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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 >> LS (Uzbekistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 909 (30 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/909.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 909 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
AA/04445/2006
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
LS (UZBEKISTAN) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Ms Susan Chan (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the respondent
Hearing dates : 18th June 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
"I now turn to the second aspect of the Appellant's claim in the alternative, that if she is returned she faces persecution or adverse treatment arising from her unauthorised departure from Uzbekistan. Having found the core of the Appellant's account untrue, there is no basis for finding that the Appellant has left her country of origin without the appropriate approval of the authorities. Even if she has, the authority of OM (Returning Citizens) CG [2007] UKAIT 00045 suggests that her position will not cross the threshold of Article 3. She will be a single young woman returning to her country of origin in circumstances where the authorities will not know of her claimed sexual orientation. As the CG authority indicates, it is not impossible for the Appellant to obtain a passport outside Uzbekistan bearing in mind she has settled family ties in the country. There is no objective basis for finding as Miss Farquharson does that upon return the Appellant's unsuccessful application for asylum would be deemed an aggravating feature, particularly if what she says earlier is correct, that the Appellant's father may have influence which can be brought to bear."
(i) that despite the order made by Senior Immigration Judge Drabu adjourning the reconsideration for a full hearing on all issues (including by implication the issue of the appellant's sexual orientation), the tribunal had no jurisdiction as a matter of law to re-open that question;
(ii) that the judge's finding that the appellant is not a lesbian was irrational and based to a material degree on findings that were not supported by the evidence;
(iii) that the judge failed properly to consider and evaluate the evidence bearing on the risk to the appellant of ill-treatment on her return to Uzbekistan.
(i) The scope of the tribunal's jurisdiction
"43. I would add this on the procedural aspect of the case. Had the tribunal been right in its critique of the first determination in relation to Rule 317, it should have included in its order a direction that the immigration judge who was to continue the reconsideration should do so on the basis that the facts found by Mr Ince were to stand save insofar as the issue to be reconsidered required their significance to be re-evaluated.
44. The reason why it is important to be rigorous about this is that reopening a concluded decision by definition deprives a party of a favourable judgment and renders uncertain something which was certain. If a discrete element of the first determination is faulty, it is that alone which needs to be reconsidered. It seems to me wrong in principle for an entire edifice of reasoning to be dismantled if the defect in it can be remedied by limited intervention, and correspondingly right in principle for the AIT to be cautious and explicit about what it remits for redetermination."
"As far as what has been called the second stage of a reconsideration is concerned, the fact that it is, as I have said, conceptually a reconsideration by the same body which made the original decision, carries with it a number of consequences. The most important is that any body asked to reconsider a decision on the grounds of an identified error of law will approach its reconsideration on the basis that any factual findings and conclusions or judgments arising from those findings which are unaffected by the error of law need not be revisited. It is not a rehearing: Parliament chose not to use that concept, presumably for good reasons. And the fact that the reconsideration may be carried out by a differently constituted tribunal or a different Immigration Judge does not affect the general principle of the 2004 Act, which is that the process of reconsideration is carried out by the same body as made the original decision. The right approach, in my view, to the directions which should be considered by the immigration judge ordering reconsideration or the Tribunal carrying out the reconsideration is to assume, notionally, that the reconsideration will be, or is being, carried out by the original decision maker."
"25. I see the theoretical force of this argument. But it ignores practical reality and human considerations. Judgment of credibility in cases such as this is inevitably a difficult and imperfect exercise. Different tribunals hearing the same witnesses may reach quite different views. A search for theoretical perfection is doomed to failure. In practice many of these cases fall naturally into two parts: the first depending on as assessment of the applicant's account of his own past experiences, the second on a more objective appraisal of his prospects on return. That was the distinction drawn in PE and it is equally valid here in my view. It is sensible case-management and convenient for everyone to treat the decision on the first part as a fixed factor, so that the debate concentrated on the second part.
26. From a human point of view, appearing in front of a tribunal in support of an asylum claim must be a gruelling experience at the best of times. To require it to be repeated on issues which have already been decided is not only wasteful of the tribunal's time and resources, but oppressive and potentially unfair for the applicant. This case illustrates both aspects. Instead of a relatively narrow inquiry into the threat currently posed by the GIA, and the consequences of the applicant's recent conviction, the tribunal had to undertake a full scale-review of the whole case from the beginning, leading to the laborious and time-consuming preparation of a decision running to 68 paragraphs. For his part, the applicant, now unrepresented and having to act as advocate and witness, was required to go back over the whole story for the third time, and reargue eight separate issues, without any credit for the favourable impression he had made on the two previous tribunals."
"It follows that if there is to be any challenge to the factual findings, or the judgments or conclusions reached on the facts which are unaffected by the errors of law that have been identified, that will only be other than in the most exceptional cases on the basis of new evidence or new material as to which the usual principles as to the reception of such evidence will apply, as envisaged in rule 32(2) of the Rules. "
(ii) Irrationality
(iii) Risk of ill-treatment on return
"Having found the core of the Appellant's account untrue, there is no basis for finding that the Appellant has left her country of origin without the appropriate approval of the authorities.",
because I could not understand why the rejection of the appellant's description of her sexual orientation made it any more or less likely that she had left Uzbekistan without an exit visa. However, I think Miss Chan was right in submitting that the judge was saying no more than that, having disbelieved her evidence on a matter of such central importance, he had no basis for believing her evidence on that aspect of the case either.
Ward L.J.: