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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 >> KBL, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department & Ors [2022] EWHC 1545 (Admin) (17 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1545.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1545 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of KBL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (2) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN, COMMONWEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT AFFAIRS (3) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE |
Defendants |
____________________
(instructed by Wilsons LLP) for the Claimant
Lisa Giovannetti QC, Edward Brown QC and Hafsah Masood (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lang :
Factual background
The issues in the claim
Ground 1
i) an unlawful and irrational refusal by the SSHD to accept and consider her LOTR application as valid in breach of the applicable LOTR policy (v. 1.0, 27 February 2018);
ii) a failure to enable the provision of biometrics in Pakistan or to defer the provision of biometrics before an in-principle decision is taken;
iii) adoption of an overly rigid and unreasonable alternative procedure that unfairly excludes KBL from consideration for LOTR.
Ground 2
Ground 3
The history of the Part 18 application
"The Defendants' Detailed Grounds of Defence and evidence provide your clients and the Court with sufficient evidence pursuant to the duty of candour. Practice Direction 18 … indicates that requests should be "strictly confined to matters which are reasonably necessary and proportionate to enable the first party to prepare his own case or to understand the case he has to meet" (1.2). My clients have provided detailed evidence which is sufficient for these purposes."
The law
"Obtaining further information
(1) The court may at any time order a party to—
(a) clarify any matter which is in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) give additional information in relation to any such matter,
whether or not the matter is contained or referred to in a statement of case.
(2) Paragraph 1 is subject to any rule to the contrary."
"It is now clear that proceedings for judicial review should not be conducted in the same manner as hard-fought commercial litigation. A respondent authority owes a duty to the court to cooperate and to make candid disclosure, by way of affidavit, of the relevant facts and (so far as they are not apparent from contemporaneous documents which have been disclosed) the reasoning behind the decision challenged in the judicial review proceedings."
"[T]here is … a very high duty on public authority respondents, not least central government, to assist the court with full and accurate explanations of all the facts relevant to the issue the court must decide."
"Departments of state need…to bear in mind that they have an advantage in this field. They have access to materials to which other parties have no access or which it would be difficult and expensive for them to search out. But axiomatically an exercise of this kind, if it is to be carried out at all, must disclose the unwelcome along with the helpful."
"It is the function of the public authority itself to draw the court's attention to relevant matters…. to identify "the good, the bad and the ugly"", at [20];
"there is a duty on public authorities not to be selective with their disclosure", at [21].
"(4) The witness statements filed on behalf of public authorities in a case such as this must not either deliberately or unintentionally obscure areas of central relevance; and those drafting them should look closely at the wording to ensure that it does not contain any ambiguity or is economical with the truth. There can be no place in this context for "spin".
(5) The duty of candour is a duty to disclose all material facts known to a party in judicial review proceedings. The duty not to mislead the court can occur by omission, for example by the non-disclosure of a material document or fact or by failing to identify the significance of a document or fact."
Part 18 Requests
Outstanding questions from KBL's original Part 18 request
Question 1
Response dated 15 June 2022: A reasonable and proportionate search has been conducted. No record has been found to confirm that the Secretary of State "personally intervened" in the way described. There is no further information to provide.
Question 2
Further Part 18 request following service of Defendants' evidence
Question 1
Question 2
This is a specific online visa application form normally used for Syrian nationals who are accepted as eligible for UK resettlement under the Syrian Resettlement Scheme. The form is not live to the general public as an applicant's eligibility for UK resettlement under the Syrian Resettlement Scheme is considered and determined by the Home Office following a referral from a third-party organisation (for example UNHCR). Since the Afghan Girls Development Football Team cohort had already been accepted as "eligible" (in the exercise of the Home Secretary's discretion: see Elloise Gordon's witness statement §§5-7), this form, which was completed on applicants' behalf by Home Office Officials, was used as a means to facilitate an entry clearance application that would lead to a visa being issued. The forms were required to be filled out as the system requires this to process an applicant's identity, generate biometric enrolment letters in order for security checks to be carried out and a visa to be issued.
Question 3
Question 4
Question 5
Question 6
Question 7
Question 8
Question 9
Questions 10 and 11
Question 12
Question 13
Questions 14 and 15
Question 16
Question 17
The order