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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Uca v Arad Courthouse, Romania [2023] EWHC 449 (Admin) (01 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/449.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 449 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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NICOLAE-FILIP UCA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ARAD COURTHOUSE, ROMANIA |
Respondent |
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Miriam Smith (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1.3.23
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM:
Decision
Introduction
Adjournment
i) Two key points have been raised on the Appellant's behalf. On Article 3 there was a point about inadequate assurances in relation to prison conditions. On Article 8 there was a point about a period on conditional bail with a tagged-curfew and whether that period would or could have the effect that the sentence in Romania is treated there as having been served.
ii) On both of those key points there are important documents which are being relied on by the Respondent. On Article 3 there is a bespoke assurance dated 30 September 2020 which, I am told, was received by the CPS on 21 October 2022.
iii) The position of the Appellant's legal representatives and his position is that that assurance had not been seen until yesterday. Having seen it, Mr Mak and his instructing solicitor have taken the position that they are not able to advance a positive case on the Appellant's behalf which would resist that assurance being adduced in these proceedings before this Court; and that they are not able to adduce a positive case on his behalf on Article 3 in the light of that assurance.
iv) Ms Smith for the Respondent advances the position that the Respondent believes the assurance was served after 21 October 2022; but having searched yesterday and today they cannot find any email sending it to the Appellant's solicitors; nor can Ms Smith point to anything before yesterday which drew attention to that assurance in correspondence between the parties relating to the preparation for today; nor is she inviting me to adjourn for any further enquiry. I proceed on the basis that that assurance was provided and seen only for the first time yesterday. It would not, in my judgment, be fair in the circumstances to the Appellant – or to his lawyers – to proceed on any other basis.
v) The position in relation to the other documents is more complicated. Those documents relate to proceedings which lawyers in Romania were bringing on the Appellant's behalf. They were known to be bringing those proceedings. A Romanian Court Judgment was available to the Appellant's lawyers on Wednesday 22 February 2023, the date on which Mr Mak provided an Updating Note on the key Article 8 issue, namely the curfew and its consequences. I have been told that on that date neither his instructing solicitor nor Counsel had access to an English translation of that Romanian document; that they were able to review it; and that they did not appreciate its contents. All that was known was that the proceedings in Romania have been "partially successful". The following day the Respondent provided an English translation which the solicitors and then Counsel's in-box had on that date. Mr Mak tells me that, although he had seen that email, he was on leave and was not in a position to review its contents until yesterday. The documents, produced from the Appellant's own Romanian proceedings, record what the outcome was on 8 December 2022 and then on 11 January 2023. In the light of those documents Mr Mak and his instructing solicitors are in a position where they are unable to advance on the Appellant's behalf any positive case, either to resist those documents being adduced in these proceedings, or to maintain the Article 8 argument in the light of those materials.
This is the context in which they asked to come off the record.
Context
Article 3
Article 8
Conclusion
1.3.23