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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 >> Kaczor v Kalisz Regional Court (Poland) [2022] EWHC 1914 (Admin) (22 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1914.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1914 (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 :
____________________
ADAM KACZOR |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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KALISZ REGIONAL COURT (POLAND) |
Respondent |
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Hannah Burton (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service Extradition Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT :
A. Introduction
(1) The article 8 ground of appeal
(2) The judgment of the District Judge
"Factors which favour extradition
66. In favour of extradition, I find that there are the following factors:
(i) The constant and weighty public interest in extradition: those convicted of crimes should serve their sentences; there is very high public interest in ensuring that the United Kingdom honours its treaty obligations to other countries; there is a very high public interest in ensuring that the UK is not regarded as a 'safe haven' for fugitives from justice;
(ii) Whilst there has been considerable delay since the offences and to some extent in progressing the extradition requests, the RP's flight was the initial cause;
(iii) The decision of the JA to make an extradition request should be accorded a proper degree of mutual confidence and respect;
(iv) The total outstanding sentence is not inconsiderable and reflects repeated offending of different kinds.
Factors militating against extradition
67. Against extradition, I find that there are the following factors:
(i) The RP has a settled life in this country, he has put down roots in his local community since 2008, he has matured and led an entirely blameless life, contributing to society;
(ii) The RP's partner and her children are in this country. Their lives would be uprooted in the event of extradition. [IB]'s wellbeing would be detrimentally affected; the children's interests are a primary consideration;
(iii) The RP's mother is likely to be detrimentally affected because the RP would not be able to continue to provide her with financial support;
(iv) There has been considerable delay since the commission of the offences and in the time that elapsed before EAW1 and EAW2 were issued and certified;
(v) The RP served 2 years and six months' pre-trial detention which is greater than, and it appears ought to count towards, the outstanding sentence the subject of EAW2 and he has been subject to a few more days custody as well as stringent bail conditions restricting his liberty in the UK;
(vi) The offences are not of great seriousness;
(vii) There is a risk that the RP may not be able to return to live in the UK after he has served his sentences.
Decision on article 8
68. I have concluded that the factors which favour extradition outweigh those which militate against it in respect of EAW1. Very strong counter-balancing factors are required before the extradition of a fugitive, as I have found Mr Kaczor to be, could be disproportionate. The factors militating the other way are insufficient to overcome the imperative of extradition. In particular, whilst he plays an important role in the lives of [IB] and [KM's] children, the RP is not their father, nor is he otherwise their primary carer. In respect of the RP's mother, the requesting state must be trusted to provide for her with at least a minimal level of care consistent with her needs.
69. My conclusion in respect of EAW2 is different notwithstanding my findings as to fugitivity. The strongest factor militating against extradition is the time the RP served on remand, which extinguishes the sentence of 2 years 3 months. This must be determinative factor. I am driven to take that remand time into account in fairness to Mr Kaczor. JA2 have had more than sufficient time ought to be treated and they have failed to do so. Ms Burton fairly accepted that it was open to me to conclude that remand time should be offset against the sentence. The considerable age of the offences (more than 20 years) together with the other, lesser, factors identified above further support the conclusion that the article 8 rights engaged outweigh extradition."
B. Decision
"90. The argument that the Convention or the 1998 Act requires the Court of Appeal to form its own view in every case where a trial judge's decision on proportionality is challenged, appears to me to be wrong in principle and potentially unfair or inconvenient. The argument is wrong in principle because, if the function of the Court of Appeal is as I have described, then, in my view, there can be no breach of the Convention or the 1998 Act, if it conducts a review of the trial judge's decision and only reverses it if satisfied that it was wrong. The only basis for challenging that view is, on analysis, circular, as it involves assuming that the Court of Appeal's primary function is to reconsider not to review. The argument is potentially unfair or inconvenient, because in cases where the appeal court could not be sure whether the trial judge was right or wrong without hearing the evidence and seeing the witnesses, it would either to have to reach a decision knowing that it was less satisfactorily based than that of the judge, or it would have to hear the evidence and see the witnesses for itself.
91. That conclusion leaves open the standard which an appellate court should apply when determining whether the trial judge was entitled to reach his conclusion on proportionality, once the appellate court is satisfied that the conclusion was based on justifiable primary facts and assessments. In my view, an appellate court should not interfere with the trial judge's conclusion on proportionality in such a case, unless it decides that that conclusion was wrong. I do not agree with the view that the appellate court has to consider that judge's conclusion was "plainly" wrong on the issue of proportionality before it can be varied or reversed. As Lord Wilson says in para 44, either "plainly" adds nothing, in which case it should be abandoned as it will cause confusion, or it means that an appellate court cannot vary or reverse a judge's conclusion on proportionality of it considers it to have been "merely" wrong. Whatever view the Strasbourg court may take of such a notion, I cannot accept it, as it appears to me to undermine the role of judges in the field of human rights.
…
93. There is a danger in over-analysis, but I would add this. An appellate judge may conclude that the trial judge's conclusion on proportionality was (i) the only possible view, (ii) a view which she considers was right, (iii) a view on which she has doubts, but on balance considers was right, (iv) a view which she cannot say was right or wrong, (v) a view on which she has doubts, but on balance considers was wrong, (vi) a view which she considers was wrong, or (vii) a view which is unsupportable. The appeal must be dismissed if the appellate judge's view is in category (i) to (iv) and allowed if it is in category (vi) or (vii).
As to category (iv), there will be a number of cases where an appellate court may think that there is no right answer, in the sense that reasonable judges could differ in their conclusions. As with many evaluative assessments, cases raising an issue on proportionality will include those where the answer is in a grey area, as well as those where the answer is in a black or a white area. An appellate court is much less likely to conclude that category (iv) applies in cases where the trial judge's decision was not based on his assessment of the witnesses' reliability or likely future conduct. So far as category (v) is concerned, the appellate judge should think very carefully about the benefit the trial judge had in seeing the witnesses and hearing the evidence, which are factors whose significance depends on the particular case. However, if, after such anxious consideration, an appellate judge adheres to her view that the trial judge's decision was wrong, then I think that she should allow the appeal."
In her submissions for the Appellant Ms Barden referred me to paragraph 26 of the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Love v Government of the United States of America [2018] 1 WLR 2889, which is materially to the same effect. In their judgment in that case, Lord Burnett CJ and Ouseley J put the matter in terms of whether "crucial factors should have been weighed so significantly differently as to make the decision wrong".
"This evidence is key due to the detailed exploration of their relationship with the Applicant, which was necessitated by the District Judge's improper and outdated approach to this, made plain by way of his statement that the Applicant "is not their father nor is he otherwise their primary carer". It could not have been foreseen that the District Judge would take this approach, given the substantial unchallenged evidence of the role that the Applicant plays in their lives and the understanding of the courts in recent years of the role of a father figure in what may be considered to be a non-traditional family setting."
The passage from the judgment quoted within the skeleton argument is the passage in the penultimate sentence of paragraph 68 of the judgment to which I have already referred. The submission made rests on a significant over- reading of the sentence. The District Judge made two factually accurate points while recognising that the Appellant had played an important part in the lives of KM's children in the period following May 2020. What the District Judge said was not out of the ordinary or an expression of any antediluvian opinion. That being so there is no proper basis for this application to admit Dr Wain's report based on this part of the District Judge's decision.