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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 >> The Duke of Sussex, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2022] EWHC 682 (Admin) (24 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/682.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 682 (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 THE DUKE OF SUSSEX |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Robert Palmer QC & Christopher Knight (instructed by GLD) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18 and 25 February 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT:
A. Introduction
"1. Upon the Judge being satisfied that it is strictly necessary:
1.1 No copies of the Confidential Material will be provided to any person other than the Defendant without further order of the Court;
1.2 Any person other than the Defendant seeking access to, or copies of, the Confidential Material must make an application to the Court, giving proper notice (of no less than 7 days) to the Claimant and the Defendant.
2. Any application made by any person other than the Defendant to obtain a copy of any other document from the Court file must be made on proper notice (of no less than 7 days) to the Claimant and the Defendant.
3. The Claimant and Defendant shall refer to the person whose name is set out in the Confidential Schedule by the letter "X" in any and all open hearings and any and all publicly accessible documents. Until further order, the publication of the name of "X", or any particulars or details which may lead to his identification in connection with these proceedings, is prohibited.
4. The parties (and their legal advisors) shall take all steps to preserve the confidentiality of the Confidential Material."
The "Confidential Material" referred to comprised the Confidential Statement, a witness statement made by the Claimant and the exhibits to that statement, a witness statement made by Tim Robinson OBE (a partner in the firm of solicitors instructed by the Claimant) and the exhibits to that statement, a witness statement by the person referred to as X and the exhibits to that statement, and submissions made in support of the application. The application explained that disclosure of the Confidential Material, which included information about security arrangements, would prejudice the rights of the Claimant, his family, and others under any/all of ECHR articles 2, 3 and 8.
"(4) The court may, on the application of a party or of any person identified in a statement of case –
(a) order that a non-party may not obtain a copy of a statement of case under paragraph (1);
(b) restrict the persons or classes of persons who may obtain a copy of a statement of case;
(c) order that persons or classes of persons may only obtain a copy of statement of case if it is edited in accordance with the directions of the court; or
(d) makes such other order as it thinks fit."
"1. The redactions in the Redacted Material (as defined in Section 10 below) are allowed.
2. No non-party shall obtain a copy of the Confidential Material (as defined in Section 10 below) from the court's records.
3. A non-party seeking access to documents from the Court's records shall only be permitted to obtain a copy of the Redacted Material.
4. The parties shall refer to the persons identified in the Confidential Schedule to the Order by the ciphers set out therein in any and all open hearings and any and all publicly accessible documents. Until further order, the publication of the names of the persons identified in the Confidential Schedule, or any particulars or details which may lead to their identification in connection with these proceedings, is prohibited.
5. Any application by any non-party to vary the terms of paragraphs 2 to 4 of this Order shall be made on no less than seven days' notice to the parties.
6. The Defendant shall file an Acknowledgement of Service, Summary Grounds of Resistance and any accompanying application for an equivalent Order in respect of those summary grounds by 4:30pm on 4 March 2022 …"
The material part of section 10 of the Application Notice further explains the situation as follows:
"This application has been prepared by the Claimant but is filed on a joint basis, together with the Defendant as an applicant.
On 20 September 2021 the Claimant filed a claim for judicial review challenging the arrangements for the provision of State security when he is in the UK. The parties are agreed that, in principle, it is necessary to restrict access to some confidential information in documents filed in support of the claim. By this application, confidentiality protections are sought in respect of the following documents of the claim: (a) the Confidential Statement of Facts and Grounds: (b) the First Confidential Witness Statement of The Duke of Sussex and exhibits; (c) the First Confidential Witness Statement of Tim Robinson OBE and exhibits; (d) the First Confidential Witness Statement of X and exhibits; (e) the Confidential Schedule to the Order; (f) the Claimant's Confidentiality Schedule; (g) the Defendant's Confidentiality Schedule; and (h) the parties' skeleton arguments and application bundle for the purpose of this hearing (together, the "Confidential Material").
In relation to the (a) – (d): the confidentiality sought is limited to the redactions made to those documents and the ciphers that have been applied. The confidentiality protections are sought in respect of the following categories of information, which are indicated by colour-coded highlighting of the Confidential Material. The inclusion of a category in the list below does not connote acceptance of the category or the related redactions by the parties to this application …
(i) the level of threat assessments and persons for whom they have been carried out …
(ii) the protective security arrangements, movement, lifestyle or areas of vulnerability of the Claimant and his family …
(iii) the protective security arrangements applicable to persons other than the Claimant, including those whose protected security is considered by RAVEC …
(iv) names of serving protection officers, remembers and staff of RAVEC and other names and email addresses on data protection grounds …
(v) specific protective security tactics …
(vi) financial information relating to protective security … and
(vii) private information of others which is, in any event, not relevant to the legal issues in the claim …"
B. Decision
(1) The application to edit the Confidential Statement of Facts and Grounds
"8. … when all other matters are equal, requests by non-parties for copies of documents that have been placed before a judge or referred to in proceedings in some material way in open court ought to be allowed. However, the specific circumstances of each application must be carefully considered to determine whether the default position should be reflected in the final order on the application. Toulson LJ's "default position" is just that, no less but no more.
9. As to which specific circumstances may be material, both Guardian News and Media and Dring are authority for the proposition that the reasons for the request could be relevant to whether the court's final decision on the application corresponds to the "default position". In Dring the court stated, "it is for the persons seeking access to explain why he seeks it and how granting him access will advance the open justice principle". Both courts also assumed that in this regard, journalists would be better placed than others: see Guardian News and Media per Toulson LJ at paragraph 85; and Dring per Baroness Hale at paragraph 45. Both judgments are binding on me. Nevertheless, some care is required. First, the premise of the open justice principle is that it is in the public interest for those who are not parties to proceedings to have access to documents used in court so as to better understand the proceedings. This purpose is pursued regardless of whether the person making the request is a journalist. Second, it seems optimistic (or possibly unrealistic) to assume that in every instance where the request is made by a journalist the objective of the open justice principle will be better or more affectively achieved through material that the journalist might publish, other than in the loosest sense. Although a court ordering provision of a document to a journalist (or any other person) might in principle impose conditions on the use that could be made of the information (for example, in exercise of the power at CPR5.4C(4)), in practice it would be invidious for any court to attempt to use that power to distinguish between journalistic purposes that further the open justice principle and those that might not, let alone to encourage how the former might be pursued.
10. … it seems to me that in most instances the primary relevance of the fact that the person requesting documents is a journalist seeking the material in pursuit of her work, will be as counter to any claim that the documents were sought for some purpose that would harm the legitimate interests of others, whether parties to the litigation or other non-parties.
11. Apart from this, the other matter that may affect the outcome otherwise produced by the default position will be the possibility of prejudice consequent on disclosure; either prejudice to one or both of the parties to the claim; or to other non-parties; or to some identifiable public interest."
(2) The application so far as it concerns the witness statements and exhibits
(3) The request for anonymity, Witness X
(4) Irrelevant evidence