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In the matter of an application for judicial review R v. PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSIONER FOR STANDARDS EX PARTE MOHAMED AL FAYED [1997] EWCA Civ 2488 (15th October, 1997)
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
FC3
97/5927/D
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CROWN
OFFICE LIST
(MR
JUSTICE SEDLEY
)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Wednesday,
15 October 1997
B
e f o r e:
THE
MASTER OF THE ROLLS
(LORD
WOOLF)
LORD
JUSTICE MILLETT
LORD
JUSTICE MUMMERY
-
- - - - -
In
the matter of an application for judicial review
R
E G I N A
-
v -
THE
PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSIONER FOR STANDARDS
EX
PARTE MOHAMED AL FAYED
-
- - - - -
(Computer
Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London
EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 831 3183
Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
-
- - - - -
MR
D PANNICK QC with MR M FORDHAM
(Instructed by Messrs Dibb Lupton Alsop, London EC4R 2SS) appeared on behalf of
the Appellant
MR
S RICHARDS
(Instructed by the Treasury Solicitors, London) appeared on behalf of the
Respondent
-
- - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(As
approved by the Court
)
-
- - - - -
©Crown
Copyright
Wednesday,
15 October 1997
J
U D G M E N T
LORD
WOOLF MR: This is a renewed application for leave to apply for judicial review
by Mr Mohamed Al Fayed in relation to a report by the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Standards. The application for leave was originally refused
by Sedley J on 24 April 1997 in a reasoned judgment which I have found of
considerable assistance in dealing with this application today.
The
application is in effect a preliminary issue as to whether the activities of
the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards are an appropriate subject of an
application for judicial review.
In
his very helpful skeleton argument, Mr Pannick QC identified the issue as being
whether the supervisory jurisdiction of the Court applies where the impugned
decision is not by the House of Commons itself, or by one of its Committees,
but by an independent person who has been appointed by Parliament to exercise
an investigative function.
The
issue raises the question of the relationship between the Courts and
Parliament. That is a relationship which is central to the constitutional
arrangements in this country. It is clearly a matter of sensitivity and
importance. Therefore, although this Court was clearly of the view that this
was a case where the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards is not an
appropriate subject for judicial review in relation to matters of which
complaint is made, nonetheless, we should grant leave to Mr Pannick to apply
for judicial review and treat the application as the hearing of the substantive
application. We did this so that, if it is thought desirable, an application
can be made to the House of Lords for leave to petition their Lordships in
relation to the decision to which we have come.
Because
the issue appears to us to be one to which there is a clear answer (and that
that answer is the same as that to which Sedley J came in the judgment to which
I have referred) we have also come to the conclusion that, notwithstanding the
importance of the point, it is not necessary to reserve judgment.
It
is clearly established that the Courts exercise a self-denying ordinance in
relation to interfering with the proceedings of Parliament. That approach is
supported by Article 9 of the Bill of Rights. The terms of Article 9 (so far
as relevant) are as follows:
"That
the freedom of speech and debates or proceedings in Parliament ought not to be
impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament."
The
expression "proceedings in Parliament" is not defined by the Bill of Rights,
and in my judgment the issue which I have previously identified is best
approached by consideration of the broader principles which underline the
relationship between Parliament and the Courts. That relationship was
elegantly described by Sedley J as "a mutuality of respect between two
constitutional sovereignties".
In
the case of
Prebble
v. Television New Zealand Ltd
[1995] 1 AC 321 at page 332D, Lord Browne-Wilkinson dealt with the same matter.
Lord Browne-Wilkinson indicated that a generous approach had to be adopted to
Article 9. He then went on to say:
"In
addition to article 9 itself, there is a long line of authority which supports
a wider principle, of which article 9 is merely one manifestation, viz. that
the courts and Parliament are both astute to recognise their respective
constitutional roles. So far as the courts are concerned they will not allow
any challenge to be made to what is said or done within the walls of Parliament
in performance of its legislative functions and protection of established
privileges... As Blackstone said in his Commentaries on the Laws of England,
17th ed. (1830), vol.1, p.163:
'the
whole of the law and custom of Parliament has its original from this one maxim,
"that whatever matter arises concerning either House of Parliament, ought to be
examined, discussed, and adjudged in that House to which it relates, and not
elsewhere."'"
The
establishment of the office of Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards has its
source in the Nolan report. In the course of argument, Mr Pannick drew our
attention to parts of that report which explain why it was created. The report
also resulted in the setting up of a Standing Committee with responsibilities
for the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards. What had been recommended by
Lord Nolan in his report was that(paragraph 11):
"• the
House should appoint a person of independent standing, who should have a degree
of tenure and not be a career member of the House of Commons staff, as
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards;
• the
Commission should have the same ability to make findings and conclusions public
as is enjoyed by the Comptroller and Auditor General and the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Administration;
• the
Commissioner should have independent discretion to decide whether or not a
complaint merits investigation or to initiate an investigation;
• the
Commissioner should be able to send for persons, papers and records, and will
therefore need to be supported by the authority of a Select Committee with the
necessary powers..."
I
draw attention to the fact that in the Nolan report itself an analogy was drawn
between the position of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards and the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, who is commonly referred to as
the Ombudsman.
By
the Standing Orders of the House of Commons of 1997, printed by order of the
House on 20 March 1997, it was ordered that there should be a Select Committee
called the Committee of Standards and Privileges, who should have the
responsibility:
"(a) to
consider specific matters relating to privileges referred to it by the House;
(b) to
oversee the work of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards...
(c) to
consider any matter relating to the conduct of Members, including specific
complaints in relation to alleged breaches in any code of conduct to which the
House has agreed..."
The
same Standing Orders provide that there shall be an officer of the House,
called the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, who shall be appointed by
the House, and whose duties should include maintaining the Register of Members'
Interests, providing advice confidentially to Members, advising the Committee
on Standards and Privileges. He should also:
"...
receive and, if he thinks fit, investigate specific complaints from Members and
from Members of the public in respect of -
(i) the
registration or declaration of interests, or
(ii) other
aspects of the propriety of a Member's conduct,
and
to report to the Committee on Standards and Privileges or to an appropriate
sub-committee thereof."
It
is not necessary (because we are dealing with this application today on the
basis of an issue of principle) to refer to the merits of the application. I
should however indicate that the applicant contends that Mr Howard, then a
Minister of the Crown as well as a Member of Parliament, received a corrupt
payment. I should also indicate that in the report which the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Standards produced in relation to that complaint, he concluded
that Mr Howard had no case to answer.
Mr
Pannick in his submissions recognises that the issue under consideration is
borderline. He submits that so far as his client's application is concerned,
it is on the right side of the borderline. He relies strongly on the
similarities between the position of the Parliamentary Commissioner for
Standards and the Ombudsman.
The
Courts having previously concluded that the Local Government Ombudsman was
subject to the Court's jurisdiction in respect of judicial review, had then to
consider the position of the Ombudsman. That issue came before the Courts in
the case of
R
v. Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration ex p Dyer
[1994] 1 WLR 621. Mr Pannick submits that it would be inconsistent with the
general approach adopted by the Divisional Court in the case of
Dyer
for the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards not to be subject to the
supervision of this Court on an application for judicial review.
There
is no doubt that there is a similarity between the two offices. The Ombudsman
is not strictly speaking an officer of Parliament. He does, however, have the
privileges of such an officer, and that is made clear by Erskin May (current
edition) at page 199. In the words of that authority he is "accorded the
privileges of an officer of the House". In addition, they both are subject to
the supervision of Standing Committees of Parliament. There is then the fact
that both make reports to Parliament. However, as I see it, there is a
significant distinction which I regard as critical between the two roles. The
activities of the Ombudsman are in relation to what I will call loosely the
"administration"; they are not in relation to activities of Parliament. The
Ombudsman investigates the activities of Government. Activities of Government
are the basic fare of judicial review. Activities of Parliament are not the
basic fare of judicial review. Indeed activities of Parliament are accepted in
general by Mr Pannick to be not subject to judicial review. If I may put it
this way, if what was being sought here was judicial review of the Standing
Committee responsible for supervising the activities of the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Standards, Mr Pannick would accept that judicial review was
not available.
It
is important on this application to identify the specific function of the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards which is the subject of complaint on
this application. It is that a Member of Parliament received a corrupt
payment. Mr Pannick rightly says that Parliamentary privilege would not
prevent the Courts investigating issues such as whether or not a member of
Parliament has committed a criminal offence, or whether a member of Parliament
has made a statement outside the House of Parliament which it is alleged is
defamatory. He submits that, consistent with this, the sort of complaint which
the applicant makes in this case is not in relation to an activity in respect
of which the member of Parliament would necessarily have any form of
Parliamentary immunity.
As
to those arguments of Mr Pannick, it seems to me that we are not concerned here
with what the Member of Parliament was doing, but the nature of the role of the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards. He was conducting his activities
under the supervision of the relevant Committee, because the activity which is
complained of could have an effect on the workings of Parliament. It is
therefore directly related to what happens in Parliament.
Here
is the really significant distinction between the role of the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Standards and the Ombudsman. The Ombudsman is concerned at
looking at what happens in relation to the administration by Government and
other relevant public bodies outwith Parliament. The Ombudsman is concerned
with proper functioning of the public service outside Parliament. On the other
hand, the focus of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, is on the
propriety of the workings and the activities of those engaged within
Parliament. He is one of the means by which the Select Committee set up by the
House carries out its functions, which are accepted to be part of the
proceedings of the House. This being the role of the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Standards, it would be inappropriate for this Court to use its
supervisory powers to control what the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards
does in relation to an investigation of this sort. The responsibility for
supervising the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards is placed by
Parliament, through its Standing Orders, on the Committee of Standards and
Privileges of the House, and it is for that body to perform that role and not
the Courts.
It
is for these reasons that I would dismiss this application.
LORD
JUSTICE MILLETT: I agree.
LORD
JUSTICE MUMMERY: I agree.
ORDER: Renewed
application allowed; substantive application dismissed with costs; leave to
appeal to the House of Lords refused.
© 1997 Crown Copyright
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