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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NJ (Iran) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 77 (22 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/77.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 77 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. AA/07485/2006]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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NJ (IRAN) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Mr S Kovats (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent..
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Lord Justice Carnwath:
"In summary I accept that the appellant was a member of a women's culture centre. I find her role was low-key and that she was not known to the authorities. I accept that she attended the International Women's Day demonstration on 8 March 2006 and that she was one of the many people struck by baton-wielding police as they broke up the demonstration. I find that the police action was intended to disperse and intimidate those at the demonstration. I am satisfied that no arrests were made at the demonstration and consequently the Appellant's fear that her friends may disclose her name to the authorities is without foundation.
41 On the basis of the objective material before me I do not consider that the Appellant is of any interest to the authorities in Iran because of her membership of the Women's Cultural Centre or her attendance at the demonstration."
"The grounds on which the appellant has applied for an order for reconsideration may be summarised as follows:
1. In rejecting the appellant's account that friends of hers had been arrested during or after the International Women's Day demonstration in Tehran on 8 March 2006 because there were no reports of such arrests in the objective material, the immigration judge failed to take account of objective material before him which reported that such arrests had in fact taken place;
2. An application to adduce fresh documentary evidence relating to such arrests."
"Ground 2 is misconceived. Reconsideration lies on a point of law only. It was manifestly not an error of law on the part of the Immigration Judge not to take account of evidence which was not before him at the time of his decision.
…ground 1 clearly raises an arguable point of law which merits further consideration. Reconsideration is therefore ordered, limited to the issue raised in ground one."
"Having considered the material before it and with the consent of the parties the Tribunal has decided that the original [tribunal] made a material error of law. This reconsideration will now proceed on the issue of whether the appeal should be allowed or dismissed, and to substituting a fresh decision to the appropriate effect."
The parties were invited to respond to that within 14 days.
"This appeal comes before the Tribunal as a reconsideration of the Appellant's appeal which was original determined by an Immigration Judge in a decision promulgated on 22nd August 2006. At the reconsideration hearing on 23rd November 2006 a Senior Immigration Judge decided as follows:"
(There is then set out the direction which I have already quoted. )
"At the hearing before me both representatives agreed that I should consider all the evidence and issues in the case afresh. However Miss Pope on behalf of the Secretary of State conceded that the Appellant had attended at a demonstration in Iran on 8 March 2006 in Daneshgo Park in Tehran. Miss Pope however made no further concessions at the outset of the hearing, although I should state that during submissions she accepted that the objective evidence showed that arrests had been made at that demonstration. Miss Pope indicated that credibility was in issue. Consequently I have considered all matters in issue save for what the Home Office has conceded."
"The Appellant has so undermined her credibility by the matters that I have stated above that I am unable to [accept her credibility]. I do not find that the Appellant was ever involved in any women's group in Iran. She has not proved to me the reason she was attending the demonstration in Iran on the day in question was because of an involvement in a women's group. I do not accept the Appellant has ever been arrested or detained in Iran or ever ill treated. I do not accept that she was ever attacked by the police in March 2006 or at any other time."
So in conclusion he did not accept that she left Tehran fearing persecution or ill-treatment.
"It is arguable that Immigration Judge Birkby's duty was confined to a reconsideration of the single issue referred to him, and that he could not enlarge his jurisdiction through any agreement between the parties."
"In ordering the reconsideration, the sole direction made by the Senior Immigration Judge was that the matter should not be put before the original Immigration Judge. No directions were either sought or made in relation to the extent to which the evidence already heard was to be relied on at the reconsideration or the extent to which the matter was to be re-heard as opposed to merely reconsidered. The notice of reconsideration hearing, dated 29 November 2006, which were accompanied by standard directions in respect of the service of a witness statements and evidence bundle.
4. Prior to the hearing, I spoke with the Respondent's representative Miss Pope. I recall asking her about the ambit of the order for reconsideration. She informed me that she understood that what had been ordered was effectively a rehearing de novo. I did not have any specific instruction on the point. However, having regard to the terms of the order and directions that had been made, it seemed to me reasonably clear that the Respondent's interpretation was correct and the matter had been listed for effectively a rehearing before a differently constituted tribunal.
5. At the commencement of the hearing, the Immigration Judge raised the question of whether the matter was to proceed as a rehearing. Miss Pope submitted that the tribunal must consider the evidence and issues in the case afresh. I responded that her interpretation did not appear inconsistent with the order for reconsideration and directions made. The Immigration Judge did not invite any further submissions and appeared satisfied that the matter should proceed in the manner suggested by the Respondent. Accordingly, the immigration judge reheard the evidence subject to those concessions made by the Respondent as outlined in paragraph 4 of the determination."
"If (despite some material error of law) an issue or matter has been properly and satisfactorily dealt with in the first decision, there is no reason why further time should be spent on it in the reconsideration. Although the Tribunal considering the appeal has all the grounds of appeal before it, it also has -- indeed it has just been considering -- the previous decision, then it must be at liberty to adopt those parts which it considers are sound. The principle perhaps goes further than that. Because the process is reconsideration, we would incline to the view that in general the Tribunal should always adopt those parts of a previous decision which are not shown to be unsound."
"I consider that the reasoning of the Tribunal was essentially sound as to the jurisdictional ambit of a reconsideration. That does not provide a complete answer to what should be the scope in practice of any particular reconsideration. The jurisdiction is one which is being exercised by the same Tribunal, conceptually, both at the first hearing of the appeal, at then at any reconsideration. That seems to me to be the key to the way in which reconsiderations should be managed in procedural terms."
"21 In the first instance, in relation to the identification of any error or errors of law, that should normally be restricted to those grounds upon which the immigration judge ordered reconsideration, and any point which properly falls within the category of obvious or manifest point of Convention jurisprudence as described in Robinson [[1998] QB 929.] Therefore parties should expect a direction either from the immigration judge ordering reconsideration or the Tribunal on reconsideration restricting argument and the points of law identified by the immigration judge when ordering the reconsideration. Nothing in either the 2004 Act or the rules, however, expressly precludes an applicant from raising points of law in respect of which he is not successful at the application itself and there is no appellate machinery which would enable an applicant who is successful in obtaining an order for reconsideration to challenge the grounds upon which the immigration judge ordered such reconsideration. It must however be very much the exception, rather than the rule, that a Tribunal will permit other grounds to be argued. But clearly the Tribunal needs to be alert to the possibility of an error of law other than identified by the immigration judge, otherwise its own decision may be unlawful."
I agree.
I also agree.
Order: Appeal dismissed