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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 >> LXD & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2019] EWHC 1120 (Admin) (28 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/1120.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1120 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF LXD AND OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CHIEF CONSTABLE OF MERSEYSIDE POLICE |
Defendant |
____________________
MR P. F ERNANDO (instructed by Legal Services, Merseyside Police) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON:
The back ground facts
"The intelligence picture is likely to develop over the next few days. The best way to safeguard these subjects is the prompt arrest of the suspects."
Target hardening measures were put in place and local officers were notified of the threat.
"I have today spoken to LXD, as has an officer from the LP team who has been able to provide LXD with advice about obtaining a new property through the council. LXD remains at a family address not known to offenders and feels safe there, although this is clearly not a long-term solution. The two named offenders have been arrested and bailed with conditions. Target hardening has been completed and there have been no more reported incidents. Based upon the above, I am satisfied that this threat can be closed. Should there be any need information, intelligence or incidents consideration can be given to re- opening the threat."
"Temporary Detective Inspector Speight is of the opinion that the threat to the Claimants, such as it is, can be managed by an urgent TAU marker and target hardening. Temporary Detective Speight believes that the Claimants have returned to their home address which they left in January 2019. Secondly, as from 2 April 2019 RT will no longer be provided with safe house accommodation by Merseyside Police. Thirdly, a witness statement served by the father of the First Claimant, dated 25 March 2019, outlines the difficulties caused by the Claimant staying at his home, namely the cramped accommodation, the adverse impact on sleep for all the household, the tension arising between family members and his concerns about the risks to his wife and son due to the ongoing situation. Fourthly, an undated witness statement from the First Claimant, served shortly before the court hearing, also explains the difficulties with the present accommodation, the lack of alternative places to stay and it explains that her accommodation situation has become desperate."
Legal framework
"… Article 2 of the Convention may also imply in certain well-defined circumstances a positive obligation on the authorities to take preventive operational measures to protect an individual whose life is at risk from the criminal acts of another individual.
... bearing in mind the difficulties involved in policing modern societies, the unpredictability of human conduct and the operational choices which must be made in terms of priorities and resources, such an obligation must be interpreted in a way which does not impose an impossible or disproportionate burden on the authorities.
... where there is an allegation that the authorities have violated their positive obligation ... it must be established to its satisfaction that the authorities knew or ought to have known at the time of the existence of a real and immediate risk to the life of an identified individual or individuals from the criminal acts of a third party and that they failed to take measures within the scope of their powers which, judged reasonably, might have been expected to avoid that risk. ... This is a question which can only be answered in the light of all the circumstances of any particular case."
Interim relief
Submissions on behalf of the Claimants
Submissions on behalf of the defendant
Discussion
Interim Relief – serious issue to be tried
Balance of convenience
"Generally, there is a strong public interest in permitting a public authority's decision to continue, so the applicant for interim relief must make out a strong case for relief in advance of the substantive hearing."
MS NI GHRALAIGH: (Inaudible).
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes. Yes, if you could – I appreciate that Mr Skelt is not here and you may not be fully appraised of this matter. If it is possible to – I mean, it may not be possible to come back at two on costs because Mr Skelt is not available, in which case I am in your hands. I just wanted to make it clear that I am available if it helps with a speedy resolution.
MR FERNANDO: I am grateful, my Lady. I think (inaudible) as to costs (inaudible).
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes, or do you want to seek to agree – why do you not see if you can agree costs between yourselves and put them into a draft order with a timetable? That would be the quickest way forward. Come back before two if you need to but it may be that you do not need to. I will now rise.
(Short Break)
MS NI GHRALAIGH: My Lady, I must begin by apologising to the court for the late notification of the need for this hearing. I have apologised to my learned friend.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: That is all right.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: It was just a miscommunication on my part.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Do not worry at all. Do not worry. Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: My Lady, we have agreed a timetable----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: -- between us, which would be to a hearing on 16 May.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: That has required -- I have something in my diary that date already, but we are making efforts to move that around and I hope that that will be possible.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Mr Skelt was not available on the 2nd. The current proposed timetable is that----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Sorry to interrupt. (Talks to the associate) That is what I thought actually. I thought I had said -- you think the same, yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: I have a note of the 16th.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Is that going to cause difficulties? Unless, I read it out. I am sorry.
Let me just check my note.
MR FERNANDO: My Lady, I originally thought it was the 14th.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Right. Right. I am afraid----
MS NI GHRALAIGH: 14th is okay for me. Would you need to take instructions?
MR FERNANDO: I would need to check Mr Skelt's diary.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Why don't you tell me what else you want to raise and, hopefully, you can check. Is there a way you can check Mr Skelt's diary while we are in court?
MR FERNANDO: My Lady, if you would permit me to switch on my phone, I can email from my phone.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes. I am conscious you might want to listen to the submissions.
Just take it as you wish. We may have to break for a bit.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: We then made, well, the submissions that I was going to make were about timetabling, but I will come back to those then, given that we will need to abridge those in terms of the date of the hearing.
The two submissions which I would like to make to support are regarding costs and the calling of live evidence.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: I will deal with those in reverse order. As I submitted yesterday, to resolve primarily an issue about forum, the matter is properly before this court.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: There would be no basis upon which to transfer it to the Civil Court, because the Civil Courts have no jurisdiction to make the orders that we are seeking.
In terms of giving live evidence, I have never been involved in a judicial review that required the giving of live evidence and neither has my solicitor and, as I said yesterday,
I can see nothing in this case, as it currently stands, that requires the calling of live evidence. The factual disputes, for example was it a council house was it not, I imagine that those will be resolved on the papers without difficulty.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: They are not matters that in my opinion at present require the calling of live evidence and they are matters that can be determined on the papers. I cannot see why this case would be different from any other judicial review, but we have had very limited disclosure to date. So, I cannot obviously with a crystal ball foresee what will arise and what I cannot do, because I have no power to do this, is of course to bind the court. As the cases law makes absolutely clear, this court will not normally order cross-examination, no more than they will ordinarily order disclosure, but such orders can and should be made where justice requires it and where it is necessary for the fair disposal of the case. The rules under the CPR rule, CPR 8.6(2) "The court may require or permit a party to give oral evidence at the hearing." Or Rule 8.6(3) "The court may give directions requiring the attendance for cross-examination of a witness who has given written evidence."
Now, there is only one witness who has given written evidence at present and there is certainly nothing arising in her statement.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Who is that?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: It is the----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Ms Hardy, is it?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: No, for the defendant. It is a police officer. Her name is Caroline Anne----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Ashurst. The solicitor. Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: There is nothing in her statement which I can foresee requiring.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: There may be in the exhibits, but she does not give evidence about the statements made in the exhibits. So, all I mean to say by that is I cannot fetter the court, I cannot fetter my client's right to a fair disposal of the case, but if it becomes necessary to either call live evidence or to order disclosure in the case, it may well be that the court determines that the timetable is no longer appropriate.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes, of course. To take it clear what I was trying to say was on matters, as they have developed so far, we ought to be able to manage without live evidence and you have accepted that. I entirely accept that something may come out of the blue and we may have to change track and so there should be a liberty to apply and that may affect timetable. That is a matter for your client, because in a way the burden falls on her or the disadvantage of that falls on her because she is where she is. So, yes, of course. You will have to come back to the court and so be it.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Indeed. What I have discussed with my learned friend is that perhaps on the timetable for us providing our skeleton argument that we should at that stage obviously raise if we do need further disclosure, if we believe we need to make an application for disclosure, or for the hearing of live evidence that we would make it at that stage and at that stage----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: That would be, presumably, only a few days before.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Well, it would be on the current timetable, and I accept that that now needs to be tweaked, it would be about two weeks.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I see.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Because we would be submitting----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: What is the current?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: The current timetable if I can begin with that----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: -- is----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I mean the key next step is the grounds of defence and the evidence.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Indeed.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: When is that?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Absolutely. The first step we thought was an updated statement of facts and grounds, which will need to be slightly modified in light of the information that we have already, including regarding the new information regarding RT.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes. Well, I mean it might just be better to -- really you probably just want to hear from them.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Indeed.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I mean I am not -- I am just thinking of getting this done as quickly as possible. I am not sure we need that.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: If the court does not believe that that is needed, then that is a step we are very happy to -- we had suggested an abridged time for that.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Put it this way, I am sure your summary grounds, your ground of defence will make what they will of RT having been released and then you can pick it up in the skeleton. That might be a more efficient way to cover it.
MR FERNANDO: My Lady, if I just rise briefly just to explain.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MR FERNANDO: If the grounds were amended, the statement of facts and grounds were amended, there may be less of a dispute between the defendant and Claimant, factually. That was a thought process----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I see.
MR FERNANDO: -- behind an amendment to see if we can proceed within the next week or so and find a more common ground. That may not be necessary and it may just be creating work for the sake of it, but it might focus minds.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I see. If you could get all this done before 14 May then so be it. I will leave it to you.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: My Lady, I do not anticipate that it will resolve factual matters, because, as my Lady has highlighted, what we need is to hear from the defendant what their position is.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: So, we had, in any event, suggested an abridged timetable for that. We could perhaps -- I would be content to skip that process entirely and to move directly to a----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I think what I am hearing -- I am sorry I do not know your name.
MR FERNANDO: Mr Fernando.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: If we suggest this----
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: You would like this extra stage or your client would like to see some -- I think if your client would like to see some revised grounds.
MR FERNANDO: I think, my Lady, my client has anticipated, on the basis of the factual differences, that there would be some communication between the parties where that would be clarified and then there would be a further response to those grounds, but my learned friend says that there is no need for this step, because she will not amend her grounds to
a more common position or then it is perhaps a step we do not need to take, but the logic behind it is to see if, given the comments of the court about the factual differences, whether that would be taken.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes, I can certainly see the logic of what you are saying. I think the reason I made the comments I did in my judgment was to get to the place we have now got to which is where Ms Ni Ghralaigh accepts that she will not need it call witness evidence, but, understandably, reserves her position.
MR FERNANDO: Yes.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I do not think we are probably going to get that much further. So it seems to me we may as well go straight for your grounds, because that is going to be
the really important part of this case.
MR FERNANDO: Yes.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: And you need time for that. How long are you asking for?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: In the current timetable, the updated statement of facts and grounds was to be by 5 April and, thereafter, the defendant's response by 18 April.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I mean I would propose that we go straight to the response. 21 days takes you to 15 April or something like that and then skeleton arguments, because what I am concerned about from the court's perspective is I do not want to find a few weeks beforehand we might need to start talking about three or four witnesses, because that really will throw matters. That is the problem with leaving these matters to skeleton argument. So, I would rather have the grounds of defence within 21 days, or even shorter if you can, but that is a matter for you and then any application for witness evidence to be made very promptly after that so everybody, including the court, knows where we are going.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Indeed.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: So shall I leave you to agree? I mean why don't I leave you to agree the timetable in light of (a) the 14th not the 16th and (b) in light of my comments.
MR FERNANDO: Yes.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Unless you have any more generally points to make on timetable, I think you know where I am going. So it ought to be possible for both parties to agree that timetable and we could then turn to costs. Do either of you want to say anything else about timetable at the moment?
MR FERNANDO: No.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: No, my Lady.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: So we are effectively just building in provision for you to come back to the court pretty immediately. If you look at whatever grounds of defence and think, right, this rolled-up hearing is not going to work in the current format.
MR FERNANDO: My Lady, just to clarify. The provision for service by the defendant is for updated grounds and evidence upon which they rely?
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes. That is always -- that should not come as a surprise to your client, because that has always been their case. They were going to do that. So, costs.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: So, in terms of costs, my Lady, the Claimant's position is that the order should be costs in the case.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: The two key factors impacting on my Lady's ruling on interim relief where the decision was that with which the defendant informed the Claimant on the morning of the hearing that RT was no longer to be accommodated in the safe house and the view of the defendant indicated at 4.03 of the hearing that the assessment was that it was safe for the Claimant to return home.
While reference had been made to a prior threat assessment, in fact the prior threat assessments are based on her not being at her home address and, indeed, the court has seen no assessment, other than the verbal assessment, that it is indeed safe for the Claimant to return home. It is pretty clearly post the balaclava incident.
The defendant did refuse to meet with the Claimant on five occasions prior to this hearing in what was anticipated to be a way of avoiding the need for this hearing and failed also to correct the Claimant's misapprehension that RT was in protective custody and failed to correct the Claimant's misapprehension about the underlying basis for the threat; namely, that it was linked to money laundering. They also failed to alert the Claimant to the fact that she was in fact at risk and the threat involved gun crime but, perhaps more importantly, if the Claimant were to succeed at the main hearing, it would simply mean that the court had not had sufficient information at this hearing to determine the balance of convenience in the Claimant's favour.
The defendant had could not have indicated in not providing her with protective measures if indeed she succeeds in her main claim. Until there is proper disclosure, effectively, it will be impossible to know whether interim relief would have been granted or not on that information. As such, the Claimant's position is that no order for costs should be made against the Claimants for this hearing.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: So costs in the case, yes.
MS NI GHRALAIGH: Yes.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Mr Fernando.
MR FERNANDO: I am grateful, my Lady. Well, I think the first point is of course that the application made by the Claimant for interim relief was unsuccessful and the ordinary course would be that costs follow the event and nothing in this matter should detract from that.
There was I understand an issue about the expedited hearing being agreed. I think that is still the position. I clarified, my Lady, with Mr Skelt this morning that he had not reneged from that position simply to say that he required and his clients required more time to consider the material. So, the basis for dismissing the application, my learned friend I understand to be corrected, is, firstly, that RT was to move from a safe house on 2 April and, secondly, the risk assessment posed or the risk posed to the Claimant.
It is accepted that the information about RT was conveyed on the day of the hearing, simply because the decision, as I understand it, to move him was made very late, or at least communicated to him, very late in the day. So, there was no delay as such on the defendant's part. My Lady, you will appreciate that I am in a slightly invidious position in not having been involved in this case nor heard and only having picked it up in fact yesterday and this morning. So, my in depth knowledge is not the same, of course, as Mr Skelt.
But, in respect of the risk posed to the Claimant, my learned friend says that this was something raised latterly, indeed on the day, but in Ms Ashurst's statement, which is dated on 22 March, the risk of the downgrading of that risk to the Claimant was known. It is there and it is plain within the logs to see. So that should not have come as new news. It was something that was known.
It is also relevant in this case, my Lady, I think again I speak on behalf of Mr Skelt when he says he took my Lady to the chronology of this claim and the very short duration within which the defendant was allowed to respond before the claim was issued. That also must be taken to account the fact that the defendant did not really have a proper opportunity to respond and was thrust into these proceedings, somewhat based on the Claimant's instance on immediate responses, which does not and would not fall within the natural pre-action timetable.
It should also be said, my Lady, that the day before the hearing there was an offer to the Claimant to install CCTV within her property and that was served on a without prejudice basis, but to be installed within her property to provide additional insurance and that was something she rejected and of course the hearing took place, commenced.
So, all those matters are relevant, my Lady, in considering whether costs should be awarded. I understand, of course, that the Claimant is legally aided, but, subject to s.26 the defendant says that costs should be awarded in this event in the ordinary course and follow the event of the unsuccessful interim application.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: Thank you both for your submissions.
My decision is that there should be costs in the case. The fact that RT is no longer going to be accommodated within the safe house as from 2 April and the assessment that it is now safe for the Claimant to go back home, did weigh heavily in the balance of convenience and those were matters that became apparent very late in the day.
My understanding is, and I will be corrected, is that the police log was disclosed after the application for interim relief and there was an attempt in a pre-action process by the Claimant's solicitors to seek information in meetings which might have avoided the application for interim relief. I do accept that the timescales are short, but the way in which that should be dealt with, it seems to me, is for all this to be looked at the end of this hearing and not for the Claimant's to be penalised at this stage. That is my decision.
Is there anything I can assist further with at this stage?
MS NI GHRALAIGH: No.
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON: I will expect to see an agreed order in writing which I will sign and will be sealed. Thank you.
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