![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> T, R (On the Application Of) v Ministry of Justice [2018] EWHC 2615 (Admin) (09 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/2615.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2615 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE PHILLIPS
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of T) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
MINISTRY OF JUSTICE |
Defendant |
____________________
James Strachan QC and Benjamin Tankel (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 and 8 March 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Irwin:
Introduction
"14. I have seen a number of other specialists but I do not wish to attend any more appointments at the National Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery. They can do small things to alleviate my symptoms but that is not what I want or need. They have been wonderful and I have no complaints about my care. I just cannot tolerate being alive in this condition, with years of pain and suffering ahead and no cure that will put me back in the situation I was in before about 2007. I cannot turn the clock back and the way forward is deterioration and loss of autonomy and dignity.
15. I wish to end my life as I am entitled to do under the law. I tried in March 2015 and failed. It is not an easy thing to do when you have the disabilities I have. I need help to end my life safely and painlessly and with dignity."
"Is it appropriate and necessary in this case for the Court to hear first-hand evidence with cross-examination to seek to determine the mixed ethical, moral and social policy issues that underlie whether Parliament's prohibition on assisted suicide in s.2(1) Suicide Act 1961 is a justified interference with the Claimant's rights in this case?"
"4. …does not seek to advance further argument on the Preliminary Issue in light of the judgment in Conway. Rather, the Claimant accepts that the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Conway, albeit strictly obiter on this issue, is such that the Divisional Court is bound to find against the Claimant on the Preliminary Issue. In light of this ruling, however, the Claimant seeks:
4.1. A judgment and order of the Divisional Court dismissing the Claimant's application on the Preliminary Issue and his application to cross-examine on the basis of the arguments already made and in the light of the judgment in Conway.
4.2. The certification of the Court for a 'leapfrog' appeal on the Preliminary Issue to the Supreme Court under either s 1 Administration of Justice Act 1960 ('the 1960 Act') (if this is a 'criminal cause or matter') or s 12 of the Administration of Justice Act 1969 ('the 1969 Act') (if these are 'civil proceedings').
4.3. Permission to appeal under s 1 of the 1960 Act (if this is a 'criminal cause or matter')."
The Question of Oral Evidence
"174. I would accept that it is in principle open to claimants in the position of the appellants to invite a court to revisit an issue of proportionality previously decided between different parties in the light of different evidence, and, further, that this would not involve inviting the Supreme Court to depart precedentially from Purdy. Proportionality is here a judgment reached in the light of evidence, so that it is capable of being re-litigated in this way, although courts should no doubt discourage such re-litigation in the absence of fresh and significantly different evidence.
175. However, examination of the course of the present case raises in my view serious questions about its suitability for any such exercise. At no stage does this litigation appear to have been approached on the basis that the court should hear primary evidence about the issues. There has been nothing like the wide-ranging examination of expert and statistical material concerning suicide and the psychological factors and risks bearing on its occurrence which appears to have informed the United States Supreme Court's judgments in Washington v Glucksberg. Much of the material put before the Supreme Court on the present appeal has been second hand, adduced in other litigation or by other inquiries. Thus Toulson LJ, when referring to the January 2012 report of the Commission on Assisted Dying chaired by Lord Falconer, said (para 24):
"We were asked to read the report and have done so. However, it is important to stress that it was not an officially appointed commission. Its report contains an interesting analysis of arguments and views, but it would not be right for the court to treat it as having some form of official or quasi-official status".
The report in fact records that "some prominent individuals and organisations that are fundamentally opposed to any form of assisted dying being legally permitted in the UK" refused to participate in giving evidence (p.39). Toulson LJ also records (para 25) that after judgment was given at first instance by Smith J in Carter v Canada [2012] BCSC 886, counsel for Mr Nicklinson applied for leave to introduce the evidence in that case into the present case, recognising "that, if it were admitted, there would have to be a further hearing in order to enable the witnesses to be called and cross-examined".
176. Similarly, before the Court of Appeal counsel accepted that determination of the question whether there had been a disproportionate interference with article 8 rights would involve "consideration of a vast array of detailed evidence, including sociological, philosophical and medical material, which would have to be conducted by the Divisional Court". Before the Supreme Court, on the other hand, the appellants' primary case has become not to "invite the Supreme Court to embark upon a close study of the evidence that is now available of the relative risks and advantages of relaxing the prohibitions on assisted suicide", but instead to submit that the Supreme Court
"can strike the necessary balance without such a forensic exercise because it has been conducted already by a number of expert bodies whose conclusions are remarkably similar and upon whose conclusions the Court can place weight".
In the alternative, "if the Court considers that it cannot carry out the balancing exercise without further exploration of the underlying evidential issues", they repeat their request that the case should be remitted to the High Court for that exercise to be conducted along the lines of that in Carter v Canada [2012] BCSC 886, with appropriate guidance as to how the balancing exercise is to be conducted.
177. The appellants' primary case before the Supreme Court amounts in substance to an invitation to short-cut potentially sensitive and difficult issues of fact and expertise, by relying on secondary material. There can in my opinion be no question of doing that. Their secondary case (their primary case below) is that the case should in effect re-commence from the beginning with directions for evidence to be called and examined on the relevant issues of fact. But the handing down of the first instance decision in Carter v Canada shortly before the Divisional Court hearing is not a justification for not applying at the outset for a trial of the relevant issues on the basis of evidence directly examined before the court."
"189. As we have said, the evidence in this case is considerable. Important parts of it are conflicting. There was no request for oral evidence or cross-examination. That seems to us to be right. The conflict inherent in the moral and ethical issues involved in balancing the principles of sanctity of life and the right of personal autonomy cannot be resolved in a forensic setting by cross-examination. Conflicts in the expert opinion and factual evidence as to the appropriateness of the criteria in Mr Conway's scheme and the existence and extent of risk of an incorrect decision that the substantive criteria are satisfied are unlikely to be resolved satisfactorily by cross-examination. Furthermore, the evidence available to the court is necessarily limited to that which the parties wish to adduce. Unlike Parliament, or indeed the Law Commission of England and Wales, the court cannot conduct consultations with the public or any sector of it and cannot engage experts and advisers on its own account.
190. In Pretty Lord Steyn said (at [57]):
"In our Parliamentary democracy, and I apprehend in many member states of the Council of Europe, such a fundamental change cannot be brought about by judicial creativity. If it is to be considered at all, it requires a detailed and effective regulatory proposal. In these circumstances it is difficult to see how a process of interpretation of Convention rights can yield a result with all the necessary inbuilt protections. Essentially, it must be a matter for democratic debate and decision-making by legislatures.""
Further Matters
Mr Justice Phillips:
Post Script