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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Easy, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 3344 (Admin) (25 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/3344.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3344 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN On the application of SAMUEL NATHANIEL EASY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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Ms Naomi Candlin (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 6 November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lang:
"Your client's stated identity is that of an infant born at North Middlesex Hospital London on 27/12/75 who subsequently died in infancy on 21/01/1977 at St Leonard's Hospital London. The above information has been confirmed by the General Register Office of England and Wales.
As such the passport previously issued to your client in 2001 at the British High Commission in Kingston Jamaica was issued erroneously on the basis of false information.
Despite the decision taken by the Crown Prosecution Service not to proceed with your client's case, this has no bearing on the fact that your client has no entitlement to a passport in an identity that is patently not his own.
In view of the foregoing, I can only reaffirm our position that your client will not be issued a British passport in this identity. If your client is subsequently in a position to furnish evidence of his true identity, that also qualifies him for British citizenship, then we will of course consider any future application.
It may also be in your client's interests to contact the Jamaican authorities and any other family members who may have further knowledge of his identity."
History
"I know Samuel Nathaniel Easy to be the child of Juliette Marcia and Lester Jenkins – born 20.2.1957 – 134 Heathfield Road, Handsworth, Birmingham, England as per certified copy entries of birth attached."
It is not clear which birth certificate the JP was referring to. It also seems to be inaccurate as it is common ground that Lester Jenkins was the father of Juliette Jenkins, not the father of the Claimant.
i) A witness statement from Juliet Marcia Easy aged 19 years (DOB 20.2.57) living in London describing how her baby Samuel died in a house fire at their home on 21 January 1977.ii) A report of the incident from the Metropolitan Police.
iii) The post mortem report.
iv) The Coroner's Inquisition, dated 8 March 1977, certifying the death of Samuel Nathaniel Easy on 21 January 1977, whose date of birth was 27 December 1975. His father was recorded as Elias Easy, a cabinet maker.
v) The Coroner's Officer's Report and notes of evidence. The baby was pronounced dead at hospital at 4.45pm on 21 January 1977. In the notes of evidence, there is a formal record of Juliet Marcia Easy identifying the deceased as her son on 26 January 1977 before Douglas Chambers, the Coroner.
"Our case is that he is not Samuel Nathaniel Easy but the defence case, as I have seen from unused material that we have disclosed and, of course, in conversation, is simply this: that this defendant has always been known as Samuel Nathaniel Easy and documentation from Jamaica where he was at school says that they also knew him as Nathaniel Easy.
It seems to me that we would run into a potential difficulty on the issue of whether there had been any dishonesty on his part in any event in making said statement. But, more compellingly, we have taken a few moments to look at the various births and death certificates that exist in the case –
…
our case has been thus far based on the following premise: that Samuel Nathaniel Easy was born in 1975 and died in 1977.
…
Thus, a two-year-old boy. But when one looks a bit more closely at a further birth certificate, one can see that the father in both instances of the person named Samuel Nathaniel Easy is an Elias Easy….Plainly, Elias is of itself an unusual name but made more obviously the same person because the occupation is cabinet maker in each instance. It would seem that there is a more than strong possibility that the same father, who is now in any event, I am told, deceased, had a child in 1975 who died very young and then had another child who had the same name. And this defendant has always been known by his family and by others who knew him as a child and in later years as Samuel Nathaniel Easy. And he has in any event a relationship in this country and a long-term partner and they have a number of children from that union.
The point I am really leading to is that we are in an entirely circular position. The prosecution would need to establish (a) the facts but more importantly, that the defendant operated dishonestly at the time of expressing the facts. We are never going to resolve either of those issues to any level of satisfaction before a jury in my submission and accordingly, I am going to make an application that the matter does not proceed to trial. We will offer no evidence and I suspect a verdict will follow….
We are in short just going around in circles …and the point will always be the same. That he says he is who he is and there is some documentation that supports that he might be."
" (HMPO) are duty bound only to proceed on the basis of information supplied by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) who are responsible for the recording of all births, deaths and marriages in the United Kingdom. ONS have confirmed that Samuel Nathaniel Easy was born 27/12/75 and subsequently died in infancy on 21/01/1977 …. A further check has confirmed that there was only one Samuel Nathaniel Easy born on 27/12/75 in England.
As a result of the above, this office maintains our earlier position that your client is using the identity of a deceased child and as such he cannot be the true holder of this identity. He may well have been known as Samuel Nathaniel Easy both in this country and in Jamaica as you have stated, however the fact that the Crown Prosecution Service made an application for the case not to proceed to trial, does not alter our view that your client has no entitlement to a British passport in this identity.
Further to your request for the return of Mr Easy's previous passport I can confirm that the passport issued in Jamaica in 2001 was issued erroneously and cannot be returned…"
Grounds for judicial review
Conclusions
"The British passport is a secure document issued in accordance with international standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organisation. The British passport achieves a very high standard of security to protect the identity of the individual, to enable the freedom of travel for British citizens and to contribute to public protection in the United Kingdom and overseas.
There is no entitlement to a passport and no statutory right to have access to a passport. The decision to issue, withdraw, or refuse a British passport is at the discretion of the Secretary of State for the Home Department (the Home Secretary) under the Royal Prerogative.
This Written Ministerial Statement updates previous statements made to Parliament from time to time on the exercise of the Royal Prerogative and sets out the circumstances under which a passport can be issued, withdrawn, or refused. It redefines the public interest criteria to refuse or withdraw a passport.
A decision to refuse or withdraw a passport must be necessary and proportionate. The decision to withdraw or refuse a passport and the reason for that decision will be conveyed to the applicant or passport holder. The disclosure of information used to determine such a decision will be subject to the individual circumstances of the case.
The decision to refuse or to withdraw a passport under the public interest criteria will be used only sparingly. The exercise of this criteria will be subject to careful consideration of a person's past, present or proposed activities.
For example, passport facilities may be refused to or withdrawn from British nationals who may seek to harm the UK or its allies by travelling on a British passport to, for example, engage in terrorism-related activity or other serious or organised criminal activity.
This may include individuals who seek to engage in fighting, extremist activity or terrorist training outside the United Kingdom, for example, and then return to the UK with enhanced capabilities that they then use to conduct an attack on UK soil. The need to disrupt people who travel for these purposes has become increasingly apparent with developments in various parts of the world.
Operational responsibility for the application of the criteria for issuance or refusal is a matter for the Identity and Passport Service (IPS) acting on behalf of the Home Secretary. The criteria under which IPS can issue, withdraw or refuse a passport is set out below.
Passports are issued when the Home Secretary is satisfied as to:
i the identity of an applicant; and
ii the British nationality of applicants, in accordance with relevant nationality legislation; and
iii there being no other reasons (as set out below) for refusing a passport. IPS may make any checks necessary to ensure that the applicant is entitled to a British passport.
A passport application may be refused or an existing passport may be withdrawn. These are the persons who may be refused a British passport or who may have their existing passport withdrawn:
i a minor whose journey was known to be contrary to a court order, to the wishes of a parent or other person or authority in whose favour a residence or care order had been made or who had been awarded custody; or care and control; or
ii a person for whose arrest a warrant had been issued in the United Kingdom, or a person who was wanted by the United Kingdom police on suspicion of a serious crime; or
iii a person who is the subject of:
- a court order, made by a court in the United Kingdom, or any other order made pursuant to a statutory power, which imposes travel restrictions or restrictions on the possession of a valid United Kingdom passport; or
- bail conditions, imposed by a police officer or a court in the United Kingdom, which include travel restrictions or restrictions on the possession of a valid United Kingdom passport; or
- an order issued by the European Union or the United Nations which prevents a person travelling or entering a country other than the country in which they hold citizenship; or
- a declaration made under section 15 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
iv A person may be prevented from benefiting from the possession of a passport if the Home Secretary is satisfied that it is in the public interest to do so. This may be the case where:
- a person has been repatriated from abroad at public expense and their debt has not yet been repaid. This is because the passport fee supports the provision of consular services for British citizens overseas; or
- a person whose past, present or proposed activities, actual or suspected, are believed by the Home Secretary to be so undesirable that the grant or continued enjoyment of passport facilities is contrary to the public interest.
There may be circumstances in which the application of legislative powers is not appropriate to the individual applicant but there is a need to restrict the ability of a person to travel abroad.
The application of discretion by the Home Secretary will primarily focus on preventing overseas travel. There may be cases in which the Home Secretary believes that the past, present or proposed activities (actual or suspected) of the applicant or passport holder should prevent their enjoyment of a passport facility whether overseas travel was or was not a critical factor."
i) "having issued one passport, the Defendant would have to show substantial, well-founded and cogent reasons for not renewing it", per Edis J. in R (Rahman) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 1146 (Admin), at [27].ii) "The task of the court is the familiar one of evaluating whether the decision was one open to the Secretary of State on the information available to her, or otherwise considering conventional public law grounds of challenge. That is not to say that the fact that an individual has previously been issued with a British passport is not important in evaluating whether the decision reached was a rational one, in public law terms. It is unhelpful in this context to speak in terms of burdens of proof. The reality is that, having once been satisfied that an individual was entitled to a passport, the Secretary of State would need to advance cogent reasons that stood up to scrutiny why, on a later application, she was taking a different view. The refusal to renew the passport of someone who has enjoyed the benefits of a British passport for a decade is a serious step with serious consequences. No less would be required to satisfy a rationality test." per Burnett J. in R (Ali) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 3379 (Admin), at [23].
"It is clear that in a case such as the present, a claim to a legitimate expectation can be based only upon a promise which is 'clear, unambiguous and devoid of relevant qualification': see Bingham LJ in R v Inland Revenue Comrs, ex p MFK Underwriting Agents Ltd [1990] 1 WLR 1545, 1569."
"I can see no requirement of public policy that the Secretary of State should not be precluded from denying what … the Government of Tanganyika wrote in 1952 and should not in consequence be bound by it. Indeed, it is in the public interest that the servants of the Crown should speak with one voice and speak the truth and that when responsible officers make mistakes which mislead members of the public and injure them the courts should redress the injury, if that is possible without doing harm to others …"
Conclusion
Note 1 Her first name is spelt differently in the various documents (Juliet and Juliette), however, all references appear to relate to the same person. [Back] Note 2 According to the Defendant, at the time of the Claimant’s renewal application in 2011, the material part of HMPO policy was set out in a written answer to a parliamentary question, as follows: “Joan Ryan [holding answer 18 May 2007]: Passports are issued at the discretion of the Secretary of State under the Royal prerogative. In practice, passports are issued when the Secretary of State is satisfied as to the identity and British nationality of applicants, in accordance with legislation, except in certain well defined categories, of which Parliament has been informed from time to time….” (Hansard HC 23 May 2007, Col. 1332W)
[Back] Note 3 The following ministerial statement, by way of answer to a parliamentary question, was applicable at that time.
Passports: Grounds for Withdrawal
Lord Lester of Herne Hill: Whether British citizens are entitled to expect that passport facilities will be withdrawn only in clearly defined circumstances which have been reported to Parliament; and, if so, what are the current circumstances in which the Government would exercise the right to withdraw passport facilities.
Lord Williams of Mostyn: The circumstances in which a British passport would be withdrawn have been reported to Parliament on a number of occasions, the last being 7 February 1995, and have not changed. Withdrawal of a passport would be considered:
1. if it came to the Passport Agency's attention on replacement that it had been issued incorrectly; and
2. on the same basis as the refusal of an application…”
Lord Lester of Herne Hill: Whether they will consider giving the present arrangements for issuing and withdrawing passports a statutory basis.
Lord Williams of Mostyn: The Government have no plans to change the present system under which passports are issued in the United Kingdom at the discretion of my right honourable friend the Home Secretary, and by my right honourable friend the Foreign Secretary in overseas posts, both exercising the Royal Prerogative. In practice, refusal and withdrawal of passport facilities to United Kingdom nationals is confined to certain well defined categories, of which Parliament has been informed from time to time. Although the issue of passports is a discretionary power under the Royal Prerogative, it is constrained as any statutory power might be, and the exercise of the discretion may be reviewed by the courts. The system has worked well and it has been generally accepted, under successive Administrations, that the exercise of the Royal Prerogative has not been abused.
(Hansard HL Deb 30 Jul 1998 vol 592 col 237-8WA)
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