M v International Protection Appeals Tribunal & ors [2019] IEHC 867 (19 December 2019)
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THE HIGH COURT
[2019] IEHC 867
[2019 No. 372 JR]
IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 5 OF THE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS (TRAFFICKING) ACT
2000 (AS AMENDED), AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION ACT
2015
BETWEEN
M
APPLICANT
– AND –
THE INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION APPEALS TRIBUNAL, THE MINISTER FOR JUSTICE
AND EQUALITY, THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, AND IRELAND
RESPONDENTS
JUDGMENT of Mr Justice Max Barrett delivered on 19th December, 2019.
1. Mr M is a national of Albania. He is the brother/uncle of a man/boy who were murdered in
Greece by a criminal gang which allegedly has an international reach to its operations. Mr
M claims to believe that he too is at risk of being killed by the criminal gang and, as a
result, has fled to Ireland. His initial application for international protection and his
papers-only appeal to the International Protection Appeals Tribunal (“IPAT”), which was
the subject of a decision of 7th March 2019 (the “Impugned Decision”) have been
unsuccessful. The Impugned Decision is assailed in the within application on two grounds,
viz., per the statement of grounds:
“1. The Tribunal erred in law and acted in breach of natural and constitutional justice in
making fresh findings without prior notice on a papers-only appeal. [The court
notes that Ground 1 does not object to the papers-only appeal per se but to the
making of certain findings in the context of same].
2. The Tribunal acted ultra vires in accepting, considering and determining the appeal
of the decision of the…IPO…in circumstances where a lawful examination of the
Applicant’s application for international protection was not carried out by an
authorised person of the IPO.”
2. When it comes to Ground 1, the central question is whether Mr M can reasonably be
taken to have been on notice of the matters in respect of which the IPAT made adverse
conclusions. The short answer to this question is ‘Mr M can be so taken’, the court
respectfully adopting, in support of this conclusion, the lengthy ‘compare and contrast’
grid undertaken by counsel for the respondent in his written submissions which shows the
overlap between the International Protection Office (“IPO”) and IPAT decisions. Two
points of that grid were the subject of particular comment at hearing, viz. [a] the
reference to the IPAT finding that the whereabouts of the alleged aggressor was a central
issue, and [b] the reliance placed by the IPAT (in the context of credibility) on Mr M’s
apparent lack of knowledge about the gang members whom he claims to fear. As to:
[a] the issue of location was clearly ‘in play’ before the IPO and expressly considered
(see p. 355 of the pleadings);
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[b] this lack of knowledge was likewise ‘in play’ before the IPO, with the IPO expressly
making comment in this regard (see pp. 356-7 of the pleadings). Indeed, the
significance of the issue of credibility was expressly brought home by the IPAT to
Mr M in a letter of 8th April 2019 which expressly states that “the Tribunal has
noted the generic nature of your grounds of appeal. Please feel free to engage with
the specific credibility findings made by the IPO should you make any further
submission to assist the Tribunal in determining this appeal”. Surprisingly, perhaps
even astonishingly, no reply issued from or for Mr M to this letter. Mr M may regret
this now, but that does not yield the conclusion that the IPAT is somehow at fault in
proceeding as it did.
3. It will be clear from the foregoing that the court respectfully does not accept that the
IPAT erred in law and/or acted in breach of natural and constitutional justice in making
fresh findings without prior notice in the context of a papers-only appeal. The court is
mindful in this regard:
.
that, following on the judgments of, inter alia, Fennelly J. in Ezeani & Allen v.
Minister for Justice, Equality & Law Reform & Ors. [2011] IESC 23, Cooke J. in
S.U.N. v. Refugee Applications Commissioner [2013] 2 IR 555, Mac Eochaidh J. in
M.A. v. Refugee Appeals Tribunal [2015] IEHC 528 and C.N.K. v. Minister for Justice
& Equality [2016] IEHC 424, and Peart J. in B.W. v. Refugee Appeals Tribunal
[2017] IECA 296, it is clear that it is only when a decision-maker, here the IPAT,
contemplates making a finding based on an issue on which the applicant has not
had an opportunity to comment, that an obligation presents to notify the applicant
of the nature of its concern. That is not the factual matrix that presents here.
.
of the “extreme care” which Clark J. suggests in V.M. (Kenya) v. Refugee Appeals
Tribunal & Ors. [2013] IEHC 24, at para. 22, falls to be brought to bear when a
court engaged in a judicial review application in considering what was a documents-
only appeal, and respectfully considers Clark J.’s observations to be as well-founded
in the context of the current legal scheme as they were when V.M. was decided.
However, such “extreme care” does not offer a basis for finding error where there
has been none (nor, the court should note, was this suggested), and here there has
been no error.
.
that although Charleton J. observes in M.A.R.A. (Nigeria) (infant) v. Minister for
Justice & Equality [2015] 1 IR 561, at para. 16, that the Refugee Appeals Tribunal
“examine[s] afresh” the initial, appealed Refugee Applications Commissioner
decision (with the same applying in the IPAT/IPO context), that does not mean, nor
does it fall properly to be read as meaning, that an appellate body cannot consider
something entirely “afresh”, come to the same conclusion as the previous decision-
maker, and thus make no ‘fresh’ finding (in the ordinary use of the English
language).
4. When it comes to Ground 2, in truth this was not given a lot of ‘airtime’ at the hearing of
the within application, counsel for Mr M acknowledging that following the decision in I.X.
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v. The International Protection Office [2019] IEHC 21, the law at this time is against him
in this regard. That decision having been appealed to and heard by the Supreme Court,
with judgment awaited, Ground 2 is in truth something of a ‘placeholder’ argument that
may arise to be relied upon in some (if any) future appeal by Mr M of the within
judgment, depending on how the awaited judgment of the Supreme Court goes.
5. For the reasons stated above, the various reliefs sought by Mr M are respectfully refused.
6. In passing, and by way of obiter comment only, the court admits to continuing unease
that in Mr M’s grounding affidavit, as is standard, Mr M has been required to swear to his
religion, an arrangement which would appear, ostensibly, to trespass on his right to
privacy. One would have thought that, as a nation, we have endured enough of religious
wars, discrimination, persecution and killings, to have learned that it is best not to
demand of anyone, including those who come seeking international protection, that they
swear to any (if any) private religious beliefs held. It is not difficult to conceive of means
whereby the significance of an affidavit can be brought home to deponents without the
need for disclosure of the inherently private.
Result: Judgment in favour of the respondents.
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