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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> MTA v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis & Anor [2023] EWHC 117 (KB) (25 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/117.html Cite as: [2023] HRLR 7, [2023] EWHC 117 (KB), [2023] WLR(D) 191, [2023] 1 WLR 2197, [2023] WLR 2197 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MTA (a protected party, by his litigation friend, the Official Solicitor) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and – |
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(1) THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE OF THE METROPOLIS |
First Defendant |
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- and – |
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(2) THE LORD CHANCELLOR |
Second Defendant/ Applicant |
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Ms Joanne Clement KC and Mr Riccardo Calzavara (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Second Defendant/Applicant
The First Defendant did not participate in the application
Hearing date: 15 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN :
I Introduction
II The Facts
III The nature of the claim
"Any step taken before a child or protected party has a litigation friend has no effect unless the court orders otherwise."
IV The statutory framework
(a) © 2014 Act
(b) The HRA 1998
"Proceedings under section 7(1)(a) in respect of a judicial act may be brought only – (a) by exercising a right of appeal;
(b) on an application (in Scotland a petition) for judicial review; or
(c) in such other forum as may be prescribed by rules."
"(3) In proceedings under this Act in respect of a judicial act done in good faith, damages may not be awarded otherwise than
(a) to compensate a person to the extent required by Article 5(5) of the Convention,
(b) to compensate a person for a judicial act that is incompatible with Article 6 of the Convention in circumstances where the person is detained and, but for the incompatibility, the person would not have been detained or would not have been detained for so long.
(4) An award of damages permitted by subsection (3) is to be made against the Crown; but no award may be made unless the appropriate person, if not a party to the proceedings, is joined"
(c) The Constitutional Reform Act 2005
(d) Relevant powers under the Civil Procedure Rules
"A party who seeks to rely on any provision of or right arising under the Human Rights Act 1998 or seeks a remedy available under that Act … (2) must state in his statement of case … (f) where the claim is founded on a judicial act which is alleged to have infringed a Convention right of the party as provided by section 9 of the Human Rights Act 1998, the judicial act complained of and the court or tribunal which is alleged to have made it".
19.4A Human Rights
…
Section 9 of the Human Rights Act 1998
(3) Where a claim is made under that Act for damages in respect of a judicial act—
1. that claim must be set out in the statement of case or the appeal notice; and
2. notice must be given to the Crown.
(4) Where paragraph (3) applies and the appropriate person has not applied to be joined as a party within 21 days, or such other period as the court directs, after the notice is served, the court may join the appropriate person as a party."
V The submissions on behalf of the Lord Chancellor
"(1) an action cannot be brought against the Lord Chancellor for a declaration under the HRA in respect of a judicial act;
(2) the only permissible free-standing claim under the HRA in respect of a judicial act is for damages for unlawful detention in breach of article 5;
(3) save in those circumstances, a judicial act can only be the subject of proceedings under the HRA by way of an appeal or (where available) judicial review."
(i) In Mazhar 1, the Court of Appeal found that "it may be an abuse of process to make a claim against the Lord Chancellor under section 9(3) by way of an originating process in respect of an order which, as a matter of proper process, can be and ought to have been appealed." (para. 63). The question is whether this is one of those cases where it is an abuse of process to make a claim against the Lord Chancellor without first appealing the orders thus far made.
(ii) As occurred in respect of the claim for a declaration in Mazhar, an appeal out of time is still possible with the permission of the Court. It is not academic to have an appeal in that in the instant case, as in Mazhar, the deprivation of liberty of Mr Mazhar had been set aside long before permission to appeal had been granted. There is also no difficulty about appealing more than one order at a time: appropriate orders may be made under the Access to Justice Act 1999 (Destination of Appeals) Order 2016/917 so that all the decisions whether of district judges or circuit judges can be heard at the same time by a judge of the High Court or by the Court of Appeal: see section 57(1)(b) of the Access to Justice Act 1999.
(iii) It is first necessary for the appellate court to determine whether the judicial order was wrong and whether there has been a breach of the Claimant's Convention rights before any claim for damages can be brought.
(iv) It is irrelevant if there was some delay in the launching of the application. The abusive nature of the action was flagged in the defence, and the application was brought once transcripts of the relevant hearings had been obtained. If the claim is abusive, it should be struck out irrespective of whether such application could have been made earlier.
VI The submissions on behalf of the Claimant
(a) "The categories of abuse of process are varied and not closed; the courts have declined to define or circumscribe the circumstances in which an abuse may be established. There are nevertheless now certain well-established categories of abuse" (para. 172).
(b) "A finding of abuse of process does not lead automatically to a striking out of the claim. The court then retains a discretion as to the appropriate response, which must always be proportionate" (para. 177).
(c) "Litigants should not be deprived of their claims without scrupulous examination of all the circumstances and unless the abuse has been sufficiently clearly established: 'the court cannot be affronted if the case has not been satisfactorily proved' … Thus it has been stated repeatedly that it is only in 'clear and obvious' cases that it will be appropriate to strike out proceedings as an abuse of process so as to prevent a claimant from bringing an apparently proper cause of action to trial" (para. 178).
"The principles to be derived from the authorities, of which by far the most important is Johnson v Gore Wood & Co [2002] 2 AC 1, can be summarised as follows:
i) Where A has brought an action against B, a later action against B or C may be struck out where the second action is an abuse of process.
ii) A later action against B is much more likely to be held to be an abuse of process than a later action against C.
iii) The burden of establishing abuse of process is on B or C or as the case may be.
iv) It is wrong to hold that because a matter could have been raised in earlier proceedings it should have been, so as to render the raising of it in later proceedings necessarily abusive.
v) The question in every case is whether, applying a broad merits based approach, A's conduct is in all the circumstances an abuse of process.
vi) The court will rarely find that the later action is an abuse of process unless the later action involves unjust harassment or oppression of B or C."
"62. [We] reject the submission of Mr Grodzinski that section 9(1) is to be treated as imposing a statutory hierarchy, under which section 9(1)(c) can never apply, even in the case of a section 9(3) claim for damages against the Lord Chancellor, as it will be possible to proceed by way of appeal or judicial review, and section 9(1) is to be interpreted against the background of the usual procedural rule favouring an appeal over an application to the same judge or a judge of equal standing to set aside the infringing order. There is nothing in the 1998 Act that warrants such an interpretation and the combination of section 9(1)(c), 9(3), and the reasons (see above) for those amendments in the course of the passage of the Bill through Parliament show that the submission is plainly wrong.
63. We accept that it may be an abuse of process to make a claim against the Lord Chancellor under section 9(3) by way of originating process in respect of an order which, as a matter of proper process, can be and ought to have been appealed.
64. We disagree with Mr Grodzinki's submissions (and the judgment of Ryder LJ) in that we do not think it right to say that a claim for damages under section 9(1)(c) in respect of an order by the High Court must be brought on an appeal. In our view, it can be (and usually would be) brought by way of an originating process in the High Court itself pursuant to section 9(1)(c) and CPR r 7.11(1) ."
(i) the Court's position that there was no hierarchy in section 9(1) HRA 1998 (para. 62);
(ii) the words "may be an abuse of position" rather than "will" or "would" be an abuse of position in para. 63;
(iii) the words "can be (and usually would be) brought by way of an originating process in the High Court itself", which shows that a claim for damages need not be brought by way of an appeal.
(i) there is no risk of inconsistent decisions because the order that could have amounted to a breach has been swept away;
(ii) an appeal in those circumstances would serve no purpose.
VII Discussion
"In our view, when the final version of section 9 is read in the light of its legislative history, it is clear that the way in which a judicial act is usually to be the subject of proceedings under the 1998 Act is by way of an appeal or (where it is otherwise available) by way of judicial review. The only circumstances in which a claim is permissible under section 9(1)(c) is where that is necessary to enable a claim to be brought for damages for unlawful detention in breach of article 5 , in accordance with section 9(3)."
"…Rather the express provisions of section 9(4) and (5) make it clear that the only kind of action that is contemplated by section 9(1)(c) is a claim for damages for breach of article 5."
(i) the decision on 9 June 2020 of HHJ Hellman that the Claimant lacked litigation capacity in respect of the committal proceedings, which were dismissed, and the order releasing him from custody.
(ii) the order of DJ Swan of 30 June 2020 contained a recital that the effect of the decision of HHJ Hellman was that the Claimant lacked litigation capacity since birth, such that the Injunction was void and required to be set aside by reason of incapacity under CPR 21.3(4).
(iii) the decision of 7 December 2020 of DJ Beecham declaring that the Claimant lacked injunction capacity and dismissing the underlying claim.
(i) a real possibility that there would be issues of fact and opinion to be established (as regards timing) of the kind that an appellate court may determine, but which would be more usually be the subject of live evidence in a first instance court. In addition to that concern, in the instant case, the Lord Chancellor in his defence has raised other issues going beyond timing on the basis that he was not a party to the proceedings in the County Court, and it is possible that these points will be in issue in the course of a claim for damages. An appeal in those circumstances may be too limited a prism for these issues to be determined.
(ii) there are a number of orders to be appealed. The Lord Chancellor submitted that this is not an insuperable obstacle. That is true because appeals can be conjoined. However, it is an added feature about the cumbersome nature of the appeal route in circumstances where it has already been established that at some point, proximate to the orders made by the court, the Claimant lacked litigation and injunction capacity.
(iii) if appeals proceeded, it is likely that the Landlord would have no interest in being heard because the matters are now academic to the Landlord. The Lord Chancellor would have an interest in being joined because in reality the points are germane to the damages claim, and not for any other purpose. There is an artificiality in these matters being ventilated in the context of appeals, especially in the circumstances adverted to in the third sentence of sub-paragraph (ii) immediately above.
(i) there are sufficient nuances to indicate that the Court should not deprive the Claimant of this claim without a more scrupulous examination of the circumstances of the kind which would occur in the context of a trial. The grounds of the application are not sufficiently clear and obvious as to indicate that the claim was inappropriate.
(ii) There was not a prompt application to strike out the claim. Although the strike out possibility was identified in the defence, the defence went into the merits of the claim and identified potential defences other than those based on abuse. There was a lapse of more than a year from service of the claim before the Lord Chancellor made the application to strike out the claim. Whilst this factor by itself is not decisive because a clear and obvious case for a strike out may not be lost by delay by itself, this is a factor which the Court is entitled to take into account in the context of the application as a whole.
(iii) There is no particular prejudice to the Lord Chancellor in proceeding in this way through a Part 7 claim without an appeal.
(i) on the information before the Court on this application, there is no abuse of process in proceeding with the claim without an appeal against each or any of the orders to which the Claimant objects, particularly in view of the fact that the Court has found in broad terms that the Claimant lacked litigation capacity and injunction capacity;
(ii) on the information at this stage, there is no affront to the administration of justice or harassment or oppression to the other parties in the case for the claim for damages to be brought without a prior appeal or a judicial review;
(iii) in all the circumstances, this is not a case where it is clear and obvious that the claim is an abuse of process such as to require a strike out;
(iv) on the contrary, there are case management reasons which indicate that the sensible course is to allow the claim for damages to proceed without an appeal;
(v) in any event, a strike out is a discretionary remedy, and it is one for various reasons which ought not to be exercised, especially by reference to the factors which militate against a strike out and the absence of prejudice to anybody else in the case;
(vi) I reject the alleged constitutional reasons for striking out the claim: if they exist at all, they do not in the context of the case as a whole militate in favour of depriving the Claimant of his remedy under section 9 (if the claim is otherwise well made out).
VIII Disposal