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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 >> BA & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 944 (11 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/944.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 944 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
HH Judge Anthony Thornton QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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BA BB BC BD |
Claimants and Respondents in the appeal |
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-and- |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Defendant and Appellant in the appeal |
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-and- |
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Bail for Immigration Detainees |
Intervener |
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Mr Hugh Southey QC (instructed by Deighton Pierce Glynn Solicitors) for the Respondent
Ms Helen Mountfield QC and Mr Tom Hickman (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for Bail for Immigration Detainees, as Intervener
Hearing date : 13 March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
President of the Queen's Bench Division :
The facts
(a) The claim for asylum and its determination
(b) The issuance of removal directions
(c) The first judicial review proceedings
(d) Representations made by BA's solicitors to the Secretary of State after 18 June 2008
"There are a number of points I should like to make.
…
2. Detention of a baby at age 2 months when essential immunisations are already planned at age 2, 3 and 4 months is indefensible.
3. You have made no attempt to consider [BD]'s health needs prior to detention.
…
10. Your policy is that families will only be detained "when absolutely necessary and for the shortest possible time".
11. There is no necessity to detain this family who will not abscond given their dependence on health services.
12. You are unable to remove this family within the next two months due to legitimate health need.
13. You therefore need to release the family.
14. This situation was entirely predictable prior to detention and as such the detention is an abuse of the family and a waste of public money."
(d) The second judicial review proceedings
"The contents of the immigration factual summary are accepted. The claimant has secured medical opinion requesting a stay of removal. Following the defendant's refusal a further letter was served relating to the refusal to stay removal. D has failed to respond to date."
That was a reference to the letter sent by Dr Lessof dated 11 July 2008. The statement of grounds described the claimant in the same terms as the claim form. Ground 1 related entirely to the claim for judicial review of the decision of 4 July 2008. Ground 2 was in the following terms:
"It is submitted that the defendant has acted against its own policy by failing to release the claimants from detention by letter dated 3 July 2008, which is contrary to the medical opinion served."
There was a third ground claiming that the Secretary of State had acted unlawfully by failing to provide a decision on the human rights claim. The grounds contained a caveat which stated they had been settled on an emergency basis and in great haste. Permission was sought to correct any errors within seven days or to amend the grounds following the Secretary of State's summary grounds of defence. The relief claimed was a quashing order of the decision to set removal directions and a declaration that to proceed with removal was unlawful. It also contained a claim for, "such further or other relief as the court finds fit".
(e) The proceedings after the withdrawal of the removal directions
"The present application for judicial review be stayed for 28 days from the date of this Order for the Defendant to respond to the Claimant's submissions dated 11 July 2008."
There were further directions in relation to the response. The reference to the document dated 11 July 2008 was a reference to Dr Lessof's letter.
"15. The Defendant submits that detention of the Claimant and her family was at all times in accordance with the relevant policies and procedures. It is well accepted that detention is appropriate where removal is imminent. Following the failure of the Removal Directions set for 21 July 2008, the Claimant and her family were released from detention on 22 July 2008.
16. During detention, the Claimant and her family's circumstances were reviewed weekly to ensure that detention remained appropriate. The claims in relation to the claimant and her family's medical conditions were fully considered and it was determined that detention remained appropriate (see Defendant's letter dated 20 June 2008)."
(f) The letter before action of 11 March 2009
(g) The decision of Cranston J in relation to the second judicial review claim
"This claim is an abuse of process. The Grounds mention malaria and TB. Yet the letter from Nurse Emma Kelly demonstrates that the claimant and her family were offered malaria prophylaxis on a number of occasions and have refused it. The Secretary of State was entitled to act in accordance with the objective evidence about treatment for TB in Cameroon. I have read the letters of both Dr Lessof and Dr Jones but they do not address the legal issues now before me. There can be no objection to the earlier detention."
He then certified the claim as totally without merit.
(h) The issue and service of proceedings in the Queen's Bench Division
The submissions of the parties
(a) The second application for judicial review had raised as a distinct ground of challenge the lawfulness of the detention. It had been so treated in particular in the light of Dr Lessof's letter of 11 July 2008.(b) That claim was maintained in the application for judicial review after the release of the claimants who included the children.
(c) It was not at any time abandoned by Fadiga & Co. The letter before action sent by Pierce Glyn on 11 March 2009 was in essence based on the same grounds as were being advanced in the application for judicial review which was still extant.
(d) On well established principles enunciated in Johnson v Gore Wood, the claim was in the circumstances an abuse of process. It could not be right to give the claimants the opportunity to try to bring the claim twice and avoid making a renewal application in the judicial review proceedings.
The relevant factors
"be a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by seeking to raise before it the issue which could have been raised before."
(a) The question as to whether detention is lawful will be closely related to the removal directions and the time within which removal can be effected. This question raises issues which the Administrative Court is best placed to determine, whereas the quantum of damages can best be determined in the general list of the Queen's Bench Division or the Central London County Court or another County Court. Although it is plainly permissible to bring a claim for damages for immigration detention alone as an ordinary civil claim (see ID at Paragraphs 102-105), the efficient administration of justice favours issues of immigration law in such claims being determined by judges with experience of asylum and immigration law.(b) Although a County Court or the High Court can transfer a claim to the Administrative Court when such issues arise (see paragraph 103 of ID), where a claim is brought on behalf of a person in detention pending removal challenging removal directions by an application for judicial review, then any claim in respect of detention said to be unlawful should also be brought in the judicial review proceedings, given the close relationship between the issues.
(c) That is because it is important in the overall public interest that all the issues in relation to the lawfulness of the removal directions and the legality of the detention are determined by the Administrative Court in one set of proceedings having regard to the overall business of the courts. It is not permissible to circumvent these objectives: see Carter Commercial Developments Ltd v Bedford Borough Council [2001] EWHC 669 (Admin) at paragraphs 32 and following. Moreover, enabling the claimant to litigate the issues in two sets of proceedings would unnecessarily place a significant and unjust burden on the Secretary of State.
(d) The importance of orderly case management under the Civil Procedure Rules is a highly relevant consideration: see Lord Woolf MR in Clark v University of Lincolnshire and Humberside [2000]1 WLR 1988 at paragraphs 34-36; and Chadwick LJ in Securum Finance v Ashton [2001] Ch 291 at paragraphs 34-5 and 52.
(e) The fact that in an ordinary action there will be disclosure will generally make no difference, as the Secretary of State is under a duty of candour in judicial review proceedings. However any lack of time on a claimant's part to obtain the necessary evidence for a claim relating to unlawful detention will be material in considering whether there is an abuse of process.
(f) Where the Administrative Court has determined an issue or refused permission to bring a claim or advance an issue on a permission application, then even though that determination will not usually give rise to an issue estoppel, it is generally not permissible for the claim or issue to be re-litigated between the same parties in those proceedings or in fresh proceedings: see the authorities referred to by Simon J in R (Ecopower UK Ltd) v Transport for London [2010] EWHC 1683 (Admin) at paragraphs 19-22; R(Opoku) v Principal of Southwark College and Others [2003] 1 WLR 234 where Lightman J considered the circumstances in which grounds in respect of which permission had been refused could be raised at the full hearing.
The present appeal
Conclusion
Lady Justice Black :
Lord Justice Davis :
i) The second application for judicia