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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Secretary of State for the Home Department v AF [2010] EWHC 42 (Admin) (18 January 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/42.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 42 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS PURSUANT TO THE PREVENTION OF TERRORISM ACT 2005
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AF |
Respondent |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AE |
Respondent |
____________________
Timothy Otty QC and Zubair Ahmad (instructed by Middleweeks of Manchester) for the Respondent AF
Tim Owen QC and Ali Naseem Bajwa (instructed by Chambers of Bradford) for the Respondent AE
Hearing dates: 15 and 16 December 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SILBER:
I Introduction
II The Facts
(a) On 18 May 2006, AE was served with a control order (PTA/4/2006) imposing inter alia, an 18 hour curfew. On 28 June 2006, Sullivan J held in Secretary of State for Home Department v J J & Others [2006] EWHC 1623 (Admin) that control orders including curfews of such length constituted deprivations of liberty and were therefore ultra vires and fell to be quashed ab initio. Sullivan J's decision was upheld on 1 August 2006 by the Court of Appeal in Secretary of State for Home Department v JJ and Others [2007] QB 446 and on 31 October 2007 by the House of Lords in Secretary of State for Home Department v JJ and Others [2008] 1 AC 385. AE was deprived of his liberty by PTA/4/2006 between 18 May and 11 September 2006, i.e. for 116 days.
(b) On 12 September 2006, the Secretary of State revoked the control order in PTA/4/2006 and made a further control order PTA/34/2006 in its place imposing, inter alia, a 14 hour curfew. This order was renewed on three occasions, in September 2007, 2008 and 2009. Its terms varied over time and included a 14 hour curfew between 12 September 2006 and 30 October 2007 (412 days), a 16 hour curfew between 31 October 2007 and 2 April 2009 (518 days), a 12 hour curfew between 3 April 2009 and 2 September 2009 (152 days) and a 10 hour curfew between 3 September 2009 and 22 September 2009 (20 days). AE was restricted by PTA/34/2006 between 12 September 2006 and 22 September 2009, i.e. for 1,104 days.
(c) On 22 September 2009, the Secretary of State revoked AE's control order in the light of the decision in AF (No.3).
(d) In total, AE has been restricted by the two control orders (PTA/4/2006 and PTA/34/2006) between 18 May 2006 and 22 September 2009, i.e. for 1,221 days, which is about 3years and 7 months.
(a) On 2 June 2006, AF was served with a control order imposing, inter alia, an 18-hour curfew and a geographical boundary restriction for the remaining 6 hours ("PTA/6/2006"). On 1 August 2006, the Court of Appeal held in Secretary of State for Home Department v JJ and Others [2007] QB 446 that control orders including curfews of such length constituted deprivations of liberty and were therefore ultra vires and fell to be quashed ab initio. The Court of Appeal's decision in this regard was upheld by the House of Lords in Secretary of State for Home Department v JJ and Others [2008] 1 AC 345. AF had been deprived of his liberty by PTA/6/2006 for 102 days.
(b) On 11 September 2006, Secretary of State revoked the control order in PTA/6/2006 and made a further order in its place imposing, inter alia, a 14- hour curfew and a geographical boundary restriction for the remaining 10 hours ("PTA/33/2006"). On 30 March 2007, Ouseley J held that this control order also constituted a deprivation of liberty and was ultra vires and fell to be quashed ab initio. AF had been restricted by PTA/33/2006 for 231 days.
(c) On 30 March 2007, the Secretary of State made a further control order imposing, inter alia, a 12-hour curfew and a geographical boundary restriction for the remaining 12 hours ("PTA/4/2007"). This order was renewed on two occasions (under PTA/23/2008 and PTA/13/2009) and was ultimately revoked by Secretary of State on 27 August 2009, following the decision of the House of Lords in AF (No. 3). AF had been restricted by PTA/4/2007 for 2 years and 149 days. Its terms varied over time and included a period between 1 November 2007 and 29 March 2009 when AF was subjected to a 16-hour curfew.
(d) In a judgment dated 31 October 2007, the House of Lords held unanimously that control orders with 12 and 14 hour curfews did not amount to a breach of Article 5 - see Secretary of State for the Home Department v MB and AF [2008] 1 AC 440. Consequently, Ouseley J's order dated 30 March 2007 and referred to in sub-paragraph (b) above quashing PTA/33/2006 was reversed.
(e) During the currency of his various control orders, AF has also been detained on remand for alleged breach of the orders. He was detained for alleged breach of PTA/33/2006 for 85 days between 5 January 2007 and 30 March 2007. The Crown offered no evidence to these charges following the decision of Ouseley J on 30 March 2007. He was also detained for alleged breaches of PTA/4/2007 on 3 occasions between 30 July 2007 and 20 March 2009 for periods totalling 99 days. The charges in relation to these alleged breaches remain pending and his trial at the Central Criminal Court in respect of these matters has been adjourned to await the outcome of these proceedings.
(f) In total, AF had been restricted by the control orders imposed on him for a total of 3 years and 15 days.
(g) Lord Phillips explained in AF (No. 3) in relation to the material available when all the control orders against AF were made that: -
"23...It is common ground that the open material did not afford the Secretary of State reasonable grounds for suspicion of involvement by AF in terrorism-related activity. The case against him was to be found in closed evidence "
"7... He was required to wear an electronic tag at all times. He was restricted during non-curfew hours to an area of about 9 square miles bounded by a number of identified main roads and bisected by one. He was to report to a monitoring company on first leaving his flat after a curfew period had ended and on his last return before the next curfew period began. His flat was liable to be searched by the police at any time. During curfew hours he was not allowed to permit any person to enter his flat except his father, official or professional visitors, children aged 10 or under or persons agreed by the Home Office in advance on supplying the visitor's name, address, date of birth and photographic identification. He was not to communicate directly or indirectly at any time with a certain specified individual (and, later, several specified individuals). He was only permitted to attend one specified mosque. He was not permitted to have any communications equipment of any kind. He was to surrender his passport. He was prohibited from visiting airports, sea ports or certain railway stations, and was subject to additional obligations pertaining to his financial arrangements."
"8. In his judgement, Ouseley J summarised the evidence given by AF concerning the impact of the order upon him. He had three times been refused permission to visit his mother. His sister and her family were unwilling to visit because of the traumatic experience of one child when AF was first arrested. Friends were unwilling to visit. He only had one Libyan or Arabic-speaking friend in the area he was allowed to frequent, which was not the area to which he had gravitated before. He was not permitted to attend the mosque he had attended before, and was confined to an Urdu- speaking mosque; he could not speak Urdu. He could not visit his Arabic- speaking general practitioner. He could not continue his English studies, since there were no places at the college in his permitted area. He was cut off from the outside world (although, as was pointed out, he had television access to Al Jazeera). The judge very broadly accepted AF's account of the effects of the control order on him, and of his reaction to those effects ...while noting certain elements of overstatement and exaggeration.... The judge concluded that the effects of the control order as described by AF were the effects which the restrictions were intended to have... "
"59.. establishes that the controlee must be given sufficient information about the allegations against him to enable him to give effective instructions to those allegations. Provided that this requirement is satisfied there can be a fair trial notwithstanding that the controlee is not provided with the detail or the sources of the evidence forming the basis of the allegations. Where, however, the open material consists purely of general assertions and the case against the controlee is based solely or to a decisive degree on closed materials the requirements of a fair trial will not be satisfied, however cogent the case based on the closed materials may be" (per Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers (with whom the other members of the Appellate Committee agreed) in Secretary of State for the Home Department v AF (No.3) [2009] 3 WLR 74, 98-99).
III The Issues
A. Whether in circumstances where the requirements of Article 6 of the European Convention compel the Secretary of State to withdraw the material relied upon in support of a control order such that the order cannot be maintained the Court should:
i. Quash the control order (and any relevant renewals) ab initio or direct revocation with retrospective effect; or
ii. Direct the revocation of the control order with prospective effect only (to the extent that this has not occurred) ("The Quashing/ Revocation Issue") (see paragraphs 14 to 89 below);
B. Whether the disclosure requirements identified in AF (No. 3) apply to a claim for damages by a controlled person arising out of the imposition of a control order upon him ("the Damages Claim Issue") (see paragraphs 90 to 112 below); and
C. Whether a Respondent to control order proceedings is entitled to recover the costs of those proceedings where the control order is quashed or revoked (either prospectively or retrospectively) as a result of the Secretary of State's election not to disclose further material so as to comply with the requirements of Article 6 of the Convention" ("The Costs Issue") (see paragraphs 113 to 118 below).
IV. The Quashing/ Revocation Issue
(i) Introduction
"If the court determines, on a hearing in pursuance of directions under subsection (2)(c) or (6)(b)(c), that a decision of the Secretary of State was flawed, its only powers are:
(a) power to quash the order;(b) power to quash one or more obligations imposed by the order; and(c) power to give direction to the Secretary of State for the revocation of the order or for the modification of the obligation it imposes".
(a) I should follow the decision of Mitting J in the case of Secretary of State for the Home Department v AN [2009] EWHC 1966 (Admin) refusing to quash a control order but merely to revoke it with effect from the date of revocation;
(b) Article 6 has no role at all in relation to the Secretary of State's actions in relation to control orders because the role of the Secretary of State was merely to make administrative decisions, which do not engage article 6;
(c) in making the decision to apply for and subsequently make control orders, the Secretary of State is not inhibited from placing reliance on material which may subsequently prove not to be admissible in court proceedings;
(d) even if there was power to quash or to revoke the control orders with effect from a date prior to their revocation, such powers should not on the facts of the present cases be exercised so as to have retrospective effect;
(e) insofar as there is a discretion whether to quash or to revoke the control orders, the discretion should be exercised in favour of revoking them solely with prospective effect and not to quash them; and
(f) If (contrary to the Secretary of State's primary case) the control orders are to be quashed, the quashing should be with effect from a date after that on which they were made.
(ii) Do the decisions in A v UK and AF (No.3) have solely prospective effect?
"without shutting the door on the possibility of such a development by a decision or practice statement of the House, I would say that it is best considered in the context of a case or cases where the employment of such a power would serve the ends of justice" (page 29f).
"not an appropriate case for detailed consideration of these arguments [on prospective overruling]... If ever there was a case where the declaratory theory should be applied, it must be one where the liberty of the subject is in issue - as it plainly is where the point relates to the entitlement of the subject to be released from custody" (page 37a-b).
"Anything said about the doctrine of "no-retrospectivity" will be obiter and is best left over to a case which requires its decision. It is extremely doubtful that there will be any such case" (pages 47h-48a).
(iii) The decision of Mitting J in AN
(iv) The Power to Quash Control Orders ab initio
"On a hearing in pursuance of direction under sub-section (2)(c) or (6)(b) or (c), the function of the court is to determine whether any of the following decisions of the Secretary of State was flawed-
(a) his decision that the requirements of section 2(l)(a) and (b) were satisfied for the making of the order; and
(b) his decisions on the imposition of each of the obligations imposed by the order ".
"if the Secretary of State cannot rely on it and it is indeed crucial to the decision, then the decision will be flawed and the order will have to be quashed" Secretary of State for the Home Department v MB & AF [72].
(v) Who is responsible for the Breach of the Controlees' article 6 Rights? Is it the Secretary of State or is it the Courts?
"Rules of court made in an exercise of the relevant powers must secure ...(d) that the relevant court is required to give permission for material not to be disclosed where it considers that the disclosure of the material would be contrary to the public interest".
i) Section 1(2) of the PTA states (with my emphasis added) that "Ihe power to make a control order against an individual shall be exercisable - (a) except - (in circumstances which do not apply in this case) by the Secretary of State";
ii) Section 2 of the PTA deals with the making of non-derogating control orders and provides that the Secretary of State may make control orders and section 2(6) of the PTA enables the Secretary of State to renew non-derogating control orders for a period of 12 months;
iii) Section 3 of the PTA gives the court some involvement but that is adequately described by the marginal note to section 3 as "Supervision by the court of making of non-derogating control orders";
(d) Section 3(2) of the PTA shows that the role of the court is to consider whether the decision of the Secretary of State to seek permission to make a non- derogating control order is "obviously flawed"; Section 3(3) of the PTA deals with the duties of the court where the Secretary of State has made a non- derogating control order without the court's permission;
(e) Section 3(6) and (8) of the PTA give the court's powers in relation to non- derogating control orders where it considers decisions and certificates of the Secretary of State were flawed;
(f) Section 3 (10) of the PTA requires the court to consider if decisions of the Secretary of State relating to the making of the non-derogating control order and each of its obligations to be flawed; and because
(g) Section 7(2) of the PTA provides that the Secretary of State may at any time revoke a non-derogating control order, relax or remove any obligation in it or with the consent of the controlled person modify any obligations imposed by it.
"Parliament has entrusted the decision whether or not to make a non-derogating order to a minister responsible to Parliament. It is not for me, as a judge, to make the decision ".
"... as MB makes clear, the Secretary of State is better placed than the Court to decide the measures which are necessary to protect the public from terrorism-related activities by the individual concerned" [19].
"23. The difficult question [which] is how the requirements of article 6(1) apply in a case such as this. It is a well-known principle that decisions which determine civil rights and obligations may be made by the administrative authorities, provided that there is then access to an independent and impartial tribunal which exercises full jurisdiction'... What amounts to full jurisdiction' varies according to the nature of the decision being made.. It does not always require access to a court or a tribunal even for determination of dispute issues of fact. Much depends on the subject matter of the decision and the quality of the initial decision-making process. If there is a "classic exercise of administrative discretion", even though determinative of civil rights and obligations, and there are a number of safeguards to ensure that the procedure is in fact both fair and impartial, to supply the necessary access to a court, then judicial review may be adequate to supply the necessary access to a court, even if there is no jurisdiction to examine the factual merits of the case. The planning system is a classic example..." (R (Wright) v Secretary of State for Health and another at page 750.
(vi) In taking decisions in the interests of national security, is the Secretary of State inhibited from placing reliance on material, which may subsequently prove not to be admissible in court?
"47... This suggests that there is no correspondence between the material on which the Secretary of State may act and that which is admissible in legal proceedings.
48. This is not an unusual position. It arises whenever the Secretary of State (or any other public official) relies on information which the rules of public interest immunity prevent him from adducing in evidence... It is a situation which arises where action is based on a warranted interception and there is no dispensation which permits evidence to be given. This may be seen as an anomaly, but, ..it springs from the tension between practical common sense and the need to protect the individual against unfair incrimination. The common law is not intolerant of anomaly".
(vii) Does the interim nature of control order applications mean that article 6 is not engaged?
"... the measure requested was drastic, disposed of the main action to a considerable degree, and unless reversed on appeal would have affected the legal rights of parties for a substantial period of time" (Micallef v Mortar GC (Appl. 17056/06 (15 October 2009) [75]).
"80. Against this background the Court no longer finds it justified to automatically characterise injunction proceedings as not determinative of civil rights or obligations. Nor is it convinced that a defect in such proceedings would necessarily be remedied at a later stage, namely, in proceedings on the merits governed by Article 6 since any prejudice suffered in the meantime may by then have become irreversible and with little realistic opportunity to redress the damage caused, except perhaps for the possibility of pecuniary compensation. "
81. The Court thus considers that, for the above reasons, a change in the case- law is necessary. While it is in the interests of legal certainty, foreseeability and equality before the law that the Court should not depart, without good reason, from precedents laid down in previous cases, a failure by the Court to maintain a dynamic and evolutive approach would risk rendering it a bar to reform or improvement ...It must be remembered that the Convention is designed to 'guarantee not rights that are theoretical or illusory but rights that are practical and effective... "'.
"84. First, the right at stake in both the main and the injunction proceedings should be 'civil' within the autonomous meaning of that notion under Article 6 of the Convention ...
85. Second, the nature of the interim measure, its object and purpose as well as its effects on the right in question should be scrutinised. Whenever an interim measure can be considered effectively to determine the civil right or obligation at stake, notwithstanding the length of time it is in force, article 6 will be applicable.
86. However, the Court accepts that in exceptional cases - where, for example, the effectiveness of the measure sought depends upon a rapid decision-making process - it may not be possible immediately to comply with all of the requirements of Article 6. Thus, in such specific cases, while the independence and impartiality of the tribunal or the judge concerned is an indispensable and inalienable safeguard in such proceedings, other procedural safeguards may apply only to the extent compatible with the nature and purpose of the interim proceedings at issue. In any subsequent proceedings before the Court, it will fall to the Government to establish that, in view of the purpose of the proceedings at issue in a given case, one or more specific procedural safeguards could not be applied
without unduly prejudicing the attainment of the objectives sought by the interim measure in question ".
(viii) Is the court obliged to quash the control orders ab initio because of the decision in AF (No3) ?
"4. ..Mr. Owen QC [counsel for the controlled person] submits that I should quash the order. Mr. O'Connor [counsel for the Secretary of State for Home Department] submits that I should give directions for its revocation. Mr. Owen submits that the order was a nullity, because the Secretary of State had no power to make an order, which could not subsequently be sustained in proceedings which complied with the civil proceedings limb of Article 6. If I had been persuaded that the order was a nullity, I agree that it would have to be quashed, like the order which the Secretary of State had no power to make in Secretary of State for the Home Department v JJ [2007] UKHL 45 (because the Secretary of State had no power to deprive JJ of liberty). Article 6 applies to "control order proceedings": see Lord Bingham's summary of the Secretary of State's concession in MB at paragraph 15. Whether or not the procedure used has involved significant injustice to the controlled person must be determined by looking at the process as a whole: paragraph 35. The making of the order by the Secretary of State is part of that process. But it is the Court which determines, when granting or withholding permission to make the order under section 3(2) whether the decision of the Secretary of State is obviously flawed and which determines, on a review hearing under section 3(10), whether the decision to make the order and to continue it in force is flawed. The obligation to disclose or gist to the controlled person the essence of the case only arises at the stage when the Secretary of State's decisions are reviewed under section 3(10). Subject to the qualification made below, when the Secretary of State decides to apply for permission to make the order and makes it, he is not inhibited from relying on closed material which, in due course, he may elect to withdraw rather than to disclose or gist. Further, when the Secretary of State decided to make the order it was reasonable to suppose that she would be permitted to rely on the closed material without gisting or disclosing it: the hearing in MB did not begin until the following day and the decision was not handed down until 31st October 2007. If Mr. Owens's argument is right, it was not only the decision of the Secretary of State which was a nullity, but also that of Collins J, when he granted her permission to make the order on 3rd July 2007. On the principle that a decision of a properly constituted Court on an issue within its jurisdiction is binding unless and until set aside, that proposition is untenable. I am satisfied that both elements of the proceedings at the inception of the control order (Collins J's permission, and the minister's decision, to make the order) were lawful and that neither was a nullity. Taken together, that stage of the proceedings, cannot be so described. It follows that I am not required by the application of ordinary judicial review principles to quash the order".
"... there had been a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of article 5 the judge in AF's case was wrong to conclude that the appropriate remedy was to quash the control order since the effect of doing so was to render it of no effect and to leave the public , for whose protection it has been made, at risk of terrorist-related activity. The scheme of the 2005 Act is to focus specifically on individual obligations, rather than to treat a control order as either valid or invalid as a whole" (page 463h-464 a).
"72.... But if the court considers that the material might be of assistance to the controlled person in relation to a matter under consideration it may direct that the matter be withdrawn from consideration by the court. In any other case, it may direct that
the Secretary of State cannot rely upon the material. If the Secretary of State cannot rely on it, and it is indeed crucial to the decision, then the decision will be flawed and the order will have to be quashed."
"Time and again in the cases I have cited it has been stated that a decision without regard to the principles of natural justice is void, and that was expressly decided in Wood v Wode. I see no reason to doubt these authorities. The body with the power to decide cannot lawfully proceed to make a decision unless it is afforded to the person affected a proper opportunity to state his case. "
"Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in this Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity".
"147 - ... Article 13 does, however, impose upon the United Kingdom an international law obligation to afford "everyone whose rights and freedoms as set out in [the] Convention are violated... an effective remedy before a national authority".
" While article 13 of the Convention is not among those scheduled to the [HRA], its requirement that there must be an effective remedy for violations of Convention rights reflects the long-standing principle of our law that where there is a right there should be a remedy. Parliament's intention was that the [HRA] itself should constitute the United Kingdom's compliance with article 13; but that makes it if anything more important that the courts, as part of the state, should satisfy themselves so far as possible that the common law affords adequate control, in conformity with article 13 of the legality of official measures which interfere with personal autonomy".
"Even where an allegation of a threat to national security is made, the guarantee of an effective remedy requires as a minimum that the competent independent appeals authority must be informed of the reasons grounding the deportation decision, even if such reasons are not publicly available. The authority must be competent to reject the executive's assertion that there is a threat to national security where it finds it arbitrary or unreasonable. There must be some form of adversarial proceedings, if need be through a special representative after a security clearance. Furthermore, the question whether the impugned measure would interfere with the individual's right to respect for family life and, if so, whether a fair balance is struck between the public interest involved and the individual's rights must be examined".
(ix) If there is only a discretion to quash the orders, what order should be made?
"5. I accept that I have discretion whether to quash the order or to give directions for it to be revoked. The difference matters in this case, because AN has been charged with an offence of breaching the order. A decision by me to quash it would, without more, require the charge to be abandoned (this is the necessary consequence of the automatic quashing of any conviction provided for in section 12). Different orders have been made without full argument in R (ota Secretary of State) v Cerie Bullivant [2008] EWHC 337 (Admin) by Collins J and by me in BM. This is, as far as I know, the first occasion on which the issue has been fully argued. I am, therefore, free to determine it uninhibited by either of those two decisions. I am satisfied that I should not quash the order, but simply give directions for it to be revoked. I do so for the same reasons as those given briefly in BM. The order was properly made and renewed on the basis of material which the Secretary of State and Collins J were entitled to take into account. It was not a nullity. It is a control order which cannot now be sustained as a result of a proper decision made on or shortly before 15th July 2009 in the light of the law as it has now been declared to be by the House of Lords. In the exercise of the discretion which section 3(12) gives to me, I propose to give directions that an order, lawful at inception, but which can no longer be sustained, should be revoked"
(x) If the control orders have to be quashed, from what date have they to be quashed?
(xi) Conclusions
V The Damages Claim Issue.
(i) Introduction
"the controlee must be given any such information about the allegations against him to enable him to give effective instructions in relation to those allegations" [59].
(ii) The decision in AF (No. 3)
"57.. The Grand Chamber was dealing with the applicants complaining of detention contrary to article 5(1). The relevant standard of fairness required of their trial was appropriate to article 5(4) proceedings. The Grand Chamber considered, having regard to the length of the detention involved, that article 5(4) imported the same fair trial rights as article 6 (1) in its criminal aspect- see para 217. Mr Eadie submitted that a less stringent standard of fairness was applicable in respect of control orders, where the relevant proceedings were made subject to article 6 in its civil aspect. As a general submission there may be some force in this, at least where the restrictions imposed by a control order falls short of detention. But I do not consider that the Strasbourg court would draw any such distinction when dealing with the minimum of disclosure necessary for a fair trial. Where this not the case, it is hard to see why the Grand Chamber quoted so extensively from control order cases".
(iii) The decision in Carnduff v Rock and Another [2000] 1 WLR 1786.
"33. It seems to me that these matters cannot be litigated consistently with the public interest; and that if that is so there is plain justification to strike out the claim as embarrassing or abusive, under CPRr3.4. See what is involved. If the disputes which they generate were to be resolved fairly by reference to the relevant evidence - and there is no other legitimate judicial means of proceeding - the court would be required to examine in detail the operational methods of the police as they related to the particular investigation in question".
VI The Costs Issue
"17... the appropriate test in my judgment, is whether it is more likely than not that the decision to make or maintain the control order or to impose or maintain in place an individual obligation would have been held to have been flawed and so have been quashed".
VII Conclusions
A. Whether in circumstances where the requirements of Article 6 of the European Convention compel the Secretary of State to withdraw the material relied upon in support of a control order such that the order cannot be maintained the Court should:
i. Quash the control order (and any relevant renewals) ab initio or direct revocation with retrospective effect; or
ii. Direct the revocation of the control order with prospective effect only (to the extent that this has not occurred)
The answer is that on the facts of the present cases, the control orders made against AE and AF should be quashed ab initio.
B. Whether the disclosure requirements identified in AF (No. 3) apply to a claim for damages by a controlled person arising out of the imposition of a control order upon him
The answer is that those requirements apply in principle to claims for damages by AE and AF arising out of the imposition of a control order upon them.
C. Whether a Respondent to control order proceedings is entitled to recover the costs of those proceedings where the control order is quashed or revoked (either prospectively or retrospectively) as a result of the Secretary of State's election not to disclose further material so as to comply with the requirements of Article 6 of the Convention
The answer is that AE and AF are entitled to recover their costs (which have not been the subject of previous orders) on a standard basis against the Secretary of State for Home Department.