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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Barron & Ors v Collins [2016] EWHC 1166 (QB) (16 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1166.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1166 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) SIR KEVIN BARRON MP (2) RT HON JOHN HEALEY MP (3) SARAH CHAMPION |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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JANE COLLINS MEP |
Defendant |
____________________
The Defendant in person, assisted by Mr Mullen as "McKenzie" Friend
Hearing date: 16 May 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warby :
Introduction
The factual and procedural background
(1) That they knew many of the details of the scandalous child sexual exploitation that took place in Rotherham over a period of sixteen years, in the course of which an estimated 1,400 children were raped, beaten, plied with alcohol and drugs, and threatened with violence by men of Asian origin, yet deliberately chose not to intervene but to allow the abuse to continue. I held this to be an allegation of fact.(2) That they acted in this way for motives of political correctness, political cowardice, or political selfishness. I held this to be an expression of opinion.
(3) That each was thereby guilty of misconduct so grave that it was or should be criminal, as it aided and abetted the perpetrators and made the Claimants just as culpable as the perpetrators. This too I held to be an expression of opinion.
"OFFER TO MAKE AMENDS
IN ACCORDANCE WITH S 2 OF THE DEFAMATION ACT 1996
Dear Sirs
Barron and others v Jane Collins
The Defendant has instructed us to make an unqualified offer to make amends under section 2 of the Defamation Act 1996 to each of the Claimants.
The Defendant offers to
a) Make a suitable correction of the statement complained of and a sufficient apology to the Claimants
b) Publish the correction and apology in a manner that is reasonable and practicable in the circumstances and
c) Pay to the Claimants damages and their reasonable legal costs to be assessed if not agreed.
The Defendant intends to rely upon this offer in the event she needs to file and serve a defence."
"23. The protocol on the Privileges and Immunities of the European Communities 8 April 1965 Article 9 makes provision that "members of the Assembly shall not be subject to any form of inquiry, detention, or legal proceedings in respect of opinions expressed or votes cast by them in the performance of their duties." At all times the claimants have acknowledged that I was speaking in a political forum and in my capacity as an MEP. It is abundantly clear that I was acting in accordance with my duties as an elected representative for the people of Rotherham, which falls within my constituency. The trafficking and abuse of children has been debated by the Assembly and the rights of the child are enshrined throughout the European Union under Article 3 of the Treaty of Lisbon [2012]. As an MEP for Yorkshire and the Humber it remains my duty to demonstrate leadership within my constituency. To actively promote the welfare and interests of all my constituents, to scrutinise the performance of all those holding public office in my constituency and to challenge the poor behaviour and abject failure of anyone claiming to represent these people.
24. … The nature of my immunity was raised with RMPI LLP however they were under the impression that it operated exactly as Parliamentary Privilege in Westminster. It required a junior researcher who joined my team in July 2015 to demonstrate enough initiative to contact and harangue the Director of the European Parliament's Legal Service for clarification of this matter. Monsieur Passos confirmed that the immunity afforded to members of the Assembly was not subject to member state legislation and operated wherever that member is carrying out their duties. It would be utterly ridiculous if an MEP were only able to robustly and candidly represent the views of their constituents in a foreign country."
The Stay Application
"Dear President Schultz
Request for the Defence of Parliamentary Privileges and Immunities
I am writing to you in accordance with Rule 7 of the Rules of Procedures of the European Parliament. I respectfully submit that proceedings which are being brought against me in the English Courts are a breach of the privileges and immunities that are accorded to Members of the European Parliament.
I respectfully request Parliament to defend:
l. My immunity under Article 8 (absolute immunity) and
2. My freedom of movement to attend Parliament and carry out my duties.
Legal proceedings have been brought against me for expressing an opinion made in my capacity as a Member of this Parliament and made in the performance of my duties. Measures taken against a Member for expressing opinions which are in the public interest and in the performance of their duties undermine the Parliament's integrity as a democratic legislative assembly.
No application to waive that privileges and immunities of a Member of this Parliament has been made by the competent authority.
I have done by utmost throughout these legal proceedings to co-operate with the English Courts and make them aware of my role as a servant of the European Parliament and my constituents. However, the parties involved refused to acknowledge my responsibilities and duty to attend the Parliament and Plenary Sessions. This has even been presented as an aggravating factor in the current proceedings.
In addition attempts have been made to restrict my movements to and from the Parliament in Brussels and Strasbourg under threat of a court order.
I would also request your personal clarification on the application of immunity under article 9 for a UK Member of the Parliament. Article 9 grants Members the same privileges and immunities as those accorded by parliaments of member states. In the case of the UK this privilege applies only to the grounds of the Palace of Westminster. Members of the European Parliament are not afforded the right to carry out their duties in the Palace of Westminster. In my case Westminster is many miles away from the parliamentary constituency I represent.
In the legal proceedings brought against me it has been acknowledged that the opinion I expressed while carrying out my duties as a Member of the European Parliament were broadcast by the UK Parliament Channel into the grounds of the Palace of Westminster.
The crux of the legal proceeding being brought against me are that the opinion I expressed in that broadcast allegedly damaged the reputation of the claimants within the grounds of Westminster.
Please could you clarify:
1. The status of a broadcast into an area protected under article 9, and
2. What is the status for UK Members of the European Parliament who are effectively denied the right to exercise this privilege?
I thank you in advance for your attention on this urgent matter …"
"Dear Sirs
As a matter of great urgency can you please reply to this email.
The European Parliament has accepted the initiation of The Protocol of Sincere Cooperation and the announcement will be made in Strasbourg. The 'triggering' documents were attached to the original email dated 4th May 2016.
The court hearing scheduled for Monday and Tuesday next week should therefore be 'stayed'. To avoid expensive travel arrangements, wasted costs orders and legal fees, please confirm, in writing, to all parties, that a 'stay of proceedings' has been granted until the European Commission has appointed a Rapporteur and a committee to study the evidence and decide on their defence"
"Procedural fairness and the overriding objective both require that the claimants should be given notice of this application. The defendant appears to have acknowledged that in her correspondence. She has not made clear, however, that notice has been given.
The fact that the hearing date is imminent is not a good enough reason for the court to act without notice, or without assuring itself that the claimants have had a fair opportunity to respond."
Assessment
The Legal framework
"Article 7 (ex Article 8)
No administrative or other restriction shall be imposed on the free movement of Members of the European Parliament travelling to or from the place of meeting of the European Parliament.
…
Article 8 (ex Article 9)
Members of the European Parliament shall not be subject to any form of inquiry, detention or legal proceedings in respect of opinions expressed or votes cast by them in the performance of their duties.
Article 9 (ex Article 10)
During the sessions of the European Parliament, its Members shall enjoy:
(a) in the territory of their own State, the immunities accorded to members of their parliament;
(b) in the territory of any other Member State, immunity from any measure of detention and from legal proceedings.
Immunity shall likewise apply to Members while they are travelling to and from the place of meeting of the European Parliament. …"
(1) Rule 5 provides:"1. Members shall enjoy privileges and immunities in accordance with the Protocol on the Privileges and Immunities of the European Union.2. Parliamentary immunity is not a Member's personal privilege but a guarantee of the independence of Parliament as a whole and of its Members. …"(2) Rule 7 provides:
1. In cases where the privileges and immunities of a Member or former Member are alleged to have been breached by the authorities of a Member State, a request for a Parliament decision as to whether there has, in fact, been a breach of those privileges and immunities may be made in accordance with Rule 9(1).2. In particular, such a request for the defence of privileges and immunities may be made if it is considered that the circumstances constitute an administrative or other restriction on the free movement of Members travelling to or from the place of meeting of Parliament or on an opinion expressed or a vote cast in the performance of their duties, or that they fall within the scope of Article 9 of the Protocol on the Privileges and Immunities of the European Union.(3) Rule 9 relates to "Procedures on immunity" and provides that:
1. Any request addressed to the President by a competent authority of a Member State that the immunity of a Member be waived, or by a Member or a former Member that privileges and immunities be defended, shall be announced in Parliament and referred to the committee responsible. The Member or former Member may be represented by another Member. The request may not be made by another Member without the agreement of the Member concerned.2. The committee shall consider without delay, but having regard to their relative complexity, requests for the waiver of immunity or requests for the defence of privileges and immunities.3. The committee shall make a proposal for a reasoned decision which recommends the adoption or rejection of the request for the waiver of immunity or for the defence of privileges and immunities.4. The committee may ask the authority concerned to provide any information or explanation which the committee deems necessary in order for it to form an opinion on whether immunity should be waived or defended. …"
"… first, whether, where the national court which has to rule on an action for damages brought against a Member of the European Parliament in respect of opinions expressed by him has received no information regarding a request from that member to the Parliament seeking defence of his immunity, that court may itself rule on whether the immunity provided for in Article 9 of the Protocol applies with regard to the factors in the particular case; second, whether, where the national court is informed of the fact that that member has made such a request to Parliament, that court must await the decision of the Parliament before continuing with the proceedings against that member; and, third, whether, where the national court finds that that immunity does apply, it must request the waiver of that immunity for the purposes of continuing with the legal proceedings."
"32 In order to establish whether the conditions for the absolute immunity provided for in Article 9 of the Protocol are met, the national court is not obliged to refer that question to the Parliament. The Protocol does not confer on the Parliament the power to determine, in cases of legal proceedings against one of its Members in respect of opinions expressed or votes cast by him, whether the conditions for applying that immunity are met.
33 Therefore, such an assessment is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the national courts which are called on to apply such a provision, and which have no choice but to give due effect to that immunity if they find that the opinions or votes at issue were expressed or cast in the exercise of parliamentary duties.
34 If, in applying Article 9 of the Protocol, those courts have doubts concerning the interpretation of that article, they may refer a question to the Court under Article 234 EC on the interpretation of that article of the Protocol, courts of final instance being, in such circumstances, obliged to make such a reference to the Court.
35 Furthermore, it cannot be inferred, even implicitly, from Rules 6 and 7 of the Rules of Procedure – which contain the internal rules concerning the procedure for waiving parliamentary immunity – that the national courts are obliged to refer to the Parliament the decision on whether the conditions for recognising that immunity are met, before ruling on the opinions and votes of Members of the Parliament.
36 Rule 6(2) of the Rules of Procedure is limited to establishing the procedure for the waiver of parliamentary immunity provided for in Article 10 of the Protocol.
37 Rule 6(3) of the Rules of Procedure sets down a procedure for defence of immunity and privileges which can be triggered by the Member of the European Parliament. That procedure also concerns immunity for opinions expressed and votes cast in the exercise of parliamentary duties. Rule 7(6) of those rules provides that the Parliament is to 'state' whether legal proceedings brought against a Member of the European Parliament constitute a restriction on the expression of an opinion or the casting of a vote, and to 'make a proposal to invite the authority concerned to draw the necessary conclusions'.
38 As has been emphasised out by the Parliament and the Commission of the European Communities, the Rules of Procedure are rules of internal organisation and cannot grant powers to the Parliament which are not expressly acknowledged by a legislative measure, in this case by the Protocol.
39 It follows that, even if the Parliament, pursuant to a request from the Member concerned, adopts, on the basis of those rules, a decision to defend immunity, that constitutes an opinion which does not have binding effect with regard to national judicial authorities.
40 In addition, the fact that the law of a Member State provides for a procedure in defence of members of the national parliament – enabling that parliament to intervene where the national court does not recognise that immunity – does not imply that the same powers are conferred on the European Parliament in relation to its Members coming from that Member State, since, as has been held in paragraph 32 above, Article 9 of the Protocol does not expressly grant the Parliament such power and does not refer to the rules of national law.
41 However, according to settled case-law, the duty of sincere cooperation between the European institutions and the national authorities, enshrined in Article 10 EC and reiterated in Article 19 of the Protocol, which applies both to the national judicial authorities of Member States acting within their jurisdictions and to the Community institutions, is of particular importance where that cooperation involves the judicial authorities of a Member State who are responsible for ensuring that Community law is applied and respected in the national legal system (see, in particular, order in Case C-2/88 IMM Zwartveld and Others v Commission[1990] ECR I-3365, paragraph 17, and Case C-94/00 Roquette Frères [2002] ECR I-9011, paragraph 93).
42 It must be held that that duty of cooperation applies in the context of disputes such as those in the main proceedings. The European Parliament and the national judicial authorities must therefore cooperate in order to avoid any conflict in the interpretation and application of the provisions of the Protocol.
43 Therefore, where an action has been brought against a Member of the European Parliament before a national court and that court is informed that a procedure for defence of the privileges and immunities of that Member, as provided for in Article 6(3) of the Rules of Procedure, has been initiated, that court must stay the judicial proceedings and request the Parliament to issue its opinion as soon as possible.
44 Once the national court has established that the conditions for the absolute immunity, provided for in Article 9 of the Protocol are met, the court is bound to respect that immunity, as is the Parliament. It follows that such immunity cannot be waived by the Parliament and that, as a result, that court is bound to dismiss the action brought against the Member concerned."
"… does not constitute an opinion expressed in the performance of his parliamentary duties covered by the immunity afforded by that provision unless that statement amounts to a subjective appraisal having a direct, obvious connection with the performance of those duties ..."
Evidence
(1) At 10:07 (the times are BST) the defendant informed the court at 10:17 that "my Protocol of Sincere Cooperation will be announced before the Members of this House today, prior to voting at 1200 CET".(2) At 15:39 the defendant's assistant Mick Burchill sent a link to a video of such an announcement. He did so as part of a notice that the defendant's request for the EP "to defend her and implement the Protocol of Sincere Cooperation at Strasbourg's Plenary Session today" had been accepted by the Parliament. He stated that "the Chairman of the Plenary Session has now referred the matter to JURI which will appoint a Rapporteur and a committee to decide on the matter." He further stated that a request had been made to the President at the Chair of JURI to write to the Court and The Attorney General confirming the "Stay of Proceedings" in the case.
(3) At 17:45 Mr Burchill emailed to say that "We have received documentation from Strasbourg" which he would forward once he had had "the opportunity to digest it".
(1) On Wednesday 11 May at 17:51 Robert Bray, Head of Unit at the Secretariat of the Committee on Legal Affairs emailed the defendant's PA stating"As soon as we have the particulars of the case, we will arrange for an official letter to be sent to the Queen's Bench Division informing them of the need for them to stay proceedings in accordance with the case-law of the Court of Justice."(2) At 18:23 on 11 May the defendant's PA, Ms Mullen, replied stating that "it would be extremely helpful if you could compose a formal letter to the English Courts." She stated that the proceedings are being dealt with by Queen's Bench Division of the High Court and are being held at the Royal Courts of Justice." She identified me as the sitting judge. The email did not give details of the nature of the hearing.
(3) Whether there were any further communications on 12 May is not clear. But at 11:13 on Friday 13 May 2016 Alexander Keys, an Administrator of the Parliament, emailed the defendant stating that:-
"the letter concerning your request for defence of immunity has been prepared for signature by Pavel Svoboda, Chair of the Committee on Legal Affairs, as we are aware of the urgency of the case. However, we have not been able to reach him or any of his private staff today. It will therefore have to be submitted to him for signature on Monday."
Submissions
(1) On the true facts there has been no "administrative or other restriction on the free movement" of the Defendant on the part of the state, or even on the part of the other parties to the proceedings.(2) The claim in these proceedings does not relate to an opinion expressed in the performance of the defendant's duties as an MEP. The main allegations about which complaint is made are extremely grave allegations of fact made by the defendant and not opinion.
(3) Nor was there any connection between what the defendant said and her parliamentary duties, let alone the "direct and obvious" connection required by authority. The speech was not made for the purposes of the European elections, which took place five months earlier, nor was it about European matters, nor was it made in the precincts of the Parliament of the UK or the EU.
(4) The letter of 3 May fails to set out the true factual position, or the correct procedural history, as detailed above. It does not disclose that the proceedings are not recent but date back to late 2014; or that the defendant made an offer of amends, which she later sought to withdraw; or that her request for immunity was sent just before this hearing to decide the Application to Vacate and the Assessment Application.
(5) The letter is not a bona fide request for Parliamentary immunity but "a dishonest and improper attempt to avoid these proceedings". Mr Millar points to "the decision not to copy the correspondence to the claimants or their legal advisers or even to inform them of it" as further evidence of tactical motives.
Discussion and conclusions
Postscript [18 May 2016]