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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Taylor v HMP Wandsworth & Ors [2009] EWHC 1020 (Admin) (15 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1020.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1020 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE BLAIR
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George Taylor |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) The Governor of HMP Wandsworth |
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(2) The Government of the United States of America |
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(3) The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondents |
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David Perry QC and Mark Weekes (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Government of the United States of America
Hugo Keith QC and Ben Watson (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Secretary of State for the Home Department
Hearing date: 27 March 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The Divisional Court's previous decision
"12. Patients with severe heart failure as Mr Taylor's have a very poor prognosis with a 50% 5 year mortality. The randomised Aldactone evaluation study (RALES) have suggested a 50% mortality within the first 3 years of the diagnosis.
13. In view of his incapacity Mr Taylor would be in danger of flying as things stand. This may be feasible only with the provision of oxygen and close monitoring during the flight.
14. Possibility of travel to the United States by boat obviously would not pose any risk from oxygen decompensation but simply the risk of being out at sea when he could be acutely unwell.
15. My other concern about deportation is about the stress that will cause in someone who has significant cardiac disease and may in fact cause his demise."
"As I mentioned in my previous reports, Mr Taylor's prognosis is poor and I would suggest he has a 50% 5 year mortality. Again I would suggest that it would be unsafe for him to travel by air and the problem with the long boat trip would be that he could run into problems mid-ocean and it would therefore not be medically advisable from my point of view."
"If one looks at the Article 8 argument here, it is essentially based upon the risk to the appellant's health as to transfer from this country to America. That risk can, as the district judge indicated, be properly moderated by the steps which are proposed by the United States Government, and I see no reason to dissent from the views of the district judge that accordingly there is no bar to his extradition based upon Article 8. In doing so, I take into account the fact that Dr Spyrou considers that there is a risk of his suffering sufficiently from stress to mean that his condition might be exacerbated. The difficulty is that that is not expressed in a way which gives any confidence that it is other than simply a cautious doctor's comment in circumstances which one can readily understand in relation to his patient. I accordingly do not consider that there is any potential problem which justifies the conclusion that the removal of the appellant would be disproportionate in Article 8 terms."
The more recent medical evidence
"I first saw this man in reception 12th June and I realised that his heart failure was risky. I put him on medical hold and made an urgent referral to cardiology at St Georges.
…
I saw him again in September and was surprised that he was still here on [sic] more ways than one. His congestive failure was much worse and I modified his new medication as suggested by St Georges ….
He was to have a defibrillating pacemaker fitted. His prognosis is very grim. He is likely to die in prison shortly. He is not fit to travel anywhere other than home.
Congestive cardiac failure is a condition with a prognosis of metastatic cancer such that hospices now take CCF patients."
Dr Butler added on 21 October that the applicant "is not fit to travel by any means including Boat".
"(1) Mr Taylor was admitted yesterday to A&E.
(2) I have been asked to deal with the question of his life expectancy in a little more detail following … the insertion of his biventricular pacemaker and his node ablation.
(3) The position is that there is a real risk that he will die within the next six months because of his extremely weak heart and the fact that his mitral valve is leaking. There is a very high probability that he will die in the next 18 months to 2 years. There is no further treatment that can be attempted.
(4) As to his fitness to travel, this will vary from day to day. There are times when he could probably survive a flight, but he could die any day. Travel by sea is not a viable alternative.
(5) As to a trial I do not foresee him surviving a trial in the United States of America. His state is very fragile and I do not think he would have the will to fight and cope with his condition. If put on trial I do not believe he would do his case full justice."
The possibility of a further application to the Secretary of State
"61. … Although section 87 provides a bar to extradition on human rights grounds when the matter is being considered by the District Judge and, correspondingly, on any appeal against his decision, the 2003 Act does not specify a breach of Convention rights as a basis for appealing against the decision of the Secretary of State. However, the Secretary of State is a public authority within the meaning of section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 and the 2003 Act does not disapply section 6. Accordingly, we accept that, in principle, there may be cases in which the Secretary of State may be susceptible to human rights challenge ….
63. In the present case Mr McKinnon has been able to raise his human rights points in this Court in the context of his appeal against the decision of the District Judge. They have failed, and in our judgment he has no separate human rights case against the Secretary of State …. We tend to the view that, in reality, the only situation in which a free-standing human rights case may lie against the Secretary of State pursuant to section 6 of the Human Rights Act is where statutory appeals against the decisions of the District Judge and the Secretary of State have been exhausted but something arises between finality in those proceedings and actual removal to the requesting state – for example, a supervening illness which impacts on the subject's ability to travel or to face trial in the requesting state. At that stage a challenge to a refusal of the Secretary of State to reconsider extradition on human rights grounds may arise (subject to the high threshold), albeit probably in judicial review proceedings rather than by way of statutory appeal."
"3. Mr Fitzgerald submits that there is, even at this stage, a residual discretion in relation to the claimant's health and the effect of extradition upon it, over and above any protection afforded by Convention rights. We are entirely satisfied that this is not correct, even on an arguable basis. It is clear from the structure and detailed provisions of Part 2 of the 2003 Act that, whilst physical and mental conditions rendering extradition unjust or oppressive are matters for due consideration in the statutory appeal process (section 91), once the appropriate judge sends the case to the Secretary of State for her decision as to whether a person is to be extradited, the Secretary of State must order extradition unless she is prohibited from doing so by one of the matters specified in section 93(2) or one of the matters referred to in section 93(4) is in play. It is plain that none of the matters specified or referred to in those provisions arises in this case. Whatever the position may have been under earlier legislation, the 2003 Act does not preserve or create a residual discretion. Indeed, by the language of section 93, it is inconsistent with one. This is because the policy of the Act is to put an end to serial applications seeking to raise issues which have already been, or should have been, raised in the proceedings. On the other hand, as the 2003 Act does not remove the obligation of the Secretary of State, as a public authority, to respect the Convention rights of the individual, exceptionally she is duty-bound to consider fresh evidence in limited circumstances such as those described in McKinnon 1 at paragraph 63 …."
The jurisdiction to reopen a final determination of an extradition appeal
"52.17.(1) The Court of Appeal or the High Court will not re-open a final determination of any appeal unless –
(a) it is necessary to do so in order to avoid real injustice;
(b) the circumstances are exceptional and make it appropriate to re-open the appeal; and
(c) there is no alternative effective remedy.
…
(4) Permission is needed to make an application under this rule to reopen a final determination of an appeal even in cases where under rule 52.3(1) permission was not needed for the original appeal.
(5) There is no right to an oral hearing of an application for permission unless, exceptionally, the judge so directs.
…
(7) There is no right of appeal or review from the decision of the judge on the application for permission, which is final."
"21. I entirely see the force of the submissions made on behalf of the applicants that, in the period between the decision on the statutory appeal and the execution of the extradition order, some dramatic alteration in circumstances may occur. It is possible to postulate various scenarios which would give rise to concern that the court's finding that extradition would not involve a breach of rights under the ECHR was no longer valid – a change of regime in the State to which the person is to be extradited might potentially give rise to such a concern. That would fall within what the Divisional Court in Hilali meant by 'the undermining of the factual premise of the judge's decision': paragraph 35. One has also to bear in mind that this court is by virtue of the Human Rights Act 1998 section 6(3) a public authority and that it is therefore unlawful for it to act in a way which is incompatible with a Convention right, unless primary legislation prevents it from acting differently: section 6(1) and (2) of the 1998 Act. One would in any event strive to find a remedy if it was clear that there was a real risk that extradition would lead to treatment in breach of Articles 2 or 3 of the ECHR.
22. There is, however, a course of action and a remedy which is available in such circumstances and which would not be prevented by section 34 of the 2003 Act, and that is by way of an application to re-open the determination of the Divisional Court under CPR 52.17 …."
The issue
The submissions
Discussion
Conclusion
Mr Justice Blair :