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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Horos, Re Application for Judicial Review v. [2006] ScotCS CSOH_109 (14 July 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_109.html
Cite as: [2006] CSOH 109, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_109

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 109

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD DAWSON

 

in the Petition of

 

ALI HOROS

 

Petitioner;

 

for

 

Judicial Review of a decision of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal refusing to grant leave to appeal from a decision of an Adjudicator

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Petitioner: Melvin-Farr; Wilson Terris

Respondent: Drummond; H F Macdiarmid, Solicitor to the Advocate General

 

 

14 July 2006

 

[1] The petitioner in this case was born on 20 December 1982. He resided latterly at Flat 27/2, 63 Petershill Drive, Glasgow. He entered the UK illegally in March 2001. He applied for asylum. That application was refused. He appealed against that decision to the Adjudicator who also refused the application. He further appealed to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal. The Tribunal refused him leave to appeal. He now seeks decree of declarator that the Tribunal erred in law in refusing leave to appeal. These decision and the reasons therefor were set out in Nos. 6/1 and 7/7 of process.

[2] Counsel for the petitioner submitted that such leave ought to have been granted as the Adjudicator's findings in fact were inconsistent and contradictory. The petitioner had no idea why his claim failed. Accordingly, the Adjudicator's determination was perverse and irrational and unreasonable. Counsel referred me to the Immigration and Asylum (Procedure) Rules 2000, Rules 18(1) and (7). He also referred to the case of Robinson 1998 Q.B.928 in which Woolf, M.R., as he then was, at pages 943-945 indicated that leave should be granted where the ground was readily discernible, obvious or had a strong prospect of success. In this case, it was said, there was an obvious point which the Tribunal should have noticed but missed. Further, the Tribunal should look beyond the grounds of appeal to ascertain for itself whether there was any obvious error of fact or law by the Adjudicator. Reference was made to the case of Abdul Aziz Kolcak 2001 Imm.App.Report 666 where the above rule was said to be adumbrated. In that case it was also held by Stanley Brunton J that to grant leave to appeal, the Tribunal had to be satisfied, apart from anything else, that taking all the evidence into account there was a reasonable prospect of an appeal succeeding. Counsel also referred to Hathaway: The Law of Refugee Status at para.3.2.2 (page 83) regarding the role of the claimant's testimony and suggested that when considering the Adjudicator's determination, the Tribunal should bear in mind that the applicant's credibility is to be accepted in the light of contrary evidence. Therefore, the Adjudicator should have given the applicant a chance to comment on any perceived inconsistencies. Further it was "obvious" on reading his determination that this was so. (Singh v Secretary of State 2000 S.C.219).

[3] Counsel then referred to the Adjudicator's decision (No.6/1 of process). He suggested that the law was set out in para.3 thereof and commented that the Adjudicator did not set out what "standard of assessment" he intended to use. Counsel suggested that in terms of the case of Singh 1998 S.L.T.1370 the Adjudicator had certain duties. The Adjudicator in this case failed in that regard. His decision was therefore flawed and that was "obvious". At para.14 the Adjudicator paraphrased his reasons in this way:-

"The appellant has been largely consistent. The background material shows that Kurds have suffered many abuses in Turkey. These are matters in the appellant's favour. They are however not determinative. There are difficulties with the appellant's account".

According to counsel the Adjudicator did not say he was inconsistent at this or any other point. Counsel also appeared to criticise the Adjudicator's failure to ask, in relation to paras.15 and 16, why there was a difference in the applicant's given reason for his release from police detention in Turkey. The question was simple "Did he or did he not agree to inform?". This failure, it is said, is compounded by para.17. However, in para.18, this applicant said that his release was nothing to do with informing; it was because of his age. Reference was then made to paras.21-23. Counsel made little or no reference to the decision of the Tribunal refusing leave to appeal.

[4] Counsel for the respondent, the Secretary of State for the Home Department, invited me to repel the plea-in-law for the petitioner and sustain her third plea. As a matter of interest, she pointed out to me that none of the grounds of appeal appeared in the petition. The appeal grounds were quite different. She submitted that the Tribunal were not bound to consider any other ground, subject to the observations in Robinson that they ought to do so if there was an obvious point which had a strong likelihood of success. Indeed, Rule 18(6) provided that the Tribunal were not required to consider other grounds. Although the Rules postdated Robinson, it still stood. That meant that there were only limited reasons for going outside the grounds of appeal; in particular one must "not search for new points"; they must be obvious (Lord Reed in Mutas Elabas - unreported July 2004, where at paras.21-23 his Lordship helpfully reviews the relevant authorities). In this context counsel suggested that the test of "obvious" was is anything crying out for an answer here from a reading of the determination. She submitted that nothing said in the petition or at the Bar met that test. The question raised was of differing accounts which were not investigated by the Adjudicator. That question was neither in the grounds of appeal or in the petition. Nor was it to be found in the petitioner's first Minute of Amendment. Counsel asked "if this point is so 'obvious' why did it not become obvious until the day of the hearing". She answered herself by saying "because it is not obvious". The Minute of Proceedings was not produced and there was no evidence of what questions were put to the applicant. Further she had no notice of this point and no information to support the bald assertion that this apparent discrepancy was not put to the applicant.

[5] Counsel also pointed out that the petitioner was put on notice by the Secretary of State that his credibility was an issue. In a letter dated 26 May 2001 the Secretary of State gave the petitioner extensive written reasons for the refusal of his application. Towards the end of para.9 the letter reads:-

"In view of your claims that you were released without charge following your alleged detention, despite the security forces accusing you of being involved in terrorism, the Secretary of States does not find it credible that you were detained as claimed. You also stated that the police then came after you and put your house under surveillance. The Secretary of State does not consider that a well trained police force would let an alleged terrorist go free only to pursue them (sic) again, especially as you had not agreed to inform for them. This leads the Secretary of State to doubt that you were detained at all".

According to counsel, that was a clear indication that credibility on this very point was at issue right from the start. Again, at para.12 the letter reads:

"Therefore, in view of the lack of credibility of your overall individual account the Secretary of State is not prepared to believe that you are genuine conscientious objector".

Miss Drummond, counsel for the respondent, submitted that there was no evidence to suggest that the point made by the petitioner was not put by the Adjudicator. The petitioner was in any event put on notice by the refusal letter. Further, there was no obligation on the Adjudicator to put the specific question to explain any differences. Reference was made to the case of Hassan Najeeb Hassan v IAT 2001 Imm.A.R.83 (C.A.) in which the applicant had also been refused asylum by the Secretary of State: his appeal had been dismissed by a special adjudicator: he sought judicial review of the refusal of the Tribunal to grant him leave to appeal. The Secretary of State had not found the applicant credible: his credibility was a central issue in his appeal: the special Adjudicator also concluded he was not credible. Counsel submitted that the Adjudicator had been unfair to conclude that the applicant's evidence was vague in material respects without putting him on notice and giving him an opportunity to elaborate on it. It was held that the allegations were ill-founded and represented a serious misunderstanding of the function of the special Adjudicator and the duty that lies upon him. He had no obligation, having heard the evidence and found it unsatisfactory to put the applicant on notice and allow him to start again. (cf. Buxton L.J. at para.18). Miss Drummond suggested that that case was on all fours with the present and commended the reasoning to me (cf. paras.11-19). All in all, it was submitted that the issues were clear in this case.

[6] Miss Drummond sought to distinguish the case of Singh (supra) on the basis that the facts and the actions of the Adjudicator were different. Instead she chose to refer on the general question of credibility to Kulwinder Singh 2000 S.C.288 (esp. Lord Reed at 193F-294A) and Asif 2002 S.C.182 (esp. Lord Coulsfield at 188H).

[7] Counsel then turned to the Adjudicator's determination (No.6/1 of process). She submitted that reading from para.11 onwards as a whole there was no illogicality in the conclusion expressed in para.23, which is as follows:-

"When I come to consider the evidence in the round the cumulative effect of these difficulties with the appellant's account is such that I reach the conclusion that the appellant has been untruthful and that no credence at all can be attached to his account of the events which led to his leaving Turkey. It follows therefore no credence at all can be attached to his claim that he was of interest to the police authorities in Turkey when he left there and is of interest to them now".

It was suggested that the Adjudicator's first problem lay in a difficulty as to why the petitioner was released by the police. At the original stage it was not suggested that he had agreed to act as an informer. This was a change of story to get round the decision of the Secretary of State to refuse asylum. The Adjudicator dealt fairly and carefully with this. Indeed he said (para.17) that it was "dangerous to make much of it". At para.18 he had said he was released because of his age. There was no mention of having agreed to be an informer and one would have expected him to say that. This discrepancy was clearly crucial as it was the only reason given for persecution (paras.20 & 21). There were further difficulties over credibility which led the Adjudicator to the proper conclusion reached at para.23. Miss Drummond submitted that he was entitled to reach that conclusion and any suggestion that no reasonable Adjudicator could have reached that view had not been made out.

[8] In the whole matter, Miss Drummond submitted that in line with authorities in both Scotland and England there was no merit in the petition which should be refused.

[9] It seems that both counsel were agreed that the test to be applied by the Tribunal in cases such as this was that leave to appeal should only be granted only where the ground was readily discernible, obvious or had a strong prospect of success (Woolf M.R. in Robinson). In my opinion the ground of appeal adumbrated in this case falls into none of these categories. Indeed, as counsel for the respondent said the ground proposed at the Bar was not even obvious enough to have been noticed when the original grounds of appeal were suggested in the Petition. It did not seem to have become "obvious" until the day of the hearing, even although the question of the applicant's credibility was raised at an early stage in the reasons for refusal of the application in May 2001 (Hassan Najieb Hassan v IAT op. cit.). In any event, I agree with Miss Drummond that there was no illogicality in the Adjudicator's determination. In the whole matter I am of the view for the above reasons that this application is without merit. I therefore repel the first plea-in-law for the petitioner, sustain the third plea-in-law for the respondent and refuse the application.

 

 

 

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_109.html