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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> AIG, R (On the Application Of) v HM Courts & Tribunal Service & Anor [2021] EWHC 584 (Admin) (12 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/584.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 584 (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 :
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THE QUEEN on the application of AIG |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) HM COURTS & TRIBUNAL SERVICE (2) COMMISSIONER OF POLICE OF THE METROPOLIS |
Defendants |
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Neil Sheldon QC (instructed by Metropolitan Police Legal Department) for the Second Defendant
The First Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 26 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT:
A. Introduction
B. Decision
"… the first question is whether a document is sufficiently relevant and material to require disclosure in the interest of justice … if a document is relevant and material then it must be disclosed unless it is confidential and unless a breach of confidentiality will cause harm to the public interest which outweighs the harm to the interests of justice caused by non-disclosure … when a document is known to be relevant and material, the holder of the document should voluntarily disclose it unless he is satisfied that disclosure will cause substantial harm … if the holder decides that a document should not be disclosed then that decision can be upheld or set aside by the judge. A rubber stamp approach to public interest immunity by the holder of a document is neither necessary nor appropriate … as a general rule the harm to the public interest of the whole or part of a document dealing with defence or national security or diplomatic secrets will be self-evident and will preclude disclosure …"
"27. But it must be noted that the adverse effect on the public interest in the administration of justice is materially greater under the present dispensation than previously. Previously, the worst that could happen was that relevant material was withheld generally. Now, the position is that relevant material is deployed before the court in the absence of an interested party. Inevitably, the court loses the benefit of the scrutiny and submissions of that interested party.
28. It follows that the adverse effect on the due administration of justice is significantly greater in a case where PII material is being deployed without sight to one party than where it is simply being withheld from everyone. That is because one party (here, the CMA) can refer to and deploy in argument material that is unavailable to the other party to the dispute (here, Concordia).
29. That must mean that the cogency of the PII arguments made by the party asserting PII must be stronger than in a case where the PII material is simply being withheld. In short, the balancing exercise in a case such as this is different to the balancing exercise contemplated in previous cases in that there is this additional factor to take into account."
"17. In my judgment, the applicable principles are as follows:
…
(c) At the third stage (the Wiley balance), it is necessary to weigh, on the one hand, the damage to the public interest that would be caused by disclosure and, on the other, the damage to the administration of justice caused by non-disclosure. This involves two calibrated assessments, both fact-specific.
(d) When considering the damage to the public interest caused by disclosure, it will sometimes be obvious that there is a serious risk of grave damage. That be the case where, for example, disclosure would substantially increase the risk that the identity of a covert informer would be revealed. The disclosure of the identity of a covert informer is generally liable to cause grave damage to the public interest because it may lead to his or her suffering physical harm and/or because it may deter others from providing information. In other cases, the party asserting PII may succeed in establishing that disclosure would give rise to a risk of damage to the public interest, but the extent to which disclosure increases the risk, though material, is low; or, although the risk of damage eventuating is substantial, the damage feared would not be grave. It is important for the court to reach its own, level-headed assessment of the extent of any damage to the public interest caused by disclosure.
(e) Against this must be weighed the extent of the damage caused by non-disclosure to the public interest in the administration of justice. Any assessment of that damage requires a close focus on the issues in the case (both those pleaded and any others to which the undisclosed material gives rise) and the nature of the closed material. I would certainly not assume that, because the court can now consider that material in a CMP, there is no such damage: any proceeding where the opportunity for adversarial scrutiny is lacking represents a fundamental derogation from the standards of fairness which the common law ordinarily demands. But nor, for my part, would I assume that availability of a CMP means that the adverse effect on the public interest in the administration of justice is materially greater than it would have been previously, when material attracting PII was categorically inadmissible. One of the reasons why the Supreme Court in Haralambous was prepared to countenance a CMP in claims of this kind was that, without one, the absence of admissible evidence as to the basis on which the warrant was granted might well have favoured the defendant. Prior to Haralambous, the court might have had to apply the presumption of regularity, as in R v Inland Revenue Commissioners ex parte Rossminster Ltd [1980] AC 952 and R(AHK) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 1117 (Admin) or might have struck the claim out as untriable, as in Carnduff v Rock [2001] 1 WLR 1786. These outcomes would not have served the public interest in the administration of justice. The possibility that a court might apply the opposite presumption, quashing a warrant because it was not possible to consider the material on which it was based, would have been equally unacceptable. The Supreme Court regarded the CMP as preferable to any of these outcomes from the standpoint of the administration of justice: see generally Haralambous, at [44]-[59]. It follows that I respectfully disagree with Marcus Smith J insofar as he held that a higher standard of cogency is required of the arguments advanced by a party asserting PII in a case such as this where, post-Haralambous, material attracting PII may be considered by the court in a CMP."
"… In Bank Mellat, a determination by the Supreme Court on a basis different from that required and adopted in the courts below would have been self-evidently unsatisfactory, risk injustice and in some cases be absurd. So too in the present context it would be self-evidently unsatisfactory, and productive potentially of injustice and absurdity, if the High Court on judicial review were bound to address the matter on a different basis from the magistrate or Crown Court, and, if it quashed the order, to remit the matter for determination by the lower court on a basis different from that which the lower court had quite rightly adopted and been required to adopt when first considering the matter."