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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Doyle v. Garda Commissioner [1997] IEHC 147; [1999] 1 IR 249; [1998] 1 ILRM 229 (27th August, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/147.html Cite as: [1999] 1 IR 249, [1997] IEHC 147, [1998] 1 ILRM 229 |
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1. The
Plaintiff's daughter, Anne O'Brien, and his infant granddaughters, Jacqueline
and Ann-Marie O'Brien, were three of the innocent victims of car bomb
explosions which occurred in Dublin and Monaghan on 17th May, 1974, which
killed 33 people and injured and maimed many others. Nobody has been
prosecuted in this jurisdiction or in any jurisdiction for these atrocities
although, in a statement issued on 17th May, 1995, the Minister for Justice
stated that the Garda files on the murders remain open and, if any lead should
emerge which might bring the culprits to justice, it will be pursued rigorously.
2. The
Plaintiff, claiming to be the indirect victim of a violation by the United
Kingdom of Article 2 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (the "European Convention") has lodged an
application with the European Commission of Human Rights ("the Commission")
under Article 25 of the European Convention. The basis of the Applicant's
complaint against the United Kingdom is that the car bomb explosions in Dublin
and Monaghan on 17th May, 1974 were directly and proximately linked with
criminal and unlawful activity originating in Belfast and Portadown, Northern
Ireland, on that day and that the Royal Ulster Constabulary (the "RUC"), for
whose acts and defaults the United Kingdom is answerable insofar as those acts
and defaults constitute breaches of the European Convention, in breach of
Article 2 failed to take the necessary and appropriate steps -
3. Amongst
the specific allegations made by the Plaintiff of breaches of the obligations
imposed by Article 2 are allegations that the RUC failed to follow up on
information, including information concerning possible suspects, supplied by An
Garda Siochana and failed to adequately liaise with An Garda Siochana.
4. In
these proceedings, which were initiated by a plenary summons which issued on
21st February, 1997, the Plaintiff claims:-
5. The
Plaintiff also seeks ancillary orders allowing inspection of and production to
the Commission of such documents.
6. The
Plaintiff's application was registered by the Commission on 21st May, 1997. In
accordance with the Commission's Rules of Procedure, a single member of the
Commission, acting as rapporteur, is to carry out a preliminary examination of
the Plaintiff's application and report to the Commission on the question of its
admissibility. In correspondence with the secretary to the Commission, the
Plaintiff's solicitors have intimated that the sources of evidence they seek to
rely on to substantiate the Plaintiff's complaint are:-
7. Prior
to the initiation of these proceedings, the Plaintiff's solicitors had been in
correspondence with the Defendant for approximately a year seeking
clarification of a number of aspects of the investigation by An Garda Siochana
into the atrocities and, in the correspondence, the Plaintiff's solicitors
sought responses to the following questions:-
8. Following
the lodgment of the Plaintiff's complaint against the United Kingdom with the
Commission, the Plaintiff's solicitors wrote to the Defendant seeking
confirmation that the Defendant would place the files and records in relation
to the investigation into the Dublin and Monaghan bombings at the disposal of
the Commission for the purposes of the Plaintiff's application. The
Defendant's response to the Plaintiff's request for information and access to
information has been consistent throughout: it is a refusal on the grounds that
it is of paramount importance for the effectiveness of An Garda Siochana that
information gathered in the course of a criminal or other investigation remains
confidential. The Defendant's primary defence to these proceedings is that the
Court has no jurisdiction to grant the relief sought by the Plaintiff.
9. The
only evidence adduced on behalf of the Plaintiff at the hearing was the
evidence of his solicitor, Mr. Greg O'Neill. Mr. O'Neill outlined the
assertions made in the "First Tuesday" programme but, being hearsay, this
testimony was inadmissible and of no evidential value whatsoever. He also
proved correspondence which passed between him and the Chief Constable of the
RUC and, in particular, a letter dated 28th August, 1996 from the Assistant
Chief Constable of Crime in which the following response was given to five
specific questions which Mr. O'Neill had raised in earlier correspondence:-
10. Before
outlining the submissions made on behalf of the Plaintiff and the Defendant
respectively, it is important to emphasise that it is common case that what the
Court is concerned with on this application is whether, in principle, the
Plaintiff is entitled to an order for discovery against the Defendant and
ancillary relief in the circumstances which prevail in this matter. It is
agreed that, if the Court decides that the Plaintiff is entitled to such an
order in principle, the Defendant is entitled, where appropriate, in relation
to any document or series of documents, to claim privilege in respect of the
same and to justify such privilege in the discovery. Moreover, the Plaintiff's
legal advisers acknowledge that the Court may, if it grants the reliefs sought,
impose terms for the purpose of ensuring confidentiality of sensitive material
and, where appropriate, the preservation of anonymity and the Plaintiff will
abide by any such terms. Finally, it is acknowledged on behalf of the
Plaintiff that the relief sought has been framed in terms which go beyond the
scope of the matters in issue between the Plaintiff and the United Kingdom
before the Commission and it is acknowledged that, if the Court determines that
in principle the Plaintiff is entitled to discovery, the documents sought to be
discovered require to be identified with greater particularity.
11. Mr.
Sammon, on behalf of the Plaintiff, submitted that this Court has jurisdiction
to hear an action in which the only relief claimed by the Plaintiff is an order
for discovery and relies on the decision of the Supreme Court in
Megaleasing
U.K. Limited -v- Barrett
[1993] I.L.R.M. 497 as authority for that proposition. Moreover, he submitted
that the entitlement of a party to seek and obtain an order for discovery is no
way dependent upon the Court being satisfied as to the strength of the
Plaintiff's case and, in support of this proposition, he cited dictum of Murphy
J. in
Bula
Limited -v- Tara Mines Limited (No. 1)
[1987] I.R. 85 at page 93. The essential question, therefore, for the Court,
he submitted, was whether an application for discovery only should be acceded
to where the relief is sought in the furtherance of a complaint before the
Commission and not for the purposes of the furtherance of litigation within the
jurisdiction of this Court. He contended that the Court should answer that
question in the affirmative for the following reasons:-
12. On
behalf of the Defendant, Mr. Comyn submitted that the Court does not have
jurisdiction to grant the relief sought on the following grounds:-
13. In
determining whether the relief sought by the Plaintiff should be granted, the
crucial questions to be addressed are whether the Court has an inherent
jurisdiction to grant relief where discovery is the sole cause of action in the
proceedings and, if so, the extent of that jurisdiction. Consideration of
these questions involves an examination of the common law, which is the source
of the jurisdiction, if it exists. In my view, the indirect legal effect of
the European Convention contended for by Mr. Sammon does not bear on these
questions. It is true that in
Ó
Domhnaill -v- Merrick
[1984] I.R. 151, Henchy J., at page 159, tentatively suggested that, while the
European Convention is not part of the domestic law of the State, as the
Statute of Limitations, 1957, which was in issue in that case, was passed after
the State ratified the European Convention in 1953, it could be argued that the
Statute, since it does not show any contrary intention, should be deemed to be
in conformity with the Convention and should be construed and applied
accordingly. The same Judge, in
The
State (DPP) -v- Walsh
[1981] I.R. 412, at page 440, when dealing with the common law concept of
criminal contempt of Court stated that there is a presumption that our law, in
this respect, is in conformity with the European Convention, particularly
Articles 5 and 10(2) thereof. A similar view was expressed by O'Hanlon J. in
Desmond
-v- Glackin
[1992] I.L.R.M. 490 in the following passage at page 513:-
14. The
only provision of the European Convention which Mr. Sammon pointed to which
might bear on the issue of the Court's inherent jurisdiction to make an order
for discovery is the last sentence of Article 25.1 which is in the following
terms:-
15. In
my view, the non-existence of a jurisdiction it the State which empowers the
Court to make an order for discovery against a person who is not a party to a
complaint before the Commission could not be regarded as a hindrance of the
right of individual complaint to the Commission under Article 25. In any
event, on the facts of this case, it seems highly improbable that the Defendant
has any information or documentation in his possession which is material to the
complaint which is not in the possession of the RUC and the United Kingdom
against whom the complaint is brought, as the correspondence between the
Plaintiff's solicitors and the Defendant and the Chief Constable of the RUC
illustrates.
16. For
completeness, I should perhaps say that I reject the argument that, as
disclosure is sought for the purposes of a proceeding in a forum outside the
jurisdiction of the Court, the Court could not control the use of information
and material disclosed. The Court can, and frequently does, control inspection
of documentation by permitting the person against whom an order for discovery
is made to blank out or otherwise edit portions of documents to ensure
compliance with the fundamental principle governing the use of discovered
documentation or information - that it may be used only for the purpose of the
proceedings in which it was discovered. Moreover, with the same objective, the
Court can, and frequently does, control the use of material discovered by
exacting undertakings from the solicitor for the party who has obtained
discovery, who is an officer of the Court, as to who is to be allowed to see
the material.
17. Returning
to the crucial questions as to the existence and extent of the Court's inherent
jurisdiction to order discovery against a party against whom no other relief is
sought, these questions were considered by the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case. In that case, Finlay C.J., having analysed the decision of the House of
Lords in
Norwich
Pharmacal Company -v- Customs & Excise Commissioners
[1974] AC 133, said at page 503:-
18. Having
commented that the Counsel who appeared before the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case were unable to identify any case in which upon a claim of prima facie
proof as to the probability of the commission of a wrong, relief by way of
discovery was granted, Finlay C.J. went on to say at page 504:-
20. O'Flaherty
J. also found that the action for discovery is of ancient origin and that there
is no doubt that it may prove to be a valuable instrument in the search for
justice. However, he went on to say at page 507:-
21. The
decision of the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case unequivocally lays down that the jurisdiction of the Court to grant relief
in an action for discovery only arises where there is very clear proof of the
existence of wrongdoing. The earlier authorities, culminating in the
Norwich
Pharmacal
case, in which the jurisdiction was successfully invoked generally involved a
clearly established infringement of an intellectual property right, for
example, infringement of a patent in the
Norwich
Pharmacal
case, where the identity of the perpetrator of the infringement was unknown to
the property owning plaintiff but was known to the defendant in the action for
discovery through whose hands the infringing goods had passed, albeit
innocently. The rationale underlying the jurisdiction, which was equitable in
origin, was that justice required the defendant in the discovery action, who
had been caught up in the tortious act, to assist in righting the wrong. The
obiter dictae in the
Megaleasing
case suggest that the relief which the Court can afford to a plaintiff in an
action for discovery is limited to compelling disclosure of the names and
identity of the wrongdoers, although there are hints in the judgments of Finlay
C.J. and O'Flaherty J. that the jurisdiction is not "set in stone" and may be
developed in the future. However, there is no suggestion in the judgments of
the Supreme Court that the Court's inherent jurisdiction could be developed
into an inherent jurisdictional equivalent of Order 31, Rule 29 of the Rules of
the Superior Courts, 1986, which empowers the Court to order discovery against
a non-party to a cause or matter before the Court.
22. Having
outlined the parameters of the Court's inherent jurisdiction in an action for
discovery as defined by the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case, it is necessary to consider whether, leaving aside the
extra-jurisdictional aspect of the Plaintiff's claim which seeks discovery not
in aid of the initiation of an action in this Court but in aid of the
progression of a complaint before the Commission, the Plaintiff has established
that his application comes within the ambit of that jurisdiction. Unlike the
cases in which the inherent jurisdiction has been successfully invoked, in this
case the alleged wrongdoer is identified - the United Kingdom as the principal
of the RUC. The wrongdoing alleged is an inadequate investigation of criminal
activity in Northern Ireland which it is alleged was connected with the
atrocities in Dublin and Monaghan on 17th May, 1974 and a consequent failure to
apprehend the culprits. The purpose of these proceedings is not to identify
the perpetrators of wrongdoing of the existence of which there is very clear
proof; its purpose is to overcome the difficulty highlighted in a letter of
13th November, 1996 from the Secretary of the Commission to the Plaintiff's
solicitors, that is to say, "
the
evidential problems of substantiating the principal claim that the United
Kingdom failed in any obligation to investigate the circumstances of the killings
".
The Plaintiff has not adduced any proof, let alone very clear proof, of a
violation of Article 2 of the European Convention in this Court. Accordingly,
on the authority of the decision of the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case, the inherent jurisdiction of this Court does not extend to granting the
remedy sought by the Plaintiff. Moreover, even if the Plaintiff had adduced
very clear proof of such a violation, it is doubtful, on the authority of the
decision of the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case, whether this Court's inherent jurisdiction would extend to making the
order sought by the Plaintiff which is aimed at obtaining disclosure of factual
information concerning the commission of the alleged wrong.
23. The
jurisdiction to make an order for discovery which was recognised by the House
of Lords in the
Norwich
Pharmacal
case was only available in aid of legal proceedings contemplated to be taken in
England: see Matthews and Malek on
Discovery,
page 22, paragraph 2.09. It is arguable that, the State having submitted to
the jurisdiction of the Commission and the European Court of Human Rights by
signing and ratifying the European Convention, these organs are not to be
regarded as foreign tribunals or courts. I express no view on this point
because it is difficult to envisage a situation in which the limited inherent
jurisdiction recognised by the Supreme Court in the
Megaleasing
case could be utilised to progress a complaint by an individual to the
Commission under the European Convention. The respondent to such a complaint
will invariably be an identified High Contracting Party to the European
Convention. For the Court to make a finding of very clear proof of wrongdoing
by an identified alleged wrongdoer in proceedings in which the identified
alleged wrongdoer is not a party would constitute a breach of one of the
fundamental rules of natural justice - audi alteram partem. Moreover, it would
be invidious for the Court to pronounce on the very issue pending before the
Commission.
24. Being
satisfied that the Court does not have jurisdiction to grant the relief sought
by the Plaintiff, I must dismiss the Plaintiff's application.