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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> O. A. & Ors -v- MJELR [2011] IEHC 78 (28 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H78.html Cite as: [2011] IEHC 78 |
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Judgment Title: O. A. & Ors -v- MJELR Composition of Court: Judgment by: Clark J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 78 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW 2009 348 JR BETWEEN O. O. O-A, A. O-A, A. O-A (A MINOR), N. M. A. O-A (A MINOR) AND S. O. S. O-A (A MINOR, SUING BY THEIR NEXT FRIEND AND FATHER O. O. O-A) APPLICANTS AND
THE MINISTER FOR JUSTICE, EQUALITY AND LAW REFORM RESPONDENT JUDGMENT OF MS JUSTICE M. H. CLARK, delivered on the 28th day of January 2011 1. The applicants in this case are a family comprising a father (O), mother (A) and three children (A, N and S). The father, mother and middle child are nationals of Nigeria, while the two other children are citizens of Ireland. The family challenges the respondent Minister’s decision to make a deportation order against the father, whose applications for refugee status and leave to remain in Ireland have been rejected. 2. Facts and legal issues similar to those raised in this case were argued and determined in Alli (a minor) v. Minister for Justice [2009] IEHC 595, (Unreported, High Court, Clark J., 2nd December, 2009) (‘Alli’) and Asibor (a minor) v. Minister for Justice & Ors. [2009] IEHC 594, (Unreported, High Court, Clark J., 2nd December, 2009) (‘Asibor’), which were heard together as test cases. The grounds on which leave was granted in those two cases are identical to the grounds pleaded in this case and in approximately 100 other similar cases where deportation orders were stayed pending the decisions in Alli and Asibor. 3. The primary issue to be determined in Alli and Asibor was whether the Minister’s use of the term “insurmountable obstacles” in his assessment of the reasonableness of the deportation of one parent from the State, where the other members of the family were lawfully resident, was the incorrect standard. A further issue for determination was how the Minister should have considered the proportionality of the effect of the father’s deportation on the family. This Court found that the phrase “insurmountable obstacles”, as used in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (‘ECtHR’) and adopted by the Minister, is analogous to a test of reasonableness and is the appropriate test when considering whether or not a family can be expected to join a deportee in his country of origin and to maintain a family life there. 4. It would, therefore, appear that the legal principles determined in those cases would be binding on the applicants in this current challenge. However, the applicants urge the Court that the decision in Alli and Asibor was wrongly decided and that the legal landscape has changed since the decision of the Supreme Court in Meadows v. The Minister for Justice [2010] IESC 3, (Unreported, Supreme Court, 21st January, 2010) (‘Meadows’). In particular, it is argued that proportionality is now an issue which must be addressed by the Court when judicially reviewing the lawfulness of any decision which affects fundamental rights. It was submitted that had the Meadows decision been available to this Court, Alli and Asibor would have been differently decided. It was argued that those decisions cannot now stand as the law has fundamentally changed. This new argument has resulted in many of the “insurmountable obstacles” cases being further adjourned pending the determination in this case. 5. The substantive hearing in the within proceedings took place on the 29th and 30th June and the 1st July, 2010. Mr John Finlay S.C., with Ms Sarah Walsh B.L., appeared for the applicants and Ms Sara Moorhead S.C., with Ms Helen Callanan B.L., appeared for the Minister. Further affidavits were filed in late July and mid-December, 2010 and further submissions on the content of the affidavits were also heard. Background 7. In September, 2006 the mother took up part-time employment at a large retail outlet and in December of that year her husband, the first applicant (who will be described as “the father”), entered the State illegally and then applied for asylum. His son was almost three years old at that time. His application for refugee status was refused. In August, 2007 the couple’s second child, a daughter S (the fifth applicant), was born and in early 2009, the couple’s third child N, a second daughter (the fourth applicant), was born. Like her brother, the younger daughter N is a citizen of Ireland by reason of the duration of her mother’s lawful residence in the State at the time of N’s birth. Her older sister S is a citizen of Nigeria as, at the time of her birth, her mother had not reached the requisite period of lawful residence to obtain citizenship for S. All three children have lived in this State since their birth. 8. Thus it can be seen that the applicants’ case shares features common to other claims made by the foreign-national fathers of citizen children born to their wives or partners who had entered the State as asylum seekers before or during 2004 and shortly afterwards gave birth. The father in this case was not with his wife when she gave birth to their oldest child, nor did he live with or share in the rearing of his son for almost three years and, like some 3500 other foreign-national fathers, he was clearly outside the terms of the IBC/05 scheme. 9. A brief record of the father’s applications to the Minister is as follows. The negative decision of his appeal before the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (‘RAT’) was notified to him in December, 2007. He applied for residency in December, 2007. While awaiting a decision on that application, he was informed in March, 2008 that the Minister had declined to grant him refugee status and proposed to deport him. In April, 2008 he made leave to remain and subsidiary protection applications. In May, 2008 the Minister responded to his residency application, noting that the father fell outside of the IBC/05 scheme. In reply, the father made updated representations in support of his leave to remain and subsidiary protection applications. In December, 2008 he withdrew his subsidiary protection application and made additional representations in support of the leave to remain application. In January, 2009 the couple’s third child was born and her birth certificate was furnished to the Minister. The Minister’s decision to make a deportation order against the father issued to him in March, 2009. The residency application
13. The Minister’s office acknowledged receipt of the application for residency in February, 2008 and by letter dated the 21st May, 2008, the applicant father was informed that:-
15. In reply, in May, 2008, the father made additional representations in support of the leave to remain and subsidiary protection made in March, 2008. The substance of those representations is discussed below. The leave to remain application under s. 3(6) 17. The letter of application sent in April, 2008 repeated many of the submissions made in the application for residency. The testimonials furnished with the residency application were again forwarded to the Minister, along with an additional letter from the playschool, certificates from the GP indicating that the mother and son were being treated for asthma and letters from the family’s landlords and the mother’s employers. No country of origin information (‘COI’) was furnished at that stage. The subsidiary protection application 19. The Minister acknowledged receipt of the subsidiary protection application on the 8th April, 2008. Additional representations
• A US Department of State Report 2007 (released 2008); • A 2006 Amnesty International Report “Rape – the Silent Weapon” on Nigeria; • CEDAW Concluding Observations 2004; • A US Department of State Report March 2008; • A 2006 Human Rights Watch report entitled “They Do Not Own This Place: Government Discrimination against Non-Indigenes in Nigeria”, • A UN report on the Conclusion Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination dated the 1st November 2005; • A US Department of State Report 2007; • The 2006 Human Rights Watch report “Criminal politics …” relied upon previously; and • A Human Rights Watch World Report of 2008.
The enclosed country reports show that the Nigerian state will fail to provide for the needs of our client’s Irish citizen son and his daughter. The reports show a failure by the Nigerian state to protect the rights of children in general and a pattern of violence and discrimination against women. The reports also show a consistent pattern of general human rights violations by state and non-state actors and endemic corruption. All of this is clearly relevant to the assessment of whether the interference of the rights of our client’s family which comprise an Irish citizen occasioned by our client’s deportation would be proportionate and necessary in a democratic society.”
26. Receipt of the additional representations was acknowledged by the Minister by letter dated the 16th December, 2008. In February, 2009 the Minister’s agents followed up on those representations, requesting a copy of the birth certificate of the newborn child, which was provided by return post and receipt was again acknowledged by the Minister. The Minister’s impugned decision 28. Before making the said recommendation, the Minister’s agents examined the applicant father’s file and the submissions made on his behalf. The departmental analysis memorandum (“examination of file”) runs to 20 pages with more than half of that document taken up with information on general conditions in Nigeria and some specific information on a named organisation relevant to any risk of refoulement to the father if he were to be deported to Nigeria. The s. 3(6) consideration 30. The facts of the father’s two year residence in the State and his parentage of three children born here, including his two citizen children, were recorded as was his wife’s stated need to have her husband available to help her with the new baby who had been delivered by caesarean section. The representations made on the father’s behalf and all the testimonials and supportive letters were all noted. However, no reference was made to the receipt of the eight COI reports furnished with the updated leave to remain submissions in June, 2008 or to any of the extracts from that COI relating to the treatment of women and children in Nigeria. The Minister’s agents also did not address the claimed effect of the deportation on the family, apart from commenting that “Greg O’Neill Solicitors submitted that the Constitutional rights of their client’s Irish citizen child would also be infringed by the return of their client to Nigeria.” The s. 5 consideration The conclusions made in the examination of file 33. The Minister’s officer examining the file weighed up the competing interests of, on the one hand, the difficulties which would be generated by severing family ties which the deportation of the father would bring and, on the other, the State’s rights to maintain immigration control. The officer concluded that the children (then 5, 4 and newborn) were of an adaptable age, insofar as two of them were too young to have commenced their primary education. If they were to move with their parents to live in Nigeria they could integrate into society there and all three were entitled to Nigerian citizenship. Although the father expressed the wish to perform his parental responsibilities to his children in Ireland, the jurisprudence of the ECtHR indicates that the Minister is not obliged to respect that choice. It was concluded that there is nothing to suggest that there are any insurmountable obstacles to the family being able to establish family life in Nigeria. 34. The officer considered the actual facts on the ground found to weigh against permitting the father to remain with his family in Ireland. Those facts were stated to include the unlikelihood of his obtaining employment in the current economic climate; the impact on the health and welfare systems to the granting permission to the father to remain in Ireland and how such a decision may lead to similar decisions in other cases. As in many other similar cases, it was concluded that if “there is no less restrictive process available [than deportation] which would achieve the legitimate aim of the State to maintain control of its own borders and operate a regulated system for control processing and monitoring of non-national persons in the State” and this was stated to constitute a substantial reason associated with the common good which required the deportation of the father. Examination of the constitutional rights of the two citizen children 36. In support of this reasoning, the examining officer relied on the Supreme Court decision in A.O. and D.L. v. The Minister for Justice [2003] 1 I.R. 1) (‘A.O. and D.L’) where it was held that the constitutional rights of a citizen child do not include an automatic right to have his or her foreign-national parent or family members reside in Ireland. While the Minister was obliged to consider each case on its individual merits, he was entitled to take account of the consequences of allowing a particular applicant to remain in the State, which would inevitably lead to similar decisions in other cases. It was stated at p. 2 relying on a passage of Finlay CJ in Fajujonu v. The Minister for Justice [1990] 2 I.R.
38. The Minister then accepted that, notwithstanding this family’s strongly stated desire to remain here where two of the children enjoy constitutional rights to live and to receive an education, the rights of the State prevailed as there were no insurmountable obstacles to their moving to Nigeria to maintain family life with their father. Although extensive examination of conditions in Nigeria as found in COI reports was referred to in the S.5 examination, no such examination occurred in relation to conditions in Nigeria for the citizen children.
The Issues in the Case
(ii) The analysis contained in the record of the Minister’s decision did not reflect the principles laid down in the Supreme Court in the case of Oguekwe and in particular did not identify a substantial reason which required the deportation of the first named applicant with sufficient clarity but rather used a formula of words and did not sufficiently weigh and consider facts relevant to the citizen children and the family unit; and (iii) The decision to deport the first named applicant was not proportionate or reasonable. (A) Failure to recite that submissions were considered 42. It should be observed that the mother here, unlike the mothers in Alli and Asibor, never expressed an intention to remain in Ireland with her family if her husband were to be deported. She did state in a letter to the Minister that to remove the father would have a devastating effect on his children, but it is not clear whether she meant that this effect would arise if they had to live without him in Ireland or if they had to move to Nigeria. The s. 3 examination contained a formulaic consideration of the possibility that the children would stay behind in Ireland. The observation was made that, notwithstanding his parental duties and obligations, the father did not join the mother and their son in Ireland until 2006 and that his family existed without him during that time. It was concluded that if the mother chose to remain in Ireland with her children, the impact on the family would be less than if her husband had been with the family for a much longer time. The fact that two further children had been born during the two years that the father had been in the State, that all three children had lived all their lives in Ireland and that although very young, their father was present and played a nurturing role during the entirety of the two younger children’s lives was not mentioned. 43. Returning to the actual submissions on conditions in Nigeria, the overwhelming thrust of the submissions made and the extracts quoted from the reports furnished to the Minister was that Nigeria is a country where citizens, and especially women, do not enjoy the same human rights guarantees or opportunities in life as they do here and that the high incidence of rape and domestic violence would make it unreasonable for the family who had been living in Ireland for a period of over five years to relocate there. The submissions were undoubtedly directed to the relocation of the family to Nigeria if the father were to be deported. 44. The extracts upon which the applicants’ submissions focused are familiar to this Court as the source COI reports are widely relied upon in leave to remain applications. It must be assumed that they are also extremely well known to the Minister, who frequently refers to the same reports. Many of the eight reports submitted lacked relevance to the facts pertaining to this middle class, Christian Yoruba family who have never claimed to be affected by ethnic, tribal or religious conflict, nor do they have any asserted connection with the violence prevalent in the oil producing Delta region. The report on the treatment of non-indigenes is irrelevant in its entirety given that – as was noted by the examining officer – the two Irish citizen children can clearly trace their roots to their parents’ communities in Nigeria and are entitled to Nigerian citizenship in accordance with the Nigerian Constitution. Further, no submission was made associating the difficulties relating to problems in the field of employment for women with the mother’s asserted history of working as a banker in Lagos, nor did the mother put forward any personal account of discrimination or sexual harassment in her employment or workplace before she came to Ireland. Similarly, the applicants’ submissions made no attempt to relate the threat of domestic violence to this couple who submitted that they were a happily married couple. These observations by the Court were not matters which were noted either expressly or by implication by the examining officer. 45. Counsel for the applicants argues that the s. 3(6) submissions directed the Minister towards the treatment of women and children in Nigeria, which is relevant to this family, two of whom are Irish citizens. 46. Counsel for the respondent argues that the applicants failed to identify how any particular COI would or could have made a difference to the consideration of this family’s circumstances under s. 3(6). She accepts that the Minister is obliged to consider any information furnished in a general way, but argues that it would be unduly onerous on the Minister if he were expected to recite and comment on all the COI furnished when, as in this case, it had no specific reference to the applicant or his family. She accepts that simply because the examining officer stated at the close that the Minister had weighed all of the factors outlined above in relation to the family did not in itself make it so. However, she reminds the Court that Ms. Laurena Gradwell, an Assistant Principal Officer in the Minister’s office who swore the affidavit on his behalf, has sworn that all information, submissions and arguments made were considered by the Minister. Ms. Gradwell averred that:-
Decision 49. While the father in this case may have fallen into the same trap, he and later the mother herself did make some attempt to inform the Minister, albeit in a very generalised fashion, that conditions in Nigeria were so bad that it would be a breach of their citizen children’s constitutional rights for them to be expected to go there when they had known no other life but one in Ireland. That life in Ireland allowed the mother to work and attend courses to advance herself, where she and her children enjoyed a life free of sexual discrimination and sexual violence and where attitudes to domestic violence were less tolerant than in Nigeria. In particular, it was asserted on a number of occasions that the deportation of the father would be “an unwarranted and unjustified and disproportionate interference with the private and family life of the family unit and the marriage of our client and his wife who has residency here.” 50. Having received those representations, the Minister was obliged under the terms of s. 3(6) (i) of the Immigration Act 1999 to have regard to them. The question is how far he has to go to demonstrate that regard. If all the submissions made had to be summarised or listed, the decision-making process would become intolerably difficult and the lengthy recitations of those submissions would render decisions turgid in the extreme. The real issue clearly does not lie in the recitation but in whether the decision gives confidence that essential submissions were considered. The decision must be of sufficient clarity for its reasoning to be understood. It is difficult to lay down any strict guidelines as to the content and form of the decision due to the immeasurable variety of personal facts which have to be set against the varying representations and their relevance to those personal facts. 51. In Oguekwe Denham J. considered the very issue which is before this Court. The applicant father in that case had furnished a great deal of COI on education opportunities for children. Denham J. held that there was no requirement to conduct a fact-specific examination of conditions prevailing in the country where the child's parent may be deported, but that the Minister should view the situation in a general way and that this general approach would not exclude a more detailed analysis in an exceptional case. 52. In Meadows the Supreme Court considered the adequacy of the Minister’s reasoning when he determined that there was no danger of refoulement facing the applicant if she were to be returned to Nigeria. Murray C.J. held that where material is presented to the Minister on behalf of the proposed deportee in relation to the risk of refoulement, then the Minister must specifically address that issue and form his own opinion of the risk. This is notwithstanding that officers or tribunal members have, at an earlier stage in the course of the asylum application, come to a conclusion on the same claim. The majority of the Supreme Court was critical of the Minister’s decision in Meadows because the decision was couched in terms which were so vague and opaque that its underlying rationale could not be properly or reasonably deduced. Similarly, the recommendation included in the memorandum submitted to the Minister, which included the statement that “refoulement was not found to be an issue in this case”, was criticised because no reason had been provided for that conclusion. The majority found that on that basis, there was a fundamental defect in the Minister's decision. 53. In Oguekwe, Denham J. was considering submissions on education opportunities available to the Irish citizen child in Nigeria, while in Meadows the Supreme Court was dealing with submissions on country of origin conditions in the context of the absolute nature of the prohibition of refoulement under s. 5 of the Refugee Act 1996. In both instances, the underlying principles clarified by the Supreme Court related to the Minister’s decision-making process when such decisions could encroach on constitutional rights. This Court can find no reason why the same principles should not also be applied to submissions on cultural attitudes towards women and children in the country to which the family may have to move when the constitutional rights of citizens are involved. In all such instances the decision relating to prevailing conditions as they apply to fundamental rights must be reasoned so that the rationale can be properly or reasonably deduced applies. As Denham J. held in Oguekwe at p.825:-
55. While conducting his assessment of conditions in Nigeria and engaging in that balancing exercise, the Minister could have said that he considered the extracts furnished to him to have been irrelevant. He would have been entitled to refer to the State’s rights and to properly balance those rights against the children’s citizen rights in the light of the submissions made, but he failed to do so. He could have referred to the parents’ original asylum questionnaires or to other information to which he undoubtedly had access to in order to assess the fears expressed by the father as to future life in Nigeria with his wife and children. Indeed, it seems very likely that the Minister had more information than is available to the Court as, for instance, the mother’s asylum application. Obviously, the Court’s view on the extracts furnished is no substitute for the regard which the Minister should have given to the representations as it does not fall to this Court to determine the relevance or otherwise of those representations. That was for the Minister to address. 56. Applying the reasoning of Murray C.J. in Meadows to the Minister’s decision in this case, the question before the Court is whether it is possible to properly discern the rationale and basis for his determination that the constitutional rights at issue had been fully considered. The Court must answer that question in the negative because no reference was made to the submissions and no reason was expressed for disregarding them. As was noted by Fennelly J. in Meadows at para. 79: “The Minister might have had any one of a range of reasons for his decision, but the court simply does not know.” The Minister could have made it clear in his decision that he did have regard to the father’s representations, but he simply failed to do that. 57. For this reason, the decision of the Minister, which has the potential to seriously encroach on and diminish the children’s constitutional rights, is defective in failing to provide any reason for ignoring submissions made relating to the conditions in Nigeria. The decision to deport is defective and will therefore be quashed. 58. Lest this decision be taken as an inroad into the decisions in Alli and Asibor, it is necessary to reiterate that the case-law examined in those cases leaves no doubt that while constitutional rights are guaranteed from unjust attack, those rights are neither absolute nor unlimited and must sometimes yield to other conflicting rights such as the operation of a fair immigration system. 59. This concept was recognised as long ago as 1965 during a relatively peaceful time in the State’s development and long before the amendment to the Offences against the State Act 1939, the arrival of drug trafficking and organised crime, enormous economic expansion, followed by a huge rise in asylum claims as well as mass immigration and then the current economic collapse. As was held by Kenny J. in Ryan v. Attorney General [1965] IR 294 at pp. 312-313:-
(B) Meadows and proportionality 62. While extremely important, this second ground loses its significance in light of the Court’s earlier finding that the decision ought to be quashed because of the lack of clarity in the Minister’s reasoning. However, as the second issue on which the applicants concentrated in this case is relied upon by a large number of other applicants, it becomes appropriate to deal with that specific ground. 63. There were two parts to this challenge. First, there was the assertion that the Minister did not identify a “substantial reason” requiring the deportation of the father in accordance with the judgment of Denham J. in the Supreme Court in Oguekwe and second, that immigration control was not a reason of sufficient substance to outweigh the detriment that the deportation would inflict upon the applicant family now that, following the decision in Meadows, proportionality is an aspect to be considered when reviewing the reasonableness of an administrative decision. 64. The first of those two issues has already been fully thrashed out and determined in Alli and Asibor and previously in A.O. and D.L. In the former, this Court adopted the rationale of a series of decisions in the High and Supreme Courts (being Pok Sun Shum v. Ireland [1986] I.L.R.M. 593; Osheku v. Ireland [1986] I.R. 733; Fajujonu v. The Minister for Justice [1990] 2 IR 151 (‘Fajujonu’); A.O. and D.L. and Oguekwe) in holding that a “substantial reason” requiring deportation of the parent of a citizen child may include considerations relating to immigration policy. Immigration policy includes the effect on the health and welfare systems of permitting persons unlawfully in the State to remain and the question of how such a decision may lead to similar decisions in other cases. The proviso recognised in all the cases cited is that before concluding that a deportation order is necessary, reasonable or proportionate, the Minister first has to afford due and proper consideration to the constitutional and Convention rights of the citizen children and to their personal circumstances insofar as they are known to him. 65. These same principles were also considered and applied in Igiba (a minor) & Ors v. The Minister for Justice [2009] IEHC 593, (Unreported, High Court, Clark J., 2nd December, 2009) (‘Igiba’), delivered on the same day as Alli and Asibor, but argued on a later date than those cases. The decision in all three cases can be encapsulated by paragraphs 20 and 21 of Igiba which said:-
The second ground relates to the identification of a “substantial reason” which requires the deportation of the parent of an Irish citizen child. This is also a matter that was considered at length by this Court in Alli and the conclusions reached in that case apply equally in this case. As was the case in Alli and Asibor, the Minister expressly considered each of the competing rights in their fact-specific context, and he balanced those rights against those of the State. He was clearly aware of the consequences of the deportation on the citizen child, her mother and her siblings. In the circumstances, it was open to him to identify general reasons of immigration control associated with the common good as a “substantial reason” which required the deportation of Ms Igiba. Provided that he engages in a fact-specific analysis and weighs the competing interests there is no obligation on the Minister to identify an applicant-specific reason.” 67. By a quirk of fate, counsel for the respondent who appears in this case, also represented the respondent in Igiba. She relied on the decision in Osunde v. Minister for Justice [2009] IEHC 448, (Unreported, High Court, Cooke J., 14th October, 2009) (‘Osunde’) in support of her argument that the integrity of the immigration system was, in fact, a valid reason for deportation of a person who would leave behind Irish citizen family members lawfully residing in the State. She submitted that Cooke J. had noted that the Minister in Osunde had engaged in an applicant-specific analysis of all of the relevant facts and was aware of the gravity of the consequences of his deportation decision for the family. He gave reasons of substance for his decision and determined that he was satisfied that general reasons of immigration control would constitute a sufficient “substantial reason” requiring the deportation of the applicant. 68. Having reviewed the Osunde decision, the Court fears that the applicants here have fallen into error in citing background argument as the actual reasoning in Osunde, rather than addressing the rationale of the determination. Cooke J. held in refusing the relief sought that:-
53. The court does not consider that this was intended by the Supreme Court namely that the State’s rights as mentioned in item 10 of the list in the Dimbo [and Oguekwe] case could not in itself constitute a substantial reason because they were abstract reasons of a policy of a political or social nature rather than specific factors relating to the individual personality of the proposed deportee. It seems to the court that the word “substantial” is used in its sense of a reason which has substance and thus as the antonym of “insubstantial” or “inconsequential”. The very fact that such rights are enumerated at item 10 in the list demonstrates that the Supreme Court considered them capable of having such substance but that whether in any given case the State’s rights will be sufficiently substantial to outweigh the rights of the deportee and his or her family members must depend, as the court indicated, on the full factual matrix of the particular case. Thus, the State will always have a substantial and serious interest in maintaining the integrity of its borders and the effectiveness of its immigration system. But whether that consideration is sufficient to prevail over the private or family rights of particular persons depends on the specific circumstances of the case. In that sense the substantial character of the State’s reason for deporting is relative and will alter when assessed against the circumstances of the deportee and his or her family including, obviously, how long they have been in the State, what roots if any they have put down here, whether the minor children are at school and at what stage of schooling they may be and so on. 54. In this case those factors have been addressed in the analysis made by the Minister when formulating the conclusion reached in favour of making a deportation order. In the court’s judgment the reasons outlined are reasons of substance and, as such, cannot be interfered with as being unlawful or invalid. 55. The court accordingly finds that grounds A and C are not made out and the application for judicial review will therefore be refused.” 70. The substance of the applicants’ second argument was that immigration control in this case was not a reason of sufficient substance to outweigh the detriment that the deportation would inflict upon these particular applicants. The argument advanced was that the decision in Meadows, and especially the judgment of Murray C.J., had provided elucidation of the Oguekwe requirements when considering the deportation of the foreign-national parent of a citizen child, which must now pass a proportionality test in order to be considered reasonable. In particular, reliance was placed on this passage from the judgment of Murray C.J. in Meadows:-
The principle requires that the effects on or prejudice to an individual’s rights by an administrative decision be proportional to the legitimate objective or purpose of that decision. Application of the principle of proportionality is in my view a means of examining whether the decision meets the test of reasonableness.”
73. The key guidance to be derived from Meadows is not its discussion on the inclusion of the concept of proportionality in the test of reasonableness, but rather the unanimous determination by the Court that no new standard of review such as anxious scrutiny as applied in the UK forms part of Irish law. The majority determined that the test of reasonableness which has been applied since The State (Keegan) v. Stardust Victims Compensation Tribunal [1986] I.R. 642 (‘Keegan’) was adequate to provide an effective remedy in judicial review, even where the decision under review has the potential to affect a person’s fundamental rights. Fennelly J. stated in his decision at paras. 70 and 72 that:-
26. [...] I am satisfied that the test applied by Henchy J., and agreed to by all of the members of the Court, is the correct test. It should be applied in all the circumstances of each case. In a case where the decision maker has a special technical skill, such as in O’Keeffe v. An Bord Pleanála , the test should be applied strictly. In a case where fundamental rights are in issue, such rights form part of the constitutional jurisdiction of the Court in which a reasonable decision is required to be made and, if made, analysed. [...] 38. The test as stated by Henchy J. in The State (Keegan) v. Stardust Victims’ Compensation Tribunal is sufficiently general when construed broadly in relevant circumstances to be applied so that fundamental rights may be protected. 39. The term "irrational" is less relevant in that it relates to situations which are alleged to be perverse and arise less frequently in litigation. 40. The term "unreasonable" is the key, it is broader and essentially the basis of this type of scrutiny. A decision which interferes with constitutional rights, if it is to be considered reasonable, should be proportionate. If such an approach is not taken then the remedy may not be effective. This is relevant especially when access to the courts has been limited by the legislature.”(emphasis added)
(1) It is fundamentally at variance with reason and common sense. (2) It is indefensible for being in the teeth of plain reason and common sense. (3) Because the court is satisfied that the decision-maker has breached his obligation whereby ‘he must not flagrantly reject or disregard fundamental reason or common sense in reaching his decision.’”
81. Contrary to the extraordinary arguments made that proportionality is a new and defining principle in judicial review, the Murray C.J. explained to the contrary when he said:-
83. When Murray C.J. was reviewing previous decisions on deportation, reasonableness and proportionality, he distinguished between cases under s. 3 of the Act of 1999 involving humanitarian considerations where the Minister enjoys a broad discretion, contrasted with the quite different cases involving s. 5 of the Refugee Act 1996 and non-refoulement. He then referred to his previous decision in A.O. and D.L. where he held that “in deciding whether there is such good and sufficient reason in the interests of the common good for deporting the non national parents the Minister should ensure that his decision to deport, in the circumstances of the case is not disproportionate to the ends sought to be achieved.” He recalled that on the particular facts in that case, he had said:-
87. He also took the opportunity in Meadows to consider the Minister’s functions under s. 3 of the Act of 1999. He was of the opinion that the Minister had been conferred with a broad discretion in that regard. The Minister’s function was to balance the personal circumstances and other matters referred to in s. 3(6) with the common good and public policy, including the integrity of the asylum system. He found that even if the balance favoured the applicant, the Minister is not bound to accede to a request for leave to remain since he has to balance any humanitarian considerations on file with broader public policy considerations which may not be personal to the person concerned. This aspect of the Chief Justice’s decision in Meadows is frequently overlooked. It affirms that it is the Minister who retains the discretion and not the reviewing court as it is only the Minister who has responsibility for public policy in this area and it is for him to decide where that balance lies. 88. This is surely an unequivocal statement that the law relating to the deportation of the parents of citizen children and of judicial review is unchanged. 89. The decision in Meadows cannot therefore affect the decision in Alli and Asibor where this Court held that the question of whether or not “insurmountable obstacles” exist means no more than asking whether or not it is reasonable to expect the family to move to the country of origin of the proposed deportee. Proportionality was considered by the Minister in his decision in Alli and Asibor and formed part of the judicial review grounds considered by the Court in that case. Proportionality then, and long before that, formed part of a sound evaluation of the reasonableness of an administrative decision. A decision could not be reasonable if its effect were disproportionate to the objective pursued. 90. All decisions involving the deportation of a failed asylum seeker come at the end of the asylum claim process. The Minister must, if he is made aware of the existence of a spouse and children, be fully aware that the deportation would have the effect of breaking up a family. If, notwithstanding this disruption, having fully considered all relevant submissions made to him, the Minister makes the deportation order because he is satisfied that family life can reasonably be continued with the deported parent in the receiving country, then the reason for the deportation will be proportionate to the Minister’s legitimate objective of immigration control. The very fact that a particular family can, without any great difficulty, follow the deported father is the essence of the reasonableness of the decision to deport. 91. The Minister must go a step further if there are citizen children and specifically consider the rights of those citizen children and must furnish a reasoned decision on the rights of such citizen children. 92. When balancing the State’s interests against those rights, the Minister is undoubtedly entitled to take patterns of immigration into account and to have regard to the demands made thereby on the State’s resources. This was stated by Hardiman J. in A.O and D.L. in 2003. While much has changed relating to resources since the financially happier days of 2003, no elaboration of the Minister’s current immigration policy or the specific factors relevant to the common good was set out in the consideration of the father’s file in this case. The father has stated in all of his correspondence relating to his application for leave to remain that 26,000 foreign-national parents and family members of citizen children have already been permitted to remain prior to 2005 and that he wishes to be included in this number. In the examination of file the Minister in effect says: if I make an exception for you, I may have to make exceptions for other such parents of citizen children and this will have an effect on our social welfare and health system and our immigration policies. 93. The Minister did not expand on just how large an effect on the social welfare and health systems such an exception made would have, nor did he outline what exactly his policy on immigration is or just what the “Immigration Scheme” is. The Court’s experience is that this somewhat clipped and non-expansive language is common to all such decisions. It is left to the Court to try to discern this policy or scheme from previous decisions, legislation, statutory instruments and website information. Those sources indicate a closed immigration policy to non-EU nationals, unless an entry or work visa is first obtained. For this reason the Court considered that it would be helpful if the Minister could provide figures on the extent of the number of fathers who were in the position of Mr O-A, Mr Alli and Mr Asibor who were outside of the IBC/05 scheme, who have asserted a nurturing role in the upbringing of their citizen children in the State and who relied on their children’s constitutional rights in seeking permission to remain in Ireland. 94. While it would also have been useful to know how many such fathers had sought visas to legally visit or join their families, how many had utilised the asylum system to enter the State or how many such fathers now face deportation, the Court confined its enquiries to statistics readily available on the number of fathers who have sought permission to remain in the State because of their parentage of citizen children born within the applicability of the IBC/05 scheme. 95. In this regard, the respondent furnished three affidavits. The first affidavit was sworn on the 19th May, 2006, by Ms Maura Hynes, the then officer in charge of the administration of the IBC/05 scheme. This affidavit was specifically prepared for the Oguekwe case in the Supreme Court and was exhibited in an affidavit sworn for this case by Mr Michael Flynn, an assistant principal officer who is currently in charge of the Irish Born Child Unit. These affidavits outline the problems created by the sudden influx in the 1990s of large numbers of asylum seekers, many of whom gave birth shortly after arrival in the State to children who were Irish citizens. The affidavits outlined the development of the law in this area, including the amendment to the Constitution in 2004 and the establishment of the IBC/05 scheme to deal with some 11,000 outstanding residency applications from the parents of citizen children born in Ireland before the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 2004 came into effect. 96. Mr Flynn’s affidavit discloses that, in fact, not 11,000 but 17,917 parents and approximately 15,000 siblings of Irish citizen children applied for permission to remain under the IBC/05 scheme. Originally, only 933 of those parents were refused but, ultimately, the vast majority were granted permission to remain after the test cases of Bode v. Minister for Justice [2008] 3 IR 663 and Oguekwe. The numbers of fathers who remain outside the scheme can be extrapolated from the discrepancy between the number of females to whom IBC/05 status was granted and the number of males. The number of mothers who travelled alone and gave birth to citizen children in this State without their husbands or partners is the very probable explanation for the lower number of male applicants under the scheme. It has been determined that, at a minimum, there were 2,337 identified spouses / partners outside the State at the time of the application of the IBC/05 scheme and a further 1,102 whose identity or whereabouts was not disclosed at the time of the mother’s application. Mr Flynn stated that since then, “the Department had become aware that in many of these cases, these are persons who have now declared that at all times they had a spouse / partner and some of the spouse/partners came to join them in this jurisdiction or attempted to do so.” 97. If the content of Mr Flynn’s affidavit is properly understood, then the potential number of asserted fathers of Irish citizen children born before the 1st January, 2005, and during the application of the IBC/05 scheme exceeds 3,400. This figure is the sum of 2,337 who were not with their spouses at the time the Irish citizen child was born and roughly a further 1,000 whose identity or location was not disclosed at the time the mothers applied under the IBC/05 scheme. What is not clear is whether any of these fathers have already been deported or served with a notice of an intention to deport. The breakdown was not available. 98. Mr Flynn has stated that this number of asserted fathers is a significant problem and that the effect of granting leave to remain to any one of these spouses / partners would have a significant effect on other cases. He further states that while the Minister will take account of the individual circumstances and reasons for the absence of the particular spouse / father while the IBC/05 scheme was in operation, there is still a significant cohort of persons seeking to join their spouses / partners in this jurisdiction. 99. This is the first time that the Court has been made aware of the potential number of fathers involved. Whether the Minister considers this number to be a significant number is a matter of policy for him and not one for consideration by the Court as he is undoubtedly the person with responsibility for immigration policy with its knock on effect on social, medical and education services. 100. Immigration policy in its general sense can clearly be a substantial reason for refusing leave to remain, even to fathers of citizen children. This is not to say that the facts of any particular case may not render the refusal of leave to remain unreasonable in that particular case. That has been the law since Osheku and Fajujonu. No change has been brought about by the decision in Meadows. Had the applicants been relying solely on the ground that that the law has been changed since Meadows, then the Court would have refused to grant certiorari. However, as previously stated, for different reasons this Court has held that it is not possible to be confident that the constitutional rights of the children in this case were appropriately addressed in the memorandum forwarded to the Minister or in the reasoning of the decision. Conclusion
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