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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Owens v City of Westminster Magistrates' Court [2009] EWHC 1343 (Admin) (08 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1343.html Cite as: [2010] WLR 17, [2010] 1 WLR 17, [2009] EWHC 1343 (Admin), [2009] ACD 56 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CRANSTON
____________________
GARY SAMUEL OWENS | Claimant | |
v | ||
CITY OF WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES' COURT | Defendant | |
(1) THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE, MARBELLA, SPAIN | ||
(2) THE SERIOUS ORGANISED CRIME AGENCY | Interested Parties |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant was not represented and did not attend
Rachel Scott (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) appeared on behalf of the First Interested Party
Ben Watson (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Second Interested Party (Bo-Eun Jung appeared for judgment)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"... the application of the claimant for certification of points of law of general public importance and for permission to present a petition of appeal to the House of Lords be refused".
"(1) This section applies if
(a) there is an appeal to the High Court under section 26 against an order for a person's extradition to a category 1 territory, and
(b) the effect of the decision of the relevant court on the appeal is that the person is to be extradited there.
(2) The person must be extradited to the category 1 territory before the end of the required period.
(3) The required period is
(a) 10 days starting with the day on which the decision of the relevant court on the appeal becomes final or proceedings on the appeal are discontinued, or
(b) if the relevant court and the authority which issued the Part 1 warrant agree a later date, 10 days starting with the later date.
(4) The relevant court is
(a) the High Court, if there is no appeal to the House of Lords against the decision of the High Court on the appeal;
(b) the House of Lords, if there is such an appeal.
(5) The decision of the High Court on the appeal becomes final
(a) when the period permitted for applying to the High Court for leave to appeal to the House of Lords ends, if there is no such application;
(b) when the period permitted for applying to the House of Lords for leave to appeal to it ends, if the High Court refuses leave to appeal and there is no application to the House of Lords for leave to appeal;
(c) when the House of Lords refuses leave to appeal to it;
(d) at the end of the permitted period, which is 28 days starting with the day on which leave to appeal to the House of Lords is granted, if no such appeal is brought before the end of that period.
(6) These must be ignored for the purposes of subsection (5)
(a) any power of a court to extend the period permitted for applying for leave to appeal;
(b) any power of a court to grant leave to take a step out of time.
(7) The decision of the House of Lords on the appeal becomes final when it is made.
(8) If subsection (2) is not complied with and the person applies to the appropriate judge to be discharged the judge must order his discharge, unless reasonable cause is shown for the delay."
Subsection (9) refers to Scotland and need not be cited. Not all sections are relevant to this appeal, but I have set them out in order that the full scheme should be specified.
"If it is accepted that the 'required period' is 10 days from that date [that is 15th May 2009] then SOCA's discovery on the morning of 26th May is very shortly afterwards and steps were taken to put it right and delay has thereby been kept to a minimum."
"I have real doubts as to whether habeas corpus is the appropriate procedure in this case. The claimant is detained in prison pursuant to an order of the court. That is, on its face, perfectly valid and within the jurisdiction of the court. That is not in dispute. The true target of the challenge is not the prison governor but the District Judge, the case being that he erred in declining to order discharge. That seems to me to be a challenge properly brought by way of judicial review against the Magistrates' Court, not by way of habeas corpus against the prison governor."
"Time limits for surrender of the person
1. The person requested shall be surrendered as soon as possible on a date agreed between the authorities concerned.
2. He or she shall be surrendered no later than 10 days after the final decision on the execution of the European arrest warrant.
3. If the surrender of the requested person within the period laid down in paragraph 2 is prevented by circumstances beyond the control of any of the Member States, the executing and issuing judicial authorities shall immediately contact each other and agree on a new surrender date. In that event, the surrender shall take place within 10 days of the new date thus agreed.
4. The surrender may exceptionally be temporarily postponed for serious humanitarian reasons, for example if there are substantial grounds for believing that it would manifestly endanger the requested person's life or health. The execution of the European arrest warrant shall take place as soon as these grounds have ceased to exist. The executing judicial authority shall immediately inform the issuing judicial authority and agree on a new surrender date. In that event, the surrender shall take place within 10 days of the new date thus agreed.
5. Upon expiry of the time limits referred to in paragraphs 2 to 4, if the person is still being held in custody he shall be released."
"1... Thereafter, by way of a letter, the claimant asked the court to certify a point of general public importance and also sought leave to appeal to the House of Lords. The matter came back before the court on 22nd March 2007, whereupon the court declined to certify a point of general public importance. As far as the litigation was concerned the matter was therefore at an end.
2. On 24th April 2007 an application was made to the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court for the claimant's discharge under section 118(7) of the Extradition Act 2003 on the basis that he had not in fact been extradited."
"Miss Dobbin, for the Secretary of State, points out that section 36 of the 2003 Act which deals with extradition following appeal follows the same language. As a result, she concedes that in some way this legislation ought to be construed so as to ensure that time is only extended beyond the conclusion of High Court proceedings if a certificate is in fact provided, notwithstanding that leave has been refused. As I have said, section 118(4) appears, on the face of it, to be comparatively straightforward, albeit it does not provide or reflect for the possibility of the need for a certified question. Having regard to the obligation which the statute intended to meet, however, it seems to me that it is proper to construe section 118(4) so as to make clear that where no point of law has ever been certified there is in fact no permitted period for applying to the House of Lords. After all, the House of Lords will only entertain a lawfully brought application and in the event that the High Court refuses to certify a point of law, no such application could ever properly be brought. Thus, there is no permitted period for applying to the House of Lords in the event of a certified question being refused. In those circumstances time cannot be extended as the district judge ruled."
"An application to the High Court for leave to appeal under this section must be made before the end of the permitted period, which is 14 days starting with the day on which the court makes its decision on the appeal to it."
A permitted period of 14 days is thus conferred with no suggestion of its curtailment by an application made, as in this case, for example, on the day the court made its decision.
"... the court may, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, by order direct the applicant to be discharged from custody and, if a warrant for his return has been issued under the said section 9, quash that warrant."
"Accordingly, it seems to me that when one is construing the words in section 7, 'unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary', one is entitled to take into account questions such as reasonableness in all the circumstances. Once one gets as far as that, as a matter of construction, it seems to me quite plain that on the facts disclosed in Mr Rushford's affidavit no one could say that he was not acting perfectly reasonably in making the arrangements he did. One cannot shut one's eyes to the fact that this is only a matter of a day or two's delay and that the alleged offences are serious offences."
"The only relevant conduct is that of the Home Office in relation to the need to cause the applicant to be taken from custody and to be extradited expeditiously according to law. But two matters have, as I have said, been advanced for the admitted failure to do that: there was wholly avoidable delay in dealing with the offence on file and a misconstruction of section 10(1) of the Fugitive Offenders Act 1967. I do not see how the description 'reasonable' can apply to those errors in fact and in law. They are I feel bound to say inexcusable and come nowhere near constituting sufficient cause to allow us to refrain from directing forthwith the discharge from custody of the applicant and I would so order."
"In my judgment there can be no question but that the requirements of international comity in the general sense could not be regarded as within the scope of the phrase 'reasonable cause for the delay' where it appears in section 6(1). I, for my part, would find it strange if that sort of a consideration, properly to be counted as of importance in relation to the Extradition Act, were not allowed to play any part at all in relation to the 1965 Act. I, therefore, would construe the 1965 Act (section 6(1)) in this way, that the word 'may' gives to this court a normal discretionary power, but that power is qualified by the indication that in certain circumstances, that is to say where a reasonable cause is shown for the delay, the jurisdiction must be exercised in one way. In other words, the court in those circumstances may not order him to be discharged. In other cases, it may or may not according as it considers appropriate."
At page 4 Kennedy LJ stated:
"It is apparent, and it really hardly needs saying, that damage to international relations is done if in a situation like this, because of a technicality, an offender or an alleged offender is not sent back to the Republic of Ireland to stand trial in circumstances where that, in reality, would appear to be the proper outcome."
However, in the final substantive paragraph of his judgment, Kennedy LJ stated:
"If I had to decide this matter on the basis of whether or not there was reasonable cause for the delay, despite the impressive arguments advanced to us by Mr Hardy that these words should be construed liberally, I could not construe them so liberally as to find that there was any reasonable cause for the delay. I am supported in that conclusion by the decision of this court in Oskar, where Watkins LJ, admittedly dealing with a rather different and more complicated set of facts, adopted a very similar approach in relation to what was, in reality, administrative incompetence."
"29. As for that proviso, it seems to me that it simply means what it says. It will clearly be apt to bar the remedy of discharge in what I have called a force majeure case. One may readily multiply examples. Thus if the extradition is to be effected by air, a strike by airline or air traffic control staff over a period during which the extradition is set to take place might well fall within this category. And I would think there may readily be reasonable cause for the delay where it is occasioned on humanitarian grounds, such as the serious illness of the extraditee. To that extent the instances of postponement referred in article 23(3)(4) of the Framework Decision may be said to dovetail with the "reasonable cause" proviso in section 47(4) upon the latter's interpretation according to ordinary domestic canons of construction.
...
31... The... two considerations [force majeure and humanitarian] go only to whether there are particular circumstances adventitious, contingent which might prevent the extradition taking place within the required period stipulated under section 47(2) and (3)...
33. My conclusion on the proviso to section 47(4) is I think all of a piece with the use in sections 35(5) and 36(8) of exactly the same expression... They are concerned with the possibility of unlooked-for slippage in the execution of the tight timetable for extradition which the statute requires."
"Those are the main points put forward on behalf of the judicial authority. In my judgment, Ms Cumberland's submissions are well founded. The discretion conferred on the court by section 35(4)(b) of the 2003 Act is in broad terms. It is to be distinguished in that respect from the provision of section 35(5) that, in the event of non-compliance with subsection (3), discharge must be ordered 'unless reasonable cause is shown for the delay'. Had it been intended to impose a similar limitation on the power of the court in section 35(4)(b), the statute would have used similar language. The obligation to interpret national law, so far as possible, in the light of the wording and purpose of the Framework Decision should not require the discretion to be cut down in the way suggested by the claimant, so as to be exercisable only if it is shown that extradition within the normal period has been prevented by circumstances beyond the control of the member states concerned. The discretion must certainly be exercised with due regard to the wording and purpose of the Framework Decision and for that reason would no doubt fall normally to be exercised so as to extend the period where extradition was shown to have been prevented by circumstances beyond the control of the Member States. But I do not think that can be exhaustive of the circumstances in which the discretion may be exercised. Regard should be had not just to the wording of Article 23 but also to the Framework Decision's underlying purpose of facilitating extradition and enhancing extradition procedures, based on a spirit of mutual co-operation. I see no reason why those considerations should not in an appropriate case tell in favour of the grant of an extension at the request of the judicial authority even if it has not been shown that circumstances beyond the control of the Member States prevented extradition within the normal time limit, in the sense that the delay occurred without any fault on behalf of any of the state agencies concerned."
He stated:
"25... The correct focus is on the situation in which the court found itself on 1st October as a result of non-production and on the court's reaction to that situation. I do not think that it can have been intended that the extradition procedures might be frustrated by questions as to whether or not there has been fault on the part of the prison authorities or of those responsible for delivering prisoners to court.
26. I accept that the judge may have focused unduly on the relatively short period since the initial hearing and the fact that the delay had been only one day. But I think he was entitled to have regard to those considerations as part of the overall circumstances of the case. Even if it could be said that he took into account an irrelevant consideration, such an error would not impel me to quash his decision because, in my judgement, for the reasons I have given, there was in this case a reasonable cause for the delay and the judge could properly so decide."
Agreeing with Richards LJ, Gibbs J stated:
"29... As it seems to me, the judge, in considering whether there was reasonable cause, was not confined to asking himself whether or not the error or omission of the prison service and/or the escort service was excusable or unreasonable. He was entitled to look at the issue in the light of all relevant circumstances. These included the fact that the court made all reasonable efforts to ensure that the error or omission of those agencies was put right in order to facilitate the applicant's attendance that day. They also included the fact that when those efforts had come to nothing the applicant's attendance was ensured at the next available opportunity, that is the following morning.
30. I accept that the mere fact that the delay was short does not, in itself, make it reasonable. But human or administrative error on occasion is inevitable. Here, after it had occurred, steps were taken to put it right and delay was thereby kept to a minimum.
31. I would hold that the judge would be entitled, and indeed would be right, to take into account the circumstances to which I have referred..."
"... the introduction of a new simplified system of surrender of sentenced or suspected persons for the purposes of execution or prosecution of criminal sentences makes it possible to remove the complexity and potential for delay inherent in the present extradition procedures."
Recital 10 provides that:
"The mechanism of the European arrest warrant is based on a high level of confidence between Member States."
The states referred to are in the European Union, and include Spain. It should be borne in mind that decisions such as Oskar were taken before the Framework Decision.