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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> RS (Funding, meaning of significant prospect) Iran [2005] UKAIT 00138 (6 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00138.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00138, [2005] Imm AR 726, [2005] UKAIT 138, [2005] UKIAT 00138 |
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RS (Funding – meaning of 'significant prospect') Iran [2005] UKAIT 00138
Date of hearing: 21 September 2005
Date Determination notified: 6 October 2005
RS |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
This is a reported decision considering whether there is a difference of interpretation of the phrase 'significant prospect' in regulation 6(3) of The Community Legal Services (Asylum and Immigration Appeals) Regulations 2005 and of 'real possibility' in rule 26(6) of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (Procedure) Rules 2005. Held: in the majority of cases there is no difference in practice and the making of the reconsideration order will usually satisfy the requirements of regulation 6(3) of the Regulations in favour of making a fiunding order (paragraphs 12 to 15); but, there will be occasions when different criteria will apply and the term 'significant prospect' may be applied in a more restrictive way; there is a requirement of good faith on the representative's part – see paragraph 16 and the examples given in paragraph 17 of the determination.
Relevant provisions of primary and secondary legislation
(1) On the application of an appellant under section 103A, the appropriate court may order that the appellant's costs in respect of an application under section 103A shall be paid out of the Community Legal Servoice Fund established under section 5 of the Access to Justice Act 1999 (c.22).
(2) Subsection (3) applies where the Tribunal has decided an appeal following reconsideration pursuant to an order made -
(a) under section 103A(1) and,
(b) on the application of the appellant.
(3) The Tribunal may order the appellant's costs –
(a) in respect of the application for reconsideration and,
(b) in respect of the reconsideration, shall be paid out of that Fund.
For the reasons that will appear hereafter we are not in the present application concerned with any application for an order that the appellant's costs in respect of the application under s.103A shall be paid pursuant to s.103D(1).
'6(1) The Tribunal must exercise the power to make an order under s.103D(3) in accordance with this regulation.
(2) If the Tribunal allows an appeal on reconsideration, it must make an order under s.103D(3).
(3) If the Tribunal does not allow an appeal, it must not make an order under s.103D(3) unless it is satisfied that, at the time when the appellant made the s.103A application, there was a significant prospect that the appeal would be allowed upon reconsideration.
(4) If, where paragraph (3) applies the Tribunal decides not to make an order under s.103D(3), it must give reasons for its decision.'
'(1) This rule applies where -
(a) The Tribunal has reconsidered an appeal following a s.103A application made by the appellant in relation to an appeal decided in England, Wales or Northern Ireland; and
(b) The appellant's representative has specified that he seeks an order under s.103D of the 2002 Act for his costs to be paid out of the relevant fund.'
Time for notifying intended funding order application
'Is an order for the payment of costs from the Community Legal Service Fund sought under s.103D of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002?
Yes/No/Not Applicable
Note:
If an order for costs is sought you must answer 'Yes' to ensure that consideration is given to whether or not an order should be made.
Unrepresented parties, if you do not have a legal representative acting for you, or you do not have a not charity or not for profit organisation assisting you, you must answer 'Not Applicable'.
If you were the respondent to the original appeal, you must also answer 'Not Applicable'.
The meaning of 'significant prospect' in the 2005 Regulations
'There is nothing in the grounds of appeal of the determination to indicate any error of law by the Immigration Judge so far as concerns whether the appellant will face any real risk of persecutory or Article 3 infringing treatment from his uncles.
It is however reasonably arguable as to whether the Immigration Judge may have erred in law in omitting to make clear what (if any) findings of fact he was making in relation to the claim that false reports had been made to the Iranian authorities that the appellant was involved with the KDPI and that security agents were said still to be looking for him in March 2004. Arguably paragraph 17 of the determination does not make sufficiently clear what precisely is the Immigration Judge's analysis on this point and for what reason. Reconsideration is ordered on this point.'
(6) The immigration judge may make an order for reconsideration only if he thinks that –
(a)the Tribunal may have made an error of law; and
(b) there is a real possibility that the Tribunal would decide the appeal differently on reconsideration.
"It will therefore be for the judiciary to determine what "significant" means in practice but the Government's intention is that if a case is pursued in good faith through to reconsideration funding should be awarded. … the judiciary is best placed to make retrospective decisions precisely because it has built up a body of expertise in the Immigration Appeal Tribunal. … we are not providing guidance on what "significant" means, because it would be most unusual for the Government to interpret something before an interpretation has been made by the judiciary."
Before the House of Lords, in proposing that the Regulations previously laid before the House be approved, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Department of Constitutional Affairs (Baroness Ashton of Upholland) is recorded as saying:
"It will be for the judiciary to interpret the regulations and what "significant prospect" means, and I cannot pre-empt what that interpretation might be. However, I can clarify the Government's intention. The purpose of the scheme is to reduce the number of weak cases moving through the appeals process and to discourage unmeritorious challenges to tribunal decisions. If an application is unsuccessful at the review stage, it will usually be because it lacked merit. And therefore we would not expect costs to be awarded. However, if an application is successful and the representative has acted in good faith, that would mean that the case had merit. In those circumstances, we should expect costs to be awarded. Every case must be dealt with on an individual basis, but representatives who pursue meritorious cases can expect to be paid.
I also assure noble Lords that an unsuccessful outcome at the reconsideration will not automatically lead to costs being refused. That is not how the scheme has been designed. The test that the tribunal must apply will be based on the prospects of success and the information that was available to the representative when the application was made. That is a specific requirement of the test in Regulation 6(3), because we realise that representatives cannot make an assessment of a case's prospects of success based on information that they do not have."
The difference between the tests in the Procedure Rules and the Regulations
3 October 2005