father.
i) A decision on the Claimant's ILR claim is imminent.
ii) The delay from 2005 to 2008 arose as a result of the high volume of casework experienced by the Defendant, as indicated earlier and as explained to Harry Cohen MP.
iii) The Claimant's claim was lodged at a time when there were a large number of applications. Absent any compassionate circumstances, the Claimant's claim fell to be considered in turn.
iv) Further delays arose as a result of the Claimant's offending, which in turn led to deportation proceedings. Deportation was considered from February 2013, during which time there was no separate progress on the ILR application. The ILR application could not be processed independently of or in isolation to the deportation proceedings; at the very least, the Claimant's offending made the ILR application significantly more complicated.
i) there is no evidence in support of the submissions made about case volumes from 2005 to 2008;
ii) there is no apparent reason to have regarded the Claimant's case as complex, at least prior to his first conviction in 2012 (by when the application had been outstanding for 7 years), other than the Defendant's own error referred to in §5 above, which cannot amount to a justification for delay;
iii) the Defendant offers no explanation at all for the lack of activity from 2008 to 2012 (when the Claimant first offended): a period of four years, which even by itself might well be regarded as amounting to an unlawful delay;
iv) there is no evidence to explain how the fact that deportation was under consideration after the Claimant's convictions in 2012 and 2015 meant that the ILR decision had still not been taken by November 2018; and
v) the overall period of more than 13 years since the application was made, in the absence of compelling explanations (which have not been provided) must be regarded as an excessive delay amounting to an unlawful failure to deal with the Claimant's application.
i) It was common ground that even if the Claimant had obtained ILR in or shortly after 2005, he would still have been liable to deportation after the offences he committed in 2012 and 2015. Indeed, under section 5(1) of the Immigration Act 1971 a deportation order against a person invalidates any leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom granted given him before the deportation order is made or while it is in force.
ii) Even if there were some possible causal link between the delay in dealing with the ILR application and the Claimant's offending in 2011/12 and 2015, the proximate cause of his convictions was his own decisions about how to respond to the situation in which he found himself. It would be unrealistic to envisage the Defendant being held liable in damages on that basis.
iii) The failure to deal with ILR application over such a long period may have affected the Claimant's wellbeing and family/social relationships, and his evidence is that it did. However, those effects do not arguably rise to the level of severity necessary to found a damages claim for breach of Article 8.
iv) It was not suggested that the rules in relation to eligibility for ILR have in any way changed adversely to the Claimant during the period for which his application has been outstanding.
v) There is no reason to believe that the Defendant deliberately set out to infringe the Claimant's rights.
vi) In all the circumstances, the delay cannot be said to have had sufficiently severe consequences, or to have occurred in such a way, as to give rise to an arguable case for damages.
i) The Claimant's case was allocated to a case worker in May 2015 to consider deportation on the basis of the Claimant's previous offending, but the deportation process was put on hold pending the determination of the asylum claim.
ii) After the screening interview on 22 January 2015, an asylum interview was scheduled for 3 June 2015 but did not proceed as the Claimant was by then in custody following his arrest for firearms offences.
iii) Following the Claimant's release on 22 January 2018 into immigration detention, matters moved reasonably swiftly, in that a further screening interview took place on 20 April 2018, and the substantive asylum interview scheduled for 11 May 2018 was rescheduled only as a result of the Claimant's interim relief application.
iv) The substantive interview took place on 31 July 2018.
v) A decision was (at the date of the hearing before me) imminent.
vi) As with the ILR application, the Defendant accepts that the overall delay is on its face excessive but submits that in the circumstances it was not unlawful, and in any event does not justify an award of damages.
(C) GROUND 2: UNLAWFUL DETENTION
i) there was no lawful basis for detention;
ii) the Defendant failed to provide the Claimant with monthly detention reports;
iii) the Defendant's assessment that the Claimant posed a high risk of harm to the public was irrational;
iv) the Defendant's assessment that the Claimant's 'character, conduct or associations' was a basis for continued detention was irrational;
v) the Defendant failed to apply relevant policy (EIG §§ 5.3.A and 55.3.1); and
vi) the Defendant made no attempt to obtain an Emergency Travel Document.
(1) Legal context
"1. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person.
…
4. 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.
5. Everyone who has been the victim of arrest or detention in contravention of the provisions of this Article shall have an enforceable right to compensation."
"Detention
A person who has served a period of imprisonment may be detained under the authority of the Secretary of State–
(a) while the Secretary of State considers whether section 32(5) applies, and
(b) where the Secretary of State thinks that section 32(5) applies, pending the making of the deportation order."
"… The requirements of the 1971 Act and the Hardial Singh principles are not the only applicable "law". Indeed, as Mr Fordham QC points out, the Hardial Singh principles reflect the basic public law duties to act consistently with the statutory purpose (Padfield v Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [1968] AC 997, 1030 b-d) and reasonably in the Wednesbury sense: Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corpn [1948] 1 KB 223. But they are not exhaustive. If they were exhaustive, there could be no room for the public law duty of adherence to published policy, which was rightly acknowledged by the Court of Appeal at paras 51, 52 and 58 of their judgment. …" (§ 30)
"…A purported lawful authority to detain may be impugned either because the defendant acted in excess of jurisdiction (in the narrow sense of jurisdiction) or because such jurisdiction was wrongly exercised. Anisminic Ltd v Foreign Compensation Commission [1969] 2 AC 147 established that both species of error render an executive act ultra vires, unlawful and a nullity. In the present context, there is in principle no difference between (i) a detention which is unlawful because there was no statutory power to detain and (ii) a detention which is unlawful because the decision to detain, although authorised by statute, was made in breach of a rule of public law. For example, if the decision to detain is unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense, it is unlawful and a nullity. …" (§ 66)
"…It is not every breach of public law that is sufficient to give rise to a cause of action in false imprisonment. In the present context, the breach of public law must bear on and be relevant to the decision to detain. Thus, for example, a decision to detain made by an official of a different grade from that specified in a detention policy would not found a claim in false imprisonment. Nor too would a decision to detain a person under conditions different from those described in the policy. Errors of this kind do not bear on the decision to detain. They are not capable of affecting the decision to detain or not to detain." (§ 68)
"To summarise, therefore, in cases such as these, all that the claimant has to do is to prove that he was detained. The Secretary of State must prove that the detention was justified in law. She cannot do this by showing that, although the decision to detain was tainted by public law error in the sense that I have described, a decision to detain free from error could and would have been made." (§ 88)[1]
"I can see that at first sight it might seem counter-intuitive to hold that the tort of false imprisonment is committed by the unlawful exercise of the power to detain in circumstances where it is certain that the claimant could and would have been detained if the power had been exercised lawfully. But the ingredients of the tort are clear. There must be a detention and the absence of lawful authority to justify it. Where the detainer is a public authority, it must have the power to detain and the power must be lawfully exercised. Where the power has not been lawfully exercised, it is nothing to the point that it could have been lawfully exercised. If the power could and would have been lawfully exercised, that is a powerful reason for concluding that the detainee has suffered no loss and is entitled to no more than nominal damages. But that is not a reason for holding that the tort has not been committed" (Lumba § 71 per Lord Dyson)
(i) The Secretary of State must intend to deport the person and can only use the power to detain for that purpose.
(ii) The deportee may only be detained for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances.
(iii) If, before the expiry of the reasonable period, it becomes apparent that the Secretary of State will not be able to effect deportation within that reasonable period, he should not seek to exercise the power of detention.
(iv) The Secretary of State should act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal.
"It is not possible or desirable to produce an exhaustive list of all the circumstances that are or may be relevant to the question of how long it is reasonable for the Secretary of State to detain a person pending deportation pursuant to paragraph 2(3) of Schedule 3 to the Immigration Act 1971. But in my view they include at least: the length of the period of detention; the nature of the obstacles which stand in the path of the Secretary of State preventing a deportation; the diligence, speed and effectiveness of the steps taken by the Secretary of State to surmount such obstacles; the conditions in which the detained person is being kept; the effect of detention on him and his family; the risk that if he is released from detention he will abscond; and the danger that, if released, he will commit criminal offences."
"37 The Secretary of State acting through his officials has to determine whether the period of detention is reasonable when deciding whether or not to continue the detention, subject to the right of any detainee to apply for bail. It is a judgment which has to be made on the evidence and in the circumstances as appear to the officials in each case.
38 There is no period of time which is considered long or short. There is no fixed period where particular factors may require special reasons to make continued detention reasonable.
39 McFarlane LJ said in R (JS (Sudan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWCA Civ 1378 at paragraphs 50-51 that fixing a temporal yardstick might cause the courts to accept periods of detention that could not be justified on the facts of a particular case. In R (NAB) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWHC 3137 (Admin) Irwin J made clear at paragraphs 77-80 that a tariff would be repugnant and wrong. He added:
"It would be wise for those preparing legally for such cases to abandon the attempt to ask the courts to set such a tariff by a review of the different periods established in different cases""
"…The risks of absconding and re-offending are always of paramount importance, since if a person absconds, he will frustrate the deportation for which purpose he was detained in the first place."
"107 … It seems to me that it is possible to construe the power to detain either (more narrowly) as a power which may only be exercised to further the object of facilitating a deportation, or (more broadly) as a power which may also be exercised to further the object which it is sought to achieve by a deportation, namely, in the present case, that of removing an offender whose presence is not conducive to the public good. The distinction between these two objects was clearly drawn by the Court of Appeal in R (A) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 804. Toulson LJ said, at para 55:
"A risk of offending if the person is not detained is an additional relevant factor, the strength of which would depend on the magnitude of the risk, by which I include both the likelihood of it occurring and the potential gravity of the consequences. Mr Drabble submitted that the purpose of the power of detention was not for the protection of public safety. In my view that is over-simplistic. The purpose of the power of deportation is to remove a person who is not entitled to be in the United Kingdom and whose continued presence would not be conducive to the public good. If the reason why his presence would not be conducive to the public good is because of a propensity to commit serious offences, protection of the public from that risk is the purpose of the deportation order and must be a relevant consideration when determining the reasonableness of detaining him pending his removal or departure."
Para 78 of Keene LJ's judgment is to similar effect.
108 I acknowledge that the principle that statutory powers should be interpreted in a way which is least restrictive of liberty if that is possible would tend to support the narrower interpretation. But I think that the Court of Appeal was right in A's case to adopt the interpretation which gives effect to the purpose underlying the power to deport and which the power to detain is intended to facilitate. Perhaps a simpler way of reaching the same conclusion is to say, as Simon Brown LJ said in I's case at para 29, that the period which is reasonable will depend on the circumstances of the particular case and the likelihood or otherwise of the detainee reoffending is "an obviously relevant circumstance".
109 But the risk of reoffending is a relevant factor even if the appellants are right in saying that it is relevant only when there is also a risk of absconding. As Lord Rodger of Earlsferry JSC pointed out in argument, if a person re-offends there is a risk that he will abscond so as to evade arrest or if he is arrested that he will be prosecuted and receive a custodial sentence. Either way, his reoffending will impede his deportation."
"181 The absconding risk is important because a former detainee who absconds will be frustrating the public interest in favour of his deportation. The risk of reoffending is relevant but it must be less important, because the purpose of immigration detention is not to provide indirect facilitation to the separate policies and objects of the criminal law."
"64 … the approach of Toulson LJ in A (Somalia) seems to me to be particularly helpful when considering the issues raised here about the prospect of securing the claimant's removal to Somaliland. As Toulson LJ said, there must be a "sufficient prospect" of removal to warrant continued detention, having regard to all the other circumstances of the case (see [32] above). What is sufficient will necessarily depend on the weight of the other factors: it is a question of balance in each case.
65 I do not read the judgment of Mitting J in R (A and Others) v Secretary of State for the Home Department as laying down a legal requirement that in order to maintain detention the Secretary of State must be able to identify a finite time by which, or period within which, removal can reasonably be expected to be effected. That would be to add an unwarranted gloss to the established principles. ... Of course, if a finite time can be identified, it is likely to have an important effect on the balancing exercise: a soundly based expectation that removal can be effected within, say, two weeks will weigh heavily in favour of continued detention pending such removal, whereas an expectation that removal will not occur for, say, a further two years will weigh heavily against continued detention. There can, however, be a realistic prospect of removal without it being possible to specify or predict the date by which, or period within which, removal can reasonably be expected to occur and without any certainty that removal will occur at all. Again, the extent of certainty or uncertainty as to whether and when removal can be effected will affect the balancing exercise. There must be a sufficient prospect of removal to warrant continued detention when account is taken of all other relevant factors. Thus in A (Somalia) itself there was "some prospect of the Home Secretary being able to carry out enforced removal, although there was no way of predicting with confidence when this might be" (per Toulson LJ at para 58); and that was held to be a sufficient prospect to justify detention for a period of some four years when regard was had to other relevant factors, including in particular the high risk of absconding and of serious re-offending if A were released."
"60 My conclusion as to the disposal of this appeal would be the same whether it is for the court to decide if A's detention for the period in question was reasonably necessary or whether the court's role is limited to reviewing on a narrower basis the reasonableness of the Home Secretary's decision to exercise his power of detention during that period.
61 Mr Giffin advanced a subtle argument in support of the latter, based on certain passages in Tan Te Lam and Khadir, although I am not entirely clear what is the suggested scope of the court's power of review. Mr Giffin said that the test would be broader than whether the Home Secretary's decision was Wednesbury unreasonable and would involve "strict scrutiny", but it is less clear what strict scrutiny would connote in this type of case.
62 I intend no disrespect by not going into the refinements of Mr Giffin's argument but dealing with the matter on a broader basis. Where the court is concerned with the legality of administrative detention, I do not consider that the scope of its responsibility should be determined by or involve subtle distinctions. It must be for the court to determine the legal boundaries of administrative detention. There may be incidental questions of fact which the court may recognise that the Home Secretary is better placed to decide than itself, and the court will no doubt take such account of the Home Secretary's views as may seem proper. Ultimately, however, it must be for the court to decide what is the scope of the power of detention, and whether it was lawfully exercised, those two questions being often inextricably interlinked. In my judgment, that is the responsibility of the court at common law and does not depend on the Human (although Human Rights Act jurisprudence would tend in the same direction)."
"176 In unlawful detention cases, the court does not conduct a Wednesbury review but assumes the role of primary decision maker: see R(A) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 804 , per Toulson LJ at paragraph 90. The court can take into account any facts that were known to the Defendant at the time, even if they did not feature in the reasons for detention that were furnished: see R(MS) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWCA Civ 938. Hindsight is no part of the exercise: see R(Fardous) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWCA Civ 931. The weight to be given to the Defendant's view is a matter for the court, although certain issues are more within the expertise of the executive than the judiciary, for example the progress of diplomatic negotiations and the attitude of other countries to accepting returnees. I would add that in my judgment the Defendant knows more than judges sitting in this jurisdiction about the absconding risk of immigration detainees."
(2) Policy
"Detention reviews and up-date of claim
Every detained person will be provided, by the Secretary of State, with written reasons for his detention at the time of his initial detention, and thereafter monthly."
"55.1.2 Criminal casework cases
…
In any case in which the criteria for considering deportation action (the 'deportation criteria') are met, the risk of re-offending and the particular risk of absconding should be weighed against the presumption in favour of immigration bail. Due to the clear imperative to protect the public from harm from a person whose criminal record is sufficiently serious as to satisfy the deportation criteria, and/or because of the likely consequence of such a criminal record for the assessment of the risk that such a person will abscond, in many cases this is likely to result in the conclusion that the person should be detained, provided detention is, and continues to be, lawful. However, any such conclusion can be reached only if the presumption of immigration bail is displaced after an assessment of the need to detain in the light of the risk of re-offending and/or the risk of absconding."
"Criminal casework cases
"In looking at the types of factors which might make further detention unlawful, case owners should have regard to 55.1.4, 55.3.1, 55.9 and 55.10. Substantial weight should be given to the risk of further offending or harm to the public indicated by the subject's criminality. Both the likelihood of the person re-offending, and the seriousness of the harm if the person does reoffend, must be considered. Where the offence which has triggered deportation is more serious, the weight which should be given to the risk of further offending or harm to the public is particularly substantial when balanced against other factors in favour of granting immigration bail."
"Factors influencing a decision to detain
All relevant factors must be taken into account when considering the need for initial or continued detention, including:
- What is the likelihood of the person being removed and, if so, after what timescale?
- Is there any evidence of previous absconding?
- Is there any evidence of a previous failure to comply with conditions of temporary release or bail?
- Has the subject taken part in a determined attempt to breach the immigration laws? (For example, entry in breach of a deportation order, attempted or actual clandestine entry).
- Is there a previous history of complying with the requirements of immigration control? (For example, by applying for a visa or further leave).
- What are the person's ties with the UK? Are there close relatives (including dependants) here? Does anyone rely on the person for support? If the dependant is a child or vulnerable adult, do they depend heavily on public welfare services for their daily care needs in lieu of support from the detainee? Does the person have a settled address/employment?
- What are the individual's expectations about the outcome of the case? Are there factors such as an outstanding appeal, an application for judicial review or representations which might afford more incentive to keep in touch than if such factors were not present? (See also 55.14).
- Is there a risk of offending or harm to the public (this requires consideration of the likelihood of harm and the seriousness of the harm if the person does offend)?"
55.3.2 Further guidance on deciding to detain in criminal casework cases
55.3.2.1 This section provides further guidance on assessing whether detention is or continues to be within a reasonable period in criminal casework cases where the individual has completed their custodial sentence and is detained following a court recommendation or decision to deport, pending deportation, or under the automatic deportation provisions of the UK Borders Act 2007. It should be read in conjunction with the guidance in 55.3.1 above, with substantial weight being given to the risk of further offending and the risk of harm to the public."
"55.3.2.6 Risk of harm to the public will be assessed by the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) unless there is no Offender Assessment System (OASYS) or pre-sentence report available.
…
55.3.2.8 Where NOMS are unable to produce a risk assessment and the offender manager advises that this is the case, case owners will need to make a judgement on the risk of harm based on the information available to them.
55.3.2.9 Where possible the NOMS assessment will be based on OASYS and will consist of two parts as follows:
I. A risk of harm on release assessed as low, medium, high or very high (that is, the seriousness of harm if the person offends on release).
II. The likelihood of re-offending, assessed as low, medium or high.
A marking of high or very high in either of these areas should be treated as an assessment of a high risk of harm to the public.
In cases involving more serious offences, a decision to release is likely to be the proper conclusion only when the factors in favour of release are particularly compelling. In practice, release is likely to be appropriate only in exceptional cases because of the seriousness of violent, sexual, drug-related and similar offences."
"Decision to detain – criminal casework cases
… Where a foreign national offender meets the criteria for consideration of deportation, the presumption in favour of granting immigration bail may well be outweighed by the risk to the public of harm from re-offending or the risk of absconding, evidenced by a past history of lack of respect for the law. However, detention will not be lawful where it would exceed the period reasonably necessary for the purpose of removal or where the interference with family life could be shown to be disproportionate. …
In assessing what is reasonably necessary and proportionate in any individual case, the caseworker must look at all relevant factors to that case and weigh them against the particular risks of re-offending and of absconding which the individual poses. In balancing the factors to make that assessment of what is reasonably necessary, the Home Office distinguishes between more and less serious offences."
"Detention reviews
… In all cases of persons detained solely under Immigration Act powers, continued detention must as a minimum be reviewed at the points specified in the appropriate table below. At each review, robust and formally documented consideration should be given to the removability of the detainee. Furthermore, robust and formally documented consideration should be given to all other information relevant to the decision to detain.
Monthly reviews should be conducted using the detention review template (ICD3469 or criminal casework equivalent). Additional reviews may also be necessary on an ad hoc basis, for example, where there is a change in circumstances relevant to the reasons for detention. …
Rule 9 of the Detention Centre Rules 2001 sets out the statutory requirement for detainees to be provided with written reasons for detention at the time of initial detention, and thereafter monthly (in this context, monthly means every 28 days). The written reasons for continued detention at the one month point and beyond should be based on the outcome of the review of detention.
…
Detention reviews are necessary in all cases to ensure that detention remains lawful and in line with stated detention policy at all times. Detention reviews must be carried out at prescribed points throughout the period a person remains detained under Immigration Act powers, whether the person is held in the immigration detention estate or elsewhere, for example, secure hospital or prison."
(3) Legal basis of detention
i) section 32(5) of the UKBA 2007 provides that a deportation order is mandatory where a foreign national offender is sentenced to a period of imprisonment of at least 12 months; and
ii) section 3(5)(a) of the Immigration Act 1971 provides that a person who is not a British Citizen is liable to deportation if the Secretary of State deems his deportation to be conducive to the public good. In this case, the Claimant's previous convictions led the Defendant to conclude the Claimant's presence in the UK was not conducive to the public good.
"Detention or control pending deportation
(2) Where notice has been given to a person in accordance with regulations under section 105 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (notice of decision) of a decision to make a deportation order against him, and he is not detained in pursuance of the sentence or order of a court, he may be detained under the authority of the Secretary of State pending the making of the deportation order."
"I am ordering your detention under powers contained in the Immigration Act 1971, the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, the UK Borders Act 2007 or the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016."
and at the end included these notes:
"Notes:
DETENTION POWERS
…
(3) A person served with a Notice of Decision to make a deportation order, whose detention has been authorised by the Secretary of State – Paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 3 to the 1971 Act.
…"
"48 It is agreed that the forms served on the claimants here were inappropriate. It was, to say the least, unfortunate but without going as far as Collins J in his criticism of the Immigration Service, I agree with him that even on his approach the failure to give the right reason for detention and the giving of no or wrong reasons did not in the end affect the legality of the detention." (§ 48)
"45 In R (Saadi) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] 1 WLR 3131, which was concerned with the lawfulness of detention under paragraphs 2(1) and 16(1) of Schedule 2 to the 1971 Act, Lord Slynn of Hadley said, at para 48, that the Secretary of State's giving of no or wrong reasons did not affect the legality of the detention. Mr Tam said that no hint was given in that case that this failure gave rise to a problem as to its legality. But Collins J said that it was not argued in that case that the muddle about reasons rendered the decision to detain unlawful: [2002] 1 WLR 356, para 16. Nor was the effect of a failure to review in issue."
However, the point was not taken any further.
(4) Provision of monthly reports
"A breach of public law duties when exercising a discretionary power to detain renders the subsequent detention unlawful (i.e. amounts to the tort of false imprisonment) if the breach bears on and is relevant to the decision to detain."
(5) Risk of reoffending and risk of harm to the public
[Harm]
"High – Given the fact that [the Claimant's] latest conviction was possess a controlled drug of Class B – Cannabis/cannabis resin as well as possession of a firearm, illustrating his pernicious capabilities of having easy access to such deadly weaponry, it would be logical to conclude that [the Claimant's] interaction with the public would be highly risky."
[Reoffending]
"High – Given the fact that [the Claimant] has committed over 7 offences in the space of five years ranging from Drug offences to possessing Firearms to assaulting a constable. It is very likely that [the Claimant] would reoffend if he were to be released."
i) a statement from his stepmother, confirming that he regretted having got involved with the wrong people, and
ii) a GCID Case Record Sheet indicating that a panel in July 2018 had envisaged detaining the Claimant for interview but then releasing him thereafter.
(6) The Claimant's 'character, conduct or associations'
(7) Alleged failure to apply policy: EIG paras 5.3.A and 55.3.1
(8) Emergency Travel Document
(9) Conclusion on Ground 2
(D) OVERALL CONCLUSIONS
i) the Claimant's claim that there has been unlawful delay in dealing with his indefinite leave to remain and asylum claims succeeds, though not his claim to be entitled to recover substantive damages as a result; and
ii) the Claimant's claim to have been unlawfully detained does not succeed.
Note 1 See also the statements of Baroness Hale at §§ 207-208, Lord Collins at § 221 and Lord Kerr at §§ 239-240 and 248-251. [Back]