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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 >> AB v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 1490 (Admin) (22 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/1490.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1490 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
East Parade Leeds |
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B e f o r e :
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AB |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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William Hansen (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 11th May 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Clive Heaton QC:
(i) The decision is unlawful because the SSHD fails to have any/ any adequate regard to her own policy and/or acts in breach of that policy
(ii) The decision is unlawful because the SSHD fails to have any/any adequate regard to relevant evidence
(iii) The decision in unlawful and/or irrational as the SSHD fails to give any any adequate reasoning for failing to consider the relevant evidence and in reaching conclusions on credibility
(iv) A breach of Article 4 ECHR
The essential background
(i) She was born into a poor family in Lagos. She had 8 siblings. Two of those children died in childhood. Her home circumstances were poor and abusive
(ii) At age 6 she was sent to work for a woman in Lagos as a child domestic servant. She stayed there for "a long time" but then was allowed to return home
(iii) She then spent about a year at home and went to secondary school. In this period she was sexually assaulted by an older step brother
(iv) The Claimant says she was then once again placed in domestic servitude, this time with a woman Grace. She describes her time living with Grace as "hell". She was subject to physical and sexual abuse in this period. At one point she was ejected from Grace's house. Her father returned her there and told her she should remain and threatened her life if she did not. She says that at this point she made an attempt on her own life.
(v) The Claimant was then brought to the UK via Belgium by Grace in 2000 she says. They lived in London. The Claimant was again subject to domestic servitude. She was not paid for her work. She was beaten and had inappropriate sexual comments made about her by the men in the house
(vi) After "a few years" the Claimant was assisted to leave the house of Grace by a friend of Grace called Wally. This was understood by the Claimant to be an "escape" from Grace. The Claimant says she was sexually exploited by Wally. She became pregnant by him and terminated the child. She was thereafter abandoned by him in 2005. It is right to say that while she was living with Wally the Claimant attended college and accessed medical services
(vii) After the time with Wally came to an end the Claimant lived for a time with a friend from college
(viii) In 2006 the Claimant met a man called CD. She has had three children by him in 2007, 2011 and 2013. That relationship was characterised by domestic violence. She eventually left that relationship
(ix) Following leaving CD the Claimant and the children lived in a hostel
(x) On 27th September 2013 the Claimant was sectioned under the Mental Health Act. The children were received into care where they remain. The Claimant sees them three times each week
(xi) The Claimant was discharged from hospital on 13th January 2014.
The argument before me
28. Further, in many asylum cases, some, even most, of the appellant's story may seem inherently unlikely but that does not mean that it is untrue. The ingredients of the story, and the story as a whole, have to be considered against the available country evidence and reliable expert evidence, and other familiar factors, such as consistency with what the appellant has said before, and with other factual evidence (where there is any).
29. Inherent probability, which may be helpful in many domestic cases, can be a dangerous, even a wholly inappropriate, factor to rely on in some asylum cases. Much of the evidence will be referable to societies with customs and circumstances which are very different from those of which the members of the fact-finding tribunal have any (even second-hand) experience. Indeed, it is likely that the country which an asylum-seeker has left will be suffering from the sort of problems and dislocations with which the overwhelming majority of residents of this country will be wholly unfamiliar. The point is well made in Hathaway on Law of Refugee Status (1991) at page 81:
"In assessing the general human rights information, decision-makers must constantly be on guard to avoid implicitly recharacterizing the nature of the risk based on their own perceptions of reasonability."
30. Inherent improbability in the context of asylum cases was discussed at some length by Lord Brodie in Awala –v- Secretary of State [2005] CSOH 73. At paragraph 22, he pointed out that it was "not proper to reject an applicant's account merely on the basis that it is not credible or not plausible. To say that an applicant's account is not credible is to state a conclusion" (emphasis added). At paragraph 24, he said that rejection of a story on grounds of implausibility must be done "on reasonably drawn inferences and not simply on conjecture or speculation". He went on to emphasise, as did Pill LJ in Ghaisari, the entitlement of the fact-finder to rely "on his common sense and his ability, as a practical and informed person, to identify what is or is not plausible". However, he accepted that "there will be cases where actions which may appear implausible if judged by…Scottish standards, might be plausible when considered within the context of the applicant's social and cultural background".
25. There seems to me to be very little dispute between the parties as to the legal principles applicable to the approach which an adjudicator, now known as an immigration judge, should adopt towards issues of credibility. The fundamental one is that he should be cautious before finding an account to be inherently incredible, because there is a considerable risk that he will be over influenced by his own views on what is or is not plausible, and those views will have inevitably been influenced by his own background in this country and by the customs and ways of our own society. It is therefore important that he should seek to view an appellant's account of events, as Mr Singh rightly argues, in the context of conditions in the country from which the appellant comes. The dangers were well described in an article by Sir Thomas Bingham, as he then was, in 1985 in a passage quoted by the IAT in Kasolo v SSHD 13190, the passage being taken from an article in Current Legal Problems. Sir Thomas Bingham said this:
"'An English judge may have, or think that he has, a shrewd idea of how a Lloyds Broker or a Bristol wholesaler, or a Norfolk farmer, might react in some situation which is canvassed in the course of a case but he may, and I think should, feel very much more uncertain about the reactions of a Nigerian merchant, or an Indian ships' engineer, or a Yugoslav banker. Or even, to take a more homely example, a Sikh shopkeeper trading in Bradford. No judge worth his salt could possibl[y] assume that men of different nationalities, educations, trades, experience, creeds and temperaments would act as he might think he would have done or even - which may be quite different - in accordance with his concept of what a reasonable man would have done."
26. None of this, however, means that an adjudicator is required to take at face value an account of facts proffered by an appellant, no matter how contrary to common sense and experience of human behaviour the account may be. The decision maker is not expected to suspend his own judgment, nor does Mr Singh contend that he should. In appropriate cases, he is entitled to find that an account of events is so far-fetched and contrary to reason as to be incapable of belief. The point was well put in the Awala case by Lord Brodie at paragraph 24 when he said this:
"… the tribunal of fact need not necessarily accept an applicant's account simply because it is not contradicted at the relevant hearing. The tribunal of fact is entitled to make reasonable findings based on implausibilities, common sense and rationality, and may reject evidence if it is not consistent with the probabilities affecting the case as a whole".
He then added a little later:
"… while a decision on credibility must be reached rationally, in doing so the decision maker is entitled to draw on his common sense and his ability, as a practical and informed person, to identify what is or is not plausible".
27. I agree. A decision maker is entitled to regard an account as incredible by such standards, but he must take care not to do so merely because it would not seem reasonable if it had happened in this country. In essence, he must look through the spectacles provided by the information he has about conditions in the country in question. That is, in effect, what Neuberger LJ was saying in the case of HK and I do not regard Chadwick LJ in the passage referred to as seeking to disagree.
The Defendant's argument in response
(i) Was not the new information contained within the Ashiana report that this respected and experienced organisation who had worked with the Claimant for some time had formed the professional opinion that the Claimant was a trafficked person, and should that not have been grappled with in the decision letter? Mr Hansen's response was to say that ultimately the decision was for the SSHD and to return to his point that there was nothing new in the report
(ii) Was the decisionmaker not under an obligation at least to explain why she had taken the approach to the report she had? Given that she had provided no reason at all it might be said that Mr Hansen was seeking to descend into the mind of the decisionmaker in making even the submission that the report added nothing new. Mr Hansen's response was to argue that "in a perfect world it would have been" but that this did not constitute such a failing as to undermine the decision letter as a whole.
Discussion and conclusions
"There is no evidence (despite you being registered with a GP) that you had any mental illness at that point which would have prevented you from reporting your traffickers to the authorities in the UK. Your current mental health problems cannot be considered to be a mitigating reason as to why you did not seek help when you were free of Grace and Wally, when at that time you were functioning within society and making a life for yourself in the UK…"
"This is [C's] first contact with the psychiatric services. There may have been other dissociative episodes in the past. [C] described cutting herself off from experiences and times when things that have happened that she cannot explain…….. [C] also describes that around the age of 16 the spirit of her female "employer" came inside her, she cannot describe this clearly"
and later
"Our assessment was that [C] was suffering from longstanding and complex PTSD…"
(i) Quash the decision of 9th July 2014
(ii) Make a mandatory order for the Defendant to reconsider the Claimant's claim to be a victim of trafficking
(iii) That the Defendant pay the Claimant's reasonable costs to be assessed if not agreed. Any such assessment shall take place on paper
(iv) A Public finding direction for the Claimant
His Honour Judge Clive Heaton QC