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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Work and Pensions v Kehoe [2004] EWCA Civ 225 (05 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/225.html Cite as: [2004] QB 1378, [2004] 1 FLR 1132, [2004] UKHRR 443, [2004] 1 FCR 511, [2004] 2 WLR 1481, [2004] EWCA Civ 225 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Administrative Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KEHOE |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Drabble Q.C. and R. de Mello (instructed by Hodge, Jones & Allen) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward :
Introduction
"the provisions of the Child Support Act 1991 ("the 1991 Act") are incompatible with a Convention right (namely the right of access to a court under article 6) because they deny a parent with care of children access to any court (in her own right or alternatively on behalf of the children) in connection with disputes as to her (or their) civil rights consisting of disputes as to whether the absent parent has paid and/or ought to pay the sums due under a maintenance assessment under the 1991 Act; or as to the manner in which the obligations under the maintenance assessment should be enforced."
"The case raises points of considerable public importance on which there is no direct authority and this warrants the attention of the Court of Appeal."
The Child Support Agency scheme
The position at common law
"The strange state of our law is that there may be a so-called common law duty to maintain, but when one analyses what that duty is it seems effectively to have come to nothing. Like so many rights, the right extends only so far as the remedy to enforce it extends. the common law has no remedy. The remedies to enforce a duty to maintain are statutory remedies which are variously laid down in numerous statutes."
I need to elaborate.
"The judges based this principle upon the same doctrine of matrimonial symbiosis as they employed to deprive the wife of her property rights. Since the husband owed it to the community to sustain himself, he was, it was said, under the inevitable compulsion to sustain his other self, his wife, who was "bone of his bone, flesh of his flesh, and no man did ever hate his own flesh so far as not to preserve it." (See Manby v Scott (1663) 1 Mod 124, 128).
However while recognising the husband's obligation, the common law refused recognition of any corresponding right on the part of the wife to enforce the obligation directly against him. The law was conclusively so established in 1663, in Manby v Scott. The reasoning was that the marriage and its incidents were exclusively within the jurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Courts, so that for the common law to have entertained a claim for maintenance by the wife against her husband would have amounted to an invasion of the spiritual jurisdiction. A wife could neither claim nor enforce any right to maintenance in the civil courts. The only assistance which the common law did give to her was that in certain circumstances it would support her in pledging her husband's credit so that, for example, if a wife was able to purchase household goods from a tradesman on credit, the husband might be held liable, at the suit of the tradesman, to discharge the debt. This was based on the notion of agency "
The wife's agency of necessity extended to cover necessities for the children: see Bazeley v Forder (1868) L.R. 3 Q.B. 559.
"Thus was established the national system by which the public supported those who were unable to support themselves, but sought reimbursement by imposing a legal liability upon financially able relatives."
Its echoes reverberate on.
The statutory developments
a) Part II of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973;
b) the Domestic Proceedings and Magistrates Court Act 1978;
c) Part III of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984;
d) Schedule I to the Children Act 1989.
Each of these statutes, which for convenience I shall call the "ordinary maintenance statutes", is listed in s.8(11) and each gives the relevant court a wide discretion as to the amount of the periodical payments order, the court's task very broadly being to balance needs against available resources.
The ordinary enforcement procedures
"The effect of these changes (which does not seem to have been foreseen) was effectively to transfer the power of dealing with much of the aftermath of marital breakdown to the magistrates' court. This had a profound impact on the enforcement of support obligations: the law officially recognised that the magistrates' courts had become the usual forum for dealing with default in the making of orders for periodical payments. Paradoxically this occurred at a time when the availability of legal aid for divorce had reduced the number of applications to magistrates for matrimonial orders; and to some extent the role of the courts changed from making and enforcing orders for the support of separated wives to those of an enforcement agency for the divorced. The fact that it was primarily the existence of a state-provided administrative collection machinery which had influenced the Morton Report's recommendations was also significant for the future: it was increasingly suggested that the attempt to deal with maintenance obligations by judicial process was outdated and that court procedures should be replaced by a system of administrative assessment and recovery."
Does therein lie a clue to the resolution of this case?
The background to the introduction of the Child Support Agency
"Thus, one fundamental principle of 43 Elizabeth, namely, the designation in the public assistance legislation of liable relatives and the right of the public authority granting such assistance to seek reimbursement from the liable relatives, still retains its vitality today. the unsupported wife or mother both retains her legal right of maintenance which she may seek to enforce through an order of the court, and enjoys also, in her capacity as a citizen, a right to support from the social security authorities which carries no stigma. the relationship between those two rights still remains unsatisfactorily resolved, either in practice or principle "
"The present system of maintenance is unnecessarily fragmented, uncertain in its results, slow and ineffective. It is based largely on discretion. The system is operated through the High and County Courts, the Magistrates' Courts and the offices of the Department of Social Security. The cumulative effect is uncertainty and inconsistent decisions about how much maintenance should be paid. In a great many instances, the maintenance awarded is not paid or the payments fall into arrears and take weeks to re-establish. Only 30% of lone mothers and 3% of lone fathers receive regular maintenance for their children. More than 750,000 lone parents depend on income support. Many lone mothers want to go to work but do not feel able to do so."
"Ensure that parents honour their legal and moral responsibility to maintain their own children whenever they can afford to do so. It is right that other taxpayers should help to maintain children when the children's own parents, despite their own best efforts, do not have enough resources to do so themselves. That will continue to be the case. But it is not right that taxpayers, who include other families, should shoulder that responsibility instead of parents who are able to do it themselves." (See para. 2.1)
"It is important that, as far as possible, all the services relating to child maintenance which are to be provided to the public should be delivered by one single authority. It will be a priority for the agency to secure payment to the caring parent as quickly and accurately as possible."
In para. 5.20 the point was made, and one does not imagine that Mrs Kehoe would disagree:-
"If enforcement action is to be effective, it has to be taken quickly."
Thus it came about that the Child Support Act 1991 was rushed onto the statue book.
The relevant provisions of the 1991 Act
"(1) For the purposes of this Act, each parent of a qualifying child is responsible for maintaining him.
(3) Where a maintenance assessment made under this Act requires the making of periodical payments, it shall be the duty of the absent parent with respect to whom the assessment was made to make those payments."
A child's welfare is a relevant matter to which the Secretary of State must have regard only when considering the exercise of any discretionary power conferred by the Act: s.2. A parent is a "non-resident parent" (formerly called the "absent parent") if he does not live in the same household with the child and the child has a home with a parent who is, in relation to him "a person with care". Under s.4(1) either the person with care or the non-resident parent may apply to the Secretary of State for a maintenance assessment to be made under the Act with respect to a qualifying child. If, however, the person with care of the child is a parent who is claiming or receiving income support, income-based job-seeker's allowances or any other benefits of a prescribed kind and that person is required to do so by the Secretary of State, then she shall authorise the Secretary of State to take action under this Act to recover child support maintenance from the non-resident parent: s.6. The Act makes a clear distinction between those receiving State benefits and those, like Mrs Kehoe, who are not: the former are given no choice, the latter can at least decide for themselves whether to seek the help from the CSA. Once such a request has been made or deemed to have been made to the Secretary of State, it shall be dealt with by him in accordance with the provision made by or under the Act: s.11(1). In this regard, therefore, the Secretary of State has no discretion. Maintenance is assessed applying the formula prescribed by the Act. Assessments can be reviewed, and now revised. There can be an appeal with a public hearing to a Child Support Appeal Tribunal and further appeals on a question of law to a Child Support Commissioner and thence to the Court of Appeal: ss.20-25.
"(1) This subsection applies in any case where the Secretary of State would have jurisdiction to make a maintenance assessment with respect to a qualifying child and the absent parent of his on an application duly made by a person entitled to apply for such an assessment with respect to that child.
(3) In any case where ss.(1) applies, no court shall exercise any power which it would otherwise have to make, vary or revive any maintenance order in relation to the child and absent parent concerned.
A maintenance order for this purpose is an order made under the several Acts, the ordinary maintenance statutes, which I listed in paragraph 12 above.
"(2) Where a maintenance assessment has been made in response to an application under this section the Secretary of State may, if the person with care applies to him under this subsection, arrange for
(a) the collection of the child support maintenance payable in accordance with the assessment;
(b) the enforcement of the obligation to pay child support maintenance in accordance with the assessment.
(3) Where an application under ss.(2) for the enforcement of the obligation mentioned in ss.(2)(b) authorises the Secretary of State to take steps to enforce that obligation whenever he considers it necessary to do so, the Secretary of State may act accordingly. "
This section confers a discretionary power in the Secretary of State to decide whether or not to take the enforcement proceedings and if so what steps to take. Because enforcement involves the exercise of a discretionary power conferred by the Act, then by virtue of s.2 the Secretary of State must have regard to the welfare of any child likely to be affected by his decision and this would include the effect on other children than the qualifying children, such as stepchildren of the non-resident parent. That there are such stepchildren possibly making demands upon the income of the non-resident parent is, perhaps ironically, not a matter to take into account when calculating the amount to be paid.
"(2) The Secretary of State may apply to a magistrates' court for an order ("the liability order") against the liable person.
(3) Where the Secretary of State applies for a liability order, the magistrates' court shall make the order if satisfied that the payments in question have become payable by the liable person and have not been paid.
(4) On an application under ss.(2), the court shall not question the maintenance assessment under which the payments of child support maintenance fell to be made."
"On complaint of the Secretary of State that the sums specified below are due from the defendant under the Child Support Act 1991 and are outstanding, it is adjudged that the defendant is liable to pay the aggregate amount specified below.
Sum payable and outstanding - child support maintenance
interest "
The background facts.
"It is clear that the child support officer would not have been able to swear under oath to the court that the amount of arrears applied for were correctly due. The agency could not, therefore, have gone ahead with an application for a liability order."
"I have expended all my energy attempting to get the CSA to obtain maintenance payments for me. I feel excluded from the process. I have been repeatedly told that the dispute is between the CSA and (my former husband) and does not involve me. I have been repeatedly refused information concerning (my former husband) on the grounds that I have no right to this information. I believe I would not have received a fraction of the payments and compensation that has been made" [in February 1999 the Secretary of State made an ex gratia payment of £10,381.14 to Mrs Kehoe to reflect the amount of child support she might have received up to that point] "had I not continually pressurised the CSA and complained of their inaction and inability to obtain maintenance for me.
The combined effect of reduced income and stress involved in trying to obtain payments from the CSA has seriously affected my family life. I believe that if I had been allowed direct access to the courts to obtain maintenance I would have been successful. The Child Support Act's prohibition on me taking independent action through the courts has left me powerless. My only remedy is to constantly pressurise the CSA which takes no real responsibility for ensuring maintenance is paid and for whom I am just a nuisance."
The judgment under appeal.
"84. I find myself unable to accept this analysis, which seems to me to blur the necessary distinction between the right and the remedy. In my judgment, the claimant undoubtedly has a civil right to seek maintenance for her children from their father. Furthermore, that it is an autonomous, substantive right. It is a right which is plainly recognised in English law, and provided for by domestic legislation. The 1991 Act and the scheme provide the statutory mechanisms designed to give effect to and to facilitate that right.
86. my assessment is that the provisions of the 1991 Act, far from precluding the bringing of an effective right, provide the mechanism by means of which the claimant's substantive rights are exercised; but that in its exclusion of the claimant from the enforcement process, the 1991 Act and the scheme impose a procedural bar on the prosecution/enforcement of the claim which engages article 6."
"131. I have come to the conclusion that in relation to the scheme under the 1991 Act, the remedy of judicial review by itself does not give the court full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decision requires. What I have to envisage is a failure by the agency properly to exercise its powers of enforcement. Plainly any decision by the agency not to enforce, or any failure to enforce timeously or effectively would be subject to challenge by judicial review. But in my judgment that might well not be an adequate remedy for the claimant.
133. if the agency unreasonably fails to take enforcement proceedings; or delays unreasonably in taking them; or fails to prosecute them effectively, the claimant might well suffer loss, and judicial review of itself would not compensate her. It therefore seems to me that since the claimant's article 6 rights are engaged, and she has no right of access to a court on her own account to enforce a maintenance assessment, "full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decision requires" means that the court must have the power to compensate the claimant for the loss of child support which results from any decision by the agency which is unreasonable, or any failure by the agency which has the effect of causing the claimant to suffer damage.
134. The court is given that jurisdiction by HRA 1998. If the agency acts in a way which is incompatible with the claimant's article 6 rights, she can bring an action for damages under section 7. In my judgment, therefore, a combination of the right to apply for judicial review and the right to bring an action under HRA 1998 section 7 fulfils the Alconbury criteria. On this basis, the scheme of the 1991 Act is HRA compliant."
"147. I agree that I have jurisdiction to entertain an action for damages by the claimant under HRA 1998. The only basis for that action canvassed in argument was delay as creating a discrete head of jurisdiction under article 6, although it seems to me arguable at least that actionable delay on the part of the Secretary of State which resulted in loss of child support could come within article 8. But that point, however, was not argued and I say no more about it at this stage.
148. Since there is plainly an issue of fact as to whether or not there has been delay or other unreasonable conduct by the agency in the pursuit of the maintenance assessment, it would, I think, be quite wrong for me to grant the declaration Mr Drabble seeks in paragraph 146 and give directions for the determination of damages. The claimant must first, I think, establish that she is entitled to the declaration."
The Human Rights Act 1998
"So far as it is possible to do so, primary legislation and subordinate legislation must be read and given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights."
Section 4(2) provides:
"If the court is satisfied that the provision is incompatible with a Convention right, it may make a declaration of that incompatibility."
Section 6(1) provides:-
"It is unlawful for a public authority to act in a way which is incompatible with a Convention right."
Section 7(1) provides:-
"A person who claims that a public authority has acted (or proposes to act) in a way which is made unlawful by section 6(1) may
(a) bring proceedings against the authority under this Act in the appropriate court
but only if he is (or would be) a victim of the unlawful act."
Article 6.1 of the Convention upon which this appeal is centred provides:-
"In the determination of his civil rights and obligations everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. "
The Strasbourg jurisprudence and how it has been explained and applied here.
" it seems likely that the phrase "civil rights and obligations" was intended by the framers of the Convention to refer to rights created by private rather than by public law."
Expanding upon this in para.28 of his speech in Runa Begum v Tower Hamlets London Borough Council [2003] UKHL 5 [2003] 2 AC 430 he said:-
" The term "civil rights and obligations" was originally intended to mean those rights and obligations which, in continental European systems of law, were adjudicated upon by the civil courts. They were, essentially, rights and obligations in private law. The term was not intended to cover administrative decisions which were conventionally subject to review, if at all, by administrative courts."
"These [a line of Strasbourg cases] indicate that article 6(1) is likely to be engaged when the applicant has public law rights which are of a personal and economic nature and do not involve any large measure of official discretion."
"88. Both the Commission and the government agree that the concept of "civil rights and obligations" cannot be interpreted solely by reference to the domestic law of the respondent state. the concept of "civil rights and obligations" is autonomous.
89. Whilst the court thus concludes that the concept of "civil rights and obligations" is autonomous, it nevertheless does not consider that, in this context, the legislation of the state concerned is without importance. Whether or not a right is to be regarded as civil within the meaning of this expression in the Convention must be determined by reference to the substantive content and effects of the right and not its legal classification under the domestic law of the state concerned. In the exercise of its supervisory functions, the court must also take account of the object and purpose of the Convention and of the national systems of other contracting states."
Lord Bingham of Cornhill explained in para.3 of Matthews v Ministry of Defence [2003] UKHL 4 [2003] 1 AC 1163:-
"This means that the concept of a "civil right" cannot be interpreted solely by reference to the domestic law of the member state. It is the view taken of an alleged right for Convention purposes which matters."
"The court recalls its constant case law to the effect that "Article 6(1) extends only to contestations (disputes) over (civil) "rights and obligations" which can be said, at least on arguable grounds, to be recognised under domestic law; it does not itself guarantee any particular content for (civil) "rights and obligations" in the substantive law of the contracting states. It will however apply to disputes of a "genuine and serious nature" concerning the actual existence of the right as well as to the scope and manner in which it is exercised."
" For purposes of article 6 one must take the domestic law as one finds it, and apply to it the autonomous Convention concept of civil rights."
Lord Hope's comment in para.51 was:-
"Article 6(1) does not have anything to say about the content of the individual's civil rights, nor does it impose an obligation on the state party to confer any particular rights in substantive law on the individual."
"35. The principle whereby a civil claim must be capable of being submitted to a judge ranks as one of the universally "recognised" fundamental principles of law; Were article 6(1) to be understood as concerning exclusively the conduct of an action which had already been initiated before a court, a Contracting State could, without acting in breach of that text, do away with its courts, or take away their jurisdiction to determine certain classes of civil actions and entrust it to organs dependent on the government. Such assumptions, indissociable from a danger of arbitrary power, would have serious consequences which are repugnant to the aforementioned principles and which the court cannot overlook. It would be inconceivable, in the opinion of the court, that article 6(1) should describe in detail the procedural guarantees afforded to parties in a pending law suit and should not first protect that which alone makes it in fact possible to benefit from such guarantees, that is, access to a court. The fair, public and expeditious characteristic of judicial proceedings are of no value at all if there are no judicial proceedings.
36. Taking all the preceding considerations together, it follows that the right of access constitutes an element which is inherent in the right stated by article 6(1). the article embodies the 'right to a court', of which the right of access, that is the right to institute proceedings before courts in civil matters, constitutes one aspect only. "
" the Strasbourg court has been left to develop the law. It has done so in two ways. First, it has been concerned to ensure that State parties do not exploit the gap left in article 6 by changing their law so as to convert a question which would ordinarily be regarded as appropriate for civil adjudication into an administrative decision outside the reach of the article. It has done this by treating "civil rights and obligations" as an autonomous concept, not dependent upon the domestic law classification of the right or obligation, which a citizen should have access to a court to determine."
"It is not always an easy matter to trace the dividing line between procedural and substantive limitations of a given entitlement under domestic law. It may sometimes be no more than a question of legislative technique whether the limitation is expressed in terms of the right or the remedy."
"The detailed reasoning of the European Court in these cases does not provide us with much by way of guidance as to how the dividing line between these two concepts is to be identified. It is not possible to find a clear ratio in these decisions which will lead to the right result in every case. So it is better to have regard instead to the underlying principles."
"An accurate analysis of a claim in substantive rights in domestic law is nonetheless the first essential step towards deciding whether he has, for purposes of the autonomous meaning given to the expression by the Convention, a "civil right" such as will engage the guarantee in article 6", per Lord Bingham, para. 3.
Secondly there is the historical factor:-
"The distinction between limits to the substantive content of the law and procedural bias to a judicial remedy is not an easy one to draw. It cannot be made to depend upon the drafting technique employed in the domestic legislation of the State concerned without opening the door to evasion of the Convention rights. Nor can the problem be resolved by invoking the word "immunity", for the question is whether the national law creates immunity from liability or merely immunity from suit. It is best to avoid a formalistic approach and enquire whether the rule which bars the claim is of general application and is independent of the facts which found the claim. Often the answer can be found by tracing the history of the domestic rule and examining the underlying policy to which it gives effect. It is, perhaps illogically, easier to treat restrictions on a newly created legal right as limitations of substantive law than to accord the same treatment to the withdrawal of existing legal rights," per Lord Millett at para. 79.
Thirdly there is the constitutional approach expounded by Lord Hoffmann in para.35:-
"The purpose for which the distinction [between substance and procedure] is being used in applying article 6 is that stated with force and clarity by the Strasbourg Court in Golder 1 EHRR 524 and subsequent cases, namely to prevent contracting States from imposing restrictions on the right to bring one's dispute before the judicial branch of government in a way which threatens the rule of law and the separation of powers."
"28. In the great case of Golder v United Kingdom (1975) 1 EHRR 524 the Strasbourg Court decided that the right to an independent and impartial tribunal for the determination of one's civil rights did not mean only that if you could get yourself before a court, it had to be independent and impartial. It meant that if you claimed on arguable grounds to have a civil right, you had a right to have that question determined by a court. A right to the independence and impartiality of the judicial branch of government would not be worth much if the executive branch could stop you from getting to the court in the first place. The executive would in effect be deciding the case against you. That would contravene the rule of law and the principle of the separation of powers.
29. But provided one holds onto the underlying principle, which is to maintain the rule of law and the separation of powers, it should not matter how the law is framed. What matters is whether the effect is to give the executive a power to make decisions about people's rights which under the rule of law should be made by the judicial branch of government."
"35. The distinction between the substantive content of a right and an unacceptable procedural bar to its enforcement by a court can give rise to difficulty in distinguishing the one from the other in a particular case. As a matter of drafting, a restriction on the scope of a right may be framed in several different ways. But the drafting technique chosen by the draftsman cannot be determinative of this issue. Human Rights Conventions are concerned with substance, not form, with practicalities and realities, not linguistic niceties. The crucial question in the present context is whether, as a matter of substance, the relevant provision of national law has the effect of preventing an abuse which ought to be decided by a court from being so decided. The touchstone in this regard is the proper role of courts in a democratic society. A right of access to a court is one of the checks on the danger of arbitrary power.
36. But in taking that power [the discretion over whether to make an order under the Consumer Credit Act 1974] away from the court the legislature was not encroaching on territory which ought properly to be the province of the courts in a democratic society."
"But comparison of [two sets of European cases] shows movement from a narrower towards a broader interpretation of "civil rights". Further cases may no doubt continue that trend."
So much for the identification of what is or is not a civil right.
"The European Court of Human Rights has, however, recognised from the beginning that some administrative law decisions which affect civil rights are taken by ministers answerable to elected bodies. Where there is a two-stage process, i.e. there is such an administrative decision which is subject to review by a court, there is a constant line of authority of the European Court that regard has to be paid to both stages of the process. Thus even where "jurisdictional organs of professional associations" are set up:
"Nonetheless, in such circumstances the Convention calls at least for one of the two following systems: either the jurisdictional organs themselves comply with the requirements of article 6(1) or they do not so comply but are subject to subsequent control by a judicial body that has full jurisdiction and does provide the guarantees of article 6(1)."
See Albert & Le Compte v Belgium (1983) 5 EHRR 533, para. 29."
The principle is set out in para.87 of Lord Hoffmann's speech:-
"But subsequent European authority shows that "full jurisdiction" does not mean full decision-making power. It means full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decision requires."
"the absence of a full fact-finding jurisdiction in the tribunal to which appeal lies from an administrative decision-making body does not disqualify that tribunal for the purposes of article 6(1)", per Lord Bingham at para. 11.
I should also note what he said in para. 5:-
"The importance of this case is that it exposes, more clearly than any earlier case has done, the inter-relation between the article 6(1) concept of "civil rights" on the one hand and the article 6(1) requirement of "an independent and impartial tribunal" on the other. The narrower the interpretation given to civil rights, the greater the need to insist on review by a judicial tribunal exercising full powers. Conversely the more elastic the interpretation given to civil rights, the more flexible must be the approach to the requirement of independent and impartial review of the emasculation (by over-judicialisation) of administrative welfare schemes is to be avoided. Once it is accepted that "full jurisdiction" means "full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decision requires" (per Lord Hoffmann, R (Alconbury Developments Ltd. ) it must also be accepted that the decision whether the right recognised in domestic law is also a civil right and whether the procedure provided to determine that right meets the requirements of article 6 are very closely bound up with each other."
"57. the right of access to the courts is not absolute but may be subject to limitations; these are permitted by implication since the right of access, "by its very nature calls for regulation by the State, regulation which may vary in time and place according to the needs and resources of the community and of individuals". In laying down such regulation, the contracting States enjoy a certain margin of appreciation. Whilst the final decision as to the observance of the Convention's requirements rest with the Court, it is no part of the Court's function to substitute for the assessment of the national authorities any other assessment of what might be the best policy in this field. Nonetheless the limitations applied must not restrict or reduce the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired. Furthermore a limitation will not be compatible with article 6(1) if it does not pursue a legitimate aim and if there is not a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved." (I add the emphasis because it is worth noting that the quotation comes from Golder, the leading case on the constitutional importance of article 6 which seems to me to suggest that proportionality may justify even the exclusion of the constitutional right to a court.)
Mr Jay draws attention to the slightly different formulation of the principle in para. 93 of Z and Others v United Kingdom:-
"The right is not however absolute. It may be subject to legitimate restrictions, for example, statutory limitation periods, security for costs orders, regulations concerning minors and persons of unsound mind. Where the individual's access is limited either by operation of law or in fact, the court will examine whether the limitation imposed impaired the essence of the right and in particular whether it pursued a legitimate aim and there was a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved. If the restriction is compatible with these principles, no violation of article 6 will arise." Mr Jay's emphasis is added.
"The right of access to a court is not however absolute. It may be made subject to procedural restrictions but these must not so restrict or reduce the litigant's right of access as to impair the essence of the right (in other words the restrictions must satisfy the test of proportionality)." This time the emphasis is mine.
We may have to decide whether the impairment of the essence of the right is a separate and discrete requirement or merely part and parcel of proportionality viewed overall.
The issues which arise in this case from the application of those principles.
i) Is there a dispute calling for the determination of Mrs Kehoe's "civil rights" within the meaning of article 6?
ii) If so, has she had a fair hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. The live issue in this respect is the so called Alconbury question, namely, if article 6 is engaged, are the Secretary of State's determinations of her civil rights subject to subsequent control by the court having full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decisions requires?
iii) As a discrete question which the judge did not address, if Mrs Kehoe's right of access to the court has been restricted, do the restrictions satisfy the test of proportionality?
The first issue: are Mrs Kehoe's civil rights engaged?
Her rights in domestic law.
iv) Save in exceptional circumstances which do not apply in this case, s.8(3) proscribes the court from exercising any power which it would otherwise have to make, vary or revive any maintenance order in relation to the child and the absent parent concerned. In other words s.8 completely excludes the parent with care's right to apply to the court for a maintenance order.
v) Section 33 confers on the Secretary of State, not on the parent with care, the power and, if exercised, the right to apply to a magistrates' court for a liability order. Proceedings in the magistrates' court, including all applications for enforcement, are brought by the Secretary of State in his name. The parent with care has no right to proceed in the magistrates' court in her own name.
vi) It follows that Mrs Kehoe has very restricted rights under the Act. Her rights are confined to those provided by s.4. Under s.4(1) she may apply to the Secretary of State, but not to the court, for a maintenance assessment to be made under the Act. If she exercises this power, she has the right to require the Secretary of State to make an assessment in accordance with the formula. He must deal with her application in accordance with the Act (s.11): he has no discretion in this respect. Under s.4(2) she may apply to the Secretary of State, but not to the court, for him to make arrangements for the collection of the child support maintenance and for the enforcement of the absent parent's obligation to pay that maintenance in accordance with the assessment. He does have a discretion, though it may not be a wide one, whether or not to enforce the absent parent's obligation (s.4(3)). She at least has the right to apply to him to arrange for enforcement.
vii) Since the duty on the absent parent imposed by s.1(3) is to make payment of the assessed child support maintenance, she has as correlative right to receive any payment made pursuant to that assessment.
viii) Save as aforesaid she has no right to a maintenance award enforceable in her own name by her.
Are these rights "civil rights" within the meaning of the Convention?
i) Mrs Kehoe has by virtue of s.4(1) a right to apply to the CSA "for a maintenance assessment to be made under this Act" which has the effect by operation of s.1(3) of creating a correlative quantified duty imposed on Mr Kehoe to pay the assessed periodical payments.
ii) At least where the parent with care is not receiving income support or jobseeker's allowance or other benefits of a prescribed kind, the obligation is not owed to the Secretary of State but to the parent with care. Enforcement is taken in the magistrates' court for her benefit, not his.
iii) Mrs Kehoe is, therefore, the only recipient of any money which is paid and which is to be paid pursuant to the maintenance assessment and recovered after enforcement proceedings.
iv) She has the right under s.4(2) to apply to the Secretary of State to arrange for collection of the child support and for the enforcement of his obligation to pay it.
v) So he submits her autonomous civil right can be stated in either of two ways. The first is to say that she has a right to a quantified maintenance assessment creating obligations together with ancillary rights to the determination of how much is owing to her and for enforcement of that liability through the courts. The alternative, and for him the preferred formulation, is that her right is simply to payment of assessed child support.
i) All he has to show "at least on arguable grounds" is that the mother has a civil right recognised under domestic law.
ii) The right to apply to the Secretary of State for an assessment and then for collection and enforcement exists in domestic law (s.4) but that right has to be given an autonomous meaning. So one is concerned with substance not form; with practicalities and realities not linguistic niceties; with substantive content and effect, not with legal classification. One is, therefore, looking beyond the narrow classification of the right in domestic law.
iii) If the presence of the right flows from the availability and character of the remedy, the remedy in the first place is an assessment of the father's obligation to pay child support maintenance, and she accordingly has a right to that assessment. It is common ground that this amounts to a civil right. The concession is, in my judgment, correctly made on the Secretary of State's behalf. I would find it astonishing if such a right were not universally acknowledged across Europe. Family law rights do give rise to civil rights, for example judicial separation see Airey v Ireland (1979) 2 EHRR 305 and contact/access see W v United Kingdom (1987) 10 EHRR 29. So why not child support?
iv) That being so, I find it difficult to see why enforcement of that obligation should not likewise have the character of a civil right. There is support for this in Hornsby v Greece (1997) 24 EHRR 250 where the court said in para. 40:-
"However, that right ["the right to a court"] would be illusory if a Contracting State's domestic legal system allowed a final, binding judicial decision to remain inoperative to the detriment of one party. It would be inconceivable that article 6 should describe in detail procedural guarantees afforded to litigants proceedings that are fair, public and expeditious without protecting the implementation of judicial decisions; to construe article 6 has being concerned exclusively with access to a court and the conduct of proceedings would be likely to lead to situations incompatible with the principle of the rule of law which Contracting States undertook to respect when they ratified the Convention. Execution of a judgment given by any court must therefore be regarded as an integral part of the "trial" for the purposes of article 6."
A right to enforce seems to me always to be ancillary to and, as Wall J. held, "an essential component or concomitant of the right to apply for and obtain the assessment".
v) Under the 1991 Act, the legal process of enforcement begins with the application to the magistrates' court for a liability order which determines whether the payments of child support have been made. This is a prelude to the enforcement steps which can then be taken to compel payment of any arrears. All the classic early hallmarks of a civil right are present: this is a dispute over the private economic interests of two individuals being decided in a civil court. It has no public law content at all. I accept, as I set out in paragraphs 27 and 28 above, that classification is no longer the prevailing or only test but it is a powerful indication of the proper character of the mother's rights.
vi) The mother is entitled to and has the right to receive any monies paid. If a determination of what is owing to her is erroneously made because she has had no opportunity to participate in the liability order proceedings, her right to receive payment of what is truly due to her is impaired. I cannot see why her civil right is not engaged in a dispute as to how much is to be paid to her.
vii) To have, as is conceded, a civil right to the assessment of liability and a civil right to receive any payments actually made but not a civil right to enforce payment in event of default seems to me to be so strange that the proposition would seem to be wrong.
viii) From the father's perspective, his "civil obligations" are unquestionably engaged both at the assessment stage and at the enforcement stage. It would be a further anomaly if the mother's were not also in dispute at both stages. To argue, as Mr Jay does, that the statutory right to enforce is the Secretary of State's right and that the mother has no such right herself is to take a domestic view of the rights involved, not an autonomous one. The error is to forget that content and reality trump classification and legalistic exactitude.
ix) Philis v Greece (1991) 13 EHRR 741 is of some help to Mr Drabble in that the enforced use there of an intermediary, the Technical Chamber of Greece (the T.E.E.) to seek redress through the courts for non-payment of an engineer's fees was found to infringe Article 6. The help is, however, limited because, as Mr Jay correctly observes, there the engineer undoubtedly had a civil right to his fees flowing from his contract with his client. So the case does not help identifying what is or is not a civil right.
x) Finally, the trend has been noted to be a movement from a narrower towards a broader interpretation of civil rights.
xi) Taking a broad commonsense view of her position, I reach the provisional conclusion that Mr Drabble is correct to submit that Mrs Kehoe's civil rights are engaged.
"Although there are difficulties in defining the borderline between substance and procedure, the general nature of the distinction is clear in principle, and it is also clear that article 6 is in principle concerned with the procedural fairness and integrity of a State's judicial system, not with the substantive content of its national law."
"a child support agency will have responsibility for the assessment, collection and enforcement of maintenance payments," (para. 2.2), and,
"The functions of the Child Support Agency will therefore be to take appropriate enforcement action at an early stage when payments are not made", (para. 5.3).
"The Child Support Act introduced a wholly new framework for the assessment and collection of the sums required for the maintenance of children by their parents. There is no provision for the enforcement of any maintenance assessment except by the Secretary of State and his methods of enforcement are limited in the way I have mentioned. In my judgment the detailed provisions contained in the Act of 1991 which I have described show clearly that Parliament intended that all questions concerning the enforcement of maintenance assessments should be determined exclusively by the Secretary of State, the Magistrates' Court or the County Court. The civil jurisdiction of the High Court is, in my view, necessarily excluded."
Likewise Hale L.J. held in Huxley v Child Support Officer [2000] 1 FLR 898, 905 and 908:-
"It is important to bear in mind that the child support scheme is not simply a method for the State to recoup part of its benefit expenditure from the absent parents. It is a replacement both for the former method of doing this and for the court's powers to make orders between individuals for periodical payments for the maintenance of children.
The child support system has elements of private and public law but fundamentally it is a nationalised system for assessing and enforcing an obligation which each parent owes primarily to the child. It replaces the powers of the courts, which can no longer make orders for periodical payments for children save in very limited circumstances."
Finally, in R (Denson) v CSA [2002] EWHC 154 (Admin), [2002] 1 FLR 938, a case concerning Article 1 of Protocol 1 and Article 8 of the Convention Munby J. observed in para. 2:-
"It is quite clear in my judgment that putting the matter generally both the statutory scheme and the CSA's administration of it are Convention compliant."
Conclusions on whether article 6 is engaged.
i) What rights Mrs Kehoe has must be considered in a broad autonomous way and I prefer Mr Drabble's analysis to the narrow construction suggested by Mr Jay.
ii) Linguistically Mr Jay is correct but the historical survey shows that the legislative intent was to withdraw substantive rights from the mother which exist under the ordinary maintenance statutes. I find Lord Millett's observation in para.79 of Matthews apposite:-
"It is, perhaps illogically, easier to treat restrictions on a newly created right as limitations of substantive law than to accord the same treatment to the withdrawal of existing legal rights."
That compels the conclusion that substantive rights are involved.
iii) As for the constitutional question, the principles in Golder apply and prevail over James and Z. It is unconstitutional to deny the right to a court and that offends article 6. The constitutional argument trumps the linguistic one. I derive assistance from another passage in Lord Hoffmann's speech in Matthews. At para. 43 he says:-
"It seems to me, if I may respectfully say so, that instead of arguing over labels, it would be more helpful to go back to the fundamental principles deriving from Golder 1 EHRR 524. A rule that people should not be entitled to compensation out of public funds for loss suffered on account of a failure of the police to take reasonable care in conducting a criminal investigation poses no threat to the rule of law or the separation of powers. It may or may not be fair as between victims of negligent police investigations and victims of road accidents but that, as I said earlier, is not a question of human rights."
It may be a sweeping statement to say something is not a question of human rights but it is a helpful guide. We are all used to coming to conclusions as a matter of impression. We sometimes rely on our "feel" for the case. This is imprecise but it works. Here the real point at issue between the parties in the Secretary of State's appeal is not one about her entitlement to the money but rather about what control she has over the proceedings and process by which she can enforce her entitlement. I am left with the visceral feeling that, and my impression at the end of this long struggle with the argument and counter-argument is that at the heart of this dispute there truly is a human rights question which engages article 6.
iv) If and insofar as the procedural/substantive distinction has to be made, I conclude that the removal of Mrs Kehoe's right directly and in her own name to enforce the maintenance assessment is a procedural restriction on her bringing her case before a court, not a substantive bar denying her any claim at all.
v) That view is reinforced by making a more simplistic attempt to see whether the changes are procedural of substantive. What do these changes amount to? Mrs Kehoe had and still has a right to apply for child support maintenance. What is different is that the application is made to the Secretary of State, not the court and the amount is fixed by immutable application of the formula, not by the exercise of discretion. She has and still has a right to apply for enforcement but again she now makes her application to the Secretary of State not to the court. The new system is no more than a different way of producing a similar result. That smacks of procedure to me, not substance.
vi) Hence, after much travail, I reach the conclusion that Mrs Kehoe's civil rights are engaged. Consequently I would dismiss the Secretary of State's appeal on this first issue.
The second so called Alconbury question: are the determinations of civil rights by the Secretary of State subject to control by a court having full jurisdiction to deal with the case as the nature of the decision requires?
The third issue: proportionality.
"This right of access, however, is not absolute but may be subject to limitations, since the right by its very nature calls for regulation by the State. Nonetheless the limitations must not restrict or reduce the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired."
The court does not go on to add, as almost all of the other cases we have been referred to do, the standard exposition of the proportionality rule. Furthermore the argument noted in the report does not, to my mind at least, demonstrate that any strong proportionality argument was even addressed to the court. Thus the conclusion in para. 65 was only this:-
"In conclusion, since the applicant was not able to institute proceedings, directly or independently, to seek the payment from his clients even to the T.E.E. in the first instance of fees which were owed to him, the very essence of his "right to a court" was impaired, and this could not be redressed by any remedy available under Greek law."
"It may be made subject to procedural restrictions but these must not so restrict or reduce the litigant's right of access as to impair the essence of the right (in other words the restrictions must satisfy the test of proportionality)."
"Finally, I entirely endorse what Laws L.J. said in Beeson's case [R (Beeson's Personal Representative) v Dorset County Council [2002] EWCA Civ 1812], at paras.21-23, about the courts being slow to conclude that Parliament has produced an administrative scheme which does not comply with constitutional principles."
Lord Justice Latham:
"It is important to bear in mind that the child support scheme is not simply a method for the State to recoup part of its benefit expenditure from the absent parent. It is a replacement both for the former method of doing this and for the court's powers to make orders between individuals for periodical payments for the maintenance of children. The person with care may or may not be on benefit and may move between the two. The calculation may differ in such cases but the formula does not
The child support system has elements of private and public law but fundamentally it is a nationalised system for assessing and enforcing an obligation that each parent owes primarily to the child. It replaces the powers of the courts, which can no longer make orders for periodical payments for children save in very limited circumstances. Unless she can secure a voluntary agreement at least as high as that the CSA would assess, the [parent with care] is expected to look at the Agency to assess her child support according to the formula, whether or not she is on benefit. The fact that it does her no direct good if she is on means-tested benefits, and that much CSA activity so far has been in relation to parents on benefit, does not alter the fundamental characteristics of the scheme."
"It is quite clear in my judgment that putting the matter generally both the statutory scheme and the CSA's administration of it are Convention compliant. The Commission and Court have thus far declared all challenges manifestly ill founded. But the matter does not end there. The Strasbourg jurisprudence is perfectly clear."
"Likewise it is well established that where a statute creates a new right which has no existence apart from the statute creating it, and at the same time proscribes a particular method for enforcing it in a particular court, it is, in general, to that remedy in that court alone that recourse must be had . Whether or not that is so in a particular case depends on the construction of the Act in question.
As I have indicated the Secretary of State claims in respect of the statutory right correlative with the obligation expressed in Section 1(3) of the Act of 1991. But that obligation and right is not a civil debt in any ordinary sense. First the obligation may only be enforced by the Secretary of State and not by any other person who may be stated to be the payee in the maintenance assessment
The CSA 1991 introduced a wholly new framework for assessment and collection of the sums required for the maintenance of children by their parents. There is no provision for the enforcement for any maintenance assessment except by the Secretary of State and his methods of enforcement are limited in the way I have mentioned .
No doubt clear words or a necessary implication are required to exclude the jurisdiction of the court. The suggested exclusion in this case is the High Court's ordinary civil jurisdiction which includes the power to include injunctions. In my judgment, the detailed provisions contained in the Act of 1991 which I have described show clearly that Parliament intended that all questions concerning the enforcement of maintenance assessments should be determined exclusively by the Secretary of State, the Magistrate's Court or the County Court. The civil jurisdiction of the High Court is, in my view necessarily excluded."
"It may sometimes be no more than a question of legislative technique, whether the limitation is expressed in terms of the right or the remedy."
Lord Justice Keene:
"Whether or not a right is to be regarded as civil within the meaning of this expression in the Convention must be determined by reference to the substantive content and effects of the right and not its legal classification under the domestic law of the state concerned."
"Article 6(1) does not have anything to say about the content of the individual's civil rights, nor does it impose an obligation on the state party to confer any particular rights in substantive law on the individual."
That accords with such Strasbourg decisions as H v- Belgium [1988] 10 EHRR 339 (paragraph 40) and James v- United Kingdom [1986] 8 EHRR 123) paragraph 81).
ORDER: Appeal allowed with costs here and below to be assessed by the costs judge under section 11.
Cross appeal dismissed.
Legal Services Commission Funding order in respect of the respondent's costs.
Leave to appeal to the House of Lords refused.
Note 1 I was
appalled by the way in which men fathered a child and then absconded, leaving the single mother - and the taxpayer - to foot the bill for their irresponsibility and condemning the child to a lower standard of living. I thought it scandalous that only one in three children entitled to receive maintenance actually benefited from regular payments. So - against considerable opposition from Tony Newton, the Social Security Secretary, and from the Lord Chancellors department - I insisted that a new Child Support Agency be set up, and that maintenance be based not just on the cost of bringing up a child but on that childs right to share in the rising living standards. I have to live with the charge that I am the villain in the piece as a result of a judgment reported in the Times which, it is said - I like to think only apocryphally aroused the Prime Ministers fury since Nourse L.J. and I had ordered nominal periodical payments for children whose mother was receiving social security benefits. I said, it seems unwisely:- Whilst this court deprecates any notion that a former husband and extant father may slough off the tight skin of familial responsibility and may slither away and lose himself in the greener grass on the other side, nonetheless this court has proclaimed and will proclaim that it looks to the realities of the real world in which we live, and among the realities of life is that there is a life after divorce. The respondent husband is entitled to order his life in such a way as will hold in reasonable balance the responsibilities to his existing family which he carries into his new life, as well as his proper aspirations for that new future: See Delaney v Delaney [1990} 2 F.L.R. 457, 481. [Back]