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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cowling, R (on the application of) v Child Support Commissioners' Office [2008] EWHC 2306 (Admin) (17 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2306.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2306 (Admin), [2009] 1 FLR 332, [2009] Fam Law 12 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF COWLING | Claimant | |
v | ||
CHILD SUPPORT COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE | Defendant |
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Mr A Henshaw (instructed by the Department for Work and Pensions) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
NB Transcribed without the aid of all documents
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"Thank you for your letter received in this office on 24 July 2007. You have requested a copy of the file submitted to the Commissioner by the Appeal Service, although you have not said why you require a copy. You also referred to deadlines, but I do not know what deadlines you were referring to. The papers before the commissioner were the same as the bundle of documents that was before the tribunal. The only additions were the decision, the statement of reasons and the record of proceedings. Do you already have copies of these pages? If not please let me know."
The claimant responded:
"Thank you for your email. …
The deadlines I referred to are set out in your letter accompanying the decision notice. In this case there is a deadline of 1 month from the date of the decision to request a set aside. One of the grounds for set aside can be that a document that was in front of the Tribunal was not in front of the Commissioner. I have no way of knowing that all the documents in front of the Tribunal were placed before the Commissioner without seeing the file."
9. "The Commissioners' Office always obtains the tribunal's file (and not just a copy of the file) before an application for leave to appeal is considered by a Commissioner. As that is the file that will have been copied to the tribunal hearing the appeal, it is therefore extremely unlikely that any document before the tribunal will not be before the Commissioner (except that very occasionally a document handed in at a hearing is not linked to a file held at a central office).
If Mrs Cowling does not wish to make an application for the setting aside of Mr Jacobs' determination she should notify the Commissioners' Office but she need take no further action."
13. On 20 August 2007 the claimant declined to comply with that direction on the basis that it called on her to speculate about what documents might be missing and repeated her request for sight of the file. On 24 August 2007 the claimant's solicitor, Mr David Burrows, applied to the Commissioner to set aside his refusal of leave, inter alia on the basis that the claimant had not received a copy of the file. On 17 September 2007 Mr Jacobs issued a determination declining to set aside his decision to refuse leave. He said at paragraphs 6 to 9:
19. The present proceedings were issued on 12 December 2007. They seek to challenge three decisions described and dated in section 3 of the claim form as follows:
(1) 20. the refusal to give leave to appeal, 17 July 2007;
(2) 21. refusal to set aside the decision, 17 September 2007;
(3) 22. refusal and failure to disclose documents, 17 September 2007.
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"If you did make such an application the tribunal would only have jurisdiction over it if two conditions were fulfilled:
(1) a decision was made on it and (2) you would exercise your right of appeal against that decision. Those conditions were not satisfied…"
was plainly wrong in law. I am far from sure that it was wrong in law. Having been referred by Mr Henshaw to the governing statutory provisions, and to the reasons of the Tribunal on which the Commissioner was commenting, I think it likely that the Commissioner was right. However, even if he were wrong, the error seems to me to be a simple error of law of the kind which Neuberger LJ in the Sinclair case said in terms would not be sufficient to justify an application for judicial review. I can see no exceptional circumstances surrounding it, and no exceptional gravity associated with the error or its consequences, which could even arguably justify this court in intervening.