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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Gichuru v States of Jersey Police [2008] JCA 163A (24 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2008/2008_163A.html Cite as: [2008] JCA 163A |
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[2008]JCA163A
COURT OF APPEAL
24th September 2008
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Before : |
The Hon. Michael Beloff, Q.C., President; |
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Between |
Samuel Gichuru |
Applicant |
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And |
The Police of the States of Jersey Police |
Respondent |
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Appeal by the Respondent under Article 5(1) of the Court of Appeal (Civil)(Judicial Review) Rules 2000 against a decision of the Bailiff on 18th July, 2008, granting leave to apply for judicial review.
Advocate S. Young for the Applicant.
Crown Advocate H. Sharp for the Respondent.
JUDGMENT
THE president:
Introduction
1. This is an appeal by the Respondent ("the Police") under the Court of Appeal (Civil)(Judicial Review) Rules 2000 ("the Rules") Rule 5(1)(2) from the order made by the Royal Court on the 18th July 2008, refusing an application to set aside leave to apply for judicial review in respect of the ex parte decision of the Bailiff on 6th June 2008 to grant leave to the Applicant (Mr Gichuru) to bring a judicial review of the Police decision dated 28th August 2007 refusing to grant consent pursuant to the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999 ("the 1999 Law") to withdraw funds from accounts in Jersey. It raises an important issue of procedure, well researched and argued by both advocates.
2. The grounds on which relief is sought by Mr Gichuru are set out with extreme brevity in the Court form. "That the de facto freeing of assets by Court order by the States of Jersey Police for six years is unreasonable having regard to the mechanism of the same and the period for which it has been maintained."
Issues
3. No challenge was made that an arguable point was raised by this Ground: and the Deputy Bailiff in some obiter observations in a judgment on 25th April 2008 ("the April 2008 Judgment"), to which I shall shortly refer, said at paragraph 35:-
albeit that he added:-
I am therefore content to proceed on the basis that the points are arguable but equally express no view at all on their merits.
4. In such circumstances the Police asks the Court of Appeal to order that the Royal Courts decision of 18th July 2008 be set aside and that (in necessary consequence) the leave granted to Mr Gichuru on 6th June 2008 also be set aside on two distinct grounds first material non-disclosure, second effective alternative remedy.
Background: The Facts
5. The Bailiff adopted the Deputy Bailiff's summary of the background as follows. I shall with equal gratitude do likewise:-
6. In the April 2008 judgment the Deputy Bailiff, granted the Police application for discharge.
7. Further with the consent of Walbrook on the same day the civil proceedings were adjourned sine die.
8. Thereafter on 28th April 2008 Mr Gichuru's legal adviser wrote to the Law Officers' Department formally requesting that the Police review the refusal to grant consent for the withdrawal of the funds.
9. On 12th May 2008 the Crown Advocate replied stating that the Police were reviewing their position and inviting the submission of "full representations" so that they could be considered.
10. On 16th May, 2008 Mr Gichuru's legal adviser responded that his client's funds had been effectively frozen for more than six years without any court order, that Mr Gichuru had attended for interview and provided affidavits, and that he would do no more.
11. On 20th May 2008 the Crown Advocate replied seeking "detailed evidence that explains the provenance of funds received into Windward Trading Limited". Mr Gichuru's legal adviser took the view that his client was under no obligation to do so, and duly applied for leave for judicial review.
12. On 6th June 2008 the Bailiff granted leave generally for judicial review of the decision of the Police of 28th August 2007 to refuse consent under the 1999 law. Proceedings were served upon the Police.
13. On 26th June 2008 a notice was duly filed by the Police seeking, pursuant to the Court of Appeal (Civil) (Judicial Review) Rules 2000 Rule 16/6/(1), to have the leave to apply for judicial review set aside. That Rule provides:-
14. Before the Bailiff, it was contended by the Police that it was not open to Mr Gichuru to wage war on two fronts. Having begun a private law action against Walbrook, he could not now commence, in particular where he had not been candid with the Court as to his reasons for switching his line of attack, judicial proceedings against the Police. The private law action and the judicial review were alternative remedies and could not both be pursued simultaneously. This amounted to a why leave should be set aside.
15. The Bailiff summarily dismissed the other argument as to material non-disclosure as hereinafter appears.
16. The Bailiff next considered such well known authorities as R v Home Secretary ex parte Swati [1986] 1 WLR 477 per Sir John Donaldson MR at 485 and R v Epping and Harlow General Commissioners ex parte Goldstraw [1983] 3 All ER 257, R v Civil Service Appeal Board, ex parte Bruce [1988] 3 All ER 686 ("Bruce"), and the decision of this Court in Planning and Environment Committee v Lesquende Limited [1998] JLR 1,. ("Lesquende").
17. The Bailiff reasoned at para 14:-
He continued at para 18:-
and concluded at para 21:-
18. The Bailiff therefore dismissed the application. It is common ground that the Bailiff was exercising a discretion, which would only be impugned by this Court on principles frequently restated and generally known. See e.g. UCC v Bender [2006] JLR 269, paras 25 and 26.
19. The grounds of this appeal, which reflect those principles, are that the Royal Court:-
(i) erred in principle;
(ii) misdirected itself on the law;
(iii) took into account matters which it should not have done;
(iv) failed to take into account matters which it should have done;
(v) such that the exercise of the Court's discretion was plainly wrong.
The Legislative Context
20. The legislation which provides a backcloth to this application is to be found in the 1999 Law. The material provisions under the rubric "MONEY LAUNDERING" are Article 32(1), which stipulates as follows:-
21. The Deputy Bailiff also gave, in the April 2008 judgment a succinct summary of the law enshrined in those and cognate provisions, which both Counsel accepted as accurate:-
In short while consent of the police may provide a defence to a charge under Section 32(1) it has no direct relevance to any civil action brought by a depositor against a Bank or a person such as Wallbrook.
22. I draw attention to the fact that the Act contains at Articles 29, 30 and 31 provisions as to disclosure of information disclosed to the police by the police onward to third parties. It is not necessary to set these out in full. Suffice it to say that it is the reach of the restrictions as well as their limits which is significant: inter alios, competent authorities outside Jersey may be recipients of such information.
Material Non-Disclosure
23. Advocate Sharp contended, that no explanation was given as to why Mr Gichuru had agreed to an adjournment of the civil proceedings sine die: and that the duty uberrmae fidei which is imposed upon all applicants for leave to apply for judicial review had accordingly not been discharged.
24. The Bailiff held at paragraph 9:-
I would add that the Transcript makes clear that the Bailiff was apprised of the consensual adjournment of the civil action, and I draw attention also to a significant interchange between the Bailiff and Advocate Young in the Transcript which the Bailiff must have had in mind.
"BAILIFF: Well, that's really for a second stage isn't it Mr Young? I mean what, what uhm, Mr Sharp is saying here is that uhm, or one of the things he's saying is that the available private law action is uhm, is there, no explanation has been given for not pursuing that, having two bites of the cherry, and it's not, he didn't put it quite like this, but it's not really in the public interest I think for two actions to be running simultaneously or contemporaneously.
ADVOCATE YOUNG: Well Sir, I hope Sir I, I have dealt with that, but I, I shall deal with the point again. One, at the present time the civil proceedings are adjourned sine die. Secondly, the two actions seek different relief. Is it suggested, and it has not been suggested, that Judicial Review alone would be enough in this case, in my, respectful submission, the answer would be no. It may be that Mr Gichuru, with hindsight, may have decided judicially to review the administrative decision first, and then may have had to go on to sue Walbrook. Would that not put this Court in exactly the same position?""
Advocate Young therefore relied not only on the fact that the Bailiff knew the nature and state of the civil proceedings, but also had at least a hint of the reason why Mr Gichuru had chosen an alternative tack.
25. As against this Advocate Sharp also drew attention to the Deputy Bailiff's analysis in his April 2008 judgment of how the civil suit might have progressed where he said in that judgment at para 33:-
26. Accordingly, submitted Advocate Sharp, Mr Gichuru, appreciating his inability to show that the money in Wallbrook was - to use the vernacular - "clean" opted for judicial review where that issue would or might not arise.
27. I entertain respectful doubts as to the Deputy Bailiff's analysis of the civil claim. It is not at all clear to me how an assertion of "reasonable suspicion" as to the source of the funds would provide any defence in law to action by a customer for payment of his deposit in loan to a Bank. In the absence of legislative provision or express conditions to that effect. It would be otherwise if the Bank could show, on the balance of probabilities, that it would itself be committing or assisting a customer to commit a criminal offence by making such payments. [See K Ltd v National Westminster Bank Plc 2007 WLR 313 per Longmore LJ. (para 10)]
28. It is, of course, obvious that the Police for their part doubted Mr Gichuru's statement on oath in an affidavit dated 15th April 2008 that the monies deposited were "fees earned by way of business consultancy and business introductions carried out in Africa" and not unlikely that Mr Gichuru may have lacked confidence in his ability, if need be, to persuade the Royal Court that those doubts were ill-founded. But it seems to me that the key to Mr Gichuru's change of tack lay in the removal from the civil proceedings of the Police, thereby disabling Mr Gichuru from seeking in those proceedings to ascertain, and even challenge, the evidence on which the Police relied for the maintenance of their refusal to consent. Such a course would, by contrast, be available to him in a judicial review. Advocate Young's response to the Bailiff's question cited above supports that analysis. In my view the Bailiff was told enough. In any event Advocate Young's argument before us on the "alternative remedy issue" itself shows exactly why the new approach was chosen by or on behalf of Mr Gichuru. I therefore reject Mr Sharp's first argument.
Alternative Remedy
29. It is useful to consider at the outset why judicial review is conventionally regarded as a remedy of last resort. Professor Sir William Wade Q.C. is hostile to the convention: he considers that (Administrative Law: 9th ed. p [208 2]). However, on this issue his views have (unusually) not commanded assent from the judiciary see e.g. R v Birmingham CC exp Ferrero (1993) All ER 530. One reason is constitutional: if Parliament has directly or indirectly, provided a special remedy for a public law wrong, it would seem contrary to principle for the judiciary not to respect this choice. Another reason is pragmatic: the explosion of judicial review as a curb on abusive executive action has placed the Courts under pressure: if that pressure can be alleviated by referring a matter to a specialist tribunal or other forum, that promotes rather than impairs the public interest. In short where judicial review is not necessary, it is not desirable. This same philosophy is responsible for the general rule that the issue of whether judicial review should be refused on the grounds of an effective alternative remedy is to be decided at the leave stage, not at the inter partes hearing . De Smith Judicial Review of Administrative Action 6th ed para 16-061.
30. Nonetheless the Courts do not lightly surrender their powers in this context. It is not enough that there should be an alternative remedy. That remedy must be equally effective to achieve the applicant's ends. The question is "whether the substitute for judicial review adequately protects the rights and interest of the claimants" (De Smith op cit para 16-011).
31. I am content to endorse as a point of departure the statement of principle in the judgment of this Court in Planning and Environment v Lesquende Limited [1998] JLR 1 ("Lesquende"):-
32. The present is not (like Lesquende) a paradigm case of where there is an avenue of appeal or review created by statute (De Smith op cit paras 16-108 - 16-020 but the applies to other avenues of legal challenge (ditto 16-021 - 16-022)).
33. Advocate Sharp reminded us too that identity of parties is not essential for identification of an effective alternative remedy, and pointed to Yates v Minister of Planning and Environment [2006] JRC 167 (Yates) and R v DPP ex p Camelot Plc 1988 10 Admin AC 93 (Camelot). The concept of parties in the conventional private law sense does not sit wholly comfortably with judicial review in any event, but we accept the validity of the particular point made. Neither case, however, advances the argument far enough beyond that point. In Yates (which the Bailiff himself considered turned on its own facts: Judgment para 22) the object of preventing the operation of a noisome skip was achievable either by the private law of voisinage or by a successful assault on the decision to license the skip. In Camelot the object of having a rival lottery operator prosecuted was not directly promoted by establishing a public law flaw in the decision of the DPP not to prosecute: indeed Simon Brown LJ did not for various reasons consider such course an available option at all (page 105): as he put it a private prosecution which achieved the same object directly was the "only proper remedy"). In the present context (as I now explain) the private law proceedings cannot quash the refusal to consent and cancel its consequences: only judicial review could do so.
34. It is obviously vital to compare the two sets of proceedings in order to evaluate whether one (the civil) is an alternative, and in particular, an equally effective alternative to the other (judicial review). I have already noted that the refusal to consent (and its validity) will not be - if it ever was -in issue in the civil proceedings which is a private law action for debt. The judicial review proceedings are by contrast focussed exclusively on the propriety of the refusal to consent. While, at one level it can be contended that the private and public law proceedings have the same objective i.e. to secure the release of the money, at the next level up the objectives manifestly diverge.
35. It is clear that the refusal to consent is in fact, if not in law, an obstacle in the path of Mr Gichuru obtaining release of the funds. If it were to be shown to be invalid after analysis by a court of the basis for it Walbrook might be compelled to withdraw its objection. (Whether it would have that result I cannot speculate). More importantly the refusal to consent (and the material which originally gave rise to it) can be disclosed to regulatory authorities overseas; additionally its existence would need to be disclosed by Mr Gichuru to any bank invited to take deposit of the monies once released. Although Advocate Sharp says that such a bank might well regard the fact that such an order was once in place (even if later set aside by the Court) as sufficient to decline the deposit, I regard it as unrealistic to conclude that it would have no impact at all on Mr Gichuru's ability to obtain the funds and place them elsewhere in terms, at the very least, of his reputation and also in Miss Montgomery's felicitous phrase " the regulatory taint" see R v Dep Gov of Parkhurst Prison: ex Leech 1988 AC 533 per Lord Bridge at 562 where an analogous analysis can be found, comparing the Secretary of State's statutory duty to ensure compliance by the Governor with the law and a judicial review at the request of a prisoner charged by the Governor with an offence against discipline as an effective remedy for a public law wrong and highlighting the deficiency of the former compared with the latter, from the prisoner's perspective .
36. There are other reasons why I consider that the Bailiff's order should be upheld. First the issue of what constraints, if any may be imposed upon the police in making or maintaining a refusal to consent, (where prolongation as the Deputy Bailiff noted could wreak unfairness on an individual) is a matter of general importance on which the Court's guidance is required, and itself justified the grant and upholding of leave, see R (DR) - Head Teacher of S School 2003 ELR 104 at p 121.Simon Brown LJ: the matter here is whether the police can put in place a time-unlimited quasi-saisie and keep someone in a kind of financial limbo. Second, as had been said, judicial review is less about private rights (or expectations) than about public wrongs and the focus in the judicial review is on the police action. Third it requires a strong case to deny an applicant for a remedy, who can, in the public law sphere, surmount the hurdle of arguability, the opportunity to pursue a remedy which he considers, not irrationally, may, if granted, enure to his benefit.
37. Advocate Sharp's primary and more focussed argument was that once embarked on the civil proceedings Mr Gichuru was fixed with his choice and could not institute an application for judicial review until the conclusion of those proceedings. He advanced the argument on the basis of precedent (ex p Bruce) and practicality i.e. the need to minimise the burden on the Courts by being compelled to resolve two sets of proceedings rather than one.
38. I cannot see that the argument for practicality can deny an applicant a right to pursue an otherwise available and useful remedy, and I cannot construe Bruce in the manner contended for. In Bruce the applicant had been dismissed from the Civil Service. His application for judicial review sought to compel the Board to give its reasons, no doubt in order to ascertain if they were infected with inappropriate considerations. He also instituted proceedings in an industrial tribunal for unfair dismissal; compromised them; and then sued on the compromise. Understandably the Divisional Court regarded the issue in the judicial review as academic; no advantage would accrue to the applicant given what had occurred in the other for a. Two passages from the judgments were relied on by Advocate Sharp, May LJ said at pp 696 - 697:-
Roch J said at p 697:-
39. It is however to be borne in mind that May LJ at p 694 said earlier:-
40. In my view the two passages relied on by Advocate Sharp were in that context a recitation of the factual background, not an exposition of the Court's reasoning for dismissing the application which was made on well established grounds of an effective alternative remedy in another forum.
41. I should add this: the Deputy Bailiff had, in his April 2008 judgment, stated:-
42. Advocate Sharp relied on this observation, but it provides an infirm basis for his argument. The Deputy Bailiff was right to say that Mr Gichuru had a choice of remedy, but wrong if he was saying that the remedies were alternatives, the one to the other. In our view Mr Gichuru is entitled to pursue both.
43. It would also be incorrect to suggest that if there is indeed an effective alternative remedy, judicial review can nonetheless be sought, at any rate in the absence of special circumstances. The alternative remedy trumps judicial review.
44. For these reasons I would dismiss this appeal.