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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Yam, R (n the Application f) v Central Criminal Court & Anor [2014] EWHC 3558 (Admin) (31 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/3558.html Cite as: [2015] 3 All ER 354, [2014] EWHC 3558 (Admin), [2015] 3 WLR 1050, [2015] 1 Cr App R 10, [2015] Crim LR 224 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF WANG YAM |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT - and - THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of WordWave International Limited A Merrill Communications Company 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838 Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) |
Defendant Interested Party |
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(instructed by Janes Solicitors) for the Claimant
The Defendant did not appear
Mr James Eadie QC and Mr Jonathan Hall QC
(instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 2 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
"IT IS ORDERED UNDER SECTION 11 of the CONTEMPT OF COURT ACT 1981 & all other powers enabling that the court having ordered that the press and public are to be excluded from part of these proceedings for the due administration of justice, no report is to be published revealing the grounds or reasons for the making of the order or any evidence, submissions, judicial decisions or other matter heard or dealt with in camera, other than that which has been said in public in these proceedings."
"For the avoidance of doubt, no document or other communication in whatever form shall disclose any of the material to which the prohibition in the preceding sentence applies, or make it available, to anyone who was or would have been excluded from the "in camera" parts of the trial, including the staff and members of the European Court of Human Rights .…"
"I acknowledge that the court should not stand in the way of what an applicant wishes to place before Strasbourg, unless there is very good reason to do so. I have no doubt that there are very good reasons to do so in this case. These are sufficient to prevent any question of judicial comity requiring this Court to vary the order."
The grounds of judicial review
Jurisdictional issue
"In relation to the jurisdiction of the Crown Court, other than its jurisdiction on matters relating to trial on indictment, the High Court shall have all such jurisdiction to make mandatory, prohibiting or quashing orders as a High Court possesses in relation to the jurisdiction of an inferior court."
"the application may be said to arise out of a trial on indictment but it is not a matter relating to trial on indictment since the trial has concluded."
In the circumstances we think that it is right to grant permission, as Mitting J would have done once jurisdiction had been determined in the claimant's favour. We now turn to the legal grounds of challenge.
Breach of fundamental right of access to the courts
"The principle whereby a civil claim must be capable of being submitted to a judge ranks as one of the 'universally recognised' fundamental principles of law."
"Article 34 – Individual applications
The Court may receive applications from any person, non-governmental organisation or group of individuals claiming to be the victim of a violation by one of the High Contracting Parties of the rights set forth in the Convention or the protocols thereto. The High Contracting Parties undertake not to hinder in any way the effective exercise of this right.
Article 38 – Examination of the case
The Court shall examine the case together with the representatives of the parties and, if need be, undertake an investigation, for the effective conduct of which the High Contracting Parties concerned shall furnish all necessary facilities."
"The Court reiterates that it is of the utmost importance for the effective operation of the system of individual petition instituted under Article 34 of the Convention that States should furnish all necessary facilities to make possible a proper and effective examination of applications. This obligation requires the Contracting States to furnish all necessary facilities to the Court, whether it is conducting a fact-finding investigation or performing its general duties as regards the examination of applications. A failure on a Government's part to submit such information which is in their hands without a satisfactory explanation may not only give rise to the drawing of inferences as to the well-foundedness of the applicant's allegations, but may also reflect negatively on the level of compliance by a respondent State with its obligations under Article 38 of the Convention (see Tahsin Acar v. Turkey [GC], no. 26307/95, §§ 253-254, ECHR 2004-III; Timurtas v. Turkey, no. 23531/94, §§ 66 and 70, ECHR 2000-VI; andTanrikulu v. Turkey [GC], no. 23763/94, § 70, ECHR 1999-IV."
"205. In cases where the Government advanced confidentiality or security considerations as the reason for their failure to produce the material requested, the Court had to satisfy itself that there existed reasonable and solid grounds for treating the documents in question as secret or confidential …."
"The judgment by the national authorities in any particular case that national security considerations are involved is one which the Court is not well equipped to challenge. Nevertheless, in cases where the Government have advanced confidentiality or security considerations as the reason for their failure to produce the material requested, the Court has had to satisfy itself that there were reasonable and solid grounds for treating the documents in question as secret or confidential. Where such legitimate concerns exist, the Court may consider it necessary to require that the respondent Government edit out the sensitive passages or supply a summary of the relevant factual grounds (see, among other examples, Nolan and K. v. Russia, no. 2512/04, § 56, 12 February 2009 and Janowiec and Others, cited above, §§ 205-206).
The judgment by the national authorities in any particular case that national security considerations are involved is one which the Court is not well equipped to challenge. Nevertheless, in cases where the Government have advanced confidentiality or security considerations as the reason for their failure to produce the material requested, the Court has had to satisfy itself that there were reasonable and solid grounds for treating the documents in question as secret or confidential. Where such legitimate concerns exist, the Court may consider it necessary to require that the respondent Government edit out the sensitive passages or supply a summary of the relevant factual grounds (see, among other examples, Nolan and K. v. Russia, no. 2512/04, § 56, 12 February 2009 and Janowiec and Others, cited above, §§ 205-206).
The judgment by the national authorities in any particular case that national security considerations are involved is one which the Court is not well equipped to challenge. Nevertheless, in cases where the Government have advanced confidentiality or security considerations as the reason for their failure to produce the material requested, the Court has had to satisfy itself that there were reasonable and solid grounds for treating the documents in question as secret or confidential. Where such legitimate concerns exist, the Court may consider it necessary to require that the respondent Government edit out the sensitive passages or supply a summary of the relevant factual grounds (see, among other examples, Nolan and K. v. Russia, no. 2512/04, § 56, 12 February 2009 and Janowiec and Others, cited above, §§ 205-206).
Furthermore, such concerns may, depending on the document, be accommodated in the Court's proceedings by means of appropriate procedural arrangements, including by restricting access to the document in question under Rule 33 of the Rules of Court, by classifying all or some of the documents in the case file as confidential vis-à-vis the public and, in extremis, by holding a hearing behind closed doors (see Janowiec and Others, cited above, §§ 45 and 215, and Shamayev and Others, cited above, §§ 15-16 and 21)."
Breach of international law
"It is accepted, of course, by the appellants that, like any other treaty obligations which have not been embodied in the law by statute, the Convention is not part of the domestic law, that the courts accordingly have no power to enforce Convention rights directly and that, if domestic legislation conflicts with the Convention, the courts must nevertheless enforce it. But it is well settled that, in construing any provision in domestic legislation which is ambiguous in the sense that it is capable of a meaning which either conforms to or conflicts with the Convention, the courts will presume that Parliament intended to legislate in conformity with the Convention, not in conflict with it. Hence, it is submitted, when a statute confers upon an administrative authority a discretion capable of being exercised in a way which infringes any basic human right protected by the Convention, it may similarly be presumed that the legislative intention was that the discretion should be exercised within the limitations which the Convention imposes. I confess that I found considerable persuasive force in this submission. But in the end I have been convinced that the logic of it is flawed. When confronted with a simple choice between two possible interpretations of some specific statutory provision, the presumption whereby the courts prefer that which avoids conflict between our domestic legislation and our international treaty obligations is a mere canon of construction
which involves no importation of international law into the
domestic field. But where Parliament has conferred on the
executive an administrative discretion without indicating the
precise limits within which it must be exercised, to presume that it must be exercised within Convention limits would be to go far beyond the resolution of an ambiguity. It would be to impute to Parliament an intention not only that the executive should exercise the discretion in conformity with the Convention, but also that the domestic courts should enforce that conformity by the importation into domestic administrative law of the text of the Convention and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights in the interpretation and application of it. If such a presumption is to apply to the statutory discretion exercised by the Secretary of State under section 29(3) of the Act of 1981 in the instant case, it must also apply to any other statutory discretion exercised by the executive which is capable of involving an infringement of
Convention rights. When Parliament has been content for so long to leave those who complain that their Convention rights have been infringed to seek their remedy in Strasbourg, it would be surprising suddenly to find that the judiciary had, without Parliament's aid, the means to incorporate the Convention into such an important area of domestic law and I cannot escape the conclusion that this would be a judicial usurpation of the legislative function."
"It is also clear that Article 10 may be used when the court is contemplating how a discretion is to be exercised. Thus, in Attorney-General v Guardian Newspapers Limited [1987] 1 WLR 1248, 1296, Lord Templeman referred to Article 10 when considering whether the interference with the freedom of expression which the grant of an interlocutory injunction would entail was "necessary in a democratic society" for any of the purposes specified in paragraph 2 of Article 10."
Was the order in accordance with section 11 of the Contempt of Court Act?
"In any case where a court (having power to do so) allows a name or other matter to be withheld from the public in proceedings before the court, the court may give such directions prohibiting the publication of that name or matter in connection with the proceedings as appear to the court to be necessary for the purpose for which it was so withheld."
"…. Collins J appears to have thought that section 11 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 was the source of the power to make anonymity orders that is in play in these cases. That view was mistaken. Section 11 is dealing with the particular situation where a court, having power to do so, allows a name or other matter to be withheld from the public in proceedings before the court. An obvious example is a court allowing the victim to withhold his name when giving evidence for the Crown in a prosecution for blackmail. Section 11 then gives the court the ancillary power to give directions prohibiting a newspaper which actually knows the name of the individual from publishing it. The section resolves any doubt about the power of the court in these circumstances to prevent persons, other than the parties, from naming the individual or mentioning the matter outside court. Cf Ex p P, The Times 31 March 1998, per Sir Christopher Staughton."
"The strict liability rule applies only in relation to publications, and for this purpose "publication" includes any speech, writing, or other communication in whatever form, which is addressed to the public at large or any section of the public."
"… I can see the argument that an application to the ECtHR, while clearly a communication in some form, may not be one addressed to "any section of the public". However, once the addressee falls outside the scope of those entitled to receive the information, they are for these purposes a section of the public. The exclusion did not permit those who had to hear the material in camera to pass it on in private, to a family member or a friend, or to a few acquaintances when no one else was around, who could then pass it on themselves, all in private. S11 does not require information to be imparted in public for the prohibition to bite. The protection which the UK Courts decide such material should have should not then be put at risk through an application to Strasbourg, and the ECtHR cannot have intended that it should do so.
76. The staff and members of the Strasbourg Court would have been excluded from the trial as part of the public. The ECtHR is not another domestic appellate tier. Its Judges and staff owe no allegiance to the Crown. They do not apply UK domestic law. The various protected interests cannot be explained to it without risk of harm to those interests. It may take a different view of what is justified in the national interest, applying different tests and balancing the interests differently. It has no power to commit people for contempt of court in support of any orders it may make. The UK has no such power either in law or practice. The right to make the application has not been inhibited. The Strasbourg Court is simply not in the same position as the UK Court when it comes to the approach to such material, any balancing of interests in respect of it, its protection, and the enforcement of such protection as it orders."
Mr Eadie supports this analysis.
"Accordingly with the prima facie case of contempt made out, one has to turn to the argument for the defence and see on what basis that is put forward. Mr. Waterhouse, appearing for Mr. Foot, started with a short point. He said that the order made by the trial judge in this case did not extend to ordering the press not to disclose the names of the two witnesses. That, I think, is absolutely correct, and my reading of the judge's directions is that he was directing what was to happen in his court and was not in express terms dealing with anything which was to happen outside.
But that does not in my view make any difference. The basis of the prima facie case to which I have referred is not that the judge had made an order directly and expressly affecting the conduct of people outside his court. The real vice of this publication can only be judged by imagining a person suffering blackmail, who is trying to screw up his courage to go to the police and do something about it. He sees in the paper that at the Central Criminal Court the judge has allowed Mr. Y and Mr. Z not to give their names but to pass under those descriptions. Our potential complainant of blackmail feels cheered by this and sees the prospect perhaps of his being able to bring his proceedings without disclosure of his circumstances. But then if the next day or a few days after he sees published in the papers the names of Mr. Y and Mr. Z, he would at once realise that the protection which he was hoping for is a myth. He would say to himself "Even the judge cannot protect me. Look at this case. The judge said the names were not to be given and yet they were. Even the judge cannot protect me." It is that aspect of the matter which is the sting of the allegation against the publication in this case, and it is not affected in my judgment at all by the fact that the order was not in terms an order addressed to the press but was an order concerned with the conduct of the trial. The publication made the directions as to the conduct of the trial meaningless in this regard."
"The publication of information relating to proceedings before any court sitting in private shall not of itself be contempt of court except in the following cases, that is to say —
…
(c) where the court sits in private for reasons of national security during that part of the proceedings about which the information in question is published."
A potential further ground
Disposal
Mr Justice Hickinbottom :