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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 >> Dyer, R (On the Application Of) v [2019] EWHC 2897 (Admin) (30 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/2897.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2897 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
1 Oxford Row, Leeds, LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of NATALIE DYER) |
Claimant |
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- and HM ASSISTANT CORONER FOR WEST YORKSHIRE (WESTERN) |
Defendant |
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1. THE CHIEF CONSTABLE OF WEST YORKSHIRE POLICE and B, C AND E 2. THE POLICE FEDERATION OF ENGLAND AND WALES and OFFICERS D, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, O, P and Q 3. CALDERDALE AND HUDDERSFIELD NHS FOUNDATION TRUST 4. THE PRESS ASSOCIATION |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Hough QC (instructed by Legal Services Department, City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council) for the Defendant
Mr Hugh Davies QC (instructed by Legal Services West Yorkshire Police) for the First Interested Party
Mr Brian Dean (instructed by Precedence Law) for the Second Interested Party
Hearing date: 11th October
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Jefford :
Background
The applications before the Coroner
The present proceedings
(i) Ground 1: "The Defendant misdirected himself, in that he failed to recognise (i) the fundamental importance of open justice and to give it great weight; (ii) the particular importance of open justice in this inquest, as it involves a controversial death in police custody of a black man following police restraint; (iii) that his decision interfered with the rights of the press within article 10 of the European Conventions on Human Rights; (iv) that screening is only permitted in exceptional circumstances; and (v) that in this context screening, particularly screening of all factual police witnesses, is a serious incursion into open justice."
(ii) Ground 2: "The decision to screen the 16 officers from the family and public was a greater intrusion into open justice than was strictly necessary. It follows from the Defendant's ruling that here was no rational basis for screening the witnesses from anyone other than Qassim Hall. There was a less intrusive means of achieving the aim pursued, which was to screen the witnesses from Qassim Hall alone."
(iii) Ground 4: "The Defendant proceeded on the basis that screening is permitted if that would improve the quality of evidence, and thereby misdirected himself."
(iv) Ground 5: "The decision was not compatible with the procedural duty within Article 2 ECHR; was not correct as a matter of common law; or alternatively was disproportionate."
I note that the Press Association did not make any submissions and that arguments in relation to Article 10 were, in effect, subsumed into the other arguments.
Misdirection (grounds 1 and 4)
(i) Rule 11 Inquest hearings to be held in public
"(1) The coroner must open an inquest in public
..
(3) An inquest hearing and any pre-inquest hearing must be held in public unless paragraph unless paragraph (4) or (5) applies.
(4) A coroner may direct that the public be excluded from an inquest hearing, or any part of an inquest hearing if the coroner considers it would be in the interest of national security to do so.
(5) A coroner may direct that the public be excluded from a pre-inquest hearing if the coroner considers it would be in the interests of justice or national security."
(ii) Rule 18 Evidence given from behind a screen
(1) A coroner may direct that a witness may give evidence at an inquest hearing from behind a screen
(2) A direction may not be given under paragraph (1) unless the coroner determines that giving evidence in the way proposed would be likely to improve the quality of the evidence given by the witness or allow the inquest to proceed more expediently.
(3) In making that determination, the coroner must consider all the circumstances of the case, including in particular
(a) any view expressed by the witness or an interested person;
(b) whether it would be in the interests of justice or national security to allow evidence to be given from behind a screen; and
(c) whether the giving of evidence from behind a screen would impede the effectiveness of the questioning of the witness by an interested party or a representative of the interested person.
(i) Under rule (2) the coroner may give a direction only if he determines either (a) that giving evidence in the way proposed would be likely to improve the quality of the evidence given by the witness or (b) that it will allow the inquest to proceed more expediently.
(ii) Paragraph (3) then provides that the coroner must consider all the circumstances of the case and, in particular the matters at (3)(a) to (c), in making "that determination".
(iii) Strictly read "that determination" can only be a reference to the determination referred to at (2)(a) or (b) as to quality of evidence or expediency. The effect of rules Rule 18(2 and 3) would, therefore, seem to be, somewhat oddly, to require the consideration of the interests of justice (which I take to include the interest in open justice) only in the context of that determination. But there is no express requirement to consider the interests of justice in the overall consideration of whether to make such an order pursuant to rule 18(1).
(iv) Thus on the basis of that reading, the rule does not expressly require any overarching consideration to be given to the principle of open justice.
Discussion
The coroner's ruling
"Instinctively, the proposition that the family of a deceased who has died in circumstances that call into question the state's discharge of its Article 2 obligations should not see the agents of the state who are implicated in that death, while they are giving evidence to the inquest into it, offends what can be appropriately described as natural justice, in the sense of the fair and impartial application of law and procedure to all parties to a particular legal process.
That instinct is all the stronger where the application is not based upon any sufficient evidence or intelligence that reflects adversely on the family members most likely to the affected by it."
"41. Rule 18(2) permits a departure from that presumption for the purposes of this inquest if I determine that the use of screen will be likely to improve the quality of the evidence given by the officers or allow the inquest to proceed more expeditiously. ..
42. Considering the evidence as a whole, and acknowledging that I have the advantage of seeing evidence that has not been shared with all the PIPs. I conclude that permitting the officers to give evidence from behind a screen would be likely to improve the quality of their evidence overall.
43. I take the view that witnesses who are fearful for their safety, or the safety of their families, in the event that they are identified, are more likely to be straightforward and forthcoming in their evidence if they are confident that they will not be identified. The quality of the evidence of such witnesses is likely to be improved if appropriate steps are taken to minimise those fears. In this case, that can be done by directing that the officers give their evidence from behind a screen.
44. I cannot make that determination without considering all the circumstances of the case, and in particular, the matters set out at Rule 18(3). As to those matters, I have summarised in this written ruling the views expressed on behalf of the witnesses and other PIPs who may be affected by it (Rule 18(3)(a)). Further, I have considered whether the use of screen will impede the effectiveness of the questioning of any witness by a PIP or his representative (Rule 18(3)(c)). In that regard, the retention by the family of Mr Thomas QC (who will be able to see all witnesses who are called) obviates the risk of any such impediment.
..
47. As to the other limb of Rule 18(3)(b) is concerned, my starting point is that the interests of justice generally, and the interests of anyone concerned in a particular legal process are best served when those charged with making findings of fact and reaching conclusion based upon those findings are able to do so on the basis of the best evidence. In this case, I consider the best evidence will be given if the officers who are the subject of this application give their evidence from behind screens. Witnesses who are fearful of the consequences of being identified will give more reliable evidence if they know they will not be identified.
48. To the extent that my decision has involved a balancing of competing interests between the officers and the family, I take the view that the wider interests of justice as set out above justify my decision, having regard to the purpose of my decision as per Rule 18(2) and the provisions of Rule 18(3)(c), which provide protection for the family."
Conclusion of grounds 1 and 4
Grounds 2 and 5
The legal arguments
Authorities
"As the provision of the Coroner's Rules made clear, there are circumstances where Orders such as those made by the Coroner can be justified. They should only be made where necessary and to the extent necessary".
In order to justify the making of such orders, it was not necessary for the coroner to find that the family themselves posed a deliberate and direct threat and she had found that there was a real risk of the threat arising from others, if the family learned the identity of the officers concerned. Thus her decision to prevent the officers being seen and potentially identified was correct and neither irrational nor unfair.
" . I suggest that the exercise to be carried out by the tribunal faced with a request for anonymity should be the application of the common law test, with an excursion, if the facts require it, into the territory of article 2. Such an excursion would only be necessary if the tribunal found that, view objectively, a risk to the witness's life would be created or materially increased if they gave evidence without anonymity. If so, it should decide whether that increased risk would amount to a real and immediate risk to life. If it would, then the tribunal would ordinarily have little difficulty in determining that it would be reasonable in all the circumstances to give the witnesses a degree of anonymity. That would then conclude the exercise, for that anonymity would be required by article 2 and it would be unnecessary for the tribunal to give further consideration to the matter. If there would not be real and immediate threat to the witness's life, then article 2 would drop out of consideration and the tribunal would continue to give further consideration to the matter ."
(i) There is nothing unlawful per se in the use of screens but there is, as I have already concluded above, a balancing exercise to be undertaken.
(ii) Amongst the factors in that balancing exercise is the fundamental importance of open justice. That is why the provision of screens should only be ordered where necessary and to the extent necessary. The fact that witnesses may still be available for cross-examination is relevant but not conclusive, as is the fact that the family may have the opportunity to cross-examine.
(iii) The impact on the witnesses is a further factor. That is itself multi-faceted. The consideration of the impact on the quality of their evidence (and thus the interests of justice) may bring into play their subjective fears and concerns. But it is also necessary to consider whether those fears and concerns are objectively justified and they may carry greater weight in the balance if they are.
Factual background
(i) Discharging a noxious substance in the face of an individual in April 2000. This happened in the course of a burglary to enable him to escape. He was convicted but the seriousness of the offence is indicated by the sentence of "compensation, costs and 24 hours attendance centre".
(ii) Common assault upon his ex-partner in October 2002. He kicked her and pushed her to the ground and was sentenced to 3 months imprisonment.
(iii) Making threats to kill his ex-partner on 3 March 2003 for which he was sentenced to 2 years imprisonment.
(iv) Spitting in the fact of an arresting officer in April 2008.
(v) Throwing a catalogue in a person's face in August 2013. He received a prison sentence because the offence was committed on bail and he was unwilling to comply with a community order.
(vi) Acting as if to headbutt an officers and then kicking the officer, while Qassim Hall was being restrained on the ground, in January 2017.
"Whilst I assess that these individuals [3 including Pamela Hall] would not pose significant risk in their own right to officers it is my belief that any officers would be identifiable and there is an enduring risk that their identities may be disclosed to others if they are able to see the officers during the inquest proceedings and/or otherwise discover their names. This disclosure to family members such as Qassim, who I assess would pose a risk, would be either through a sense of loyalty or as a result of fear of what he may do to them if they did not tell him."
Discussion
"QH has convictions for offences of violence (including violence against the police), and a history of making threats of violence (including threats to kill). I accept that QH blames the police for Andrew Hall's death ."
That amounts to little more than a conclusion that, because Qassim Hall has some convictions for offences of violence and threats of violence, the threat to the police officers is a credible one. There is no consideration of the nature and context of those offences or of the events since Andrew Hall's death. More particularly, however, there is no consideration of the risk of the anonymity orders being breached by those who may be able to identify the officers. As a matter of common sense, that risk increases the greater the number of people who are able to see the officers give evidence and the more impracticable it becomes to enforce the orders for anonymity. But if the family only are permitted to see the officers give evidence, the position is very different because undertakings can be given by the individuals, there is no evidence that they are likely to breach those undertakings, and the assertion that they may be forced to do so is pure speculation.
"Article 6 is not the only provision of the Convention which is relevant to the principle of open justice. Articles 2 and 3 may for example apply where parties or witnesses are in physical danger. The rights guaranteed by those articles are, in this context, unqualified. The Convention therefore requires that proceedings must be organised in such a way that the interests protected by those articles are not unjustifiably imperilled . In our domestic law, the court's power to prevent the identification of a witness is accordingly part of the structure of laws which enables the United Kingdom to comply with its obligations under those articles ."
The position in the present case is that anonymity has been granted for each of the officers and that is not challenged. No concession is made in respect of Article 3 rights but, if it is assumed that the witnesses' rights are engaged, the issue is a narrow one of whether the provision of screens is necessary to preserve that anonymity. That turns on the argument that the family will both identify further police officers and breach the anonymity order. There is no evidence that they will or are likely to do so and the argument is wholly speculative. Following the approach that Lord Carswell suggested in the case of Article 2 rights, that would simply lead me back to the common law position. The invocation of this argument does not, therefore, affect the decision I have reached.