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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ahmad v London Borough of Brent & Ors [2011] EWHC 80 (QB) (26 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/80.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 80 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ALMAS AHMAD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) LONDON BOROUGH OF BRENT (2) NATIONAL PROBATION SERVICE (LONDON) (3) MINISTRY OF JUSTICE (4) PAROLE BOARD FOR ENGLAND AND WALES |
Defendants |
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(instructed by Messrs Matthew Gold & Co) for the Claimant
John Norman (instructed by Messrs Barlow, Lyde & Gilbert) for the First Defendant
Iain Daniels (instructed by Messrs DLA Piper) for the Second Defendant
Oliver Sanders (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Third Defendant
Russell Fortt (instructed by Messrs Bircham, Dyson, Bell) for the Fourth Defendant
Hearing dates: 26-30 July 2010, 11-12 January 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Supperstone :
Introduction
Background to recall
"The overall risk to Alia is high and immediate action needs to be taken to safeguard her future safety and welfare."
- "Mr Ahmad's life licence strictly says that [there] is to be no unsupervised direct contact, without written authority of SSD.
- In the Parole Board's report, the risk was felt to be reduced as long as Mr Ahmad did not have direct contact with his daughter in the family home. This forms part of the decision for early release.
- Mr Ahmad has been visiting the family home since 2004 and is currently staying there three times per week or more. Mrs Ahmad has admitted that she knows this is (sic) direct contravention to his life licence terms.
- Mr Ahmad has not been covert about his visits and has informed his Probation Officer. However, Probation SvCS have not alerted SSD.
- The current PO, Tess Joseph, made a referral to this Dept on account of Mr Ahmad's increasing attitude and lack of remorse. Comments were being made such as 'My daughter betrayed me'. 'The Judge didn't want to give me a life sentence'.
- Mrs Ahmad is colluding with her husband in his visits and cannot protect her daughter.
- Alia has stated that she does not feel threatened or intimidated by her father and that she was happy at home, however, Farah said the very same two weeks before she was murdered. This raises concerns.
- A forced marriage risk assessment has been undertaken in which the risk indicators are high."
"1. ... Reviewing previous case files in close detail that pre-date my supervision of Mr Ahmed it is clear that ongoing contact in person with his wife and daughter were established post child protection deregistration in June 2003, despite licence conditions that state he should have 'no direct contact except by telephone with his daughter Allaya, without prior written authority from Social Services'. On 29/08/2006 it emerged that no such written authority has ever been granted despite his increasing level of integration and presence in the family home.
2. … Though Mr Ahmed has reported regularly as instructed and has expressed pride at his compliance both in prison and on his return to the community it is now clear that he has been flouting a significant condition of his licence… from as early as 10/09/2003 when he was supervised by his previous supervising Probation Officer, Jacqueline Muge. He is reported as visiting his wife and daughter between 1-3 times a week and has been reported as going on unsupervised outings with his daughter. …
6. … Mr Ahmed would appear to present a significantly higher risk of harm to his surviving daughter that (sic) would have appeared to be the case a few months ago; risk is heightened given that his wife has no recorded ability to protect her children. I would assess the risk of harm that he poses as being high. I am also concerned that if his daughter acts in ways that he does not like he may re-offend in a similar fashion to the index offence."
Ms Joseph recommended that "given the long term flouting of the condition of the licence not to have direct contact with his surviving daughter … a decision is taken at a senior level as to whether it is legally possible to process recall with immediate effect".
"I have discussed this report fully with the SPO covering the case and a PO who attended today a further strategy meeting with Social Services. Further information and assessment in respect of current risk has been obtained. The immediate strategy meeting with Social Services has identified that there exists a current level of high risk towards Allaya as outlined in the report above. … It is now clear that Mr Ahmed has breached his licence condition 7 given the degree of contact that he has been having [with] Allaya without any specific written authorisation from Social Services. There is now information that indicates that not only has Mr Ahmed been visiting Allaya's home on a regular basis during the week, but also that he has been staying there for up to three nights a week. This had never been agreed with Social Services. Mr Ahmed had not been given written authority to have contact with Allaya in her home. This constitutes a breach of licence condition 7. Furthermore Mr Ahmed has not been given permission by his supervising officer to reside in Allaya's home.
Given these breaches of his licence and the currently assessed level of high risk I am recommending a protective recall to prison. Following recall there will be a further in depth and multi-disciplinary risk assessment undertaken with an agreed plan of further risk management action.
There are concerns in respect of imminence of the risk. It is not possible to wholly predict how Mr Ahmed may react to the realisation that he is now considered to be in breach of his licence. Furthermore it is understood that an arranged marriage for Allaya may be being organised. There are concerns that there exists a possibility that Mr Ahmed may seek to abscond with his daughter given the combination of these factors, and particularly in view of the fact that he has been currently instructed to refrain from contact with his daughter."
"The Secretary of State considered that it was necessary to take this action because of information received from the London Probation Service that you were considered to have breached condition 7 of your licence pertaining to appropriate behaviour on life licence. On 1 September 2006 the Probation Service reported to the Secretary of State that you have been visiting your wife and 16 year old daughter, from between once to three times a week without the permission of either the Probation Service or from Social Services. The Secretary of State was further informed that it had been reported that you had also been going out on unsupervised outings with your daughter.
These developments indicate to the Secretary of State that your performance on life licence gives substantial cause for concern. Having regard to all the circumstances, particularly the offence for which you were sentenced to life imprisonment, the Secretary of State cannot be satisfied that your continued presence in the community constitutes an acceptable risk."
"33. … The index offence, the Claimant's attitude and his relationship with his daughter were the important factors for me and the fact that there appeared to be great concern about the daughter. The key factor for me was the risk reflected in the Probation Service Report and the alleged breach of licence condition 7 was not decisive in and of itself. Even without it, I thought there was sufficient concern to effect an emergency recall.
34. … I was responsible for this decision which I took on the above basis. Jeff D'Cruz then signed the revocation order and took the steps needed to implement the recall to custody. I summarised my overall assessment on the CER/PBRR as follows: 'There are clearly concerns regarding Mr Ahmed's contact with his daughter, particularly as Probation were unaware of the visits. It is also clear that both S/S and the Probation Services consider that Mr Ahmed's daughter is vulnerable. I am not prepared to allow Mr Ahmed the opportunity of accessing his daughter without a full risk assessment being undertaken. This must be done in custody to protect Mr Ahmed's daughter. Immediate recall.' "
The claims against the Defendants
(1) The claim against the First and Second Defendants
(i) Negligence
"Failed to appreciate that the Claimant was not in breach of condition 7 of his life licence because the supervised and unsupervised contact had been specifically agreed by both Defendants and was authorised in writing."
Further it is said that they failed to take reasonable care to ensure that statements they made to the other Defendants about whether or not there was breach of Condition 7 were accurate, to check their files to seek what contact between the Claimant and Alia had been authorised and to disclose relevant material to the Fourth Defendant.
"A doctor is obliged to act in the best interests of his patient. In these cases the child is his patient. The doctor is charged with the protection of the child, not with the protection of the parent. The best interests of a child and his parent normally march hand-in-hand. But when considering whether something does not feel 'quite right', a doctor must be able to act single-mindedly in the interests of the child. He ought not to have at the back of his mind an awareness that if his doubts about intentional injury or sexual abuse prove unfounded he may be exposed to claims by a distressed parent." (para 85).
Lord Nicholls added:
"In principle the appropriate level of protection for a parent suspected of abusing his child is that clinical and other investigations must be conducted in good faith. This affords suspected parents a similar level of protection to that afforded generally to persons suspected of committing crimes." (para 90).
In MAK and Another v Dewsbury Healthcare NHS Trust and Another [2005] 2 AC 373 the claimants were a father and his daughter. They had brought proceedings against Dewsbury Healthcare NHS Trust and Kirklees Metropolitan Council. The Council is responsible for the provision of social services in the Dewsbury area. The father and daughter claimed damages in negligence for psychiatric injury and financial loss resulting from a clinical misdiagnosis that the daughter had been subject to sexual abuse and from the consequential investigatory steps taken by the social services. Applying the principles set out by Lord Nicholls this claim failed.
"(a) The protection of the public,
(b) The reduction of re-offending,
(c) The proper punishment of offenders,
(d) Ensuring offenders' awareness of the effects of crime on the victims of crime and the public,
(e) The rehabilitation of offenders."
In my view it is arguable that the Second Defendant was under a duty to take reasonable care to check its files and provide accurate information in relation to the Claimant to the Third Defendant.
"1. Alia and Dad to meet one another on every fortnight for an hour. Contact to be supervised by Social Worker until 19 February 2003.
If there are no concerns with regard to contact
2. Mrs Ahmad will supervise contact as from week starting on 24 February 2003. Contact will take place every fortnight at venue desired by Alia and parents.
3. Social worker will liaise with Alia and Mrs Ahmad separately to assess progress.
4. Next core meeting will be held on 30 January 2003 at 2.30 in Brent House Annex to review progress and plan future contacts and monitoring arrangements for Alia and Dad."
It is clear from para 2 of the letter that the extent of the contact permitted is "every fortnight" and Mrs Ahmad will "supervise" the contact. In my view it is not arguable that the extent of the contact is for Mrs Ahmad to determine.
"We further agree that once Alia resumes contact with Dad, you will supervise contact…"
By letter dated 9 June 2003, following the Child Protection conference held that day, Mr Jones, Independent Chair, wrote to Mr Ahmad recording the decision that Alia's name should be removed from the Child Protection Register and recording the following recommendations:
"1. In the event of Mr & Mrs Ahmad contemplating living together Mr Ahmad will immediately inform the Probation Service who will immediately inform Social Services. Given such information Social Services will undertake a Risk Assessment and give consideration to convening a Child Protection Conference.
2. Probation Service to continue to supervise Mr Ahmad in accordance with National Probation Standards."
There is no support in either of those documents or in the minutes of the conference held on 9 June 2003 that it was for Mrs Ahmad thereafter to decide on the extent of contact between her husband and her daughter or that the First or Second Defendant had authorised contact beyond that recorded in the letter of 14 January 2003.
"Mr Ahmad has always fully co-operated with Probation. He abided by the restriction that he could only have fortnightly contact with his daughter with his wife to supervise."
There was, it was stated, only one occasion in three years when he had seen his daughter on more than one occasion in a fortnight and that was when he had spoken to his Probation Officer and "genuinely believed that she was allowing him to do this". Plainly, as the Claimant now accepts, these representations are not correct: he saw Alia more frequently. In his witness statement dated 16 July 2010, made in response to the Defendants' present applications, he said:
"Towards the end of 2004, I was seeing my daughter and wife two or three times a week." (para 13).
In fact on 15 December 2004 the Claimant told his Probation Officer that he sees his family about three or four times a week and that "he is allowed to see them whenever he wants". On 16 August 2006 he told Ms Joseph that contact with his family "had been granted after Social Services and independent psychiatric assessments". There is no evidence that this extended contact was authorised by the First Defendant. Indeed the First Defendant had no direct contact with the Claimant after June 2003 when Alia's name was taken off the Child Protection Register. Whilst the Second Defendant was aware from what the Claimant told his Probation Officer of some of the extent of the increased contact, the First Defendant did not know about it. The Second Defendant did not know that that contact had not been authorised by the First Defendant. Further, the Second Defendant did not know about the overnight staying contact.
(ii) Misfeasance
"… is where a public officer acts knowing that he has no power to do the act complained of and that the act will probably injure the plaintiff. It involves bad faith in as much as the public officer does not have an honest belief that his act is lawful."
In this second form the claimant has to prove that the public officer acts knowing that he has no power to do the act complained of or with reckless indifference as to the lack of such power and that the act will probably injure the claimant.
(iii) Article 8
(2) Claim against the Third Defendant
(i) False imprisonment
"The Secretary of State may revoke the licence of any life prisoner and recall him to prison without a recommendation by the Parole Board, where it appears to him that it is expedient in the public interest to recall that person before such a recommendation is practicable."
This power was exercised in the present case based upon risk assessments and factual information provided by the Second Defendant. PSO4700 states that it is the responsibility of "the supervising Probation Area to take into account the extent that the licensee's behaviour presents a risk of sexual or violent harm to others, regardless of the type of index offence for which he or she was originally convicted" when recommending recall.
"In the present case therefore although there might be a real prospect of showing that the failure of the Parole Board to consider the reference of his recall speedily and in accordance with fair procedures was unlawful this would not have the consequence that there was unlawful detention. It is clear that the Claimant was lawfully detained in prison by the Secretary of State under the provisions of section 39 of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 which provided that that detention was pursuant to his original sentence; it did not require a review by the Parole Board for that detention to be authorised. Nor would any unlawful action by the Parole Board through its delay in dealing with the review of his recall render the detention itself unlawful; the detention remained lawful under section 39(6). It would only be if the delay were to become of a considerable magnitude that a stage might be reached were it might become possible to mount an argument that the detention had in consequence become unlawful under Article 5(1), despite the clear provisions of section 39(6) referable to a determinate sentence." (para 28)
"The prisoner who has been recalled to prison is lawfully detained pursuant to his original sentence. The recall may be legally defective but unless and until the Administrative Court quashes the recall the imprisonment of the prisoner is lawful."
Moreover the circumstances in which the Administrative Court will contemplate quashing a decision to recall are extremely limited. In R (Biggs) v SSHD [2002] EWHC 1012 (Admin) Richards J said:
"24. I agree that it will generally be inappropriate to challenge a recall decision of this kind on Wednesbury grounds. One is concerned here with an emergency procedure, involving the exercise of an extremely broad discretion by the Secretary of State.
…
33. In my judgment, if the court is to assess the rationality of a recall decision of this kind, it is essential to have due regard to the context and to focus attention on the actual information available to the decision maker. … If the Sentence Enforcement Unit is presented with information suggesting that there is cause for concern, a decision to recall immediately and to allow matters to be examined fully by the Parole Board after recall, without probing far into the factual background before reaching a decision, cannot sensibly be regarded as an irrational response."
In R (Hare) v SSHD [2003] EWHC 3336 (Admin) Elias J considered whether there is an obligation on the Secretary of State to go behind the information that is given to him in the probation reports. He said at para 7:
"The Secretary of State here is acting pursuant to a power to recall somebody where he considers it expedient in the public interest that that should be done. I do not see, in those circumstances, that he must, prior to the exercise of that power, satisfy himself that the information that he has been provided with by the Probation Service is correct."
(ii) Article 5
"Even … when an Article 5(4) hearing or decision is delayed, the antecedent period of detention is not to be regarded as unlawful. In short, unlawful detention is one thing, violation of the prisoner's rights under Article 5(4) quite another." (See also Lord Woolf CJ at paras 61-62).
In R (Hirst) v SSHD [2006] 1 WLR 3083 Sir Igor Judge P at paras 18-19 and 21 endorsed this view. At para 19 he said:
"In our judgment this Claimant's recall was justified in law by the link between the discretionary sentence of life imprisonment imposed following his conviction for manslaughter and his behaviour during the short period while he was living in the community on licence. This gave rise to realistic concerns for public safety."
In the present case there was the "link" between the murder of the Claimant's eldest daughter and the legitimate concerns for the safety of his younger daughter which justified in law his recall.
(iii) Article 8
Extension of time
The merits
The first limb
"52. …the remedy of damages generally plays a less prominent role in actions based on breaches of the articles of the Convention, than in actions based on breaches of private law obligations where, more often than not, the only remedy claimed is damages.
53. Where an infringement of an individual's human rights has occurred, the concern will usually be to bring the infringement to an end and any question of compensation will be of secondary, if any, importance."
The remedy has to be "just and appropriate" and "necessary" to afford "just satisfaction". (Anufrijeva, per Lord Woolf CJ at para 66, and see Greenfield, per Lord Bingham at para 9).
The second limb
Claim against the Fourth Defendant
"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 his detention is not lawful."
"These demonstrate the reasons for the delays in the hearings and the letter of 2 July 2007 demonstrates that the Chairman of the Parole Board took active steps to chase up the previous directions in advance of the hearing and notes that at the hearing on 29 June 2007, a significant amount of material was produced by the Third Defendant which had not previously been made available to the Parole Board (totalling 120 pages) in circumstances which precluded the hearing from going ahead. That letter also shows the necessary report from the Second Defendant was not produced to the Parole Board until the day of the hearing in circumstances which led to its Assistant Chief Officer to apologise for the failures to provide information in a timely fashion."
"20. The way the Parole Board conducts itself must meet the requirement of procedural fairness. But, as the Grand Chamber said in A and others v United Kingdom, para 203, this requirement does not impose a uniform, unvarying standard to be applied irrespective of the context, facts and circumstances. This suggests that it is a matter for the judgment of the Parole Board to decide what information it needs to make its assessment and on the timetable it should adopt for conducting its review. …
21. … Article 5(4) requires that a system must be in place for making that assessment at reasonable intervals which meets the requirement of procedural fairness. How that system works in practice in any given case is a matter for the Parole Board itself to determine. It is open to it to decide how much information it needs, to conclude that for whatever reason the information that is available for the time being is inadequate and set its own timetable for the information that it needs to be made available. It is entitled to expect co-operation from those who are responsible for the management of the sentence in meeting its requirements. But a failure to meet them does not of itself mean that there will be a breach of Article 5(4). As in the case of Article 5(1)(a), it will only be if the system which the statutes have laid down breaks down entirely because the Parole Board is denied the information that it needs for such a long period that continued detention has become arbitrary that the guarantee that Article 5(4) provides will be violated and the prisoner will be entitled to remedy in damages."
(See also In Re Doherty [2008] UKHL 33, per Lord Carswell at paras 30-32 and 35).
"… I have no doubt that to wait for 55 working days or eleven weeks, nearly three months (and in fact in this particular case over three months), is prima facie not to provide a hearing speedily. Such a delay requires justification."
In the present case there was a delay of about ten months. Plainly it was a long delay. However the Claimant accepts that the hearings of 20 December 2006 and 29 June 2007 could not go ahead because of the failure by authorities other than the Fourth Defendant to provide material reports and documents (see paras 98-100 of the AP of C).
i) The Third Defendant referred the Claimant's recall to the Fourth Defendant in October 2006.
ii) In November 2006 the Panel Chairman set a hearing date for 20 December 2006 and gave detailed directions for the hearing on that date.
iii) The multi-disciplinary report that was necessary for the hearing could not be prepared when it was discovered in early December 2006 that the Claimant's family were in Pakistan. The directions that had been made prior to the hearing had not been complied with and the home probation officer was unavailable to attend the hearing on the day.
iv) The Second Defendant was not able to meet with the Claimant's family until the end of January 2007.
v) In January 2007 the Fourth Defendant took a case management decision that the hearing would take place in May 2007 and so informed the Claimant by letter dated 23 January 2007. This date was subsequently changed to June 2007 because Ms Johnson, the Probation Officer, had not completed her report by 14 May 2007.
vi) The Fourth Defendant's documents entitled "Dossier of Recall Papers for the Parole Board" relating to the Claimant, which include the Second Defendant's logs, make clear that more time was required to complete the multi-disciplinary report. Further time was needed after the appointment with the Claimant's family to prepare the necessary report, including obtaining the views of Mr Dhother of the Metropolitan Police which was still outstanding in April 2007. On 2 April 2007 there was a MAPPA review and on 14 May 2007 there was a further MAPPA meeting.
vii) On 31 May 2007 the Chairman of the Panel gave directions for the hearing which read: "Please chase the directions given by Judge Thornton last year and which had not been complied with on 20 December, resulting in a deferral on that date. Once this further information is to hand, I shall give further directions as to witness attendance."
viii) On 27 June 2007, having heard nothing, the Chairman sent an urgent e-mail to the Secretariat. On 28 June the Chairman was told that a report from the Home Probation Officer would be available at the hearing; that the Home Probation Officer and her Assistant Chief Officer would be in attendance.
ix) At the hearing on 29 June supervision logs and contact sheets including information relevant to an assessment of risk, amounting to a further 120 pages, were disclosed which made it impractical for the hearing to go ahead. The Panel was also presented at the hearing with an eight-page report from Ms Johnson, the Home Probation Officer, dated 26 June 2007. In these circumstances neither the representative for the Third Defendant nor the Claimant's counsel opposed a deferral of the hearing. Directions were given by the Panel as to the attendance of witnesses and the provision of reports in advance of the hearing.
x) The Parole Board hearing took place on 10 August 2007.
Summary
i) The Claimant's application to re-amend the Claim Form and, so far as is necessary, for an extension of time under HRA s.7 in respect of Article 8 claims against the First and Third Defendants, be allowed.
ii) The Claimant's application to amend the Particulars of Claim in the terms set out in the draft Amended Particulars of Claim be allowed, save for that part of the application which relates to the addition of a new cause of action in negligence against the Third Defendant which is to be adjourned for 21 days after judgment is handed down in order for the Claimant to decide whether to proceed with the application in the same or an amended form.
iii) All claims against the First, Second, Third and Fourth Defendants to be struck out, save for that part of the claim against the Third Defendant which relates to the period from 24-31 August 2007.
I shall hear submissions from the parties as to the precise terms of the order I should make and as to costs, if the parties do not reach agreement on these matters.