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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NR (Jamaica) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 856 (05 August 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/856.html Cite as: [2010] INLR 169, [2009] EWCA Civ 856 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Designated Immigration Judge Shaerf
IA/12902/2007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE GOLDRING
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NR(JAMAICA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Miss Carine Patry-Hoskins (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14 July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Goldring :
Introduction
The first ground of appeal: the concession issue
"[It] was a generous concession as we do not find the case law goes that far. Nevertheless it is a concession that we would honour were we to find the appellant is a lesbian."
"…conceded the Appellant was a lesbian and in a relationship with Ms. S in 2006/7 and maintained she would not be at risk on account of her sexual orientation if returned."
"…all issues were live. We considered that paragraph 12(6) of [Carcabuk]…needed to be read in the light of what was said in paragraph 11: that it was open to the Respondent to withdraw a concession at any time before the hearing concluded…
We would add that we consider the issue of the history of the concessions made and withdrawn by the Respondent in this appeal to be most unfortunate. We would not attribute this to the Respondent's "bad faith". It appears to us this may well have occurred because the Respondent has not taken the opportunity to review the case papers in good time before coming to the several hearings at the Tribunal. Further, and in the light of Mr Chelvan declining an adjournment when offered by the Tribunal, we find that the Appellant has not been disadvantaged in any material way."
The relevant authorities
"It is in our judgment important to identify the precise nature of any so-called concession. If it is of fact…the adjudicator should not go behind it. Accordingly, if facts are agreed, the adjudicator should accept whatever is agreed. Equally, if a concession is clearly made by a HOPO that an appellant is telling the truth either generally or on specific matters, the adjudicator may raise with the HOPO his doubts whether the concession as appropriate but, if it is maintained, he should accept it. But there is all the difference in the world between a concession and a failure to challenge. The former will bind the adjudicator, the latter will not. Furthermore, any concession can be withdrawn so that, for example, the case before the Tribunal can be presented in a different way to that before the adjudicator. It is open to a HOPO to withdraw a concession made before an adjudicator before the hearing is concluded, but the appellant must be given a proper opportunity to deal with the new case against him and unless there is good reason for the withdrawal such as the discovery of fresh material we doubt that the adjudicator should permit any adjournment which such withdrawal would be likely to necessitate…
We can summarise the position as follows:-
…(3) If the HOPO wishes to withdraw any concession made: in a refusal letter or explanatory statement, he must inform the appellant or his advisor as soon as possible and it will be for the adjudicator to decide if an application for an adjournment to enable the new case to be met is made, whether to grant it. If he does not, the concession will stand…
(6) A concession can be withdrawn but, if a HOPO seeks to do this, the adjudicator must be satisfied that the appellant will not be prejudiced if the hearing continues and should only allow an adjournment if persuaded that there was good reason to have made and to withdraw the concession"
"It is clear from the authorities that where a concession has been made before an adjudicator by either party the Tribunal can allow the concession to be withdrawn if it considers that there is good reason in all the circumstances to take that course…Obviously if there will be prejudice to one of the parties if the withdrawal is allowed that will be relevant and matters such as the nature of the concession and the timing may also be relevant, but it is not essential to demonstrate prejudice before an application to withdraw a concession can be refused. What the Tribunal must do is to try to obtain a fair and just result. In the absence of prejudice, if a presenting officer has made a concession which appears in retrospect to be a concession which he should not have made, then justice will require that the Secretary of State be allowed to withdraw that concession before the Tribunal. But, as I have said, everything depends on the circumstances, and each case must be considered on its own merits."
"There is no evidence that lesbians generally face serious ill-treatment in Jamaica and in the absence of evidence to the contrary may be certified as clearly unfounded."
The second ground of appeal: the sexual identity issue
"This leads us to conclude we are not satisfied even on the lower standard of proof that the Appellant was raped as a child. We do not know the reason why she was sent by her father to the United Kingdom. We accept she may have been sent because of something to do with criminal gangs in Jamaica but not because she had been raped.
We find that on coming to London, as a teenager she experimented with different types of sexual identity. She then found herself imprisoned in all-female institutions. The Appellant told Renee Cohen [the psychologist] that while in prison she had become more socially confident and had been sexually active and that she had been lost and frightened in the years between leaving Jamaica and being imprisoned: see the second and third paragraphs of page 6 of her report. We find that as a healthy, healthy, energetic and engaged young woman in such institutions she had and took the opportunity to continue her experimentations with her sexual identity: indeed, there was no alternative except celibacy.
So far as Angela is concerned we accept what she says about how she sees her relationship with the Appellant. We note that while detained the Appellant became a trained prison listener and increased her self-confidence and we find the Appellant was and is well able to manipulate her relationship with Angela. Consequently, we find the evidence on the Appellant's side shows that so far as she is concerned her relationship with Angela is not genuine. We are led to the conclusion she is using Angela as a means of bolstering her claim for international surrogate protection.
Her case was presented on the basis that it was not a "criminal gangs" claim: see the section entitled "Stated Case" in the Appellant's skeleton argument and submissions at the foot of page 3 of the Records of Proceedings of the second hearing before us. There was no evidence of the efforts by the Appellant to correct what she considered to be errors in the PSR and PAR. Mr Chelvan for the Appellant accepted in submissions that a person's sexual identity may be amorphous but went on to submit that in any event the Appellant was not heterosexual.
Renee Cohen did not have the benefit of the Appellant giving oral testimony and being cross-examined over the period of one and three quarter hours in a forensic setting or having any of the witness statements of Angela Smith or hearing directly from her.
The Appellant was just under 19 when the index offence was committed: see page 1 of the PSR. Until April 2008 she was in custody. Since then we accept she has been in some sort of relationship with Angela but we find she has not reciprocated Angela's passion and we conclude on the evidence before us that the Appellant's relationship with Angela is part and parcel of her campaign to be allowed to remain in the United Kingdom. We do not say the Appellant has not had homosexual relationships but we do say the evidence we have seen does not support her claim that her sexual identity is that of a lesbian.
The consequence of this finding is that the Appellant's claims for asylum under the Refugee Convention, humanitarian protection under paragraph 339C of the Immigration Rules and under Article 3 of the European Convention all fail."
Lord Justice Lloyd: I agree
Lord Justice Mummery: I also agree