H397
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Fox -v- Judge Mahon & ors [2014] IEHC 397 (24 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2014/H397.html Cite as: [2014] IEHC 397 |
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Judgment Title: Fox -v- Judge Mahon & ors Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 397 High Court Record Number: 2013 938 JR Date of Delivery: 24/07/2014 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Baker J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 397 THE HIGH COURT [2013 No. 938 J.R.] BETWEEN ANTHONY FOX APPLICANT AND
JUDGE ALAN MAHON, JUDGE MARY FAHERTY AND JUDGE GERALD KEYES, MEMBERS OF THE TRIBUNAL OF INQUIRY INTO CERTAIN PLANNING MATTERS AND PAYMENTS RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Ms. Justice Baker delivered on the 24th day of July, 2014 1. This judicial review is a challenge by the applicant to the decision of the respondent, made on 31st October, 2013, that the applicant failed to co-operate with the Tribunal and/or knowingly gave false and/or misleading evidence to the Tribunal. 2. On the 24th day of July, I delivered judgment in a related case of Chawke v. Judge Alan Mahon & Ors [2013 No. 299 J.R.] where somewhat similar, but not identical, matters arose for consideration. Those two cases were not heard sequentially and there was some time between the hearings, the above case having been heard by me first. The applicant in each case had different legal representation, but the respondent was represented by the same counsel. Some common factors arise. 3. The Tribunal of Inquiry into Certain Planning Matters and Payments, ("the Tribunal ") was established by instrument of the Minister for the Environment and Local Government on 4th November 1997, to enquire into certain alleged payments to politicians or others with a decision making role in planning matters. The Terms of Reference of the Tribunal were amended by various instruments between then and 3rd December, 2004, and inter alia, required the Tribunal to inquire into and make findings and recommendations in regard to the identity of all recipients of payments made to political parties or members of either House of the Oireachtas or members or officials of the Dublin local authorities or other public officials named, and to inquire whether the persons so receiving the monies were influenced directly or indirectly by the offer or receipt of any such payments or benefits. Paragraph C (b) of the Tribunal's Terms of Reference enable the Chairperson of the Tribunal to make decisions relating to applications for costs by individual parties and these applications were made and considered after the final Report was published on 22nd March, 2012. 4. The evidence of Mr. Fox was taken in respect of several of the modules of the Tribunal's hearings. The Tribunal found as a fact in its final Report that the applicant had received money from Mr. Frank Dunlop and that such payments were improper and/or corrupt payments. Mr. Fox gave sworn evidence to the Tribunal in the course of ten separate modules in which the Tribunal was seeking to establish whether the money was solicited by and/or paid to elected Dublin County Councillors in the course of the consideration of certain matters relating to rezoning of certain lands in County Dublin. Mr. Fox was an elected Councillor, and to that extent, was not merely a witness for the purposes of the Tribunal's inquiry, but was himself identified by Mr. Dunlop as a person who had received money in return for his vote in the rezoning of identified land. The evidence given by Mr. Dunlop was contested by the applicant who gave evidence over numerous days. Findings in ten of the eleven modules were made by the Tribunal that payments were made to the applicant by Mr. Dunlop and that these payments were corrupt. 5. The Tribunal having published its substantive Report, then invited submissions in relation to costs, and submissions were delivered by the applicant on 15th May, 2012. The respondent communicated on 31st October, 2013, its finding that the applicant had not co-operated with the Tribunal in relation to certain matters identified in ten separate chapters of the report. 6. It is that finding that is challenged in this application. The applicant also sought a declaration that the findings of the respondent were ultra vires the power of the respondent, but that ground was not argued before me. The basis of the challenge and the response 8. The respondents argue that the Tribunal had regard to the fact that false evidence was given by Mr Fox during the course of its hearings, and that in coming to its decision it was entitled to have regard to the fact that the evidence he gave was expressly contradicted by evidence from other witnesses whose evidence was preferred by the Tribunal. The power to award costs
(a) of any person appearing before the tribunal by counsel or solicitor, as taxed by a Taxing Master of the High Court, shall be paid to the person by any other person named in the order; (b) incurred by the tribunal, as taxed as aforesaid, shall be paid to the Minister for Finance by any other person named in the order. " 10. The jurisdiction of Tribunals of Inquiry in respect of costs has been considered in a number of cases, from which it is clear that the decision to award costs is one which must be separated from the substantive decisions of the Tribunal itself. This finds reflection in the amended statutory provisions. The clear statement of McCarthy J. in Goodman v. Hamilton, sets out the different process or decision making activities involved in the making of findings by a Tribunal on the one part, and its determination on costs on the other, at p. 605:-
Sequence of events 13. The Tribunal identified that the basis of its decision was the review of the evidence given by Mr. Fox as part of the identified modules, and emphatic and repeated denials by Mr. Fox that he had sought money from or received money from Mr. Dunlop. It noted that these denials were made in circumstances where Mr Fox's evidence was based on his own personal knowledge and recollection and the absence of any claimed lack of recollection because of the passage of time. The Tribunal then identified its findings as follows:
14. Following the dicta of McCarthy J. in Goodman v. Hamilton, approved by the Supreme Court in Murphy v. Flood, the Tribunal may not make its decision based on its substantive findings. If it can be shown that the finding of knowing untruth against Mr. Fox was based on its findings of fact that he received corrupt payments and that his denials of such receipt were false, the Tribunal will have erred in the way identified by Hardiman J. in Murphy v. Flood and McCarthy J. in Goodman v. Hamilton. The Tribunal's findings which support its decision on non-cooperation must be based on findings that it comes to as to the conduct of a person and not on its primary findings. The status of Mr. Fox 16. His evidence was rejected and he made no challenge to the findings of the Tribunal. The process of analysis carried out by the Tribunal
(b) It found that he was motivated in the giving of this evidence by a desire to frustrate or hinder the Tribunal in its inquiries. (c) It found as a result that the applicant had not co-operated with the Tribunal in the manner envisaged by the statutory provisions.
Discussion and conclusion 21. In Murphy v. Flood, the Tribunal had fallen into error in rejecting the plaintiff's costs application by virtue of the "serious findings of corruption in its substantive report" and as the Supreme Court found that it was not possible to sever these findings from other findings the decision was flawed in its entirety. As Hardiman J. said, at para. 222, the order refusing costs must fall since:-
23. One might rationally ask what elements of a hearing could lead a Tribunal to a finding of knowing untruth if the elements did not include, or possibly even substantially be composed of, the findings and analysis with regard to the credibility of witnesses. Indeed, the dicta of Geoghegan J. in Haughey v. Moriarty clearly suggests that lack of co operation could include the adducing of deliberately false evidence. The Tribunal did not, in my view, make the finding of non-cooperation based in any way on the finding that Mr. Fox had been in receipt of corrupt payments, but on its finding as to the veracity of the evidence and the balance of that evidence against other evidence adduced to it. The substantive finding of the Tribunal was that Mr Fox received corrupt payments. The decision challenged before me was not based on findings on the substantive matter of the Tribunal but on findings of conduct, intention or the reason why evidence was given. 24. For that reason it seems to me the Tribunal did not fall into error and while it did come to its conclusion on non-cooperation from certain findings of credibility contained in the substantive Report, its conclusion was not based on its substantive findings on the subject matter of the Tribunal, the corrupt payments found to have been received by Mr Fox, but its actual and analysed findings that Mr. Fox's evidence was to be disbelieved. 25. In the circumstances, I hold that the applicant is not entitled to the order sought.
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