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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> JR AGAINST ADVOCATE GENERAL FOR SCOTLAND [2024] ScotCS CSOH_64 (20 June 2024)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2024/2024_CSOH_64.html
Cite as: [2024] CSOH 64, [2024] ScotCS CSOH_64

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2024] CSOH 64
P288/24
OPINION OF LADY POOLE
in Petition of
JR
Petitioner
against
ADVOCATE GENERAL FOR SCOTLAND
Respondent
Petitioner: Shabbir; Drummond Miller LLP (as agents for AJ Bradley and Co Solicitors)
Respondent: Cowan; Office of the Advocate General for Scotland
20 June 2024
Background
[1]
The petitioner is a national of Albania. He claimed asylum in the UK on 13 February
2023. His application was refused on 8 January 2024. He seeks judicial review of a decision
of the Home Office to certify his protection and human rights claims as clearly unfounded
under section 94 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002. Certification in this
way had the effect that the petitioner was not entitled to appeal the decision on his claims to
the First-tier Tribunal under section 82 of the 2002 Act. The claim was certified because the
decision maker considered the application was so wholly lacking in substance that it was
bound to fail before the tribunal.
2
[2]
The parties were in agreement that there are established principles governing the
approach the courts take to judicial review of certification decisions of this nature (the
"certification review principles"). The court has to ask itself the same question as the person
who made the certification decision (Tsiklauri v Secretary of State for the Home Department 2020
SC 495 at paras [11] and [14], Fathabadi v Advocate General [2020] CSOH 83 para [7]). The
court cuts through the underlying layers of decision making, and simply asks the question
of whether a protection claim and/or human rights claim is so clearly unfounded that it is
bound to fail in an appeal before the First-tier Tribunal. This is because "the question of
whether or not a claim is clearly unfounded is susceptible to only one rational answer"
(ZT (Kosovo) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] UKHL 6 para [23]). It follows
that a number of grounds frequently seen in other types of applications for judicial review,
such as whether a decision letter contains sufficient mention of relevant circumstances
bearing on a human rights claim, are not strictly to the point (Tsiklauri, para [11]).
[3]
The issues before the court for determination were: (i) whether the application for
judicial review should be transferred from the Court of Session to the Upper Tribunal for
determination, and if so at what stage; and (ii) whether to grant permission.
Transfer to the Upper Tribunal
Governing law
[4]
Rule 58.3 of the Rules of the Court of Session provides that a petition for judicial
review is made in Form 58.3. Form 58.3 contains a section headed "Transfers to the Upper
Tribunal". A petitioner is required to specify whether the petition is subject to mandatory
transfer to the Upper Tribunal, discretionary transfer to the Upper Tribunal, or neither. If
3
there are answers to the petition, they too will address the issue of transfer to the Upper
Tribunal.
[5]
The statutory provisions regulating transfers of applications for judicial review to
the Upper Tribunal are in section 20 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007
(the "2007 Act"). This provides:
"(1) Where an application is made to the supervisory jurisdiction of the Court of
Session, the Court­
(a)
must, if Conditions 1 and 2 are met, and
(b) may, if Conditions 1 and 3 are met, but Condition 2 is not,
by order transfer the application to the Upper Tribunal.
(2)
Condition 1 is that the application does not seek anything other than an
exercise of the supervisory jurisdiction of the Court of Session.
(3)
Condition 2 is that the application falls within a class specified for the
purposes of this subsection by Act of Sederunt made with the consent of the
Lord Chancellor.
(4)
Condition 3 is that the subject matter of the application is not a devolved
Scottish matter.
[...]
(6)
There may not be specified under subsection (3) any class of application
which includes an application the subject matter of which is a devolved Scottish
matter.
(7)
For the purposes of this section, the subject matter of an application is a
devolved Scottish matter if it­
(a)
concerns the exercise of functions in or as regards Scotland, and
(b) does not relate to a reserved matter within the meaning of the Scotland
Act 1998.
(8)
In subsection (2), the reference to the exercise of the supervisory jurisdiction
of the Court of Session includes a reference to the making of any order in connection
with or in consequence of the exercise of that jurisdiction".
4
[6]
The procedural rules in the Court of Session regulating transfers to the Upper
Tribunal are in rule 58.5 of the Rules of the Court of Session. Rule 58.5 provides:
"(1) If the conditions in section 20(1)(a) of the 2007 Act are met, instead of
determining permission under rule 58.7, the Lord Ordinary must make an order
transferring the application to the Upper Tribunal.
(2)
If paragraph (3) applies, the Lord Ordinary may make an order transferring
the application to the Upper Tribunal--
(a)
instead of determining permission under rule 58.7;
(b) after determining permission; or
(c)
at any subsequent hearing.
(3)
This paragraph applies if--
(a)
the conditions in section 20(1)(b) of the 2007 Act are met, and
(b) the Lord Ordinary is satisfied that it is in all the circumstances
appropriate to transfer the application.
(4)
The Lord Ordinary may make an order under paragraph (2) whether or not
such an order was sought in the petition or was sought by motion by any party to
the proceedings, but if no such order was sought, the parties must be heard before
making an order.
(5)
Where the Lord Ordinary makes an order transferring the application to the
Upper Tribunal under paragraph (1) or (2), an order may be made in respect of any
expenses incurred by the parties up to that point".
[7]
If a petition is transferred to the Upper Tribunal, section 21 of the 2007 Act provides
that the Upper Tribunal has the same powers of review as the Court of Session, and must
apply the principles that the Court of Session would apply in deciding an application to its
supervisory jurisdiction. Any steps or orders made by the Court of Session before transfer
are to be treated as made by the Upper Tribunal. Rule 27 of the Tribunal Procedure (Upper
Tribunal) Rules 2008 sets out the procedure in the Upper Tribunal when it receives a case
that has been transferred. The Upper Tribunal will notify each party in writing that the
proceedings have been transferred to it, and must give directions as to the future conduct
of the proceedings. The Upper Tribunal is entitled to regulate its procedure as it thinks fit
(rule 5 of the Tribunal Procedure (Upper Tribunal) Rules 2008).
5
[8]
Very few petitions for judicial review in Scotland will be subject to mandatory
transfer. The only class of application currently specified for these purposes under the
Act of Sederunt (Transfer of Judicial Review Applications from the Court of Session) 2008
(SSI 2008/357) is
"an application which challenges a procedural decision or a procedural ruling of
the First-tier Tribunal, established under section 3(1) of the Tribunals, Courts and
Enforcement Act 2007".
[9]
A higher number of petitions are subject to discretionary transfer. However, in
practice it has been rare for the Court of Session to transfer cases to the Upper Tribunal.
There are historical reasons in immigration cases why transfers were not made, because
they were initially prohibited under section 20(5) of the 2007 Act. This was because the
immigration and asylum tribunal was not initially in the tribunal structure under the
2007 Act, until its functions were transferred into that structure by the Transfer of Functions
of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal Order 2010 (SI 2010/21). Section 20(5) of the
2007 Act was repealed with effect from 1 November 2013, some time ago. Despite that
change in the law, it appears that little consideration tends to be given to the transfer
provisions after the making of the initial averments in the petition and answers.
[10]
In considering whether a discretionary transfer should be ordered, the first stage
will be to decide if the conditions in section 20(1)(b) of the 2007 Act are met. After that,
under rule 58.5(3) of the Rules of the Court of Session, the court has to consider all the
circumstances and decide if it is satisfied it is appropriate to transfer the application.
Two Scottish cases suggest some circumstances the courts might consider. These are
the novelty and importance of the issues raised, the views of the parties, the expense of
proceeding in the Court of Session, and expedition (L v Angus Council [2011] CSOH 196
para [54], A, Petitioner [2014] CSOH 27 paras [7]-[8]). Conversely, in A, Petitioner at para [10],
6
the loss of the ability to reclaim to the Inner House without permission was found not to
be a good reason to refuse a transfer (permission being required to appeal a decision of the
Upper Tribunal to the Inner House of the Court of Session under section 13 of the 2007 Act
and rule 44 of the Tribunal Procedure (Upper Tribunal) Rules 2008, but not to reclaim an
interlocutor of the Outer House of the Court of Session). Other relevant factors might be
delay if a hearing date already fixed would be lost, or if there are difficult questions of
procedure that might arise in the Upper Tribunal if cases are transferred, but not in the
referring court (R (on the application of Hankinson) v Revenue and Customs Commissioners
[2009] EWHC 1774 (Admin), a case decided under transfer provisions applicable in England and
Wales under section 19 of the 2007 Act).
Application of governing law
[11]
An oral hearing was ordered on both the issue of transfer and permission
(rule 58.5(4)). It had already been accepted in the pleadings that the petition was subject
to discretionary transfer under section 20(1) of the 2007 Act. The petitioner expressed
neutrality on the issue of whether it should be transferred. It was said that there was force
in the matter being remitted to a specialist tribunal to whom Parliament has given the power
to the court to transfer responsibility in appropriate cases. However, reasons why the court
might not do so were that it had the requisite experience and knowledge to determine the
case itself, the right to appeal further without permission would be lost, and the case was
different from the one reported example of a transfer the petitioner had been able to find.
The respondent invited the court not to exercise its discretion to transfer the case. It was
suggested the court was better suited to carry out the review function. On exploration in
oral argument, underlying that view was the fact that cases are not usually transferred
7
in Scotland, with the result that such cases might be relatively unfamiliar in the Upper
Tribunal.
[12]
Applying the conditions for discretionary transfer in section 20 of the 2007 Act,
condition 1 is met because this petition does not seek anything other than the supervisory
jurisdiction of the Court of Session. Condition 2 is not met, because the subject matter of the
petition is not in a class specified in an Act of Sederunt for mandatory transfer. Condition 3
is met because the subject matter of the petition is not a devolved Scottish matter, since
immigration, including asylum, is a reserved matter in the Scotland Act 1998 (Schedule 5
Part II reservation B6). As a consequence, the court "may" transfer the petition to the Upper
Tribunal under section 20(1)(b). The next stage is to decide if the court is satisfied in all the
circumstances that it is appropriate to transfer the application, applying rule 58.5(3)(b) of the
Rules of the Court of Session.
[13]
In order to decide whether it is appropriate to exercise discretion to transfer a
qualifying application for judicial review to the Upper Tribunal, regard must be had to
the circumstances of the particular application before the court. The circumstances of the
present case of most relevance were as follows.
1.
The nature of the issue to be determined. The petition did not raise any point
of general public importance, and was not the first in a number of similar cases
which might benefit from being determined in the Court of Session. The test
which must be applied in this particular type of judicial review, a challenge
to a decision to certify a claim as clearly unfounded, is streamlined and well
established (para [2] above). There is no particular benefit in the case continuing
in the Court of Session in these circumstances. The Upper Tribunal has wide
experience of appeals from the First-tier Tribunal in asylum cases, including
8
those raising human rights or humanitarian protection issues. It is in a
particularly favourable position to determine whether human rights and
protection claims in a particular case would be bound to fail before the First-tier
Tribunal. (The respondent informed the court that in England and Wales it was
a procedural requirement that this particular type of judicial review must be
commenced in the Upper Tribunal rather than the courts).
2.
Cost, including to the public purse. The petitioner submitted that cost was a
neutral factor for the petitioner. Because he was in receipt of legal aid, he was
exempt from court fees under the Court of Session etc Fees Order 2022. The
respondent was unable to provide submissions on a comparison of the overall
level of expenses likely to be incurred, because of the limited number of
applications for judicial review dealt with by the Upper Tribunal in Scotland.
The court was not in a position to reach a concluded view about relative cost on
the basis of the information before it. It can nevertheless be observed that fees for
hearing first instance petitions in the Court of Session may be significant. Under
the Court of Session etc Fees Order 2022, a fee of £225 is payable by each party
for every 30 minutes or part thereof from 1 April 2024 for a substantive hearing,
unless exempt. The fees are per party, and the respondent did not suggest it
was exempt. Many petitions in the area of immigration are listed for a day's
substantive hearing, which might result in significant court fees, if payable, being
incurred. Even though the petitioner might personally be exempt from court
fees, there is still a cost to the public purse of proceeding in the Court of Session.
Publicly available information suggested that after permission is granted there
is a fixed fee for the substantive hearing in the Upper Tribunal, currently £847,
9
unless exempt (Apply for a judicial review in an immigration or asylum case -
GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)). It is possible there might be a cost saving to public
funds if the petition is determined in the Upper Tribunal.
3.
Delay. There is no substantive hearing date fixed in the Court of Session which
will be lost if the case is transferred. Parties were unable to assist the court with
relative timescales for determination in the Court of Session or Upper Tribunal
in Scotland, because of the paucity of transferred applications for judicial review.
Information was provided about timescales in England and Wales, suggesting
12-16 weeks for listing of a hearing of an application for judicial review after
permission was granted in the Upper Tribunal, but it did not follow that the
same position would exist in the Upper Tribunal operating in Scotland. As a
matter of law, under section 21 of the 2007 Act, in any transferred case the Upper
Tribunal must apply the principles that the Court of Session would apply in
deciding an application to its supervisory jurisdiction. A well-established
principle is that judicial review is designed to provide a speedy and effective
remedy to challenge decisions of public bodies (Lauchlan and O'Neill v Scottish
Ministers 2022 SC 125 para [18]). The Upper Tribunal has wide case management
powers (rule 5 of the Tribunal Procedure (Upper Tribunal) Rules 2008). If it
chooses, in its directions as to the future conduct of the proceedings under
rule 27(1)(b) of its procedure rules, it can adopt a procedure similar to that
adopted in the Court of Session - of issuing an order fixing dates for a procedural
and substantive hearing to ensure the case is dealt with speedily, and setting a
timetable leading up to those dates for procedural steps such as the lodging of
marked up documents and authorities, any affidavits, statements of issues, and
10
notes of argument. There was nothing before the court suggesting the case
would take any longer if transferred to the Upper Tribunal.
4.
Procedural difficulties. There are rules in both the Court of Session and the
Upper Tribunal, set out in para [6] and [7] of this opinion, which regulate
procedure on a transfer. The respondent drew the court's attention to one
possible procedural issue, which concerned an appeal lodged by the petitioner
in the First-tier Tribunal as well as bringing the petition. The appeal had been
taken on the basis that there had been no certification of the human rights claim.
The decision on permission below includes refusal of permission on grounds
predicated on there being no certification of the human rights claim. It is clear
from the terms of the decision letter of 8 January 2024 that the human rights
claim was certified, with the result that these grounds have no real prospects of
success. In those circumstances, it may be that the First-tier Tribunal proceedings
will be brought to an end. If not, it is possible there are advantages to both this
case and the existing appeal being dealt with within the tribunal system. There
a no procedural difficulties of such a nature to preclude transfer of the petition.
5.
The views of the parties. Views of parties are a relevant factor. Given the terms
of rule 58.5(4) of the Rules of the Court of Session, they are not decisive. On
exploration, the views of the respondent that the case should not be transferred
stemmed from it being unusual to transfer a petition to the Upper Tribunal in
Scotland. That did not appear to the court to be a weighty reason, because the
provisions in the 2007 Act and Rules of Court which govern transfers exist to be
applied in appropriate cases. Both the Upper Tribunal and the Court of Session
have relevant expertise in immigration and asylum matters, and are able to
11
apply the well-established certification review principles. The petitioner also
referred to the additional requirement of permission to appeal against an Upper
Tribunal decision if either party wished to appeal further, but as noted above
the court has already rejected this as an adequate reason to refuse a transfer
(A, Petitioner [2014] CSOH 27).
[14]
In the circumstances of this particular case, it is on balance appropriate to transfer
this petition to the Upper Tribunal. The most significant factor for the court was the nature
of the issues for determination in this application for judicial review. As discussed above,
the Upper Tribunal may be in a particularly favourable position to determine applications
for judicial review involving application of the certification review principles. Although the
court had regard to parties' views, they did not provide any strong reason against transfer
in this particular case. The petitioner was in essence neutral. The respondent's views were
based on what was usually done in applications for judicial review in Scotland. But if taken
to its logical conclusion, this approach would render the discretionary transfer provisions in
the 2007 Act and Rules of the Court of Session otiose, which cannot have been the intention.
There was no evidence before the court that transfer would result in increased cost, delay, or
insurmountable procedural difficulties, and so those were not factors which weighed against
transfer. In all the circumstances, discretionary transfer is appropriate.
[15]
The next question is the stage at which that transfer should be made. The petitioner
submitted that the court should determine permission first if deciding to transfer the case.
The respondent submitted that if there were to be a transfer, it should occur before
permission was determined. One reading of section 20A(2) of the 2007 Act might be that
it is for the Upper Tribunal to determine time bar and permission in transferred cases.
However, under section 21(5) of the 2007 Act, steps or orders already taken or made by
12
the Court of Session in a transferred case are to be treated as taken or made by the Upper
Tribunal. Further, under rule 58.5(2) of the Rules of the Court of Session, a discretionary
transfer may be made instead of determining permission, after determining permission, or
at any subsequent hearing. Reading all of these provisions together, section 20A(2) of the
2007 Act requires to be interpreted so that the powers of the Upper Tribunal to determine
time limits and permission arise in a discretionary transfer case where those matters have
not already been determined by the Court of Session. That leaves intact the Court of
Session's powers to determine time limits and permission before transferring, if it wishes
to do so. The test for permission for judicial review in Scotland is the same whether
determined by the Court of Session or by the Upper Tribunal (section 20A(2)(b) and (3)
of the 2007 Act). Given that the court had written submissions before it and had heard
argument on permission, considerations of delay and expense suggested the court should
determine the issue of permission prior to transfer.
Permission
[16]
The petition may only proceed if permission is granted. The statutory tests that
must be applied are found in section 27B of the Court of Session Act 1988. The applicant
must demonstrate a sufficient interest in the subject matter of the application, and the
application must have a real prospect of success. Permission is not to be interpreted as
an insurmountable barrier preventing what may appear to be a weak case from being
fully argued in due course (Wightman v Secretary of State [2018] CSIH 18 at para [9]).
[17]
It has been accepted by the authorities that the petitioner was the victim of modern
slavery. He was trafficked to work in a cannabis farm in the UK. The petitioner says he was
trafficked by men to whom the petitioner's father owed money. Despite the arguments of
13
the respondent to the contrary, the grounds in the petition focussed between paragraphs 51
and 55 pass the test for permission. The grounds in paragraphs 49 and 50 also pass the test,
to the extent that the matters in them are relevant to the question of whether the human
rights claim would be bound to fail before the First-tier Tribunal (as opposed to challenging
the process before the initial decision maker). In determining these grounds, the Upper
Tribunal will apply the principles that the Court of Session would apply in deciding
an application to its supervisory jurisdiction (section 21 of the 2007 Act), including the
certification review principles. Given that those grounds will be fully argued in due course,
to avoid any issue of prejudgement, the less said about them at this stage the better.
[18]
Permission is refused on the grounds between paragraphs 44 and 49 of the petition.
The grounds in paragraphs 45 and 46, predicated on the petitioner's human rights claim not
having been certified, have no prospects of success. The decision letter of 8 January 2024
must be read as a whole. On page 1 it states in terms
"You do not have a right of appeal against this decision because your protection
and human rights claims have been certified as clearly unfounded under section 94
of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002".
Paragraph 75 of the decision letter sets out the test applied, and paragraph 77 records a
decision "to refuse your claim and certify it as clearly unfounded". Again on page 14 it is
said
"You do not have a right of appeal against this decision because your protection
and human rights claims have been certified as clearly unfounded under section 94
of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002".
While it is accepted that certification decisions are distinct from decisions on the merits of a
human rights or protection claim (Tsiklauri para [12]), it is crystal clear that in this particular
decision the human rights claim as well as the protection claim was certified as clearly
unfounded.
14
[19]
To the extent that the challenge is one of a failure to give adequate reasons for the
certification of the human rights claim (paragraph 47), that is not a relevant challenge in this
particular type of judicial review. The same can be said for the challenge in paragraph 48 of
the petition based on an alleged application of the wrong rules by the initial decision maker.
Under the certification review principles, the same question has to be asked as the person
who made the certification decision, of whether the human rights and protection claims are
clearly unfounded. Whether or not the initial decision maker applied the correct passages
in the Immigration Rules or gave detailed enough reasons are matters which are, as put in
Tsiklauri, not strictly to the point (para [11)). The grounds in paragraphs 47 and 48 also have
no real prospects of success.
Conclusion
[20]
Permission is therefore granted on the grounds in paragraphs 49 to 55 of the petition,
and refused on the grounds in paragraphs 44 to 48 of the petition. The question of any
expenses up to this point is reserved. Thereafter the application for judicial review is
transferred to the Upper Tribunal for determination of the grounds upon which permission
has been granted.


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