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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Novin v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWHC 443 (Admin) (10 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/443.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 443 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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MAJID EBADOLLAHI NOVIN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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David Manknell (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 25 January 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Carlile of Berriew QC :
"I am afraid that I cannot give you an exact date when Mr Novin's case will be resolved…
The UK Border Agency has established a dedicated resource to deal specifically with older, unresolved asylum cases such as Mr Novin's.
We are aiming to resolve these cases by summer 2011 and are on track to do so …
Turning to your request to expedite Mr Novin's case, the UKBA policy is not to take any application out of turn, in fairness to others. However, as Mr Novin's file is now with a caseworking unit the information that you have provided will be considered and a decision will then be made as to whether his case can be expedited".
i) The delay in the consideration of the material claim, with no indication given as to the date when it may be processed, "is arguably an abuse of power".
ii) On the 19th July 2006 the SSHD made a statement to Parliament that the policy of dealing with unresolved cases involved a "focus on those who can more easily be removed". Dealing with cases other than on a first-come first-served basis was a politically motivated decision by which the Government fettered its discretion unlawfully by a policy in relation to legacy cases. Thus the Government thwarted the Claimant's legitimate expectation that his case would be dealt with timeously.
iii) Given that the Claimant had produced evidence of his family having been detained in Iran, the SSHD was not justified in failing to expedite the Claimant's application on compassionate grounds.
"No doubt it is implicit in the statute that applications should be dealt with within 'a reasonable time'. That says little in itself, it is a flexible concept, allowing scope for variation depending not only on the volume of applications and available resources to deal with them, but also on differences in the circumstances and needs of different groups of asylum seekers. But … in resolving such competing demands, fairness and consistency are also vital considerations."
" …The Court can and must consider whether what has produced the delay has resulted from a rational system. If unacceptable delays have resulted, they cannot be excused by a claim that sufficient resources were not available"
" … prolonged and inexcusable delay on the part of the decision-making authorities must, on occasion, be capable of reducing the weight which would normally be given to the need for firm, fair and consistent immigration control in the proportional exercise."
" … provided the approach of the defendant was based on a policy which was fair and applied consistently, such delays could not be regarded as unlawful" [para 8]
" … a system of applying resources which is not unreasonable and which is applied fairly and consistently can be relied on to show that delays are not to be regarded as unreasonable or unlawful" [para 10]
" [delay] can only be regarded as unlawful if it fails the Wednesbury test and is shown to result from actions or inactions which can be regarded as irrational" [para11]
" … in deciding whether the delays are unacceptable, the court must recognise that resources are not infinite and that it is for the defendant and not for the court to determine how those resources should be applied to fund the various matters for which he is responsible" [para 11]
"If a result which appears unfair to an individual is produced, unlawfulness may be established, but not necessarily since there may be a good reason for what led to the apparently unfair result."
"It might be possible to devise a system which may seem better. But that does not mean that the existing one is unlawful, notwithstanding the unsatisfactory and undesirable delays. In all the circumstances I am not persuaded that there has been unlawfulness, whether the high threshold of abuse of power or the lower one of unfairness has to be overcome."
"Claims such as these based on delay are unlikely, save in very exceptional circumstances, to succeed and are likely to be regarded as unarguable. It is only if the delay is so excessive as to be regarded as manifestly unreasonable and to fall outside any proper application of the policy or if the claimant is suffering some particular detriment which the Home Office has failed to alleviate that a claim might be entertained by the court."
"I would qualify that observation in the present class of cases to this extent: if the application of the policy which is now said to be in place cannot provide any indication as to when an application may be dealt with, then it may be open to question whether the policy is being applied fairly and consistently."