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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> OAM, R (On the Application Of) v Sheffield City Council [2024] EWHC 2671 (Admin) (24 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2671.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2671 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
SITTING AT LEEDS
Leeds, LS1 |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the Administrative Court)
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THE KING ON THE APPLICATION OF OAM |
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- and - |
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SHEFFIELD CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Mr Brett Davies (instructed by Legal Services Sheffield City Council) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 27 September 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Davis-White KC :
"[2] Age assessments are unusual in the sense that, alongside any conventional public law 'soft review' principles, there is an objective hard-edged factual question whose correctness is for the reviewing court (or usually the upper tribunal following transfer) to decide, embracing any fresh evidence and where appropriate with oral evidence. The judicial review permission threshold, so far as the objective question is concerned, is identified in R (FZ) v Croydon LBC [2011] EWCA Civ 59 at §9. The permission-stage Court asks whether the material before the court raises "a factual case which, taken at its highest, could not properly succeed in a contested factual hearing". Only where the Court is satisfied on that negative question will there be the 'knockout blow' to justify refusing permission for judicial review."
" the Judge will refuse permission unless satisfied that there is an arguable ground for judicial review which has a realistic prospect of success" (see The Administrative Court, Judicial Review Guide 2024 ("The Administrative Court Guide"), paragraphs 9.1.3 and 9.6.5 and the cases footnoted in the first of those paragraphs).
The Claimant
The age assessment by the Defendant
"wounds on his face and around his mouth
Acne scarring
Muscular physique
Adult demeanour"
These proceedings
"(i) Pursuant to Ground 1, a Declaration that the Defendant's Brief Enquiry procedures are procedurally unfair;
(ii) In the alternative to (i) above, a Declaration that the Defendant's Brief Enquiry in this claim was procedurally unfair;
(iii) A Quashing Order quashing the Defendant's decision to assess the Claimant as being over 18 years old;
(iv) A Mandatory Order directing the Defendant to conduct a full Merton-compliant age assessment;
(v) A Declaration that the Claimant's date of birth is 26th November 2006
(vi) further or other relief and
(vii) costs"
"(i) An Anonymity Order to protect the Claimant's identity in light of the dispute over his age, his vulnerabilities following his journey to the UK and in light of his pending asylum claim, in which he has raised a well-founded fear f the Eritrean authorities;
(ii) An Order permitting the Claimant to conduct proceedings without a litigation friend, pursuant to CPR 21.2(3);"
These two orders were granted
"(iii) An order expediting the claim in accordance with the timescales set out in the attached draft order;
(iv) An order consolidating his claim with that of other claimants represented by Bhatia Best Solicitors for the purposes of Ground 1, as set out in the attached order."
These last two orders were not granted
"Consolidation with the other named cases is refused. It is sought
based on the premise that the short form assessment used by D in this case and the other cases is procedurally unfair. There is ample authority that there will be cases where a short assessment is appropriate and proper. The form used in this case is designed to enable D's social workers to identify those cases where they are sure the individual is a child, those where they are sure the individual is not a child (taken by them as over 25) and those cases where they are not sure and where a full assessment will be required. Whether the short assessment was appropriate/properly carried out in the circumstances of any given case is fact specific. Each of these cases falls to be considered on its own merits."
"3. I accept that reasons in a short form assessment may be brief. C claims he was given no reasons. The 2 social workers state in their respective witness statements (using different wording) that the outcome of their joint discussion concluding that C was over 25 was explained to him. They do not give any detail of what the explanation was. Thus the case relies on the documents, being "the Over 25 letter" dated 13/09/23 and the Brief Enquiry form completed by the social workers,
4. The Over 25 letter includes no reasons for the conclusion that C is over 25. The Brief Enquiry form lists 4 matters under "Physical Appearance and Presentation" but nowhere lists these as reasons for reaching any conclusion. C argues that is insufficient to allow C to know the reasons for the decision. I accept D's position that the two documents are to be read together, given that the Over 25 letter was handed to D at the end of the interview meeting. The reasonable bystander relied upon by D would see references to physical appearance and adult demeanour. When read together with the Over 25 letter it is not reasonably arguable that the conclusion that C is over 25 is based on anything other than his physical appearance and presentation, including the obvious reference to adult demeanour, There is nothing else in that document which could lead to that conclusion. Whilst it would undoubtedly be better if that list was specifically referred to as being the reasons (either in the form itself or in the Over 25 letter), in my judgement it is nevertheless sufficient to enable C to understand the reasons for the conclusion reached.
5. The change of interpreter occurred at the very end of the assessment. C had the benefit of an interpreter who accepted he understood fully for the assessment itself and the oral sharing of the outcome.
6. Much of C's complaint amounts to a challenge to the outcome, rather than the process."
Challenge to the practice and process adopted by the Defendant in age assessment cases generally
Ground 2 procedural unfairness and irrationality in this age assessment
(a) Interpreter
(b) "Minded to" procedure
(c) no reasons given for "clear case"
Ground 3-Failure to take relevant matters into account
The objective position
Interim Relief