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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Campsie v Information Commissioner [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0052 (16 April 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2007/EA_2006_0052.html
Cite as: [2007] UKIT EA_2006_52, [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0052

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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0052
Information Tribunal                                              Appeal Number: EA/2006/0052
Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA)
Decision Promulgated on:
Decision On Paper: 5.4.2007
BEFORE
INFORMATION TRIBUNAL DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
Mr David Marks
and
LAY MEMBERS
Rosalind Tatam
Michael Hake
Between
ALISTAIR KEITH CAMPSIE
Appellant
and
INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
Respondent
THIS DECISION IS MADE WITHOUT AN ORAL HEARING
Decision
The Tribunal upholds the Decision Notice of 4 July 2006.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0052
Reasons for Decision
General
1.          The Appellant appeals against the Decision Notice made by the Information
Commissioner (the Commissioner) dated 4 July 2006. The Appellant who has
throughout the history of this matter acted on his own behalf contends in this Appeal
that the disputed decision in the Decision Notice is that the Commissioner did not find
the BBC to be in breach of section 16 of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The
Appellant draws specific attention to paragraph 5.3 of the Decision Notice.
2.          The grounds of the Appeal are therefore extremely narrow although the background
is, to some extent, complicated and in order to understand fully the motives behind
and the purpose of the Appeal, it is necessary to go into some degree of history.
3.          For present purposes, it is sufficient to set out section 16 of FOIA which places a duty
upon public authorities to:
“… provide advice and assistance, so far as it would be reasonable to expect the
authority to do so, to persons who propose to make, or have made, requests for
information to it.”
Subsection (2) states that any public authority which in relation to the provision of
advice or assistance conforms with the code of practice prescribed by section 45 of
FOIA is to be taken as complying with the duty. For reasons which will become
apparent, it is not necessary to refer any further to either section 45 or, as has been
done in the history of this case, section 46: the latter section relates to the issuance
of a code of practice by the Lord Chancellor in connection with the management of
records. This is mainly because the facts in this case occurred, for all material
purposes, at a time before the provisions of the FOIA came into force. It is fair to note
however that the Appellant has contended that the provisions of FOIA did apply,
given his belief that his complaint had not been closed when FOIA came into force.
As will be explained below, the Tribunal finds that this belief is misplaced.
The Request and its Background
4.          By the terms of an email dated 8 May 2005, the Appellant asked the British
Broadcasting Corporation (the BBC) to forward to him “copies of all papers and
decisions by BBC [sic] regarding my serious complaint made on or around 1
September 1996 to its then director general, John Birt, forwarded to him through an
MP, Roger Gale, then chairman of the Back Bench Media Committee.” In addition,
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the request sought “copies of all papers relating to Baroness Young of Old Scone’s
intervention on my behalf and especially its outcome should also be included along
with the reasons why BBC [sic] has always refused to answer the complaint”.
5.          The Appellant is the author of a work apparently entitled “The MacCrimmon Legend
or The Madness of Angus MacKay” which was in effect an investigation into the
conclusions of an earlier work apparently published in 1883 edited by an individual
called Angus MacKay in which it was contended that an ancient and particularly
Celtic form of music called pibroch had been perpetuated by a group or family of
pipers called the MacCrimmons. Prior to the publication of his own work, which
occurred it seems in 1980, the Appellant claims that the BBC put out a radio
programme relating to the above to which the Appellant took great exception, as it did
not refer to or acknowledge his own work or research.
6.          The above is no more than a very shortened précis of the background which led to
considerable resentment and indeed anger that the Appellant claims he experienced
as a result of what he called a campaign mounted or instigated by the BBC in effect
to discredit him. The Tribunal feels there is no need to go further into the extremely
sad and somewhat complicated series of events that led to the request in May 2005.
7.          The Appellant claims that the strain and stress brought about by these events
contributed to a heart attack and to an overall decline in his health as well as to his
overall perception that the BBC refused to answer or in any way deal with his
criticisms.
The 1996 Complaint
8.          The original complaint (“the 1996 Complaint”) about the matters which are only briefly
described in the preceding section was made on or about 1 September 1996. No
copy of this complaint has been provided. However the gist of it was a complaint
about the manner in which the Appellant claims to have been dealt with at the hands
of the BBC.
Request of 8 May 2005
9.          The above explains the reason for the request being made in May 2005, effectively
by letter dated 8 May 2005. The BBC stated that it could not respond to the request
“as the BBC no longer holds the information you have requested”. Reference was
then made to section 46 of FOIA, it being added that “records about complaints are
kept for five years”. However, as indicated above, reference to section 46 was
misplaced since at the time the alleged destruction occurred it was at a period prior to
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the enactment of FOIA, when the BBC’s own rules applied to the destruction of
records.
10.        By letter dated 31 May 2005, the Appellant wrote what has proved to be an important
letter to Rachel Hallett of the Information and Policy Compliance Unit, dealing with
Freedom of Information affairs at the BBC. The letter is significant because it has
since been reviewed by the Commissioner in his Decision Notice and regarded as in
fact constituting a separate request being a request as to the details relating to the
destruction or alleged destruction of the original complaint and the files relating
thereto, in particular, the identity of the person responsible. However, at page 2 of
the letter, the Appellant stated as follows:
“I am therefore forced to repeat my request to you to transmit to me all the papers
concerned as a matter of great urgency – I am not in good health – and certainly
within the 20 working days limit specified by BBC and dating from 8 May 2005 when
you received my request.”
In the penultimate paragraph in the letter, the Appellant stated that he was repeating
“that you appear to have informed me the BBC can keep a complaint about its
conduct and which it has not replied to and destroyed five years later without
informing the complainant who is left in limbo, unaware that the final shock is still to
be administered.” The issue of the handling of the 1996 Complaint was a matter for
the BBC and is not a matter for the Tribunal on this Appeal.
11.        The Tribunal would agree that there is perhaps a limited scope for arguing that the
letter of 31 May 2005 in effect represents a fresh request dealing with the matter
relating to the destruction of the original complaint and the files relating to that
complaint. On the other hand, the Decision Notice and that part of it against which an
appeal is made relates to an alleged failure to provide advice and assistance under
section 16 of FOIA. The Decision Notice states that the failure is predominantly with
regard to the manner in which the BBC in fact interpreted the letter, i.e. its
understanding that the letter of 31 May 2005 related purely to the request that had
previously been made on 8 May 2005, and to nothing further.
12.        It is on that basis that the subsequent correspondence should be revisited. By letter
dated 6 June 2005, a Glenn Del Medico, on behalf of the BBC, emailed the Appellant
apologising for what he called “the BBC’s failure to respond to your original
complaint”, i.e. the 1996 Complaint. He then added the following:
“Extensive searches have been made in the BBC’s records and continue to be made,
but I am afraid that little success has resulted. We have recently traced a letter
written by John Birt to Roger Gale MP on 27 September 1996 stating that your
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complaint had been passed to Programme Complaints Unit. However, nothing else
has been found. We are continuing our search, and in this connection, it would be of
assistance if you are able to provide me with a copy of your communication to the
BBC of on or around 1 September 1996.”
The letter then continued in the form of an assurance that “every effort is being made
to trace these documents …”. Mr Del Medico appeared to treat the letter of 31 May
2005 as a request for an internal review. The Tribunal is not invited, and does not
propose, to revisit that decision. Meanwhile, the Appellant was unable to provide the
letter which was requested of him by Mr Del Medico, but provided several cuttings
from 1988 and 1997 which represented letters which he had written to the press
regarding his difficulties with the BBC, and one published letter from the BBC in
response. The Appellant wrote again to the BBC on 21 June 2005 and reiterated that
he had not received “the papers” concerned revealing “who had authorised their
destruction, when, where and why.“ On 14 July 2005, the Appellant wrote to the head
of the Information Policy and Compliance Unit, a Mr James Leaton Gray, stating that
he could not provide any correspondence other than the press cuttings from the
period of the original complaint in September 1996, although he did provide a copy of
a letter sent to John Birt, the then director general of 22 October 1996 and an answer
to that letter of 29 October 1996.
By letter dated 27 July 2005, Mr Del Medico wrote further to the Appellant expressing
regret that the documents which had been forwarded by the Appellant “still do not
offer us a great deal of hope in tracing the information. Apart from the documentation
you have kindly provide and one letter we have already disclosed, we still have
insufficient hard information about the complaint(s) you made in the 1980’s and 90’s
to enable us to trace the documents you require.”
13.        There then followed a note of the internal review decision arrived at by the BBC and
dated 10 August 2005. That note stated that the BBC could not “provide information
that it no longer holds”. The relevant file was stated as having been recorded “within
the BBC Records Management database DAISY as being first closed and
subsequently destroyed having passed the five year retention period”. The review
continued that had the file been “active, then it would not have been destroyed”. The
author of the review, a Mr Gregory, stated that he was “satisfied that the BBC has
directly followed its retention schedule”.
14.        This Internal Review notification prompted the Appellant to contact the
Commissioner’s office. He did this by letter of 28 August 2005, which was
accompanied by a detailed analysis of what he called the “FOI request”, being a
reference, it seems reasonably clear, to the original request of 8 May 2005 and its
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background. In the analysis he quoted portions of his correspondence and stressed
what arguably could be viewed as the further request for details, namely the facts
about the manner in which the file was destroyed.
15.        The Commissioner wrote to Mr Gregory by letter dated 26 January 2006 alluding only
to the content of the original request of 8 May 2005. He did however ask for dates
and an explanation as to the “normal procedure for the destruction of such data” and
also an explanation as to how the handling of the filing in question was managed in
accordance with the then BBC’s record policy and management standards. By letter
dated 2 February 2006, the Appellant communicated with the officer dealing with his
complaint at the Commissioner’s office, a Dr Jean Adams, stating that “the most vital
part of the request turns out to be the identity or identities of the person or person
who authorised destruction of the 1996 complaint and when it was done.” The
Tribunal notes that this is perhaps the first time that the Commissioner came to view
the proper interpretation of the earlier letter of 31 May in totally unequivocal terms.
16.        By a lengthy letter of 27 February 2006 addressed to Dr Adams, the BBC reported on
its search with regard to the original request. There is no need to set out this letter
save to say that it reflects two searches having been conducted by the BBC in a
number of distinct areas, the conclusion of the letter being as follows, namely:
“Having searched all of the above sources of information held by the BBC, re-
searched all the original areas and extended our search to cover new areas, we
believe that we have searched all relevant areas where information about Mr
Campsie’s complaint could be stored.”
The letter ended with the BBC’s belief that it did not hold any information covered by
the original request except a particular letter from John Birt to Roger Gale disclosed
to the Appellant on 6 June 2005. The letter pointed out that the section 46 code of
practice did not apply given the fact that the BBC’s own practices and policy of
document destruction applied at the time. The letter referred to a records
management retention schedule which was in place at the time of the destruction of
the 1996 Complaint, again concluding that it was consistent with BBC policy “at the
time the information relating to Mr Campsie’s correspondence … should have been
destroyed within five years of the complaint being closed.” The letter had appended
to it a list of the relevant correspondence, some of which has already been referred to
in this judgment.
17.        There then appears to have been some confusion about the scope for further review
which caused concern to the Appellant. Dr Adams reported the results of the BBC’s
findings to the Appellant and by letter dated 11 April 2006 stated that she assumed
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0052
that since she had by then heard nothing further from the Appellant, he was satisfied
with the response and the Commissioner therefore closed the file. By letter dated 18
April 2006, the Appellant protested, and a reply was (as Dr Adams had apparently left
the employment of the Commissioner) sent to him by Dr Adams’ line manager, a Ms
Webb, by letter dated 26 April 2006. Ms Webb pointed out that she recognised that
there had been a request for the identity of “the person or persons who authorised
destruction of the 1996 Complaint and when it was done” being a reference to the
earlier letter of 2 February 2006 sent to Dr Adams by the Appellant. Ms Webb also
recognised that Dr Adams had failed to communicate that particular request to the
BBC. However, she stressed that “the fact of the matter” was that the information
relating to the 1996 Complaint could not be found. Ms Webb then, perhaps quite
rightly, pointed to the essential difference of opinion between the Appellant and the
BBC namely that whereas the BBC had explained that the complaint had been
destroyed in line with the records management policy then in place, the Appellant had
expressed his continued belief that his complaint should not have been destroyed
because he believed at least that it was still open. In this letter, Ms Webb said she
would contact the BBC again to clarify further the circumstances surrounding the
destruction of the 1996 Complaint, and in particular to determine who was involved or
responsible.
18.        In due course, a formal Decision Notice was issued, but not before the BBC in a letter
to Ms Webb of 8 May 2006 dealt with a specific additional query about the identity of
the person who destroyed the complaint, stating that “the BBC does hold this
information”. The letter added that not only was the destruction of records at the time
prior to FOIA coming into force carried out in accordance with the retention schedule
to which reference has been made, but also that “the identity of the individual who
destroyed the records was not recorded”.
The Decision Notice
19.        In paragraph 5 of his Decision Notice, the Commissioner expressed his satisfaction
with the assurance of the BBC that the file, i.e. the file stemming from the 1996
Complaint was not held. However, in respect of information relating to the destruction
of the complaints file, the Commissioner found that by not confirming or denying to
the Appellant whether information relating to the destruction of the complaint was
held, the BBC was in breach of Part I of FOIA. At paragraph 5.3, being the paragraph
quoted in the Appellant’s Grounds of Appeal, the following appears, namely:
“Although it is clear that the BBC misunderstood the letter of 31 May, the
Commissioner does not find the BBC to be in breach of section 16. It remained in
contact with the complainant throughout the course of the complaint and appears to
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the Commissioner to have advised and assisted the complainant to a reasonable
extent. The correspondence of both parties was open to interpretation.”
20.        The action required therefore was that the BBC should within 30 days of the notice
provide to the Appellant “any information relating to the destruction of his complaint
that has not already been disclosed to the complainant …”. In practice, this was no
more than an echo of the confirmation by the BBC to which reference has been made
above that it did not hold the information relating to the identity of the person or
persons who had been responsible for the destruction of the files.
The Issues
21.        It can therefore be seen that the ambit of the Appeal is extremely narrow. No appeal
is made against the finding that the Commissioner, despite finding the letter of 31
May as constituting a separate request, was in effect upholding the manner in which
the BBC had responded to its understanding of that letter, namely a reiteration of the
original request of 8 May 2005. The question is therefore, whether in all the
circumstances, the BBC did provide advice and assistance “so far as it would be
reasonable to expect [it] to do so” to the Appellant who had by that stage made the
request.
Findings
22.        The Tribunal finds on balance that the BBC was entitled to interpret the letter of 31
May 2005 as a repetition of the original request of 8 May and that the BBC did
enough to satisfy its obligations to provide advice and assistance so far as it was
reasonable to do so in all the circumstances of the case. In support of its findings,
the Tribunal refers in particular to the letters of 27 July 2005 and 26 February 2006
with its helpful detail as to the searches in fact carried out with regard to that request.
The Tribunal also notes, whilst the original complaint does not in any way feature as
part of this appeal, that Mr del Medico apologised to the Appellant in his letter of 6
June 2005 “for the BBC’s failure to respond to your original complaint”.
23.        The Tribunal has the power to challenge the Commissioner’s decision on two
grounds, namely first, that the notice on which the decision was made was wrong in
law, and second, that in so far as any decision involved any exercise of a discretion
by the Commissioner, the discretion should have been exercised differently; see
generally section 58 of FOIA. The Tribunal has little hesitation in saying that the
notice was in accordance with the law, namely it was issued in accordance with due
consideration of the operation of section 16. Alternatively, insofar as the
Commissioner exercised his discretion in considering whether and to what extent the
public authority had fulfilled its obligations to comply with section 16, then the Tribunal
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finds such exercise was entirely reasonable and should not have been exercised
differently.
24.        In the extremely unlikely event that any further information in this matter comes to
light, the Tribunal respectfully draws the BBC’s attention to another of its decisions
comprising a differently constituted Tribunal. In Peter Quinn v Information
Commissioner
(Appeal No EA/2006/0030), a Decision promulgated on 15 November
2006, the Home Office formally informed the Appellant in that case that should the
requested information “turn up, we would of course immediately inform you …” (see
paragraph 65)
25.        For the above reasons, the Tribunal dismisses the Appeal.
Signed
Mr David Marks
Deputy Chairman                                                                                          Date: 16 April 2007
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