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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 >> ZOS, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2022] EWHC 3567 (Admin) (31 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/3567.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3567 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING | ||
on the application of | ||
ZOS | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
____________________
MR T TABORI (instructed by the Government Legal Department) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE FOSTER DBE:
Background
After the Application for Judicial Review
After the Judicial Review
"And upon the Defendant accepting that the accommodation provided to the Claimant [ ][in] Croydon, London [ ] is not adequate, and accepting that it has acted in breach of its duty under section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1995;
"And upon the Defendant also accepting that it has acted in breach of its duty under section 55 of the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act 2009;
"And upon the Defendant accepting that the Claimant's family requires self-contained, wheelchair accessible accommodation in the London Borough of Southwark with sufficient space for the Claimant's son, AS, to continue his treatment and store the specialist equipment he requires, in particular his wheelchair;
"And upon the Defendant indicating it is able to provide such accommodation within fourteen days of the hearing, absent 'special circumstances', by consent it is ordered "
"I write to inform you that the SSHD regretfully will not be able to comply with the Court Order to provide the Claimant with adequate accommodation by no later than 3 August 2022. The SSHD intends to file an urgent application today to vary paragraph of Judge Sachdeva's [sic] Order dated 13 July 2022 so that the time for compliance is extended."
"The Defendant regrets to inform the Administrative Court that she is not in a position to provide the Claimant and her son with accommodation by today. The Defendant makes an application requesting the learned judge to vary his Order so that the time for compliance is extended. If the draft Order is not made, the Defendant would be prejudiced such that it would be unjust. Accordingly, the making of the draft Order would be in furtherance of the overriding objective."
"The first-floor flat requires a stairlift to be fitted."
After the Urgent Application
"I have only just read your Order dated 4 August 2022."
"[the property] [was] adequate for the Claimant's needs within the meaning of section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999."
Hearing on 11 October: Contempt of Court
Adjournment and Further Orders
"The Defendant shall, by 4.00 p.m. on Monday, 17 October, provide evidence detailing, at least:
(a) the reason for the delay in making the application;
(b) the steps taken to secure adequate accommodation for the Claimant since the date of the Order;
(c) the reason the deadline in the Order, to which the Defendant consented, was not met;
(d) the basis of the information on which the Defendant took the view that [the property] was adequate;
(e) the nature and timeframe of the works by which the Defendant suggests [the property] may be made adequate;
(f) any reasons why an Order for costs on the indemnity basis should not be made against the Defendant in respect of any or all periods after 3 August 2022."
The Evidence
Kingham First Statement 9 August 2022
" became aware, following discussion with owner, that the property will not be suitable owing to it not being able to have a stairlift over the three floors of the property."
"The Defendant considers this property [ ] to comply with the Court's Order (as requested to be varied), as it is self-contained, wheelchair accessible accommodation in the London Borough of Southwark, with sufficient space for the Claimant's son to continue his treatment and to store the specialist equipment he requires, in particular his wheelchair."
"I apologise on behalf of the Defendant to the Claimant and to the court that we did not inform the court of the problems we faced in July 2022 earlier than we did, and that we were not in a position to accommodate the Claimant on 3 August 2022."
Kingham 2 Statement of 11 August
" address concerns over the accommodation at the Travelodge Southwark, 202-206 Union Street."
The SSHD did not accept that the room was inadequate accommodation under the Act; at that point it was proposed to move the Claimant and her family within a few days, and she was content to remain until that happened. Guidance was given to the Claimant to contact Migrant Help. The issue that there was insufficient access for the wheelchair could not be answered. CRH had been asked to follow up, and some help with the storage of luggage was offered.
Kingham 3 Statement of 17 October
(a) Mr Kingham says he had asked for an account of the steps taken after February 2022 to source accommodation, but none had been provided.
(b) He said he had asked for details of the required works for the new propert and "again, this information has not been provided with any level of detail".
(c) Despite asking, the Home Office did not know why the property at the previous location was mooted at trial in July as possible accommodation within fourteen days, if in fact it could never have accommodated a stairlift.
(d) The Home Office also did not know why they were not informed earlier so that the Court and the Claimant could have been told in good time.
(e) Mr Kingham stated:
"It is for this reason that the application to vary was made so late in short, we were only made aware at a very late stage that the Order was unable to be fulfilled."
"Self-contained accommodation in Southwark.
Ground floor/level access - all rooms on ground floor, including bathroom including bedroom for dependant aged three. Must have space for child to practice walking and other motor skills.
Not sure if you can get all that from the ITP [the request system for accommodation]."
"Self-contained accommodation in Southwark, ground floor/level access - all rooms on ground floor, including bathroom, including bedroom for dependant aged three."
And Mr Kingham continued:
"Accommodation requests relating to dispersal accommodation are communicated via a secure online portal known as the Collaborative Business Portal ("CBP"). The relevant field of the CBP for accommodation requests includes a text box for additional details to be added, such as specific accommodation needs. There is a limit to the number of characters capable of being entered into this box, which is why the actual request was unable exactly to match the instruction provided by the member of staff."
Kingham 4 Statement of 21 October
Consideration
(1) It is very regrettable that when a fourteen-day indicative period for provision of adequate housing after 13 July was up and nothing had been said or provided that the Defendant did not take precautionary steps regarding the deadline on the mandatory Court Order.
(2) Given the history of failure to provide appropriate accommodation, it is remarkable that she then left it to the very day of compliance before applying to extend time. She could have had no confidence whatsoever, given the past history, and in any event ought to have been prepared, given the seriousness of breaching a mandatory Court Order to which she had consented before the Deputy Judge.
(3) It is further regrettable that the application was unsupported with evidence and, when ordered by Norris J on 5 August to provide that evidence, it is extraordinary that she failed to provide any. An email to the court is a casual and inadequate response to a Court Order.
(4) It is very regrettable that the Treasury Solicitor did not see fit to swear a statement at least offering a chronology of the efforts made to obey the Court's Orders, and some apology for the late application to extend time in August. The breach of the Order to produce evidence of 5 August and latterly, the breach of my Order of 11 October, requiring service of evidence by specific dates to give the Claimant an opportunity to consider the evidence. It is not clear to me that Mr Kingham is the correct deponent for these matters, nor that he has been in control of provision of documentation for the Court, or at least not entirely so.
(5) Even for the purposes of this hearing, the Secretary of State failed to meet the deadlines for submission of materials. It appears there was an application at some point on Thursday or Friday for an extension of time within which to serve the bundle evidence, but it did not find its way to me within time, and was very close to the deadline, once again.
(6) The context of this case is highly sensitive. A badly disabled child has been the beneficiary of a mandatory duty to house him adequately, with the Claimant. It is approaching a year ago the family was sent to the first of a series of admittedly and obviously inadequate places, including the original property. The longer time runs from the date when the SSHD is appraised of relevant information, the keener is the duty to provide the accommodation.
(7) The already burdensome duty on the SSHD has been immeasurably worsened by the use of providers who, on the evidence of this case, are demonstrably incapable of fulfilling their contract.
(8) The flow of information not only between CRH and the SSHD but also within the Home Office and to their legal advisors, appears, on the information before the Court, to be wanting. Conclusions previously reached are apparently reversed or are inconsistent and scant or inadequate instructions appear to have been given.
Further Steps
"The Administrative Court often deals with urgent applications. This is a very important part of its work in the public interest, and a High Court judge is always available to hear such applications. Thus, a High Court judge is always available in the Administrative Court during court hours in the week, to deal only with urgent applications. Cases which are so urgent that they need to be dealt with out of normal court hours, including weekends, public holidays and vacation, are dealt with by the High Court Judge on 'out of hours' duty.
"It is of the utmost importance that this limited resource is not abused, and over the years, the courts have developed rules to ensure this does not occur. If cases that are not truly urgent displace those that are, this will have serious consequences for litigants who have a good reason for applying for urgent relief. Two things flow from this. First, those seeking to make use of the 'urgents' procedures are under a duty to the Court to satisfy themselves that the application they are considering really is urgent and to adhere, to the letter, to the rules of court which protect the procedure from abuse. This has always been the case. The fact that case papers can now be filed electronically has not altered the position. Secondly, any abuse of the 'urgents' procedures will not be tolerated by the court and will be met with appropriate sanction."
Contempt Application
"First, paragraph 1 of Lang J's Order was not simply a procedural direction requiring a particular step in the litigation to be taken by a particular date. It was an interim mandatory injunction. The distinction between procedural directions and mandatory injunctions was explained by Johnson J in R (Humnyntski) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2020] EWHC 1912 (Admin) As is usual in the Administrative Court, the injunction as made on paper rather than at a hearing and no penal notice was attached. Neither of these features detracts in any way from its binding effect: see R (JM) v Croydon London Borough Council (Practice Note) [2009] EWHC 2474 (Admin) It is well established that the court has power to issue an injunction (including a mandatory injunction) with binding legal effects against a Minister of the Crown."
"Second and relatedly, when the court grants a mandatory injunction, it must be complied with by the time stipulated unless it is set aside before that time. If it is not complied with by the stipulated time, the obligation to comply remains. A pending application to discharge or vary it does not excuse a failure to comply. The obligation to comply remains unless and until the Order is set aside by a judge: see South Cambridgeshire District Council v Gammell [2006] 1 WLR 658 In this case, there was no application to set aside Lang J's Order. The application to vary it came some three days after the expiry of the deadline contained in its paragraph 1 and only after two further Orders for the court. it is not obvious that the concept of relief from sanctions applies at all to a mandatory injunction, nor that an injunction can in principle or should in the present circumstances be varied retrospectively. Given that the Secretary of State's application notice seeks both relief from sanctions and retrospective variation of Lang J's Order, these matters may have to be considered further in due course.
"Third, on its face, paragraph 1 of Lang J's Order imposed an obligation of result, not merely an obligation to make reasonable efforts to comply. As Ms Da Costa's letter accepts, the Secretary of State was in breach of that obligation from 13.00 on Tuesday 2 February 2021. She remained in breach until at least the evening of Thursday 4 February 2021 and possibly the afternoon of Friday 5 February 2021.
"Fourth, breach of an injunction is a matter which can result in proceedings for contempt. This is so even where the breach is by a Minister Indeed CPR r.81.6 obliges the court, where it considers that a contempt of court may have been committed, to consider whether to initiate contempt proceedings against the Defendant.
"Fifth, however, not every breach of an injunction must necessarily result in proceedings for contempt - especially where, as here, compliance has been achieved (albeit late), there is an apology and a full explanation for the default is offered. In public law proceedings such as this, the appropriate course is to invite the Secretary of State to give a formal explanation of the breach, supported by witness statements; and then to allow a period of the Claimant and the Court to consider whether any further proceedings are necessary. That may depend on the explanation. If the evidence provides sufficient reassurance that the breach was not intentional and that measures have been put in place to avoid an recurrence, further proceedings may be unnecessary."
"I appreciate that the determination of the Claimant's future placement does not lie solely in the hands of the Council. The need to seek to agree a placement with the Claimant's parents, and in particular his Deputy, had the potential to create difficulty in complying with paragraph 5 of the December Order even if the Council had completed the process of identifying available suitable options to be considered at a best interests meeting prior to the 7 January. In the absence of any application to the court to vary the terms of the December Order, any difficulty of compliance goes to penalty, not to the question whether the Council has committed a contempt of court."
Conclusion