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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 >> Shittu v The Home Office [2017] EWCA Civ 1748 (17 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1748.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1748 |
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ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ARMITAGE QC
2YJ25597
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
and
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
____________________
VERONICA SHITTU KENNY FAITH SHITTU (a minor suing by her litigation friend Veronica Shittu) |
Appellants/Claimants |
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- and - |
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THE HOME OFFICE |
Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Cathryn McGahey QC and Sian Reeves (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 November 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
The Claimants' case
"On 15 February 2010 seven of the Defendant's officers attending the first Claimant's home in the early hours. These officers entered the first Claimant's bedroom and woke her. One officer immediately said to her "we are taking you". The first Claimant replied that she was not going anywhere and that her daughter had sickle cell disease. The officers insisted they had to take her. The first Claimant was in her nightclothes. The officers tried to force the first Claimant to dress. The first Claimant fell on the floor and started shouting. The second Claimant woke up and ran towards her mother and asked what was happening. A male officer took hold of the first Claimant's arm and violently twisted it behind her back. A female officer grabbed the first Claimant's other arm and twisted it behind her. The second Claimant was pulled off the first Claimant. Throughout this incident the first Claimant was shouting that the second Claimant had sickle cell disease and they would hurt her but the officers ignored her. By this time the other children were awake and they all started crying. The first Claimant wet herself and vomited. As a result of the noise generated by the children crying the officers loosened their hold on the first Claimant".
The Defendants' case
"At this stage the First Claimant grabbed the Second Claimant, pulling the second Claimant to her by her wrist. The First Claimant then held the Second Claimant, wrapping her arms around her chest as they both faced forwards on the floor with the First Claimant shouting and starting to squeeze the Second Claimant. The Second Claimant began to cry and scream and the officers reasonably perceived that this was due to the force with which she was being held by the First Claimant. The First Claimant was repeatedly requested to release the Second Claimant but refused so to do. The officers then attempted to release the Second Claimant. I.O. Maclean and I.O. Cahill did so by taking the First Claimant's right and left wrists/arms respectively, while I.O. Kevin Kilbane and I.O. Daniel O'Neill tried to release the Second Claimant. I.O. O'Neill then assisted with the First Claimant's right arm while I.O. Maclean secured the First Claimant's head, in part because she was concerned that she might bite one of the officers. The officers sought to use authorised restraint techniques on the First Claimant. The Second Claimant was freed with I.O. Kilbane leading her away and she was then escorted by I.O. Maclean out of the room.
The use of force was then de-escalated. The First Claimant was first rolled onto her side in an attempt to calm her down. The restraint lasted no more than 2-3 minutes. The First Claimant later began to cough and spit on the floor. Officers offered and provided her with a glass of water. Further attempts were made to explain the situation to the First Claimant and although she remained vocal, upset, erratic and screaming, (at one stage the First Claimant began hitting the floor with her fists) there was no further use of force at any stage."
Father O'Grady's letter
"At 7am on Monday 15th February two white vans containing eight Immigration Officers – 5 men and 3 women – arrived at her house, entered it with their own key, kicked down the child security gate at the bottom of the stairs, climbed the stairs to meet a trembling, terrified, hysterical mother, clad in her nightgown, her four children still fast asleep.
The officers told her that they had come to take her and children away to deport them with her partner Michael on the 19th February. They ordered her to get dressed which she refused to do, sitting on the floor. Two men and two women officers then tried to force dress her. In the midst of screaming and hysterics Kenny, her 7 year old daughter woke up, and seeing 7 people in her mother's bedroom, and hearing her mother's hysterical cries, jumped out of her bed, raced into her mother's arms, wrapped her arms around her neck and clung on to her for dear life. While still sitting on the floor, the mother's head was pressed sideways near to the ground, her arm was twisted behind her back and the child was wrestled from her arms, totally hysterical by this stage."
The judgment below
"14…………The whole tenor of Veronica's evidence was that she had not been open to persuasion. The essence of her strategy, having regard to her determination to defeat the deportation and her lack of other resources, had been to make it as difficult as possible for the officers to ready the family to leave the building. I accept, in part because it was not seriously in issue, that persuasion had been tried. I am satisfied that Veronica had done and said enough to make it clear beyond doubt that persuasion had no realistic prospect of success before any physical intervention occurred.
……
22. I am cautious about the label "hysterical" applied by Father O'Grady. I conclude that he was using the word in its common sense, describing an emotionally unstable state brought about by a traumatic experience. Certainly the events of 15th February had some of the elements of a traumatic experience for the Claimants, whether they resisted or not. Having heard Veronica's evidence at some length and read the transcript of her interview such hysteria may have been real or feigned. My conclusion is that it was a mixture of both. I do not accept that she was hysterical in the sense of suffering a complete loss of control of her speech and actions. Rather, she was less focussed than would ordinarily be the case about the consequences of what she did deliberately. What followed was the implementation by her of a rational plan formulated in haste on the spur of the moment to try to prevent their removal. Nonetheless it was effective and pursued relentlessly by Veronica. She presented the officers with a stark choice. Give up the attempted removal, or resort to a degree of force.
…
30. Veronica's witness statement, signed on the 21st September 2012 is very superficial.
"5. Whilst accessing my home the officers used a key which they probably picked up from the landlord, damaged the child protection gate at the bottom of the staircase and entered my bedroom."
That does not acknowledge that the officers had knocked before entering and that each had seen the other. The officers in the street had seen Veronica at a window on the upper floor and she had seen them in the street after they had alerted her to their presence by knocking. It refers to "her bedroom" as did Father O'Grady's letter, whereas in evidence Veronica said that that was a mistake. There is no account of what preceded the events in a back bedroom. Yet at trial it was common ground that there had been an exchange of words which resulted in Veronica eventually (rather than immediately) knowing why the officers were there and the officers knowing that Veronica was refusing to comply with what they thought were her legal obligations, before any of the adults entered the bedroom. I have no reason to doubt that the female officer, Amanda Cahill, who led her colleague Kevin Kilbane, up the stairs to Veronica, who was at or near the head of the stairs is correct and reliable in her evidence that that occurred outside the bedrooms. One of my reasons is that that was also Veronica's evidence at trial. Indeed in evidence she said variously that she had come out of her bedroom and had been "coming down the stairs" when the officers entered, then "coming out my room" and "I was on the landing". At trial Veronica said that the reference to "my" bedroom in her witness statement (and therefore also presumably in Father O'Grady's letter) was an error. Paragraph 6 of the witness statement, following the proposition at the end of paragraph 5 that the officers had entered her bedroom, continues
"6. I was startled by the officers presence in my room, and was shivering as the officers stated 'we are taking you', I immediately stated I was not going anywhere as my two children had sickle cell disease and returning them to mosquito-infested environment in sub Saharan Africa would mean a death sentence on them. The officers insisted we have to take you whether you like it or not."
That appears to me to be an attempt to suggest that the officers had surprised her in her bedroom, when on any view including her own oral evidence at trial, they had not. I regard that as a significant indication that Veronica's approach to this claim is not marked by candour.
"7. As I was not expecting anybody I was still in my house wear hence not fully covered. The officers said I should cover myself up, tried to force dress me by picking up my trousers, I fell on the floor and started shouting Jesus."
It will be noted that there is no allegation in that part of Veronica's evidence that physical contact was made by any of the officers with Veronica. It accords with the officers' evidence. In evidence Veronica made plain that she had not simply shouted as described but had raised her voice and shouted a number of things with the maximum force of her voice. No child could have remained asleep or undisturbed for long in such circumstances. I am satisfied, on Veronica's own evidence, that it was her chosen behaviour, which she but not the IOs knew to be in the presence of her child, which frightened Kenny.
31. In the course of oral evidence much time was taken with the evidence of Veronica and the officers about the attempt to persuade, then force, Veronica to dress. It is clear that there was a need for Veronica and the children to dress, even if they were to remain in the house and most certainly if they were to go into the street. It is equally clear, indeed not really in dispute, that Veronica saw her state of undress and unwillingness to dress as a weapon against her removal. She said so in interview……. "
"38. Kenny did not give [oral] evidence but a witness statement, apparently signed on the 27th June 2013, was in evidence before me. I must assess the weight to be given to it. Kenny says that she was born in Nigeria in May 2002. Thus she was almost 8 in February 2010 and just 11 when she signed the statement. Kenny states that she recalls the incident. I am satisfied that she does. On any view this was a most unusual day. I doubt she recalls the date.
"4. I recollect that on the 15 February 2010 I was asleep in bed when I was awoken by noise in the room. I saw the UKBA Officers twisting my mother's left arm. The officers were trying to force my mother to dress up and my mother was shouting."
I am not satisfied that that is real recollection. The reference to arm twisting describes the second alleged assault, not the first. There is no detail about how the officers were progressing the attempt to dress her mother, nor even a reference to which items of clothing were being deployed.
"5. I ran towards my mum and held onto her as the other people in the room were strangers. I was pulled by the leg by the officers and this caused me much pain. I was very unhappy about what happened to me and my mother."
I am unable to accept that that is an account of the events in Kenny's own words. On any view of the evidence only one officer at a time touched Kenny. Kenny does not mention her mother holding on to her, which her mother admits/alleges that she did. That does not lead to the conclusion that it does not contain the gist of her recollection, but it does point to be being merely a highly edited account in the language of adults. Compared with her mother's evidence and indeed that of the officers, it merges two stages of the account as told by her mother and lacks any detail about her own treatment. For instance it does not specify which leg was pulled. It does not relate even that she was parted from her mother, much less what Veronica did to resist that forced parting. I do not attach any real weight to that evidence.
…
46. Veronica proposed in evidence that she does not lie. I am willing to accept that, in ordinary circumstances, that is so. Nonetheless it must be difficult for a person to behave honestly and straightforwardly and to avoid at least suppressing the truth if not actively lying and yet to enter the UK and remain here illegally for a number of years. The circumstances were extraordinary, especially on the 15th February 2010 and immediately thereafter. I am satisfied that in relation to Veronica's determination to be and remain in the UK for reasons related to the protection of her children, the circumstances are so out of the ordinary that she is able to suspend her general attachment to the truth. She manifests a strong determination to do all in her power to achieve the protection of her children. I am not able to have the confidence in her truthfulness about the events in this case, which would otherwise have been the case.
47. In relation to the battery to Kenny and this second event in relation to Veronica, the defendants' case is that some force was used on each. Precisely which officer did what was the subject of close examination at trial. It became clear to me that the detailed accounts of each officer could not be reconciled with the details of the evidence of all others, even when it was common ground that all had been present in the relevant bedroom for all or part of any phase of the event. To that extent cross-examination of the officers was 'successful'. It is also clear that a close examination of the detail contained in the contemporaneous records made by the officers, that is to say the initial reports, personal notebooks, Use of Force Forms and non-contemporaneous documents such as disciplinary/investigatory interviews resulting from Veronica's complaint, and witness statements for this claim reveals much inconsistency of detail and a tendency to 'flesh out' if not exaggerate the accounts of Veronica's activity in relation to Kenny. Cross-examination also demonstrated the effects of time in degrading the clarity of recollection of witnesses about what had happened as well as what had been written on earlier occasions about what had happened.
48. I repeat that underlying the Claimants' response to the Defendant's case is the proposition that the officers had realised that they had acted unlawfully and therefore have given false accounts in their contemporary documents, in their interviews with the investigator arising out of Father O'Grady's complaint, in their witness statements as evidence in chief and under cross-examination. Regrettably the obvious logical proposition underlying that response, namely that the case being put by the Claimants was that the officers should be disbelieved because they were lying in support of what must be a conspiracy involving some or all of them to avoid the consequences of the wrongdoing, was not put to the early witnesses called by the defendants, nor was cross-examination conducted efficiently to achieve such a finding namely a preference for the evidence of Veronica to that of the officers. Eventually, I put the problem roundly to the Claimants' counsel and posed the question: when did the conspiracy occur? My reason was that counsel's cross-examination of the officers had concentrated on their serial accounts and the proposition that they had 'improved' with the passage of time and in response to specific points put to them. It was an entirely proper approach, but required methodical chronological analysis in order to make it good.
…
50. A feature which troubled me during the trial was an absence of evidence about who had decided that the use of force was justified to separate Veronica and Kenny. Nobody claimed to have said anything in terms of either suggesting or ordering the others to separate them, even though the officer in charge had been in the room at the time. The explanation, when I raised the matter, was that it was spontaneous because the circumstances made it obvious that Veronica was hurting Kenny. No officer suggested that Veronica was doing so deliberately. The inference which they invite is that Veronica had not realised that she was causing Kenny's distress, not the presence and activity of the officers.
Conspiracy by the officers?
51. I recognise that any group, whether it be family, friends or an organised force, may 'close ranks' against outsiders. In relation to members of organised forces the motive may be self interest for disciplinary reasons or for the protection of the organisation, or both. Such allegiances may generate very strong motives for providing initial false accounts, from which later deviation, even at the point of oral evidence on oath becomes very difficult. Sometimes it becomes obvious that some witnesses are giving only nominal support to the allegedly false story, giving rise to the inference that although they know their evidence to be untrue, their consciences are salved by their patent lack of enthusiasm. I did not detect that attitude in this case.
…
56. Thus far I detect some evidence of collaboration, but none of dishonest conspiracy. Next comes: "Other Comments/Observations". Of those who were asked whether they were permitted to collaborate (not all were asked despite the Claimant's counsel's application to have the officers remain out of court during other's evidence, which I refused, but which resulted in the officers taking the hint and absenting themselves voluntarily) the answer was that although they were not prohibited from collaboration, they had not done so. Nonetheless officers Maclean (in charge on the day) and O'Neill had written:
"The subject had grabbed her daughter around her chest and refused to let go of her, when asked by IO Cahill to let go she refused and began screaming and shouting, in the process her daughter became upset. IO Cahill repeatedly asked her to let go of her daughter which she refused."
With the substitution of "I" for her name, IO Cahill's form to that point is in precisely the same terms. Thereafter they diverge. I am wholly unable to accept that the foregoing is other than the reason of prior agreement or of plagiarism, whether by 'cut and paste' word processing of old-fashioned coping later or looking over someone's shoulder during composition. The unwillingness by anyone to admit what has happened gives rise to at least a suspicion that it has resulted from a realisation that an innocent explanation must be provided for undeniable force.
…
58. IO Kilbane's account is different and indeed a more cogent attempted justification of the use of force. He wrote:
"During an enforcement visit to detain Veronica Shittu and her four children IO MACLEAN attempted to escort one of the children, Kenny, out of the bed. As she did this Veronica grabbed Kenny and held her in a bear hug. Fearing for the child's safety myself, IO O'NEILL, IO CAHILL and IO MACLEAN attempted to get Kenny out of Veronica's grasp. IO O'NEILL held Veronica's right arm whilst I tried to loosen the grip she had on Kenny with her right arm. Having managed to loosen the grip Veronica had on Kenny I took Kenny out of the room and passed her on to colleagues to look after."
That is a succinct statement of the defendants' case at trial, on that phase of the event, albeit not consistent with all the written and oral evidence. IO O'Neill's form asserts that he had grabbed Veronica's right wrist and adds that Maclean had used an inverted wrist lock on her right hand. By contrast O'Neill places Kilbane on Veronica's left arm, with IO Cahill.
59. I was particularly favourably impressed by IO Kilbane. I found the general thrust of his evidence compelling. I am satisfied by his evidence that there has not been a conspiracy to misrepresent what the officers did and, importantly, why they used force to separate mother and daughter.
60. Having regard to the acceptance that force was used by four officers, two male and two female, to remove a 7 year old girl from the embrace of her mother in what must on any view have been potentially distressing circumstances for mother and child, it seems to me that the officers' accounts of precisely what each did and in what sequence is of far less importance than why they did it. Cross-examination of the officers revealed inconsistency of account between them and also in the several accounts each had given from time to time. I recognise that in later accounts there is greater detail. The more elaborate accounts, for instance in the interviews arising from Veronica's complaint, there is material suggesting that some witnesses were warming to their theme. My conclusion is that when the constraints of a form, notebook or report are removed and a witness is pressed for a more detailed account, the emergence of additional detail and a defensive position is not a cause for suspicion.
61. A reason for that conclusion is that this phase of the event, that is to say from the emergence of Kenny from under the bedclothes to her removal from the room, probably took only a few seconds encompassing very concentrated actions and attention by all the participants. To find even quite distinct variations of account between witnesses as to what others had done is not, in such circumstances, a matter for suspicion. It is unlikely that all witnesses in such circumstances will see and hear or register every action. If each had nonetheless given a perfectly co-ordinated account the suspicion would be that it was collaborative and not necessarily true. A review of the IOs' pocket notebooks, initial written accounts and interviews (some verbatim transcripts, others mere summaries), their witness statements and their evidence under cross-examination does not lead me to the conclusion that there was a conspiracy to cover up a recognised and acknowledged misdeed.
62. The Claimant argues that the operational plan, as exhibited, was so tightly timetabled, allowing only half an hour for packing and departure, that the force was used simply to facilitate rapid accomplishment of the task, in the face of dogged opposition. I acknowledge the force of that argument. The officers' answer, particularly IO Maclean, was that the timing was the standard allocation. It was achievable, but there was no requirement that it be achieved. I am persuaded that the timetable did not influence the manner in which the officers dealt with the Claimants. It seems to me that in any circumstance where those to be removed presented a degree of resistance, whether by argument or physical obstruction, the officers had to accommodate what they found and to adapt the timetable, as it was.
63. Neither Veronica, nor any of the officers, said that any officer had given any order or oral encouragement to others to take Kenny from Veronica. I am satisfied that they acted spontaneously to circumstances which seemed to them, at the time, sufficient to warrant immediate intervention. This was distinctly different from the situation, argued by the Claimants' counsel, in which there was an opportunity for the officers to retreat and negotiate. If the officers are correct about what happened, an emergency had arisen.
64. I am satisfied that Veronica also acted spontaneously. She saw her daughter, one of the children primarily at risk if they were deported, being taken from the room by an officer and took the opportunity to grasp her. I am satisfied that she was very fearful that all would be removed that day, into detention pending deportation. I am satisfied that she did not deliberately mistreat Kenny. The whole point of her resistance was to avoid harm. However I am satisfied that, in the agony of the moment, she did squeeze Kenny sufficiently tightly in her attempt to prevent her from being taken from the room, that it reasonably appeared to the officers that she was in fact harming the child. I find that Kenny was facing away from her mother, not towards her. I am satisfied that the force used to compel her to release Kenny was not greater than was reasonably required to protect Kenny from actual and impending harm and that the participating officers not only believed that that is what they were doing, but also that they were right. This was a heated and volatile situation. The heat and volatility was all generated by Veronica. Her actions were unpredictable. They dealt with it swiftly as a brief incident in what became a drawn out and ultimately unsuccessful removal.
65. 1 have reached my conclusions of fact on the basis that 1 found the officers' evidence on the critical factual issues to be more credible than Veronica's, despite the failure of the officers to explain the resemblances in some of the Use of Force forms."
The law
"The D has consistently defended its use of force on the single basis that the force used by its officers was necessary in order to protect Kenny from her mother. The C accepts that there is a two limbed common law defence of necessity to assault available to the D, if it can prove, on the balance of probabilities:
a) That the D reasonably believed that it was necessary to take the action which it took.
b) That the action taken in all the circumstances was reasonable."
This formulation is derived from the decisions of this court and the House of Lords in Ashley v Chief Constable of Sussex Police [2007] 1 WLR 398; [2008] 1 AC 962; and Ms McGahey QC, for the Defendant, accepted it as a correct statement of the law.
UKBA's Family Removals Guidance
"45.5.5: Control and Restraint:
All family members, including children, should be arrested as a whole unit and the arrest should be made as soon as practicable, to ensure that the family is legally in immigration custody for conveyance to a designated place of detention. It will normally be that arrests in such circumstances will be under administrative powers contained in paragraph 17 of schedule 2 of the 1971 Act and not under criminal powers.
In all cases, if restraint is considered necessary, it must be overseen by a supervising officer who is not personally directly involved in the application of force and he or she should record events appropriately. Force must be age appropriate, only be used for the shortest possible period and de-escalated at the earliest opportunity when either the individual starts to comply or the officers' objectives (of securing the safety of the individual or others, or, in the cases of adults only, to overcome resistance) have been fulfilled. The officer's objectives behind the use of force must be clarified and limited.
Use of force on adults
It remains the Agency's position that force on adults (i.e. any type of physical intervention) should only ever be used when it is immediately necessary to secure the safety of the individual or others, or to overcome resistance, and that it should be used only as a last resort when all other avenues of seeking voluntary compliance by way of persuasion have been exhausted.
Use of force on Children and Young People
The control and restraint of children and young people must be limited to circumstances where it is necessary for an officer to use physical intervention to prevent harm to the child or any individual present whilst ensuring they comply with a requirement to leave the UK.
Physical intervention must not be used simply to enforce the removal of children where there is no threat of violence. In the vast majority of cases there will not be a need for officers to exercise physical control or restraint of minors.
UKBA staff must give consideration to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of the child concerned, and of any potential adverse impact to their physical or emotional wellbeing. Children who have been identified as having additional vulnerability, such as learning difficulties, medical conditions, etc may be more adversely affected by the use of the force and staff give due consideration to this.
In cases where there is active physical resistance, and physical intervention is deemed absolutely necessary to prevent harm, Officers must ensure that any action is age appropriate, limited to the minimum level of force required in that particular circumstance, justifiable and proportionate. All physical interventions should be in line with officer safety training and it is imperative that restraint must only be used for the shortest possible period and de-escalated at the earliest opportunity.
At all times, officers are accountable for and have to justify any decisions and actions that take. Force must only ever be used by staff trained in the use of Control and Restraint (C&R), and who have received refresher training within the last 12 months.
On every occasion when force has been used against a child, a comprehensive incident report must be completed as soon after the operation as practicable. A copy of this report must be sent to the officer of the Agency's Children's Champion.
Use of force in the presence of children
The wellbeing of children within our care is paramount; as such, the restraint of adults during a family detention visit should not be routine, given the possible impact that this may have on any child/children present."
The grounds of appeal
"Ground 1: The Learned Judge was wrong to decide that a reasonable and/or proportionate method for protecting an 8 year old girl who is squeezed too tightly by her mother is to immediately resort to restraint against the mother in order to forcibly remove the child from her arms. Any reasonable person seeking to protect a child in these circumstances would first attempt less invasive and more child-centred methods, and the judge was wrong to hold otherwise.
Ground 2: The learned judge misled himself because he erroneously regarded Veronica's use of passive resistance to avoid deportation as:
a) morally wrong and/or unlawful, a judgment expressed in paragraph 6 and in the third last sentence of paragraph 9; and
b) a moral and/or legal justification for the use of force, a judgment expressed in the final sentences of paragraphs 14 and 22.
Ground 3: The learned judge either failed explicitly to find, or if he did so find, failed to supply any reasons for finding; that the officers genuinely believed that the first Claimant was harming her child BEFORE the decision to use force was taken rather than AFTER force was already in the course of being applied.
Ground 3A: Although the learned judge found that prior to C1 harming C2, officers were engaged in attempting to remove Kenny from her without her consent and in doing so were touching C2, he has failed to give any reason why this initial touching was not already an unlawful battery of the latter.
Ground 4: The learned judge appears to have accepted that the operative reason in the minds of the immigration officers for using force to separate mother and child was the altruistic motive of trying to protect the child. However the only evidence relied upon in reaching that conclusion were the claims of immigration officers themselves, and contrary to the guidance of Goff LJ in Armagas Ltd v- Mundogas SA (The Ocean Frost) [1985] 1 Lloyd's Rep.1 at 57, these claims were not evaluated "by reference to objective facts proved independently of [the officers'] testimony, in particular by reference to the documents in the case and also to pay a particular regard to [their] motives and to the overall probabilities."
Ground 5: The Learned Judge failed to provide any reason why any belief held by immigration officers that she was capable of harming her daughter so severely as to warrant being restrained was a reasonable one."
Discussion
"Where….the question is one of credibility, where either story told in the witness box may be true, where the probabilities and possibilities are evenly balanced and where the personal motives and interests of the parties cannot but affect their testimony, this House has always been reluctant to differ from the judge who has seen and heard the witnesses unless it can be clearly shown that he has fallen into error".
Conclusion
Lady Justice Asplin:
Lord Justice Underhill: