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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Lis & Ors v Regional Court In Warsaw, Poland & Ors [2018] EWHC 2848 (Admin) (31 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/2848.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2848 (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 :
LORD JUSTICE IRWIN
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
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(1) PAWEL LIS (2) DARIUSZ LANGE (3) PIOTR PAWEL CHMIELEWSKI |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) REGIONAL COURT IN WARSAW, POLAND (2) ZIELONA GORA CIRCUIT COURT, POLAND (3) REGIONAL COURT IN RADOM, POLAND |
Respondents |
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Mark Summers QC and Saoirse Townshend (instructed by Lloyds PR Solicitors) for the Second Applicant
Mark Summers QC and Myles Grandison (instructed by Lewis Nedas Law) for the Third Applicant
Helen Malcolm QC, Ben Lloyd and Ben Seifert (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for The First and Second Respondents
Helen Malcolm QC and Ben Lloyd (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for The Third Respondent
Hearing date: 7 June 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD BURNETT OF MALDON CJ
This is the judgment of the court to which we have all contributed.
Introduction
"to enable the Commission to find a solution with the member state concerned in order to prevent the emerging of a systemic threat to the rule of law in that member state that could develop into a 'clear risk of a serious breach' within the meaning of Article 7 TEU, which would require the mechanisms provided for in that Article to be launched."
Paragraph 2 of the Framework encapsulates various features of the generally accepted concept of the rule of law, including "independent and impartial courts". The Commission followed the procedures set out in the Framework but resolution was not achieved with the result that, in due course, the mechanisms in Article 7 were launched.
A Summary of Events in Poland
"(38) …On the same day [19 December], the President of the Republic appointed judge Julia Przylebska, a judge elected by the new Sejm, to the position of acting President of the Constitutional Tribunal.
(39) On 20 December 2016, judge Julia Przylebska admitted the three judges nominated by the 8th term of the Sejm without a valid legal basis to take up their function in the Tribunal and convened a meeting of the General Assembly for the same day. In view of the short notice one judge was unable to participate and requested to postpone the meeting for the next day, which judge Julia Przylebska refused. Out of 14 judges present at the meeting, only three unlawfully appointed judges and three judges appointed by the current governing majority cast their votes. Two candidates were elected: Julia Przylebska and Mariusz Muszynski, and were presented as candidate to the President of the Republic. On 21 December 2016, the President of the Republic appointed judge Julia Przylebska to the post of President of the Constitutional Tribunal."
"(57) …
(1) The unlawful appointment of the President of the Constitutional Tribunal, the admission of the three judges nominated by the 8th term of the Sejm without a valid legal basis, the fact that one of these judges has been appointed as Vice-President of the Tribunal, the fact that the three judges that were lawfully nominated in October 2015 by the previous legislature have not been able to take up their function of judge in the Tribunal, as well as the subsequent developments within the Tribunal described above have de facto led to a complete recomposition of the Tribunal outside the normal constitutional process for the appointment of judges. For this reason, the Commission considered that the independence and legitimacy of the Constitutional Tribunal are seriously undermined and, consequently, the constitutionality of Polish laws can no longer be effectively guaranteed. The judgments rendered by the Tribunal under these circumstances can no longer be considered as providing an effective constitutional review;
(2) The law on the National School of Judiciary already in force, and the law on the National Council for the Judiciary, the law on the Ordinary Courts Organisation and the law on the Supreme Court, should they enter into force, structurally undermine the independence of the judiciary in Poland and would have an immediate and concrete impact on the independent functioning of the judiciary as a whole. Given that the independence of the judiciary is a key component of the rule of law, these new laws increase significantly the systemic threat to rule of law as identified in the previous Recommendations;
(3) In particular, the dismissal of Supreme Court judges, their possible reappointment and other measures contained in the law on the Supreme Court would very seriously aggravate the systemic threat to the rule of law;
(4) The new laws raise serious concerns as regards their compatibility with the Polish Constitution as underlined by a number of statements, in particular from the Supreme Court, the National Council for the Judiciary, the Polish Ombudsman, the Bar Association and associations of judges and lawyers, and other relevant stakeholders. However, as explained above, an effective constitutional review of these laws is no longer possible;
(5) Finally, actions and public statements against judges and courts in Poland made by the Polish Government and by members of Parliament from the ruling majority have damaged the trust in the justice system as a whole. The Commission underlined the principle of loyal cooperation between state organs which is, as highlighted in the opinions of the Venice Commission, a constitutional precondition in a democratic state governed by the rule of law."
The Irish Litigation
"The legislative changes to the judiciary, to the courts, and to the Public Prosecutor brought about within the last two to three years in Poland undermines the possibility of him having a fair trial."
He also advanced a further ground concerning prison conditions, with which we are not concerned.
"It follows that the executing judicial authority may refuse to execute such a warrant only in the cases, exhaustively listed, of obligatory non-execution, laid down in Article 3 of the Framework Decision, or of optional non-execution, laid down in Articles 4 and 4a of the Framework Decision. Moreover, the execution of the European arrest warrant may be made subject only to one of the conditions exhaustively laid down in Article 5 of that Framework Decision (see, to that effect, judgment in Lanigan, C-237/15 PPU, EU:C:2015:474, paragraph 36 and the case-law cited)."
Proceedings before the Luxembourg Court
"(1) Notwithstanding the conclusions of the Court of Justice in [the judgment of 5 April 2016,] Aranyosi and Caldararu [(C-404/15 and C-659/15 PPU, EU:C:2016:198)], where a national court determines there is cogent evidence that conditions in the issuing Member State are incompatible with the fundamental right to a fair trial because the system of justice itself in the issuing Member State is no longer operating under the rule of law, is it necessary for the executing judicial authority to make any further assessment, specific and precise, as to the exposure of the individual concerned to the risk of unfair trial where his trial will take place within a system no longer operating within the rule of law?
(2) If the test to be applied requires a specific assessment of the requested person's real risk of a flagrant denial of justice and where the national court has concluded that there is a systemic breach of the rule of law, is the national court as executing judicial authority obliged to revert to the issuing judicial authority for any further necessary information that could enable the national court discount the existence of the risk to an unfair trial and if so, what guarantees as to fair trial would be required?"
"59. It must, accordingly, be held that the existence of a real risk that the person in respect of whom a European arrest warrant has been issued will, if surrendered to the issuing judicial authority, suffer a breach of his fundamental right to an independent tribunal and, therefore, of the essence of his fundamental right to a fair trial, a right guaranteed by the second paragraph of Article 47 of the Charter, is capable of permitting the executing judicial authority to refrain, by way of exception, from giving effect to that European arrest warrant, on the basis of Article 1(3) of Framework Decision 2002/584.
60. Thus, where, as in the main proceedings, the person in respect of whom a European arrest warrant has been issued, pleads, in order to oppose his surrender to the issuing judicial authority, that there are systemic deficiencies, or, at all events, generalised deficiencies, which, according to him, are liable to affect the independence of the judiciary in the issuing Member State and thus to compromise the essence of his fundamental right to a fair trial, the executing judicial authority is required to assess whether there is a real risk that the individual concerned will suffer a breach of that fundamental right, when it is called upon to decide on his surrender to the authorities of the issuing Member State (see, by analogy, judgment of 5 April 2016, Aranyosi and Caldararu, C-404/15 and C-659/15 PPU, EU:C:2016:198, paragraph 88)."
"68. If, having regard to the requirements noted in paragraphs 62 to 67 of the present judgment, the executing judicial authority finds that there is, in the issuing Member State, a real risk of breach of the essence of the fundamental right to a fair trial on account of systemic or generalised deficiencies concerning the judiciary of that Member State, such as to compromise the independence of that State's courts, that authority must, as a second step, assess specifically and precisely whether, in the particular circumstances of the case, there are substantial grounds for believing that, following his surrender to the issuing Member State, the requested person will run that risk [emphasis added] (see, by analogy, in the context of Article 4 of the Charter, judgment of 5 April 2016, Aranyosi and Caldararu, C404/15 and C659/15 PPU, EU:C:2016:198, paragraphs 92 and 94)."
"72. Therefore, it is only if the European Council were to adopt a decision determining, as provided for in Article 7(2) TEU, that there is a serious and persistent breach in the issuing Member State of the principles set out in Article 2 TEU, such as those inherent in the rule of law, and the Council were then to suspend Framework Decision 2002/584 in respect of that Member State that the executing judicial authority would be required to refuse automatically to execute any European arrest warrant issued by it, without having to carry out any specific assessment of whether the individual concerned runs a real risk that the essence of his fundamental right to a fair trial will be affected."
"73. Accordingly, as long as such a decision has not been adopted by the European Council, the executing judicial authority may refrain, on the basis of Article 1(3) of Framework Decision 2002/584, to give effect to a European arrest warrant issued by a Member State which is the subject of a reasoned proposal as referred to in Article 7(1) TEU only in exceptional circumstances where that authority finds, after carrying out a specific and precise assessment of the particular case, that there are substantial grounds for believing that the person in respect of whom that European arrest warrant has been issued will, following his surrender to the issuing judicial authority, run a real risk of breach of his fundamental right to an independent tribunal and, therefore, of the essence of his fundamental right to a fair trial.
74. In the course of such an assessment, the executing judicial authority must, in particular, examine to what extent the systemic or generalised deficiencies, as regards the independence of the issuing Member State's courts, to which the material available to it attests are liable to have an impact at the level of that State's courts with jurisdiction over the proceedings to which the requested person will be subject.
75. If that examination shows that those deficiencies are liable to affect those courts, the executing judicial authority must also assess, in the light of the specific concerns expressed by the individual concerned and any information provided by him, whether there are substantial grounds for believing that he will run a real risk of breach of his fundamental right to an independent tribunal and, therefore, of the essence of his fundamental right to a fair trial, having regard to his personal situation, as well as to the nature of the offence for which he is being prosecuted and the factual context that form the basis of the European arrest warrant."
"79. In the light of the foregoing considerations, the answer to the questions referred is that Article 1(3) of Framework Decision 2002/584 must be interpreted as meaning that, where the executing judicial authority, called upon to decide whether a person in respect of whom a European arrest warrant has been issued for the purposes of conducting a criminal prosecution is to be surrendered, has material, such as that set out in a reasoned proposal of the Commission adopted pursuant to Article 7(1) TEU, indicating that there is a real risk of breach of the fundamental right to a fair trial guaranteed by the second paragraph of Article 47 of the Charter, on account of systemic or generalised deficiencies so far as concerns the independence of the issuing Member State's judiciary, that authority must determine, specifically and precisely, whether, having regard to his personal situation, as well as to the nature of the offence for which he is being prosecuted and the factual context that form the basis of the European arrest warrant, and in the light of the information provided by the issuing Member State pursuant to Article 15(2) of the framework decision, there are substantial grounds for believing that that person will run such a risk if he is surrendered to that State."
The Submissions and Evidence of the Parties
"…so fundamental as to amount to a complete denial or nullification of the right to a fair trial…. I suggest that the appropriate criterion should rather be that the deficiency or deficiencies in the trial process should be such as fundamentally to destroy its fairness" [82/83].
Hence, it is argued that the Charter affords a higher level of protection than does the ECHR.
Do the Polish Courts Remain Judicial Authorities?
Article 6 ECHR, the Flagrancy Test and European Law
The Aranyosi Process
"has the right to make, and should indeed consider making, a further request for specific information as to whether the requested person will face a real risk of the essence of his fundamental right of fair trial ... having regard to his personal situation, to the nature of the offence for which he is being prosecuted and to the factual context of the EAW".
The Individual Applicants
Conclusions
Postscript
Following the further submissions in this case in September 2018, Mr Summers QC for the applicants alerted us to a first instance decision dated 4 October 2018 of the Rechtbank or District Court of Amsterdam, concerning a Polish EAW issued in 2015. We have heard no argument derived from this decision and invited no submissions from the respondent. With great respect to the Amsterdam court, we regard the decision of the Grand Chamber as clear and binding authority. We see no need for further general requests for information of the sort apparently contemplated by that court. The Grand Chamber has stressed that exceptional circumstances only, affecting a specific requested person, can justify a refusal to extradite on Article 6 grounds. Hence, it appears to us that requests for further information are appropriate only in relation to such specific circumstances affecting the individual.