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First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Derrick v Information Commissioner [2023] UKFTT 428 (GRC) (18 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2023/428.html Cite as: [2023] UKFTT 428 (GRC) |
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General Regulatory Chamber
Information Rights
Determined, by consent, on written evidence and submissions. Considered on the papers on 15 May 2023. |
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B e f o r e :
TRIBUNAL MEMBER Susan Wolf
TRIBUNAL MEMBER Jo Murphy
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DR LINDA DERRICK |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
Respondent |
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Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is Dismissed.
Substituted Decision Notice: No substituted decision notice.
MODE OF HEARING AND PRELIMINARY MATTERS
BACKGROUND
I am advised that I am acting in the interests of the Council and residents and taxpayers in trying to ensure that taxpayers' money is not expended on rents for leases which are not valid. That is the responsibility of all councillors and is the reason I am requesting the legal advice from BP Collins as to the validity of the leases. I am therefore acting in the public interest.
As background, I am also acting in the interests of Council, residents and taxpayers in seeking to ensure that the Council does not dispose of valuable Council assets by giving them away.
I am objecting to the application made by HCST to the Land Registry to transfer the titles of land currently registered to HPC. That is entirely in line with my acting in the public interest and in in the interests of the Council and the residents and taxpayers. If anyone, I am in dispute with HCST.
There is therefore no conflict of interest.
I would therefore be grateful for the legal advice on the validity of the leases given by BP Collins.
7. In this case, the complainant has requested legal advice sought by the Council relating to the validity of leases. The Commissioner is satisfied from the wording of the request that the information falling within the scope of this request would constitute confidential legal advice provided by a qualified legal adviser to their client. This means that this information is subject to legal professional privilege, and the Commissioner is aware of no evidence suggesting that this privilege has been waived. The exemption provided by section 42(1) of the FOIA is, therefore, engaged in relation to this information. The Commissioner will now go on to consider the public interest test.
8. In balancing the opposing public interest factors under section 42(1), the Commissioner considers that it is necessary to take into account the in-built public interest in this exemption: that is, the public interest in the maintenance of legal professional privilege. The general public interest inherent in this exemption will always be strong due to the importance of the principle behind legal professional privilege: safeguarding openness in all communications between client and lawyer to ensure access to full and frank legal advice. A weakening of the confidence that parties have that legal advice will remain confidential undermines the ability of parties to seek advice and conduct litigation appropriately and thus erodes the rule of law and the individual rights it guarantees.
…
10. The Commissioner considers that the balance of public interest lies in withholding the information and protecting the Council's ability to obtain free, frank and high quality legal advice without the fear of premature disclosure. The Commissioner is not aware of any public interest arguments that are enough to outweigh or override the inbuilt public interest in the information remaining protected by legal professional privilege.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
42.— Legal professional privilege.
(1) Information in respect of which a claim to legal professional privilege… could be maintained in legal proceedings is exempt information.
The principle which runs through all these cases, and the many other cases which were cited, is that a man must be able to consult his lawyer in confidence, since otherwise he might hold back half the truth. The client must be sure that what he tells his lawyer in confidence will never be revealed without his consent. Legal professional privilege is thus much more than an ordinary rule of evidence, limited in its application to the facts of a particular case. It is a fundamental condition on which the administration of justice as a whole rests.
41. … it is for the public authority to demonstrate on the balance of probability that the scales weigh in favour of the information being withheld. That is as true of a case in which section 42 is being considered as it is in relation to a case which involves consideration of any other qualified exemption under FOIA . Section 42 cases are different simply because the in-built public interest in non-disclosure itself carries significant weight which will always have to be considered in the balancing exercise once it is established that legal professional privilege attaches to the document in question.
53…..The in-built public interest in withholding information to which legal professional privilege applies is acknowledged to command significant weight. Accordingly, the proper approach for the Tribunal was to acknowledge and give effect to the significant weight to be afforded to the exemption in any event; ascertain whether there were particular or further factors in the instant case which pointed to non-disclosure and then consider whether the features supporting disclosure (including the underlying public interests which favoured disclosure) were of equal weight at the very least.
68. The powerful public interest against disclosure … is one side of the equation and it has to be established by the public authority claiming the exemption that it outweighs the competing public interest in favour of disclosure if the exemption is to apply. However strong the public interest against disclosure it does not convert a qualified exemption into one that is effectively absolute.
THE APPEAL AND THE HEARING
The ICO points out that legal professional privilege protects the confidentiality of communications between a lawyer and client and that legal advice is exempt information.
The ICO then goes on to apply the public interest test.
However, in their decision the ICO makes no account of the fact that I am not just a member of the public but also a councillor on Hughenden Parish Council. I made that clear in my complaint to the ICO (attached). The ICO does not even mention the fact that I am a councillor.
I think the ICO's decision is wrong because, as a councillor, I am part of the corporate body
(Hughenden Parish Council which is the client. So the legal advice should be available to the client i.e. the Council. The legal advice should not be restricted to some councillors (unless presumably there are legal reasons not to do so which there are none in this case).
In addition, there is no reference in the ICO's public test to the fact that I am a councillor.
There are additional reasons for me to have the information over and above those which would apply if I was not a councillor.
First I need the legal advice to take well informed decisions at Council. It is in the public interest that I do so, particularly on financial decisions for which this advice is crucial.
Second, as I made clear in my complaint I have corporate and personal financial responsibilities and liabilities as a councillor for the Council's decisions. The legal advice relates to HPC expenditure for which I am corporately and personally accountable.
I believe I am entitled to the legal advice provided by the Council's solicitors to the Council.
I think the ICO was wrong in its decision because it did not take into account the fact that I am a councillor on Hughenden Parish Council.
…the Appellant's arguments appear to misunderstand that disclosure under FOIA is disclosure to the world at large. Disclosure of any legal advice to the Councillor in her role as an individual Councillor is a separate consideration for the corporate body or the Council to determine and is distinct from disclosure under the FOIA.
There is one point well made in the Response which I would ask the Appellant to reflect upon. This is that disclosure under FOIA is 'disclosure to the world'. This means that, if she is successful in this appeal, the legal advice she has requested would not be made available only to her, but also to the public in general. It may be possible for the Appellant to discuss with the Council whether disclosure otherwise than under FOIA would be preferable in order to avoid this eventuality.
DISCUSSION
72 Disclosure under FOIA is always to the person making the request under section 1 . However, once such a request has been complied with by disclosure to the applicant, the information is in the public domain. It ceases to be protected by any confidentiality it had prior to disclosure. This underlines the need for exemptions from disclosure.
…acknowledge and give effect to the significant weight to be afforded to the exemption in any event; ascertain whether there were particular or further factors in the instant case which pointed to non-disclosure and then consider whether the features supporting disclosure (including the underlying public interests which favoured disclosure) were of equal weight at the very least.
CONCLUSION
Stephen Cragg KC
Judge of the First-tier Tribunal
Date:17 May 2023
Date Promulgated: 18 May 2023