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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> EA (Immigration, Rule 48(5)) Ghana [2004] UKIAT 00227 (18 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00227.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00227, [2004] UKIAT 227 |
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EA (Immigration - Rule 48(5)) Ghana [2004] UKIAT 00227
Date of hearing: 9 August 2004
Date Determination notified: 18 August 2004
EA | APPELLANT |
and | |
ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER, ACCRA | RESPONDENT |
"An Adjudicator or the Tribunal must not consider any evidence which is not filed or served in accordance with time limits set out in these Rules or directions given under rule 38, unless satisfied that there are good reasons to do so."
10. The Adjudicator may well have appreciated that the Rule prohibited the consideration of evidence served late but that prohibition is subject to the qualification "unless satisfied that there are good reasons to do so". There is nothing in the determination to suggest that the Adjudicator asked if there were good reasons why he should receive the evidence. That is not the same thing as asking if there were good reasons why the evidence had been served late. We have to say that the grounds of appeal suggest to us very strongly that there were no good reasons for the evidence being served late. If as is suggested, the Appellant had difficulty maintaining contact with his solicitors, or them with him, then it is a difficulty that could have been remedied by telephone calls, letters, travelling, using local agents, or instructing a different firm.
11. Although it may be easy for an Adjudicator, faced with an Appellant who has failed to comply with directions and who has not disclosed his case, to forget how important his decision may be, it is incumbent on him to remember his duty. Rule 4 provides "the overriding objective of these Rules is to secure the just, timely and effective disposal of appeals". In a case considering the proper application of paragraph 45(2) Barnes V-P said
"Adjudicators should be conscious that part of their overriding duty is to ensure a just disposal. Partly this is because a just disposal will be a final disposal; partly because there is a duty on immigration judiciary to give the most anxious consideration to applications which involve a claim that their makers fear persecution for a Convention reason if returned to their own country or, since the introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998, that they will suffer inhuman or degrading treatment contrary to Article 3."
12. The Procedure Rules provided for the oral hearing of an appeal. The Appellant wanted to give evidence and produced a witness statement, albeit late. Adjudicators have a duty to apply the most anxious scrutiny and the high standards of fairness to the Appellant's case.
13. One of the problems of the late disclosure of evidence is that it can cause unfairness to the Secretary of State who is expected to respond to a case that he has not considered. This does not mean that it will always be right to exclude evidence that is served late. Often late service of evidence will not really cause any difficulty to the other side, usually the Secretary of State. Often a witness statement simply repeats points that have been made previously but puts them into a better order or makes points that might be dealt with better in cross-examination in any event. Where this Adjudicator in our view was clearly wrong is that he decided to exclude the evidence upon which the Appellant wanted to rely without inquiring if there were any "good reasons" to admit the evidence, including if admitting it would cause any unfair problems to the Secretary of State.
14. Faced with an application of this kind it is clear that the Adjudicator should have reminded himself of the requirements of Rule 48(5) and addressed his mind specifically to the points raised there and particularly, if he decided to exclude the evidence, explain carefully why he was not satisfied that there were good reasons to consider it.
15. We do not intend to make an exclusive list of "good reasons" but the Adjudicator should have inquired into the significance of the evidence, the reason for the late submission and any problems that late service would cause to the other side. "Good reasons" must mean more than that the evidence is relevant. Adjudicators never have to consider evidence that is not relevant at all. However "good reasons" could include the fact that the evidence is highly pertinent; that it could not have been served in accordance with directions; that the other side had notice of the failure of the evidence and that considering it causes no unfair difficulty to the other side"…………….
Spencer Batiste
(Vice President)
Approved for electronic transmission