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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gichura v Home Office & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 697 (20 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/697.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 697, [2008] ICR 1287 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(DISTRICT JUDGE HASAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH DBE
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GICHURA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HOME OFFICE AND ANR |
Respondent |
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Mr J Beer and Ms L Boon (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent.
Ms A Hewitt (instructed by Messrs Davies Lavery) appeared on behalf of the Second Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Buxton:
"The claimant is a disabled person within the meaning of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. As a result of a spinal injury he is paralysed in both legs. He uses a wheelchair at all times."
"Both defendants were at all material times providers of services within the meaning of Section 19 of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and also public authorities within the meaning of Section 6 of the Human rights Act 1998".
"5. During the course of his detentions the claimant suffered breaches of various obligations owed to him, including under Sections 19 to 21 of the 1995 Act, discrimination by unjustified less favourable treatment but in particular the reasonable adjustments duty under Section 21 of that Act and failure to adjust practices and procedures or to adjust physical features are equally alleged".
"It is unlawful for a provider of services to discriminate against a disabled person"
"For the purposes of this section and sections 20 and 21—
(a) the provision of services includes the provision of any goods or facilities;
(b) a person is "a provider of services" if he is concerned with the provision, in the United Kingdom, of services to the public or to a section of the public; and
(c) it is irrelevant whether a service is provided on payment or without payment."
"…the first matter I need to consider is whether [the defendants were] providing a service under section 19 of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. The claimant is a failed asylum seeker and was detained on two separate occasions pending his removal. The House of Lords decision in Amin held that an immigration officer exercising his powers under the immigration rules was not providing a service to a potential immigrant under the Race Relations Act 1976. By analogy, the same principles can be applied where a claim is brought under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. In this case the claimant was detained under schedule 2 of the Immigration Act 1971 and no complaint has been made that the detention was unlawful. The right to detain is provided by paragraph 18 of that schedule. The primary purpose of the detention is to control immigration, in this case the eventual removal of the claimant, a failed asylum seeker -- it is not to provide a service to him. The use by him of the facilities at the detention centre is incidental to his detention; conversely the provision of such facilities is incidental to his detention. In such circumstances, the Home Office [and Kalyx are not providers of] services under Section 19 of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995."
So the whole claim, as far as the effect of the Disability Discrimination Act, was struck out.
"The grant of special vouchers did not come within the general wording of Section 29 (1) [a provision in material part similar to that with which we are concerned] since, on its true construction Section 29 applied to the direct provision of facilities or services not to the mere grant of permission to use facilities, and, by virtue of Section 85 (1) was to be construed as applying only to acts that were at least similar to acts that could be done by private persons; and that, accordingly, since the entry clearance officer was not providing a service for would-be immigrants but only performing his duty of controlling them, the refusal of a special voucher was not unlawful discrimination."
"That section puts an act done on behalf of the Crown on a par with an act done by a private person, and it does not in terms restrict the comparison to an act of the same kind done by a private person. But in my opinion it applies only to acts done on behalf of the Crown which are of a kind similar to acts that might be done by a private person. It does not mean that the Act is to apply to any act of any kind done on behalf of the Crown by a person holding statutory office".
Then Lord Fraser said:
"Therefore acts done in the course of formulating or carrying out government policy which are quite different in kind of any act that will ever be done by a private person is one to which the Act does not apply. For that reason therefore acts in pursuit of government policy or the performance of distinctively governmental functions do not fall within the ambit of provision of services".
"…the inestimable services of enabling a taxpayer to obtain that relief which Parliament intended he should be able to obtain as a matter of right subject only to proof."
And Lord Templeman went on at page 468A to say this:
"On behalf of the revenue [counsel] submitted that the Race Relations Act 1976 does not apply to the Inland Revenue at all, but he naturally and wisely recoiled from the suggestion that the inspector of taxes might decline to interview a taxpayer if the taxpayer were coloured. He makes forcibly the submission that, when the board decides for sensible reasons that a higher standard of proof is required from taxpayers who come from the Indian sub-continent, the board are not providing a service to that taxpayer; they are carrying out their duty to the Crown. As I have already indicated, it does not seem to me that the two concepts are mutually exclusive. The board and the inspectors perform their duty and carry out a service and, in my judgment, it is a service within the meaning of section 20 of the Race Relations Act 1976".
"…those parts of a police officer's duties involving assistance to or protection of members of the public amounted to the provision of services to the public for the purposes of Section 20(1) of the Race Relations Act 1976 and it was therefore unlawful for officers to discriminate in their provision on grounds of race".
"These acts (or services) which the plaintiff sought from the police were, to my mind, acts which might have been done by a private person. The second category envisaged by Lord Fraser covers those acts which a private person would never do, and would normally only ever be performed by the police eg gaining forcible entry into a suspected drugs warehouse. Here the officers would be carrying out government policy to which the Act would not apply. Moreover, they would be performing duties in order to prevent and detect crime and exercising their powers to enable them to perform those duties."
Lord Justice Waller:
Lady Justice Smith:
Order: Application granted; appeal allowed