[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> SA (Kuwait) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 1157 (05 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1157.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1157 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
AA/10355/2008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
____________________
SA (KUWAIT) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Parishil Patel (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: Monday 12 October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
"I am left in a situation where no more than a passing reference has been made to these documents, during closing submissions in this appeal. I am, in effect, simply being asked to take these photocopies and their respective interpretations at face value, absent evidence speaking to either document. In my judgment that would be wholly wrong. In the absence of evidence speaking to the reliability and provenance of two documents, said to be central to the appellant's case, in circumstances where such evidence is reasonably to have been expected, I find that the appellant has not persuaded me that there is a reasonable degree of probability that they are reliable and genuine. I make it clear that I am influenced, albeit to a modest extent, in coming to that conclusion, by my overall adverse assessment of the appellant's individual veracity and reliability as a witness, on the basis that a witness who lacks (a degree of) veracity and reliability is more (rather than less) likely to rely upon unreliable documents."
"In order to establish the veracity of these documents they were compared with information available from objective sources and caselaw on documents of this nature. The Secretary of State considers that the documents submitted do correlate with descriptions of these documents.
Attempts were made to further determine whether or not the documents were genuine. However, due to the lack of any security features present in documents of this type it was not possible to pursue this line of enquiry any further.
Therefore, due to existing problems with the claimant's credibility and the ease with which these documents could be created it is considered by the Secretary of State that the appellant has not discharged her burden of proof in relation to these documents and the decision to refuse asylum will be maintained."
"She told me that the identity document in question was consistent with others held in the respondent's offices and accepted to be genuine."
35. Whilst I accept the appellant has given a reasonable explanation for their delayed admissions, considering the nature of the documents and the Home Office position on those, I find myself in a position where I can give little weight to their probative value. It goes in the appellant's favour the fact that the Home Office's examination has not revealed anything to suggest that the documents are fabricated. However I accept the Home Office has a point when attention is drawn to the fact that none of the documents have any security features. In other words, these documents are consistent with any other document of this type that are real. Simply at face value, one cannot say whether the documents are false or true. I direct myself that simply because these documents lack security features should not raise doubts about their reliability. Their reliability has to be assessed in accordance with well established principles set out in a case of Tanveer Ahmed.
36. As indicated above, I find in the appellant's favour in relation to the documents but give very little weight to them. On their own, I do not accept that they are sufficient to prove that the appellant is an undocumented Bidoon, particularly, in the light of the inconsistencies in her evidence and my conclusion that the evidence of her witness was contrived. This aspect of the appellant's case is clearly damaging to her credibility. Whilst I have taken a favourable view of the documents, it has not escaped my attention that the appellant in her oral evidence claimed to have had the birth certificate all the time, whereas, the documented itself showed that it was issued on 25 September 2005. Be that as it may, I maintain my position that the documents assist the appellant's claim rather than hinder it.
42. ….. I have looked at the evidence in this case in the round as I am required to do. I find the identity card and the birth document in the appellant's favour. However, when these are set against the inconsistencies otherwise in the appellant's evidence, I have formed the view that overall I cannot be satisfied even to the lower standard of proof, that she is an undocumented Bidoon from Kuwait."
"Having made those findings, those positive findings with regard to the documents, it is then perverse of the immigration judge to then discount their weight in determining whether or not the appellant is an undocumented bidoon. It is of course the case that an appellant can be entirely without any credibility with regard to what they claim has happened to them but that would not necessarily impact on their status in their country of origin."
34. It is sometimes argued before Adjudicators or the Tribunal that if the Home Office alleges that a document relied on by an individual claimant is a forgery and the Home Office fails to establish this on the balance of probabilities, or even to the higher criminal standard, then the individual claimant has established the validity and truth of the document and its contents. There is no legal justification for such an argument, which is manifestly incorrect, given that whether the document is a forgery is not the question at issue. In only question is whether the document is one upon which reliance should properly be placed.
35. In almost all cases it would be an error to concentrate on whether a document is a forgery. In most cases where forgery is alleged it will be of no great importance whether this is or is not made out to the required higher civil standard. In all cases where there is a material document it should be assessed in the same way as any other piece of evidence. A document should not be viewed in isolation. The decision maker should look at the evidence as a whole or in the round (which is the same thing).
38. In summary the principles set out in this determination are:
1. In asylum and human rights cases it is for an individual claimant to show that a document on which he seeks to rely can be relied on.
2. The decision maker should consider whether a document is one on which reliance should properly be placed after looking at all the evidence in the round.
3. Only very rarely will there be the need to make an allegation of forgery, or evidence strong enough to support it. The allegation should not be made without such evidence. Failure to establish the allegation on the balance of probabilities to the higher civil standard does not show that a document is reliable. The decision maker still needs to apply principles 1 and 2.
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Ward: