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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 >> Gourlay, R (on the application of) v The Parole Board [2017] EWCA Civ 1003 (14 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1003.html Cite as: [2017] 1 WLR 4107, [2017] WLR(D) 474, [2017] EWCA Civ 1003, [2017] WLR 4107 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT (QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
THE HON MR JUSTICE KING
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ROBERT GOURLAY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE PAROLE BOARD |
Respondent |
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for the Appellant
Ben Collins QC (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 May 2017
Further written submissions: 20-22 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hickinbottom:
Introduction
The Parole Board
"It is the duty of the Board to advise the Secretary of State with respect to any matter referred to it by him which is to do with the early release or recall of prisoners."
i) The duty arises only where the Secretary of State refers a particular prisoner for consideration by the Board. It is generally recognised that, for a life prisoner, a key step in his progression towards eventual release is his re-classification from a category C closed conditions prisoner, to a category D open conditions prisoner; but, in respect of such a matter, the Secretary of State has an open discretion as to whether to make a reference (R (Gilbert) v Parole Board [2015] EWHC 927 (Admin) at [56])).ii) Having referred a matter to the Board, the Secretary of State (through the National Offender Management Service ("NOMS")) is entitled to make submissions to the Board with regard to his own view on transfer. Thus, the Secretary of State has two roles to play: as the general sponsor of the Board, and as a potential representor or "party" before the Board in respect of a particular case.
iii) However, as pre-2003, the advice by the Board in relation to a transfer is not binding on the Secretary of State, who is required to take into account all relevant factors, including the Board's advice, but come to his own decision (R (Harris) v Secretary of State for Justice [2014] EWHC 3752 (Admin) at [30]). Nevertheless, in practice, if, having properly considered the matter, the Board considers the risk posed by the prisoner renders transfer to open conditions inappropriate, it is unlikely that the Secretary of State will decide otherwise, the assessment of such risks being the Board's primary statutory function.
"The Secretary of State may also give to the Board directions as to the matters to be taken into account by it in discharging any functions… ; and in giving such directions the Secretary of State must have regard to –
(a) the need to protect the public from serious harm from offenders, and
(b) the desirability of preventing the commission by them of further offences and of securing their rehabilitation."
There is no objection to such directions as a matter of principle, so long as they are restricted to guidance on legally relevant matters to be taken into account. Directions that stray beyond that scope will be ultra vires (Brooke at [36] per Lord Phillips).
"A move to open conditions should be based on a balanced assessment of risk and benefits. However, the Parole Board's emphasis should be on the risk reduction aspect and, in particular, on the need for the lifer to have made significant progress in changing their attitudes and tackling behavioural problems in closed conditions, without which a move to open conditions will not generally be considered."
I will refer to this as "the August 2014 Direction".
i) After the expiry of his tariff, a prisoner may require the Secretary of State to refer his case to the Board at various specified times, but essentially upon expiry of the tariff and then every two years (section 28(7)).ii) The Board may direct a prisoner's release if, and only if, his case has been referred to the Board by the Secretary of State; and it "is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that the prisoner should be confined" (section 28(6)).
iii) Where the Board gives a direction that the prisoner be released, then the Secretary of State must comply with that direction (section 28(5)).
"(1) Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law: (a) the lawful detention of a person after conviction by a competent court…
…
(4) Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful."
In this judgment, references to "article 5(4)" are to that article of the European Convention on Human Rights. Under article 5(4), following expiry of the tariff, a life prisoner (who is then being detained solely until the risk he poses to the public has been assessed as being appropriately low to allow release) is entitled to take proceedings before a court to determine whether his detention is still lawful, i.e. whether his risk is still so high that he has to be detained to protect the public. Following the 2003 Act, it is the function of the Board to act as such a "court".
"The 'court' referred to in article 5(4) does not necessarily have to be a court of law of the classic kind integrated within the standard judicial machinery of the country. The term 'court' serves to denote 'bodies which exhibit not only common fundamental features, of which the most important is independence of the executive and of the parties to the case… but also the guarantees' – 'appropriate to the kind of deprivation of liberty in question' – 'of [a] judicial procedure', the forms of which may vary from one domain to another. In addition, as the text of the article 5(4) makes clear, the body in question must not have merely advisory functions but must have the competence to 'decide' the 'lawfulness' of the detention and to order release if the detention is unlawful."
"… the power to give a binding decision which may not be altered by a non-judicial authority to the detriment of an individual party is inherent in the very notion of a 'tribunal'".
"It is an established principle of common law that the role of judicial decision-making bodies as defendants in judicial review proceedings is not, save in exceptional cases, to contest the proceedings. [There is then reference to R (Davies) v HM Deputy Coroner for Birmingham [2004] EWCA Civ 207; [2004] 1 WLR 2739 ("Davies"): see paragraph 28 below.] The role of the court is simply to provide the reviewing court with relevant information where necessary….
The judicial body may explain matters relating to its jurisdiction, practice or procedure ([Davies]). It might also provide factual information about a case. Unless the court or tribunal plays an adversarial role in proceedings, it should not be liable for costs.
The Parole Board will decide on a case by case basis whether it should defend a judicial decision. As a statement of general purpose:
- In any form of litigation, the Parole Board will first consider whether it wishes to concede. Where it decides not to:-
- The Parole Board will not normally seek to defend a decision of a panel to refuse early release or recommend a prisoner's transfer to open conditions.
- The Parole Board will normally defend other types of judicial decision, and all administrative decisions.
- The Parole Board will defend private law claims for damages."
Costs: The Relevant Law
"The very heavy pressures on the funds available to the Legal Services Commission no longer make it possible to justify the refusal of a costs order on the basis that one public fund would simply be paying another. I do not consider, however, that it is appropriate to take into consideration the fact that the remuneration of counsel (and particularly leading counsel) on a legally aided appeal of this kind is now extremely low (by the standards of the private sector market) and that counsel and solicitors would financially benefit from a costs order in their favour. There is nothing in the Costs Rules to suggest that the financial welfare of a party's lawyers is a legitimate consideration when a court makes an order as to costs." (emphasis added).
"(1) The established practice of the courts was to make no order for costs against an inferior court or tribunal which did not appear before it except when there was a flagrant instance of improper behaviour or when the inferior court or tribunal unreasonably declined or neglected to sign a consent order disposing of the proceedings.
(2) The established practice of the courts was to treat an inferior court or tribunal which resisted an application actively by way of argument in such a way that it made itself an active party to the litigation, as if it was such a party, so that in the normal course of things costs would follow the event.
(3) If, however, an inferior court or tribunal appeared in the proceedings in order to assist the court neutrally on questions of jurisdiction, procedure, specialist case-law and such like, the established practice of the courts was to treat it as a neutral party, so that it would not make an order for costs in its favour or an order for costs against it whatever the outcome of the application.
(4) There are, however, a number of important considerations which might tend to make the courts exercise their discretion in a different way today in cases in category (3) above, so that a successful applicant… who has to finance his own litigation without external funding, may be fairly compensated out of a source of public funds and not be put to irrecoverable expense in asserting his rights after a coroner (or other inferior tribunal) has gone wrong in law, and there is no other very obvious candidate available to pay his costs."
The Facts
"9. The first and critical issue is whether for the purpose of the exercise of the court's discretion as to costs, the [Board] is to be treated as a court or tribunal or at least a 'judicial decision making body' (if that be different) when making the decision under challenge. There can be no doubt that it is exercising a judicial capacity when making its decision on a Review whether or not to direct the release of a prisoner. That decision is binding upon the Secretary of State. I accept the point made by the [Board] as to the engagement of article 5(4) in this regard. The Decision made in this case was however in two parts. The first went to the question of the [Appellant's] release. The second, consequent upon the decision not to release, went to the question of whether to recommend to the Secretary of State the [Appellant's] transfer to open conditions within the prison estate. Such recommendation is not binding on the Secretary of State. It was only this aspect of the [Board's] Decision (the decision not to recommend transfer) which was under challenge in this claim.
10. I accept that a theoretical distinction could be drawn between the two different stages of the decision-making process which the [Board] undertook in this case. I accept it is arguable that at this stage of considering transfer while still maintaining the prisoner's detention, article 5(4) is not engaged and the [Board] ceases to be acting in a judicial capacity but in reality in the process before the [Board] when the prisoner appears on a Review the question as to transfer is so bound up with the question of the prospects of the ultimate release of the prisoner, that I consider it artificial to characterise the [Board] as acting in a judicial capacity one moment and then not the next. On any view in my judgment the [Board] is acting in at least a quasi judicial capacity throughout."
The Grounds
i) The Board does not fulfil the necessary criteria to be a "court or tribunal" for the purposes of Davies, because the relationship of the executive and the Board is closer than it should be. In support, Mr Southey relied upon the August 2014 Direction which the Secretary of State had given to the Board in respect of how it should approach its decision-making in relation to transfers to open conditions (see paragraph 15 above).ii) When one of its decisions is challenged, the Board cannot properly maintain a "neutral stance", as it purported to do in this case. The Board has the power to review its own decisions, and, therefore, it is always open to the Board to concede such a challenge. Furthermore, under its own policy (in the form of the Litigation Strategy: see paragraphs 23-24 above), upon receipt of a challenge, it will "first decide whether it wishes to concede". If, having considered the matter, it decides not to concede, that same policy indicates that it will "not normally seek to defend a decision… to refuse early release or recommend a prisoner's transfer to open conditions". However, where, in those circumstances, the Board fails to engage with the claim, that will put the prisoner to proof in respect of his claim. As I understood his case, Mr Southey submitted that that was tantamount or, at least, analogous to contesting the claim, and the Board should be liable for the prisoner's costs.
iii) In support of the contention that, in these circumstances, for costs purposes the Board should be treated as contesting the claim, Mr Southey submitted that Davies is a policy-based decision, and there are now sound policy reasons why the Board should be encouraged positively to consider and, in appropriate circumstances, concede a judicial review claim. He submitted that Davies now had to be read in the light of M, which signalled a new approach to costs in public law cases. Mr Southey particularly relied upon the judgment of Lord Neuberger in M at [52], in which he emphasised that public law claims are:
"… subject to the CPR, and a successful claimant who has brought such a claim is just as much entitled to his costs as he would be if it had been a private law claim. The court's duty to protect individuals from being wronged by the state… is every bit as vital as its duty to enable them to vindicate their private law rights. And the fact that the defendants are public law bodies should make no difference."Those observations apply to all public law claims. Applying Davies, as opposed to M, to the Board's decision in the circumstances of this case would undermine this new approach.iv) In addition (and still in relation to relevant policy), Mr Southey submitted that the new approach to costs in M was designed to encourage the compromise and settlement of claims against public bodies. Putting a prisoner to proof in a judicial review claim in the circumstances of such a claim as this would delay the correction of errors, and increase the cost (and, notably, the public cost) of doing so. In any event, the Board, as a specialist body, is likely to be of assistance to the court in properly determining a challenge to one of its decisions (as observed by Judge Belcher, when giving permission to proceed here). These factors give extra force to the contention that the Board should be encouraged to engage and concede claims in appropriate cases by way of the threat of an adverse costs order in the event they do not engage with a claim ultimately lost.
v) Furthermore, many of the strands of justification put forward for having a different approach to costs in the case of courts and tribunals do not apply to the Board. Whilst there has been a historic concern that courts and tribunals should not be an active party to litigation, there are good reasons why it would be helpful for the Board to be a party to a challenge to one of its decisions (see (iii) and (iv) above). The historic concern over the possibility of the decision-maker having to pay costs out of his or her own pocket has been alleviated in the case of the Board since the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 which constituted the Board as a body corporate (see paragraph 9 above).
vi) Davies proceeded on the basis that the fact that a claimant judicially reviewing a court or tribunal is legally aided – and, hence, his legal representatives are paid at lower rates – is irrelevant (see [45(7)]). However, following R (E) v Governing Body of JFS [2009] UKSC 1; [2009] 1 WLR 2353 ("JFS") (notably at [25] per Lord Hope of Craighead, referred to with approval by Lord Neuberger in M), that is or may be now a relevant factor. Indeed, it is a factor of even more weight since JFS, because, since 2009, both the ability to obtain costs for work done has reduced (see, e.g., Civil Legal Aid (Remuneration) (Amendment) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015 No 898)) and, where work is covered, the rates have reduced (see, e.g., Civil Legal Aid (Remuneration) (Amendment) Regulations 2013 (SI 2013 No 2877)). Therefore, it is now particularly important that, where a claim is properly brought against a court or tribunal with the benefit of legal aid, the claimant's legal representatives receive "full" remuneration by means of an order for costs against the court or tribunal.
vii) In all the circumstances, Mr Southey submitted, the scope of Davies should be restricted; and, where the Board is a defendant to a judicial review, the usual costs regime of M, and not the principles set out in Davies, should apply
viii) In this case, the only decision challenged was the Board's decision not to transfer the Appellant to open conditions. If, contrary to his primary submission, the Board is independent, impartial, and acting as a court or tribunal for the purposes of Davies when it makes decisions in respect of release, Mr Southey submitted that it does not do so when it makes decisions in respect of transfer to open conditions. Those decisions are only recommendations to the Secretary of State, and not final in the sense of binding on him. As such, they do not fulfil the necessary criterion of finality to make them judicial; and Davies has no application.
Discussion
"… [T]here are good reasons why M makes no mention of claims for costs against tribunals. Any consideration of the topic would have to take into account not only the stream of authority of which Davies is only the culmination but also the novelty of the idea that any tribunal should, as a matter of normal course, be liable for paying the costs of setting aside one of its orders if the party against whom proceedings are brought does not seek to defend the tribunal's order. The proposition for which Mr Drabble [Counsel for the Appellant Claimant] contends might apply to appeals just as much as to judicial review, at any rate if the tribunal were joined as a party to the appeal. The present case is only brought by way of judicial review rather than by way of appeal to the Upper Tribunal because it is excluded [by statute]. It would be a serious step to say that in any undefended appeal or judicial review, the tribunal would be at risk as to costs and any such conclusion cannot be implied into the decision of M. If such a step is to be taken, it cannot be by a court of coordinate jurisdiction with the court which decided Davies."
"… [T]he consequences for solicitors who do publicly funded work is a factor which must be taken into account. A court should be very slow to impose an order that each side must be liable for its own costs in a high costs case where either or both sides are publicly funded…".
Whilst he did not do so consistently, during parts of his submissions, Mr Southey sought to draw from this the broad proposition that, when the court is considering costs orders in public law claim, the fact that the claimant is publicly funded is a relevant factor.
i) The principles of Davies are said to apply to challenges to the "judicial" decisions of "courts or tribunals". Although it is difficult to conceive of circumstances in which a decision that is required to be article 5(4) compliant would not fall within the category of case to which Davies applies, the converse is not necessarily true. The public policy factors that drive the difference in approach to the costs of judicial review challenges to article 5(4) compliant courts and tribunals, may make a difference in approach appropriate to some decisions which are not required to be article 5(4) complaint.ii) We have not heard submissions on whether Davies applies to judicial reviews of (e.g.) ombudsmen who, although subject to various procedural fairness requirements, are not a court or tribunal in an article 5(4) sense – and nothing I say should be taken as expressing any view on that question – but it is noteworthy that Longmore LJ in Davies itself (at [54]) referred to the historical position in cases such as Providence Capitol Trustees Limited v Ayres [1996] 4 All ER 947 in which this court appears to have considered that no order for costs would be appropriate where the ombudsman had played no active part in the challenge, i.e. the principle of Davies applied.
iii) In respect of the hallmarks of a court for article 5(4) purposes, as identified in Weeks (see paragraph 19 above), when considering a transfer issue, the Board is independent of the executive and impartial; and adopts appropriate guaranteed judicial procedures. The only element missing is that its "decision" is only a recommendation to the Secretary of State, who is not only empowered but required to make any transfer decision himself.
iv) However, in practice, even in transfer cases, the Board is responsible for assessing the relevant risk of transfer; and, in the vast majority of cases, the Secretary of State will follow the recommendation.
v) Furthermore, whether dealing with decisions concerning release or decisions concerning transfer, the Board performs a similar function, in that it has to obtain relevant material from NOMS and the offender himself, and evaluate that material in making an assessment of the risk posed by the offender; and whether that risk is at an appropriate level for him to progress by way of transfer to a category D prison or release on licence, as the case may be. In respect of release, it has to reach its own objective judicial decision, to comply with the requirements of article 5(4). In respect of transfer, it reaches its decision in the same way, and to the same procedural standards. It has to use the same procedures for practical reasons: it is often the case that a panel is considering both transfer and release, at the same time. However, it is also required to adopt the same procedural standards, not as a result of article 5(4), but by the common law. Thus, in Osborn – which concerned the requirement for oral hearings before a panel of the Board, in respect of both release and transfer decisions – without taking any fine points between the two, Lord Reed JSC, giving the only substantive judgment, held that domestic, common law procedural fairness required an oral hearing in respect of both. Therefore, in considering transfer decisions, the Board both in practice acts, and in principle is required to act, as if it were a court or tribunal, even if article 5(4) does not require it to do so.
vi) In any event, in such cases, the offender has an alternative focus for a claim (including a costs claim) namely the Secretary of State. It seems to me that, on a challenge by a prisoner to a Board recommendation in respect of transfer, the Secretary of State is a potential interested party in each of two capacities. First, he has the right to make representations to the Board on that issue. Second, whether or not the Secretary of State follows the Board's recommendation, he has to make the ultimate decision as to whether or not to direct transfer. That decision will be amenable to judicial review, in which the Secretary of State will be a (if not, the) defendant. It will therefore likely be open to the prisoner to make the Secretary of State a party to any claim challenging a decision in relation to transfer. The Secretary of State is not a court or tribunal for either article 5(4) or Davies purposes; and so the usual costs regime for a non-court or tribunal will apply, as explained in M; and, in appropriate cases – which, I accept, will not be all cases – the prisoner will be able to obtain a costs order against the Secretary of State.
Conclusion
Lord Justice David Richards:
The Vice President (Lady Justice Gloster):