BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> IY (Turkey) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 1560 (28 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1560.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1560 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UTJ WAUMSLEY
AA/01683/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
____________________
IY (TURKEY) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS SUSAN CHAN (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14th November 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis :
Introduction
The background facts
"c. The information given in this report is based on history provided directly to me by [IY]. The report does not rely on material from any other source unless specifically stated. The absence of an event does not mean it was not described to me and nothing in my summary of [IY]'s account should be taken as a finding of fact in relation to his asylum claim."
"7.1.a. I base my diagnosis of PTSD on the presence of the following features:
i. He has experienced extreme trauma (repeated detention and torture).
ii. He re-experiences his trauma in the form of intrusive thoughts and (until recently) vivid nightmares.
iii. He tries to avoid thinking about his traumatic experiences.
iv. He avoids reminders of his traumatic experiences.
v. He has difficulty remembering his traumatic experiences in exact chronological detail.
vi. He feels detached from other people.
vii. He is convinced he will soon die.
viii. He is easily startled: if he hears a knock on the door 'I feel they are coming to get me'.
b. [IY]'s dissociative symptoms, his social withdrawal and his despair suggest that he has suffered a traumatisation more profound than most post traumatic stress alone (Roth et al, 1997). The situation of detention and torture typifies such a description. Complex PTSD is a diagnostic category separate from PTSD rather than necessarily being either more or less severe than PTSD. Therapy focuses on the need to re-establish a sense of safety, of developing a sufficiently supportive environment for remembrance and mourning to take place for what was lost, with the ultimate goal of reconnecting with community and society.
c. [IY]'s complex PTSD has in my view been caused by the traumatic experiences he suffered in Turkey. I have considered the possibility that it might have been caused by other factors such as his immigration uncertainty and his separation from his native country, his immediate family and his girlfriend. In my opinion these factors may have exacerbated his depressive symptoms but are unlikely to have contributed significantly to his core PTSD symptoms."
Pausing there, the way in which Professor Katona phrased himself in paragraph 7 indicates that he had been prepared to accept the appellant's statements to him that he had been detained and tortured and suffered traumatic experiences in Turkey. Under the heading "Plausibility", Professor Katona then said this:
"a. I have considered the possibility that [IY] might have been feigning or exaggerating his symptoms. In my opinion he was trying to describe his experiences to me as accurately as possible. His dissociative behaviour in my opinion is a clear manifestation of real rather than feigned PTSD. Had he been feigning his symptoms he would, in my view, have been likely to have claimed active current suicidal thinking and more depressive symptoms as well as persistent nightmares.
b. People with PTSD experience particular difficulty in dealing with direct interviewing, especially in contexts which seem to them adversarial. Even in the relatively relaxed setting of his interview with me, [IY] became distressed and showed evidence of dissociation. It is clear from the transcript of [IY]'s fast track interview that he was very distressed at the time (eg para 72 'client upset'; para 73 'I want to wash my face'). The research evidence suggests that such difficulties should not be seen as evidence of reduced credibility (Cohen 2011, Herlihy and Turner 2007). In my opinion these factors are sufficient to explain the apparent inconsistencies in [IY]'s account that are identified in his Reasons for Refusal letter."
"a. Even in the relatively relaxed context of his interview with me, [IY] became extremely distressed, had episodes of dissociation and had great difficulty in giving a clear chronological account of his experiences.
b. I therefore think that in the very formal and adversarial context of court cross-examination [IY] would not be able to give a full account of himself. Being forced to do so would also be extremely distressing for him because it would force him to recall and therefore re-experience his trauma. I therefore conclude that he currently lacks capacity to give evidence in court. I do however think that [IY] would be able to confirm his identity in court and adopt his statement."
The First-tier Tribunal judgment
"I do not believe that the mental health problems which he has clearly persuaded Professor Katona are the results of three separate instances of torture have affected his memory so badly that he could not remember a key event which took place in late March 2009. I find as a result that the appellant has made up his entire story . I find that he has never been arrested and that he is not and never was of the slightest interest to the Turkish authorities for any reason. His wrist was probably broken as he claims during a game of football."
"24. When he was interviewed both at screening and substantively the appellant stated that he was in good health. He also gave a description of the highly complex method by which he claims he left Turkey, involving a secret drop of a ticket from Istanbul to Cyprus and a false passport as well as some money followed by a text message in Cyprus leading to a downloading of an e-ticket in an internet cafι, the return flight this time to Ankara and then a flight to Stansted. In his report Professor Katona has dealt with the possibility that the appellant might be feigning or exaggerating his symptoms but finds that he was trying to describe his symptoms to him as accurately as possible. He has not commented on the fact that someone who on his own admission was allegedly able to follow a complex set of travel instructions and who was also able to travel back and forth with confidence using a false passport, was within a matter of 6 months or so deemed by a psychiatrist who is highly experienced in the field of the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorder to be suffering from such complex PTSD that he was incapable of being cross-examined at his hearing. The appellant was also able to recount the details of how he claims he departed from Turkey both in his asylum interview and again when interviewed by Professor Katona and once again Professor Katona has not taken account of the appellant's ability to recount what I find is the most complex part of his story when he has carried out his assessment of the appellant's capacity to remember and to respond to questions. I find that Professor Katona and the Helen Bamber Foundation have been hoodwinked."
The FTTJ went on to say that he considered the appellant to be fit and well, as he had in effect said in interview.
The Upper Tribunal proceedings
"13. I am not persuaded that he did. In reaching his decision, the Immigration Judge concluded that Professor Katona and the Helen Bamber Foundation had been "hoodwinked" by the appellant. Whilst an Immigration Judge should certainly be cautious before reaching such a conclusion, nevertheless he is not obliged to accept blindly any medical evidence placed before him. On the contrary, he is required to give careful consideration to that evidence and to reach his own assessment as to whether or not it is evidence on which reliance may safely be placed. That is precisely what the Immigration Judge did. He did not reject Professor Katona's assessment out of hand. It would have been a clear error of law on his part if he had done so. On the contrary, he gave careful consideration to it, as paragraph 24 of his determination discloses, but nevertheless came to the conclusion that Professor Katona had been misled by the appellant. The Immigration Judge's reason for so concluding was one which was properly open to him, namely that the appellant had been able to follow complex instructions enabling him to leave Turkey illegally, and to recount those complex instructions during his subsequent screening interview and full asylum interview.
14. Furthermore, although the appellant had been assessed by Professor Katona as lacking the capacity to give evidence at the appeal hearing, that is precisely what the appellant had gone on to do. By so doing, he had demonstrated in cogent form that the Professor's assessment was simply wrong. The Immigration Judge had advantage of being able to assess with his own ears and eyes the appellant's ability to give evidence before him. In light of that demonstrable ability, the Immigration Judge remained unpersuaded by the overall assessment reached by Professor Katona. He was entitled to be unpersuaded by it. Professor Katona had, in the Immigration Judge's words, been "hoodwinked" in relation to the issue of the appellant's ability to give oral evidence. The Immigration Judge was entitled to conclude that he had also been hoodwinked in relation to other aspects of the appellant's case. The first ground on which Mr Min mounted his challenge to the Immigration Judge's decision discloses no error of law on the Immigration Judge's part."
Submissions
i) The Secretary of State had not sought to put in any competing psychiatric evidence of her own nor had the Presenting Officer sought to cross-examine Professor Katona on his report.ii) While he accepted that the FTTJ was not bound to accept Professor Katona's opinions, he submitted that the FTTJ should have been very cautious in departing from them and should have had justifiable, and expressed, reasons for doing so.
iii) Here the FTTJ did not display the appropriate care and caution needed before rejecting the report; such reasons as he gave did not adequately support his rejection of the report; and the FTTJ was in no position to conclude that the appellant had "hoodwinked" Professor Katona and the Helen Bamber Foundation.
iv) The FTTJ had misunderstood Professor Katona's statements as to the appellant's capacity to be examined at a tribunal hearing.
v) The UTJ had in turn replicated those errors.
vi) The other reasons given for rejecting the appellant's account were not such as to undermine the medical evidence.
i) It should not be held against the Secretary of State that Professor Katona was not cross-examined, given the late production of the report and practical realities relating to tribunal proceedings.ii) In any event, the FTTJ was not bound to accept Professor Katona's evidence, and he gave cogent and rational reasons for departing from it after evidently having considered it with care.
iii) The medical evidence had to be set in the context of the numerous implausible or inconsistent factors, as found, in the appellant's version of events.
The application to the Upper Tribunal to admit the further report
"(2A) In an asylum case or an immigration case-
(a) if a party wishes the Upper Tribunal to consider evidence that was not before the First-tier Tribunal, that party must send or deliver a notice to the Upper Tribunal and any other party-
(i) indicating the nature of the evidence; and
(ii) explaining why it was not submitted to the First-tier Tribunal; and
(b) when considering whether to admit evidence that was not before the First-tier Tribunal, the Upper Tribunal must have regard to whether there has been unreasonable delay in producing that evidence."
The decision of the Upper Tribunal: discussion
"21. Generally speaking, the weight, if any, to be given to expert (or indeed any) evidence is a matter for the trial judge (here Senior Immigration Judge Spencer). A judge's decision not to accept expert evidence does not involve an error of law on his part, provided he approaches that evidence with appropriate care and gives good reasons for his decision. Ultimately, therefore, there are only two issues as to the Senior Immigration Judge's treatment of the medical evidence: did he address that evidence with appropriate care and did he give good reasons for his conclusion? Those two questions are interrelated. It is difficult to conceive of a case in which a judge gives adequate reasons for his conclusions on expert evidence yet he is held to have exercised insufficient care. His reasons demonstrate his care."
"But to say that it is not the duty of a doctor to disbelieve the account given by a patient may be correct but takes one absolutely nowhere. It is plain that a psychiatrist does exercise his critical facilities and experience in deciding whether he is being spun a yarn or not, and all of us sitting in these courts in different jurisdictions from time to time have heard psychiatrists saying that they do believe an account or that they do not believe an account. It is, therefore, wrong to suggest, as part of support for his conclusion, that doctors do not look into anything critically; nor would it be fair to Dr Eastgate to say that he accepted uncritically the claimant's account. One does not know, because the doctor does not say, but it certainly should not be assumed against the doctor that he did."
Moses J however, it may be noted, went on to say that, whatever Dr Eastgate the expert psychiatrist in that case thought, it was open to the adjudicator to disagree and find the claim incredible: and indeed Moses J in that case concluded that the adjudicator indeed had, and expressed, ample grounds for rejecting the appellant's case.
"Similarly, where the factual basis of the psychiatric findings is sought to be undermined by suggesting that the appellants have been exaggerating their symptoms, care is required. The factuality of an appellant's account of his or her history may be so controverted by the tribunal's own findings as to undermine the psychiatric evidence. This happens from time to time, but it did not happen here. What happened here was that the designated immigration judge himself formed the view that the appellants (who had not given oral evidence before him) had been calculatedly exaggerating the symptoms they recounted to the expert witnesses. That is in the first instance a matter for the experts themselves, a fundamental aspect of whose expertise is the evaluation of patients' accounts of their symptoms: see R (o/a Minani) v IAT [2004] EWHC 582 (Admin) per Moses J. It is only if the tribunal has good and objective reason for discounting that evaluation that it can be modified or even more radically disregarded."
These comments were made in a case where it was accepted that there had been torture and mistreatment and where the principal issue was risk of suicide if return were proposed. It is to be noted that Sedley LJ was careful to confine his observations as to the evaluation by experts of symptoms. Second, he was careful to say that it was a matter for the experts "in the first instance". Third, he stressed that the "factuality" of an appellant's account of his history may be so controverted as to undermine the psychiatric evidence.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Tomlinson
Lord Justice Longmore