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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Pant v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWCA Civ 1964 (21 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1964.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1964 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(MR J CHATWANI)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
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JANAKI PANT | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS L GIOVANNETTI (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor, London, SW1H 9JS) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"Currently in the UK significant differences in status flow from a person being recognised as a refugee and someone only considered to be an Art 3 risk. The former possesses a number of civil, political social and economic rights guaranteed by Arts 2-30 of the Refugee Convention; there is also currently a policy to grant him indefinite leave to remain (previously it was limited to leave to remain). The latter may in certain circumstances possess nothing more than a guarantee of non-removal for so long as his return would place him at Art 3 risk."
"In reaching his decision, the Secretary of State also took into account the documents, including the statement, submitted by your representatives in support of your asylum claim..... the Secretary of State has carefully considered the two documents concerning the alleged arrest warrant which your representatives have submitted on your behalf. However, in the light of the above, the Secretary of State took the view that such documents, without substantial independent corroborating evidence, are of little value and is of the opinion that they do not in any way enhance your claim to asylum."
So there were two arrest warrants that were translated and there was a third one to which I shall refer, which was not translated.
"That the respondent shall obtain verification of the arrest warrant produced by the appellant and shall file his report thereon on or before 14 days before the hearing."
The directions also required the applicant to obtain and file a psychiatric report, which she did. She was also required to file a chronology and skeleton argument which those acting for her did not do.
"16. I accept that where an apparently genuine document is said to be a forgery, there will inevitably and in practice be an evidential burden on the Secretary of State to undermine the authenticity of the document. That accords with the general approach any court or tribunal will adopt to the resolution of such a factual issue. But it seems to me that it is important to bear in mind the exercise on which the court or tribunal in question is engaged. In the case of this adjudicator, he was concerned to determine whether or not the appellant had established on the evidence an entitlement to remain in this country, either under the Geneva Convention or on the basis that her removal would amount to a breach of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
17. In carrying out that exercise, the proper approach has been considered by this court in Zarandy v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] EWCA Civ 153. In that case the court considered an earlier decision of this court in R v Immigration Appeal Tribunal ex parte Davila-Puga [2001] EWCA Civ 931, and said:
'13. That case [Davila-Puga] is ample authority for the proposition that a claimant's case, which will often, as here, consist in part of oral assertions, in part of documents which are placed in front of the appellate authorities and in part of background material relating to the country in question, must be looked at in the round so that the appellate authorities may decide whether the claimant has proved his case that he was a refugee to the appropriate standard. As Sedley LJ said in Karanakeran v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2000] 3 All ER 449:
'Everything capable of having a bearing has to be given the weight, great or little, due to it .... so far as they can be established, are signposts on the road to a conclusion.'
14. [Counsel] who appeared on behalf of the appellant, made submissions which at one point seemed to suggest that it was his contention that if any piece of paper was produced by a claimant it must be taken as evidencing what was asserted in that piece of paper unless either there was evidence from elsewhere that the paper was not what it appeared to be or alternatively had been improperly procured or there was evidence appearing from the face of the document that it was unreliable I do not accept that proposition. The adjudicator must look at all of the material in the round and see whether he is persuaded of the claim.'
18. That directs the tribunal's attention to the proper issue. The question is whether the document can be relied on in support of the appellant's claim in the light of all the evidence."
"In terms of documents, where copies of warrants for arrest were concerned, for example, the Secretary of State did not find that they enhanced the appellant's claim. At a previous hearing a Special Adjudicator, Mrs Lester, had directed that the Home Office check the veracity of the warrants which the appellant had produced. She also required on 1 March 1997 that the appellant file a chronology and a skeleton argument. Neither of these had been done at the time of the hearing and Ms Jenkins applied for an adjournment because the directions of the previous Adjudicator, Mrs Lester, had not been complied with. Mr Richmond explained that it was simply not practical for the Home Office to undertake such a task. I refused the adjournment. It was not normal for the Home Office to verify documents and since I was not seized of this case, it was my view that it was for the appellant to prove her case and not the function of the Home Office. My own position was, of course, unlike the Secretary of State, that I was neutral as to the genuineness of the warrants."
"There was a further warrant mentioned at the hearing. This was an untranslated warrant which had been given in by Ms Jenkins who had not copied it. It was not translated but the appellant explained that this warrant had been sent to her after she had come to the UK by her older sister who was not in fact a member of the party. She had got it from 'other people'. She did not know who they were. As to the other warrants, they had come from friends who were not party members. Some of them had got the warrant and told her that she should not return to this country. Her colleagues were still working underground although they had not been arrested."
"(1) Subject to rule 9(1) or (2), a special adjudicator shall not adjourn a hearing unless he is satisfied that an adjournment is necessary for the just disposal of the appeal.
(2) When considering whether an adjournment is necessary, a special adjudicator shall have particular regard to the need to secure the just, timely and effective conduct of the proceedings.
(3) Where a hearing is adjourned, the special adjudicator shall-
(a) consider whether further directions should be given under rule 23, and
(b) give notice either orally or in writing to every party to the proceedings of the time and place of the adjourned hearing."
"(1) Subject to paragraph (2), where a party fails to comply with a direction given under rule 23 the appellate authority may-
(a) treat that party as having abandoned the appeal or, as the case may be, treat the decision appealed against as having been withdrawn, or
(b) proceed with the appeal; or
(c) determine the appeal without a hearing under rule 35."
Rule 24(2) contains a provision for what should happen when a direction has not been complied with for reasons beyond the control of the party who should have complied with it. It does not appear that this rule, or rule 10, was referred to specifically.
"I do not find the appellant's claims to be credible. She claims to have been a leader at the age of fifteen in Nepal and yet at interview she said that she was merely a member. I find it implausible that she remained underground for ten years."
She then said these significant words:
"I also found incredible the manner in which she described how she obtained the warrants for arrest. She said that her sister had sent the third one to the UK but no attempt had been made by the Solicitors to translate this document. I give it no weight whatsoever. I have no doubt whatsoever that a responsible solicitor would have ensured that was his duty to have it translated if it had been an important document."
These are the only findings that the adjudicator made with regard to the warrants.
"Although we agree that the adjudicator did not make any explicit findings on the warrants, we do not accept that the determination is flawed and the matter needs to be remitted for a rehearing."
The tribunal did not deal at all with the question of failure to grant an adjournment.
Order: Permission to appeal refused.