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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 >> Christian v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 311 (21 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/311.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 311 |
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& C1/2006/1603(A) |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE NEWMAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
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CHRISTIAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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MR R TAM QC & MS C NEENAN (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Lord Justice May:
(1) that the Secretary of State was in breach of a statutory obligation in failing to process the application before the early removal eligibility date or expeditiously thereafter in the limited circumstances that a failure to comply with the former requirements might be impossible; that is to say, due to time served on remand and brevity of the custodial sentence imposed following conviction, the early removal eligibility date had already passed before eligibility could be assessed and/or the Secretary of State's discretion should be narrowly construed
(2) that a proper construction of that discretion required that he process the early removal scheme application expeditiously and prior to the early removal eligibility date.
(3) in the alternative the claimant had a legitimate expectation that his application would be processed in accordance with the timetable specified in PSO6000 and annexed IND instructions, which required a determination of eligibility before the early removal eligibility date or a fast tracking of the application thereafter if the process was implemented late. The protraction of the process was indicative of maladministration in all events given the absence of any adequate explanation for the delay, the relative simplicity of the task to be performed and the substantive loss of benefits sustained by those subject to the delay and the detriment to the public interest arising from the same.
"An appeal would have no real prospect of success.
"I have not been shown the judgment of Newman J, but the extract in paragraph 4 of the skeleton more than amply demonstrates that this application is misconceived. The only legitimate expectation was release within the 135 day period, which the applicant received. An ERS directed and removal from the United Kingdom is completely different in its requirements from, e.g., home detention curfew or parole, where there is a requirement to make detailed arrangements before release. But the obligation in those cases is imposed in order to ensure that the release date is not missed, and complaint cannot be made if, as in this case, the date is achieved. To impose on the Secretary of State a further but completely unspecific obligation to actually to release the prisoner before the expiration of the period would, as the judge said, put into the statute something that is not there."
"2. As the replacement advocate, I would respectfully agree that in large part the proposed appeal is unarguable. In particular
1. 2.1. S 46A, CJA 1991, does not expressly require the Home Office to remove a FNP (foreign national prisoner) on the ERED (early release eligibility date); it provides a power to effect removal during the period (in this case) that starts 135 days before the halfway point of the sentence and ends at the halfway point;
2. 2.2. PSO 6000 (prison service order 6000) does not promise that the Home Office will remove FNP on the ERED; it acknowledges that the Home Office has as a target the removal of FNP on or as close as possible to the ERED, but indicates that this target might not always be met as the result of practical and legal difficulties, examples of which are given.
"3. However, the appeal does contain one arguable point, which is of significant wider public interest
"4. The facts of the case, in short, are that the Appellant did not obtain his liberty under s46A at or remotely close to the ERED because of a lack of staff resources at the Home Office, specifically within the CCT (criminal case work team). That raises the question of in what way are staff resources a relevant consideration in the context of human liberty and in what circumstances can a shortage of staff resources rationally justify detention for a longer instead of a shorter period."
And after quoting from a case, Mr Knafler wrote accordingly there should be a reasonable justification for not removing a foreign national prisoner on or close to his early release eligibility date.
"It seems to me, given his departure from the United Kingdom, there is a question about his standing to continue these proceedings. It is difficult to identify any concrete interest that he retains in the outcome of the case. As Mr Knafler acknowledges, there is no damages claim in the judicial review application, and he is of course now released and his prison term is over.
"4. It may be that a court could be persuaded that the case should proceed effectively as a public interest case because it is concerned with a scheme affecting numbers of other persons and the implementation and operation of the scheme according to law may well be said to be something that is in the public interest. However, Mr Knafler, who has taken over the case very lately, is not in a position to indicate what precisely is the situation in relation to his client's instructions."
The question of the applicant's instructions has been duly clarified. However, Mr Knafler accepts that unless arguments not developed before the judge under article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights can be introduced into this matter, the applicant has indeed no surviving personal interest in the proposed appeal. He has been released. He is back in Antigua and, without article 5, he has no surviving personal claim.
Lady Justice Arden:
Lady Justice Smith:
Order: Application refused