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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> SHAP v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] ScotCS CSIH_83 (07 November 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_83.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_83, [2007] CSIH 83

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Eassie

Lady Paton

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 83

XA159/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD OSBORNE

 

in

 

APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL

 

under section 103(B) of the Nationality, Immigration & Asylum Act 2002

 

by

 

S.H.A.P.

Applicant;

 

against

 

SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Forrest; Drummond Miller (Appellant)

Alt: Miss Carmichael; Office of Advocate General (Respondent)

 

7 November 2007

 

[1] The applicant, in this application for permission to appeal under section 103(B) of the Nationality, Immigration & Asylum Act 2002, applied for asylum in the United Kingdom on the basis of what was said to be a well-founded fear of persecution for Convention reasons in Iran, from which country she had come. Secondly, she sought humanitarian protection upon the basis that, if she were returned to Iran, her rights under Articles 2 and 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms would be likely to be infringed.

[2] Her application was refused by a letter from the Home Office dated 10 January 2005, which is document 1 in these proceedings. Subsequently she appealed, under the arrangements then in being, to an adjudicator, Miss Quigley. In a decision dated 7 April 2005, she allowed the appeal both on asylum grounds and on human rights grounds, as appears from her determination, which is document 2 in these proceedings. Thereafter, on the application of the respondent, reconsideration of that decision was ordered, in a decision dated 9 May 2005, on the grounds that: "It is arguable that the Adjudicator has not given a Convention reason for any mis-treatment that the claimant may encounter on return. The respondent argues that adultery cannot form such a reason. It is also arguable that the Adjudicator's reasons for an Article 3 finding are inadequate." Subsequently, the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal decided that there was indeed an error of law in the determination of 7 April 2005 in their decision which is dated 20 December 2005. They identified the core issues for reconsideration as being Articles 2 and 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and risk on return as a failed political asylum seeker. It is agreed that, in their decision, they held that certain findings were not to be disturbed in any reconsideration. These were, first, the finding that the appellant was a married woman and, second, a finding that she had commenced an adulterous relationship with a man, M.M., in about 2001. The reconsideration which had been ordered was conducted before a single immigration judge of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal, Professor R.M.M. Wallace. Her decision is dated 4 July 2006 and was to dismiss the applicant's appeal on human rights grounds. That aspect of the appeal based on asylum grounds, it seems, had not been insisted in.

[3] In the present application for permission to appeal, several grounds have been advanced upon the basis of which it has been contended that the determination of 4 July 2006 was flawed on account of an error or errors of law. These are specified in paragraph 5 of the application. The motion for the applicant was that the application should be granted, then treated as the appeal, and the case remitted to the Tribunal for reconsideration under section 103(B)(4)(c) of the 2002 Act. It was recognised, on behalf of the applicant that, not only had the test set forth in Hosieni v Secretary of State for the Home Department 2005 S.L.T. 550 to be satisfied, but, if the appeal were to be allowed as well as permission granted to appeal, it had to be demonstrated that judge Wallace had in fact erred in law, or otherwise given grounds for interference.

[4] The submission made for the applicant was essentially that judge Wallace had misapprehended the issues that she had had to determine and had ignored material relevant to their proper determination. In particular it was argued that her determination was misconceived, in that she had confined her attention to two facets of the case only: (1) the video recording allegedly taken of the applicant in the commission of adultery, and, (2) the summonses said to have been issued shortly after the applicant had left Iran on or about 8 November 2004. It was submitted that these were only two of several factors that should have been considered in determining the issue of whether, were the applicant returned to Iran, there was a reasonable likelihood that her rights under Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights would be infringed. Among the other factors that should have been considered, it was submitted, were (1) the contents of an expert report by Anna Enayat of St. Anthony's College, Oxford; (2) evidence that the husband of the applicant had in fact reported the applicant's adulterous affair to the authorities in Iran with the result, it might properly be inferred, that summonses were issued against the applicant; and (3) other evidence, particularly from the applicant, regarding her fears as to her likely treatment were she to be returned to Iran. The expert report was said to be significant, as it was said to provide detailed material regarding the treatment in Iran, under law in force there, likely to be meted out to women who commit adultery, ranging from stoning to death to lesser penalties, including public corporal punishment.

[5] Having considered the decision of judge Wallace dated 4 July 2006 we have concluded that the criticisms made of it are well-founded. In paragraph 40 of the determination she states:

"The appellant claims to be at risk if returned to Iran. The appellant's claim to be at risk is based on there being two summonses having been issued against her and a video which she claims to be in her husband's possession".

We consider that that narrow formulation of the applicant's case is erroneous. That case, and its much wider scope, can be seen from what is set forth in the background and evidence in the appeal described in paragraphs 7 and the following paragraphs of the determination. Having narrated the numerous points set out in that part of the determination, the judge appears to us then to ignore all them, save the points referred to in paragraph 40. In paragraph 44 of her determination the judge concludes that the video referred to was "the only evidence whereby the appellant could be prosecuted in Iran." By so saying, in our opinion, the judge reveals that she has failed to take into account the material in the Enayat report concerning the proof of adultery through "the knowledge of the judge", which is understood to be the judge's evaluation of the totality of the evidence before him, including circumstantial evidence. Plainly there is also ignored the possibility that the applicant's husband might give direct evidence of the adultery and the possibility that a confession of adultery might be extracted from the applicant by the authorities in Iran by unacceptable means such as torture, which the Enayat report considers is a possibility. In this connection we were referred to paragraph 1.2 of the report on page 3 and paragraph 4.2 on pages 33-35.

[6] In all these circumstances we shall grant permission to appeal and allow the appeal, remitting the case to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal for reconsideration. We shall also make a direction under Rule 31(4)(b) of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (Procedure) Rules 2005 to the following effect: (1) the findings that the applicant is a married woman and that she commenced an adulterous relationship with a man M.M. in about 2001 should not be disturbed; (2) the reconsideration should embrace consideration of all the circumstances disclosed in the applicant's evidence, including, in particular, the contents of paragraphs 13 to 16 of the decision of judge Wallace and (3) the reconsideration should have regard to the whole contents of the Enayat report dated 24 May 2006.

 


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