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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> E Y & Anor, Re Judicial Review [2009] ScotCS CSOH_100 (20 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2009/2009CSOH100.html Cite as: 2009 SCLR 768, 2009 GWD 25-395, [2009] CSOH 100, 2010 SLT 170, [2009] ScotCS CSOH_100 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2009] CSOH 100
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P620/09
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OPINION OF LADY SMITH
in the Petition of
EY and PST Petitioners;
for
Judicial Review of a Decision of the Secretary of State for the Home Department to refuse to accept representations as a fresh claim for asylum in letters dated 18th March 2009 and 6th May 2009 and remove the first petitioner to Turkey on 20th May 2009 at 0700 hours.
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Petitioner: Caskie, Advocate (14 May 2009), JJ Mitchell Q.C (20 May 2009), Drummond Miller LLP
Respondent: No appearance
20 May 2009
Introduction
[1] This is a petition for judicial review at the instance of a
person in respect of whom removal directions have been issued under paragraphs
9-10A of Schedule 2 to the Immigration Act 1971 and Section 10(1) of the
Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and also at the instance of her partner who is
a resident of the United Kingdom. The petitioners seek
(1) declarator that the decisions of the Secretary of State dated
18 March 2009 and 6 May 2009 to refuse to accept that representations made
on behalf of both of them constituted a fresh claim for asylum by the first
petitioner was unreasonable et separatim irrational,
(2) declarator that the decision of the Secretary of State
dated 7 May 2009 to remove the first petitioner to Turkey on 20 May 2009
was unreasonable et separatim irrational, (3) reduction of
the said decisions, (4) the expenses of the petition and
(5) such other orders as may seem to the Court to be just and reasonable
in all the circumstances of the case. No interim orders are sought.
[2] The petition came before me on a motion on behalf of the
petitioners for first orders. The respondents were not represented at the
hearing.
[3] The first petitioner is a citizen of Turkey. On or about 25 August 2000 she entered the United Kingdom as a visitor. Her immigration history is set out in
the UK Border Agency's letter dated 18 March 2009 (6/3 of Process):
"25/08/00 Arrived in the United Kingdom and began working as a prostitute soon after.
01/08/01 Claimed asylum.
17/09/01 Decision made to refuse asylum claim.
05/11/01 RFRL served together with IS151A.
07/11/02 Appeal Hearing.
20/11/02 Determination promulgated, dismissed.
07/01/03 Permission to appeal rejected.
07/01/03 Appeal rights exhausted.
18/02/09 Furthers (SIC) representations submitted, legacy programme and Article 8 of ECHR."
Application for Indefinite Leave to Remain Under the
Legacy Programme
[4] The further
representations dated 18
February 2009 were made in a
letter from solicitors acting on behalf of the petitioners (6/4 of Process).
Those representations were, essentially, that the first petitioner met the
second petitioner at New Year 2004, that the petitioners had been going out
together since then, that they now lived together at an address in West Calder
and that the second petitioner was anxious that the first petitioner be able to
remain and live with him in the United Kingdom.
Reference is also made to the first petitioner having undergone medical
treatment for breast cancer in December 2006 but the letter continues "we are
pleased to advise that she is now recovering from her condition." The final
paragraph of the letter is in the following terms:
"We would respectfully suggest that given the length of time that she has been in this country and given the close relationships which she has obviously formed since arriving here that her now removal from this country would breach her rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, particularly under the more recent House of Lords decisions issued during the course of 2008."
The Secretary of State's Decision of 18 March 2009
[5] The Secretary of State's decision in respect of the
application contained in the letter of 18 February 2009 is set out in a seven page letter (6/3 of Process).
The letter of 18 February 2009 is referred to as are a bundle of documents that
were sent together with that letter, in support of the application. The
Secretary of State considered whether the submissions made amounted to a fresh
claim (under reference to paragraph 353 of the Immigration Rules). The
Secretary of State makes reference to the two aspects of the "fresh evidence"
test (whether the submissions have already been considered and whether, taken
together with the previously considered material, they create a realistic
prospect of success). Whilst the Secretary of State accepted that the points
raised in the petitioners' solicitors letter had not previously been
considered, she determined that, taken together with the material which was
considered previously, they would not have created a realistic prospect of
success.
[6] By letter dated 9 April 2009 the
petitioners' solicitor appealed against the refusal decision dated 18 March 2009. That letter was responded to by letter dated 6 May 2009 confirming the original decision to refuse the
application. The first petitioner was due, accordingly, to be returned to Turkey. That return was due to take place on 20 May 2009.
Motion for First Orders: 14 May 2009
[7] On Thursday 14 May Mr Caskie appeared on behalf of both
petitioners and moved me to grant first orders.
[8] I enquired of Mr Caskie as to the basis on which it was
considered appropriate to bring the petition, not only in the name of the first
petitioner but in the name of the second petitioner. He indicated that he
could not point to any authority which specifically supported a submission that
the second petitioner had the requisite title and interest but he referred to
what was said by Lord Justice Sedley in AB (Jamaica) v Secretary of
State for Home Department 2007 EWCA Civ I 1302 at paragraph 20, where it
was commented that the applicant's spouse was "in substance, albeit not in
form" a party to the proceedings.
[9] Turning to the substance of the petition, Mr Caskie submitted
that it was appropriate to grant first orders because there was a prima
facie case that the Secretary of State had failed to recognise that had she
referred the matter for determination to an Immigration Judge, the Immigration
Judge would have been entitled to reach his own findings in fact on the fresh
representations and give whatever weight to them he thought appropriate. He
did not suggest that the Secretary of State had failed to have regard to any
relevant factor. It was a question of the Secretary of State not recognising
that an Immigration Judge might give different weight to the new material
advanced. He did not suggest that the Secretary of State had taken into
account any irrelevant factors. He submitted that there was a prospect of an
Immigration Judge allowing the petitioners' appeal. The case of Chikwamba
v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] UKHL 40 was, he
submitted, in point, as was the case of Beoku-Betts v Secretary of
State for the Home Department [2009] 1 AC 115.
[10] So far as the case of Chikwamba was concerned Mr
Caskie's submission was that it indicated that it was only in rare cases that
the Secretary of State should order the removal of an illegal immigrant where he
had existing family life in the United Kingdom.
So far as the case of Beoku-Betts was concerned, Mr Caskie relied on it
in support of a submission that the Secretary of State required to give anxious
and detailed consideration to the rights of the second petitioner in addition
to those of the first petitioner and she had not expressly stated that she had
done so or asked herself what an Immigration Judge might have made of that
matter.
Determination of the Motions for First Orders
[11] I retired to consider the motion for first orders.
[12] I required to consider whether it was competent to refuse the
motion. I considered that it was. Rule of court 58.7 makes it clear that a
first order is one which the Lord Ordinary "may" grant. The Court has a
discretion. There is precedent for refusal at this stage (Sokha v Secretary
of State for the Home Department 1992 SLT 1049; Butt v Secretary
of State for the Home Department (Lord Gill - Outer House - 15 March 1995). Whilst the respondents were represented in both of
those cases at the hearing of the motion for first orders (interim orders
having been sought), the rule did not and does not appear to me to direct that
a motion for first orders cannot be refused if the respondents are not represented.
The Court's power to do so is not, in terms of the rule of court, curtailed so
as to limit it to those instances when the respondents are represented at the
motion for first orders. At that stage it is, in my view, appropriate to
consider the relevancy of the petition, any submissions made in explanation of
it and, if so advised, to refuse the motion. When a petition for judicial
review is presented, the petitioner is asking the court to take a serious
step. In a case such as the present, it is my understanding that interim
orders are routinely not sought because, if first orders are granted, the
Secretary of State, as a matter of practice, refrains from taking any immediate
action such as, in this case, proceeding with the removal of the petitioner.
The granting of first orders has, accordingly, a significant effect which is
liable to cause inconvenience, expense and, potentially, delay. I consider it
not at all unreasonable to expect of those who present a petition for judicial
review that they should be in a position to satisfy the court of the relevancy
of their case at the earliest stage. I do not mean to suggest, thereby, that
they should be ready to present, at the motion for first orders, the sort of
detailed argument that would be presented at a first hearing. They ought,
however, to be in a position to satisfy the court that their case is an
arguable one.
[13] I was not satisfied that it was appropriate to grant the
petitioners' motion. There was no authoritative support for the second
petitioner's title and interest. Turning then to the first aspect of the
petition, as it was explained by Mr Caskie, as above noted, it proceeded on the
basis that the Secretary of State should have allowed for an Immigration Judge
being entitled to reach his own findings in fact in respect of the
representations advanced in 6/4 of Process. That did not, however, make
sense. The Secretary of State did not take issue with the veracity of those
representations. It was accepted that the first petitioner now had a
relationship with the second petitioner and that the second petitioner was a United Kingdom resident. I should, at this point, note that the
petition appears to be inaccurate in respect of one aspect of the second
petitioner's circumstances. In article 24 it is averred that the second
petitioner is unemployed and unfit for work. That is contrary to what is
stated in 6/4 of Process which is that "he works as a self employed builder".
So far as the matter of the weight that ought to be given to the new facts
advanced was concerned, it seemed to me that there was ample evidence of the
Secretary of State having given careful consideration to that matter and it
seemed to me that the petitioners' position was shown to be weak in that
respect, in any event, given that Mr Caskie's repeated submission was, at its
highest, that the Secretary of State had failed to consider whether an
Immigration Judge "might" find in favour of the petitioner if the matter had
been referred to him. It was not evident to me how that demonstrated that
there was an arguable case of unreasonableness or irrationality on the part of
the Secretary of State.
[14] So far as the position of the second petitioner was concerned,
the Secretary of State's letters (6/3 and 6/6 of Process) both showed an
awareness of his interests in the matter and it did not appear to me to be
arguable that she had overlooked them.
[15] I considered the cases of Chikwamba and Beoku-Betts but
it did not appear to me that they were in point. This was not a case where the
representations made by the petitioners were either to the effect that they
would be separated if the first petitioner's application was not granted or
that the circumstances were like those in Chikwamba where it was evident
that the applicant would, once removed back to Zimbabwe, reapply to enter the
United Kingdom to rejoin her family here. Further, the case of Konstatinov
v The Netherlands (Application No. 16351/03) Judgment Strasbourg 26 April 2007 (referred to in 6/6 of Process) was relevant, had
been taken account of by the Secretary of State but was not referred to by Mr
Caskie. The passage relied on by the Secretary of State specifically relates
to article 8 Rights, indicates that they do not entail a general obligation for
a state to respect an immigrant's choice of country of residence and mentions
as an important consideration that of whether family life was created at a time
when the persons involved were aware that the immigration status of one of them
was such that the persistence of that family life within the host state would
be precarious from the outset. It is noted that the court had held previously
that where that was the case, it was likely only to be in the most exceptional
circumstances that the removal of the nonnational family member would
constitute a violation of article 8. The petitioners here had commenced their
family life in such circumstances.
[16] It thus seemed to me that when the petition was considered
together with the documents lodged in support of it and Mr Caskie's submissions
in support of his motion, it was not appropriate for me to grant first orders.
I was not satisfied that an arguable case was made out.
Motion for Leave to Reclaim - 20 May 2009
[17] A motion for leave
to reclaim came before me in the morning of 20 May 2009 a matter of hours
before the first petitioner was due to be removed from the United Kingdom. In
addition to the motion for leave to reclaim Mr Mitchell moved motions firstly
for orders for intimation and service and, secondly, to dismiss the petition;
he was not seeking to amend it.
[18] So far as the motion for an order for service was concerned he
sought to argue that it should be inferred that the refusal of first orders was
"in hoc statu". It was a question of substance rather than language.
He did, however, accept that questions of competency might arise and it was not
entirely satisfactory since, on the face of it, it did look as though I was
being asked to review my own interlocutor.
[19] So far as the motion to dismiss the petition was concerned he
sought the grant of that motion under observation of the fact that reclaiming
is competent, without leave, on a final determination of a petition. He
submitted that, in substance, refusal of first orders amounted to a final
determination of the petition although he, equally, appeared to accept that it
would be open to a petitioner, after the refusal of first orders, to amend the
petition and renew the motion.
[20] Turning to the motion for leave to reclaim, Mr Mitchell explained
that there were two principal issues that the petitioners would seek to argue.
Firstly there was that of the competence and appropriateness of the refusal of
first orders in the absence of the respondents. He referred to the report in Greens
Weekly Digest (1995 16/905) of Butt as indicating that the
discretion to refuse the petition arose only where the respondent was present
and represented.
[21] At this point, it may be helpful for me to indicate that since 20 May 2009, with the assistance of the First Division Clerk, Mr
Jenkins, for which I am extremely grateful, I have obtained a copy of Lord
Gill's opinion in the petition of Butt and it is now placed with the
Process in this case. The passage to which the note in Greens Weekly Digest
appears to refer occurs after Lord Gill has concluded that it is competent to
refuse a petition at first orders stage and when he is considering whether, in
that case, it was appropriate to do so. The full text of the passage is as
follows:
"Without attempting to state any universal rule in the matter, I suggest that it would certainly be appropriate for the court to consider, and if need be to refuse, the petition at a first order hearing in a case where (1) the respondent is represented; (2) all necessary documents are to hand; (3) the respondent wishes to have the petition disposed of without resort to a first hearing and is in a position to present a fully prepared case; and (4) there is no dispute of a factual nature such as to prevent the court from making a properly informed decision at that stage."
Accordingly, whilst Lord Gill set out circumstances where it was, in his view, certainly appropriate for the court to consider whether or not to refuse the petition at first orders stage, he does not appear to have been suggesting that the four matters to which he refers were prerequisites to it being competent to do so.
[22] The second issue which the petitioners sought to raise in a
reclaiming motion was the interrelationship of article 8 of ECHR and UK
Immigration Policy. He made reference, in that regard to the cases of Chikwamba
and BeokuBetts. He indicated that, whatever had been submitted by Mr
Caskie, insofar as the petition sought to suggest that the Secretary of State
should have treated the representations made by the petitioners agents as being
a fresh claim, that would not be addressed. The focus, rather, would be on the
second petitioner's article 8 rights and on the issue of his title to sue which
Mr Mitchell accepted was a novel development.
[23] Having considered Mr Mitchell's submissions, I was persuaded
that it was appropriate to grant leave to reclaim and, accordingly, pronounced
the appropriate interlocutor.