H606
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> A.E.A -v- The Minister for Justice & Anor [2014] IEHC 606 (04 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2014/H606.html Cite as: [2014] IEHC 606 |
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Judgment
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Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 606 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW [2013 No. 725 JR] BETWEEN/ A.E.A. APPLICANT AND
THE MINISTER FOR JUSTICE AND EQUALITY RESPONDENT JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Barr delivered on the 4th day of December, 2014 1. This is a post-leave application by way of judicial review for an order of certiorari quashing the decision of the Minister to refuse to process and determine the applicant’s application for subsidiary protection, and for an order of mandamus compelling the Minister to process and determine the applicant’s application for subsidiary protection pursuant to the provisions of the European Communities (Eligibility for Protection) Regulations 2006 (S.I. No. 518 of 2006) (“the Protection Regulations”), which transposed Council Directive 2004/83/EC of 29th April, 2004, on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals or stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the content of the protection granted (“the Qualification Directive”). Background 3. The applicant sought to have the RAT’s decision quashed by way of judicial review but this application was unsuccessful and was dismissed by order dated 25th July, 2008. On 28th September, 2006, the Refugee Legal Service submitted representations to the Minister on the applicant’s behalf pursuant to s. 3(3)(b) of the Immigration Act 1999, as amended, requesting leave to remain in the State. This application was supplemented by further submissions on 7th November, 2008, after the judicial review application had failed. 4. By decision dated 5th May, 2009, the Minister decided to grant the applicant leave to remain for a year. This permission has been renewed on subsequent occasions. The respondent did not provide reasons for his decision to grant the applicant leave to remain, or for the subsequent renewals. 5. By letter dated 10th July, 2013, the applicant submitted a subsidiary protection application to the Minister. She stated that she has five children who remain in Ethiopia with their grandmother and stated that she wished to be reunited with them. 6. The Minister rejected the applicant’s application on the grounds that Recital 9 of the Qualification Directive precluded persons who had a right of residency in a Member State from making an application for subsidiary protection. The Minister quoted Recital 9, which states:-
The present proceedings 9. The applicant has submitted that the Minister is not, as a matter of law, permitted to seek to change his reasons for a decision once the decision has been the subject of an application for judicial review. The applicant cites, inter alia, Mullholland v. AnBordPleanala (No. 2) [2006] 1 IR 453; EMI Records (Ireland) Limited v. The Data Protection Commissioner [2013] IESC 1; and R. v. City of Westminster [1996] 28 HLR 819, in support of this argument. Applying these authorities, the applicant contends that the Minister’s advancement of new reasons in the present proceedings, and the abandonment of the sole original reason given, is such as to entitle the applicant to certiorari. 10. The respondent argues that the applicant’s contention that the Minister has substituted new reasons for her refusal in place of the reason originally stated is misconceived. The respondent submits that what has in fact occurred is that the Minister has now recognised that, in accordance with the terms of the Protection Regulations as interpreted in the Supreme Court’s decision in Izevbekhai, she did not have the power to accept the applicant’s subsidiary protection application dated 10th July, 2013. Accordingly, the respondent argues that the precise reasons given by the Minister for not entertaining the application are ultimately not material to the question as to whether or not she was empowered to accept it. 11. The respondent pointed out that if the court accepts the Minister’s position that she did not have discretion to accept the application, the court would be acting in vain if it made an order quashing the decision of 12thJuly, 2013. The respondent states that the inevitable outcome would be that the Minister would refuse to accept the application again on the basis that the application had not been made in accordance with the Protection Regulations and that she did not have discretion to accept it. The respondent submits that in Izevbekhai, the Supreme Court, having found that there was no discretion on the Minister’s part to examine the applicant’s subsidiary protection application, dismissed the applicant’s appeal without considering the merits of the Minister’s decision. 12. As a preliminary matter, therefore, the court must assess whether the Minister has the power to accept and determine a subsidiary protection application from the present applicant in light of her particular circumstances. Does the Minister have the power to consider the applicant’s application for subsidiary protection? The European Communities (Eligibility for Protection) Regulations 2006 15. Article 2(e) defines the “persons falling within the scope of this Directive,” insofar as it concerns subsidiary protection (see Recital 11) in the following terms:
(a) a recommendation under section 13(1) of the 1996 Act; (b) an affirmation under paragraph (a) or a recommendation under paragraph (b) of section 16(2) of that Act; (c) the notification of an intention to make a deportation order under section 3(3) of the 1999 Act in respect of a person to whom subsection (2)(f) of that section relates; (d) a determination by the Minister under Regulation 4(4) or 4(5).
(b) An application for subsidiary protection shall be in the form in Schedule 1 or a form to the like effect. (2) The Minister shall not be obliged to consider an application for subsidiary protection from a person other than a person to whom section 3(2)(f) of the 1999 Act applies or which is in a form other than that mentioned in paragraph (1)(b). 20. Section 3 (1) and (2)(f) of the Immigration Act 1999 provide:
(2) An order under subsection (1) may be made in respect of— (f) a person whose application for asylum has been refused by the Minister. Izevbekhai v. Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2010] IESC 4 23. The Minister’s decisions were challenged in the High Court. McGovern J. applied the interpretation of Regulation 4(2) as laid down by Feeney J. in N.H. v. MJELR [2008] 4 IR 452 which meant that Regulation 4(2) had conferred a discretion on the Minister to grant subsidiary protection provided that he was satisfied that there were new or altered facts or circumstances that showed a change had taken place in the position of the appellants from that which prevailed at the time the deportation order was made. The Minister had decided that there was no such change. McGovern J. was satisfied that the allegedly new material relied upon by the appellants did not show altered circumstances or new facts but merely amounted to an amplification of the case. He therefore held that there was nothing irrational in the Minister’s decision to conclude that there were no grounds upon which he could exercise his discretion under Regulation 4(2). 24. McGovern J.’s decision was appealed to the Supreme Court. On presentation of the appeal it became apparent that the High Court’s decision was predicated on Feeney J.’s interpretation of Regulation 4(2), as set out in his decision in N.H. v. Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2008] 4 IR 452.This decision had since been applied in several High Court decisions, but had never been considered by the Supreme Court. Accordingly, the Supreme Court invited the parties to make submissions on the question as to whether Regulation 4(2) does confer on the Minister a discretion to grant subsidiary protection to persons in respect of whom a deportation order had been made and notified before 10th October, 2006, provided that the subject of that deportation order can satisfy the Minister that there are new facts or altered circumstances which significantly change the position of the applicant from that which existed at the time the deportation order was made. 25. Fennelly J. stated that for the purposes of the case before the Supreme Court, only para. (c) of Regulation 3(1), which relates to the proposal to make a deportation order, was relevant. Regulation 3(1)(c) provides:
[...] (c) the notification of an intention to make a deportation order under section 3(3) of the 1999 Act in respect of a person to whom subsection (2)(f) of that section relates.
56. As stated earlier in this judgment, the Minister made the three deportation orders in respect of the appellants on 23rd November 2005, which was prior to the coming into operation of the Regulations. He gave notice of these orders on 29th November 2006. Section 3(3) of the Immigration Act, 1999 obliges the Minister to give notice in writing of a proposal to make a deportation order. The appellants were properly notified. Regulation 4(1)(a) of the Regulations applies only to a notification of such a proposal. The wording of that provision is capable of applying only to such notifications given after the coming into operation of the Regulations, i.e. after 10th October 2006. 57. Section 3(2) (f) of the Act of 1999 applies to "a person whose application for asylum has been refused by the Minister." Regulation 4(2) expresses a negative proposition: it specifies what the Minister is not obliged to do. It contains no words purporting to confer any positive power or discretion on the Minister. It is the centre of the issue under consideration.
31. The applicant has sought to argue that the Qualification Directive does not impose any time limit for subsidiary protection applications and that eligible persons may still be eligible if they applied 2 weeks or 2 years after a proposal to deport was issued. In support of this contention, the applicants rely on the decision of the Court of Justice in Nawaz v. Minister for Justice (Case 604-12). At para. 38 the Court of Justice stated:
39. However, Directive 2005/85 applies to applications for subsidiary protection only where a Member State establishes a single procedure under which an application is examined by reference to both forms of international protection, namely asylum and subsidiary protection (Case C?277/11 M. EU:C:2012:744, paragraph 79). Decision 33. The applicant submits that the Minister’s failure in the years following the 10th October, 2006, to inform the applicant of his entitlement to make an application for subsidiary protection, which the applicant says he was obliged to do under section 3(3) of the Immigration Act 1999, as imposed by Regulation 4 of the Protection Regulations, unlawfully denied the applicant the opportunity to make such an application to the respondent. The applicant contended that the respondent is thereby estopped from alleging that the applicant is out of time to make the application. 34. However, it seems to me that this submission is misconceived: the applicant received a proposal to deport in April 2006, which was before the coming into force of the Regulations. It is clear from Fennelly J.’s judgment in Izevbekhai that persons who received a proposal to deport before the coming into force of the Regulations are not covered by the terms of the Regulations and are, consequently, not eligible to apply for subsidiary protection. 35. The classes of persons to whom the Regulations apply are strictly limited. The Minister has no discretion to accept applications from persons who are not specified as eligible in the terms of the Regulations themselves. Fennelly J. stated that Regulation 3 limits the scope of the Regulations to cases described in Regulation 3(1)(c) where “the notification of an intention to make a deportation order under section 3(3) of the 1999 Act in respect of a person to whom subsection (2)(f) of that section relates” is communicated after 10th October, 2006. 36. I am satisfied that because the applicant in this case received her notification of intention to deport pursuant to s. 3(2)(f) prior to the coming into force of the Regulations she is not a person to whom the Regulations apply and, consequently, is not eligible to apply for subsidiary protection. The Minister, moreover, did not have the power to accept the applicant’s application since the applicant is not an eligible person under the Regulations. 37. Accordingly, the Court must answer the central question posed in these proceedings in the negative: the Minister did not have the power to accept an application for subsidiary protection from this applicant since she was furnished with a notification of intention to deport by letter dated 7th April, 2006, which was prior to the coming into force of the Regulations on 10th October, 2006. It is clear from the Supreme Court’s decision in Izevbekhai that the Minister has no discretion to accept subsidiary protection applications from persons such as this applicant to whom the Regulations do not apply and that such persons are not entitled to apply for subsidiary protection. Did the Minister change reasons? 39. The respondent, however, is no longer standing over the original reason given for rejecting the applicant’s application and has instead put forward a different explanation as to why the applicant’s application had to be rejected. This explanation is that in accordance with the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Protection Regulations as set out in Izevbekhai, the Minister had no discretion to accept an application for subsidiary protection from the applicant who, in turn, had no right to apply for subsidiary protection. 40. The respondent submits that the applicant has sought to characterise this as the substitution of new reasons for the decision made by the Minister in place of the original reasons but that this is not in fact the case. The Minister’s position is that, in accordance with the terms of the Protection Regulations and the decision in Izevbekhai, she did not have the power to accept the purported application of the 10th July, 2013. Accordingly, the respondent submits that the precise reasons given by the Minister for not entertaining the application are ultimately not material to the question whether or not she was empowered to accept it. 41. The applicant maintains that it is not open to the Minister, as a matter of law, to change the reasons for her decision, and a number of authorities were cited in support of this contention. 42. It seems to me that what happened in this case was that the Minister realised - albeit belatedly - that she lacked jurisdiction to accept and consider a subsidiary protection from this applicant in the first place, since the Regulations do not permit this applicant to make an application, and nor do they confer on the Minister a discretion to accept or consider such an application. 43. The Minister in the Statement of Opposition expressly stated that she does not stand over the reason stated in the letter of 12th July, 2013, based on Recital 9 of the Qualification Directive. I will therefore permit the respondent to advance the argument that she did not have jurisdiction to entertain an application on behalf of the applicant for subsidiary protection. However, this is a matter which may be reflected in the appropriate costs order at the conclusion of the proceedings. Should the court grant certiorari? 45. However, it seems to me that it would be futile to quash the Minister’s decision in the circumstances of the present case because it would be of no benefit to the applicant. The court cannot grant an order of mandamus compelling the respondent to accept and consider the applicant’s application because the Regulations, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Izevbekhai, preclude the making of such an order: the court cannot order the respondent to do something which he does not, in law, have the power to do. 46. The respondents rely on The State (Polymark (Ireland) Ltd) v. The Labour Court and The Irish Transport and General Workers’ Union [1987] ILRM 357 in support of their submission that the court will refuse to grant certiorari where to do so would be futile. In the course of his judgment, at p. 362 of the report, Blayney J. quoted with approval the following passage from the judgment of O’Higgins CJ in The State (Abenglen) v. Dublin Corporation [1984] IR 381 at p. 393:
My principal reason is that the granting of an order of certiorari is not necessary for the protection of the prosecutor’s legal rights in the sense that it could not in any way protect them. If the determination of the Labour Court is quashed, this will have no effect on the equal pay officer’s recommendation which I have found to have been validly made. Her recommendation will remain binding on the prosecutor. In these circumstances the quashing of the Labour Court’s determination would be pointless. It would in no way alter the position which has resulted from my finding in regard to the first ground, namely, that there was a valid recommendation made by the equal pay officer which is binding on the prosecutor. As well as being pointless, an absolute order would, for the reason I have already given, be of no benefit to the prosecutor, and this is a relevant consideration to be taken into account in exercising my discretion. This was the ground upon which Walsh J. based his refusal to make an order of certiorari in the Abenglen case. He said in his judgment: If I am correct in this, then an order of certiorari quashing the decision made by the respondents would be of no benefit to Abenglen. While the Court could make such an order in the present case, the Court in its discretion could refuse to do so where that would not confer any benefit upon Abenglen. (at p. 397). 49. Accordingly, this application for judicial review must be rejected and the reliefs sought are refused. |