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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> De Figueiredo v AG and Commonwealth of Australia [2010] JRC 182 (08 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2010/2010_182.html Cite as: [2010] JRC 182 |
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[2010]JRC182
royal court
(Samedi Division)
8th October 2010
Before : |
Sir Philip Bailhache, Kt., Commissioner, and Jurats De Veulle, Kerley, Nicolle, Le Brocq, Bullen and Allo. |
Between |
Philip Eric De Figueiredo |
Petitioner |
And |
H M Attorney General |
First Respondent |
And |
The Commonwealth of Australia |
Second Respondent |
Advocate F. B. Robertson for the Petitioner.
H. Sharp, Esq., Solicitor General for the Attorney General.
Advocate M. T. Jowitt for the Commonwealth of Australia.
judgment
the commissioner:
Introduction
1. This is a petition of doléance brought by Philip Eric de Figueiredo ("the applicant") seeking a review of a decision of Tucker, Commissioner, given on 9th September 2010, whereby he refused an application for an adjournment of the applicant's appeal against a decision of the Attorney General to order his extradition to Australia. The applicant sought the adjournment in order to prepare an application which would compel the Attorney General to disclose documents alleged to exist and to be relevant to the applicant's appeal against the Attorney General's decision.
Article 54 of Extradition (Jersey) Law 2004
2. The first matter for consideration is whether this Court has jurisdiction to hear this petition. The Solicitor General, supported by counsel for the Commonwealth of Australia, asserts that there is no jurisdiction. The basis of that assertion is Article 54 of the Extradition (Jersey) Law 2004 ("the 2004 Law") which is in the following terms:-
The Solicitor General submitted that an appeal under Part 2 of the 2004 Law was very restricted in its scope. An appeal to the Royal Court against the Attorney General's extradition order may only be brought on a question of law (Article 45). The Royal Court may only allow such an appeal either on the ground that the Attorney General ought to have decided differently a question before him, or that there is a new issue or information which was not available to the Attorney General and that issue or information would have resulted in his deciding a question differently (Article 46). The only issues to be determined by the Attorney General relate to the existence of the death penalty, specialty, and earlier extradition to Jersey from another territory (Articles 30-33). If the Attorney General determines those issues by finding that he is not prohibited from ordering a person's extradition, he is under a mandatory duty to make an extradition order. There is no discretion. Very unusually, the 2004 Law provided that there was to be no further appeal to the Court of Appeal. Appeal would lie from the Royal Court direct to the Privy Council only with leave. The clear purpose of the statute, the Solicitor General submitted, was to streamline the extradition process and to avoid the lengthy delays for which extradition in the British Isles had previously been notorious.
3. Mr Robertson, for the applicant, submitted that the doléance was not an appeal against the decision of the Attorney General, but a form of appeal against the decision of the Commissioner. Article 54 of the 2004 Law was not relevant. In support of that contention, he referred the Court to a judgment of the Divisional Court in England in Asliturk v City of Westminster Magistrates' Court. That was a case where the claimant, a Turkish national, sought judicial review of a refusal by the District Judge to order his discharge. Section 75 of the Extradition Act 2003 provides that an extradition hearing should begin within a certain time limit and that, if it does not, . In fact, the hearing had begun four days late. Some considerable time after the commencement of the hearing, the claimant had applied for his discharge. Before the Divisional Court one of the issues for determination was whether Section 116 of the Act ousted the jurisdiction of the Court to hear an application for judicial review. Section 116 is for all practical purposes in exactly the same terms as Article 54 of the 2004 Law. In refusing to accept that the Divisional Court had no jurisdiction, Stanley Burton LJ stated at paragraph 24:-
4. It is unnecessary for us to cite the judge's reasoning because the decision is not directly in point. It does, however, indicate the reluctance of the English court to exclude an application for judicial review in the context of extradition proceedings.
5. For our part, we do not consider that Article 54 ousts the jurisdiction of the Royal Court to hear a petition of doléance. A decision of the Magistrate or of the Attorney General does not embrace an interlocutory decision of the judge of the Royal Court hearing the appeal in question. We therefore reject the submission of the Solicitor General. Nonetheless, the broad purpose of the 2004 Law is a relevant matter to be taken into consideration in determining whether doléance should lie in this case.
Doléance
6. We turn to consider the proper limits of the remedy of doléance. It is a remedy the use of which has fluctuated over the centuries. In 1943, Le Gros was able to write:-
7. In 1985, however, it had a renaissance. In Re Barker [1985-86] JLR 284 a doléance was allowed and an order of the Inferior Number of the Royal Court establishing a novel procedure between a dégrèvement and a remise de biens was annulled on the ground of excess of jurisdiction. Frossard, Commissioner, stated that "... .
8. In Re Harbours & Airport Committee [1991] JLR 316, Tomes, Deputy Bailiff, after an exhaustive analysis of the history of doléance, laid it down that doléance:-
(i) no longer carried its character of being an attack upon the integrity and honour of the judge;
(ii) was available to all legal persons; and
(iii) was available where there was no other right of appeal or remedy and there was a manifest error of law upon the record.
9. Both these decisions were made, of course, in the context of civil proceedings. In the sphere of criminal procedure, a petition of doléance was made in Re Lagadec [1996] JLR N 9C, where the Court held that, in the absence of evidence that a discretionary power to order costs had been improperly exercised, the judge's failure to invite submissions and to give reasons for his decision was not such a failure of natural justice as to warrant a petition of doléance.
10. In AG v Michel and Gallichan [2006] JLR N 15, [2006] JRC 089, a doléance was presented complaining of a decision of the trial judge to refuse an adjournment to give counsel more time to prepare his submissions. Birt, Deputy Bailiff, (as he then was) stated:-
11. Finally, in Metzner v Attorney General [2010] JRC 106, the petitioner brought a doléance in respect of a refusal to award certain costs in connection with criminal proceedings. The Superior Number reminded itself that that there was no right of appeal against a costs order made following an acquittal or discharge from a prosecution. Even where there had been a conviction, and the costs order could be treated as part of the sentence so as to confer a right of appeal, an appellate court would be slow to interfere with the judge's exercise of discretion. Birt, Bailiff, in dismissing the petition, stated:-
12. The test which emerges with clarity from these different decisions is that the Superior Number will only intervene It is not to be employed to challenge any exercise of judicial discretion where the law allows of no appeal. To permit doléance to expand itself into a general remedy of judicial review, particularly in the context of criminal proceedings, would, in our judgement, be an abuse. It may be worth recalling that an order of His Majesty in Council of 27th July 1671 provided that:- (per Birt, Deputy Bailiff, in AG v Michel and Gallichan). Doléance, which involves convening the Superior Number of the Royal Court at short notice, is an extreme remedy of last resort.
That was a warning shot to litigants bringing inappropriate doléances to the Privy Council. The principle, nonetheless, holds good in this Court. A party who is found wrongly to have raised a clameur de haro may expect to be fined. We think that a similar practice ought in future to be adopted in relation to doléance in appropriate cases so as to deter all but serious and well founded complaints about the administration of justice. If an appeal does not lie against a particular decision, there is usually good reason for that rule. A petition of doléance should not be casually employed in circumstances where the law provides no right of appeal. It is a measure to which parties should resort only to prevent grave injustice. If inappropriately brought to the Superior Number, it should lay the petitioner open to a wasted costs order.
Discussion
13. We turn therefore to apply these principles to the facts of this case. The applicant seeks to impugn the decision of Tucker, Commissioner, to refuse an adjournment so that the applicant could pursue another application to seek disclosure of documents allegedly in the possession of the Attorney General. Ironically, the applicant was able to secure an adjournment for a different purpose, namely to consider the second specialty certificate issued by the acting Attorney General on 6th September 2010. Be that as it may, the applicant now seeks orders, inter alia, to require Commissioner Tucker to receive an application for disclosure from the Attorney General.
14. In refusing the application for an adjournment to enable such an application to be made, Commissioner Tucker ruled in the following terms:-
15. In this Court, counsel for the applicant appeared to shift his ground during oral argument as to the reason why it was important for his client to have access to documents allegedly in the possession of the Attorney General. Initially, it was suggested that disclosure might yield evidence of mala fides on the part of the Attorney General or his office, but that was later withdrawn. The Solicitor General told us unequivocally that, as the person who had signed the second specialty certificate, he had had sight only of the diplomatic note from the Australian High Commission. He had had no other involvement with Australian officials, nor had he seen any other correspondence. He had nothing to disclose and there was no basis whatever for asserting bad faith or collusion between him and Australia. Faced with those statements from the Solicitor General, counsel for the applicant very properly withdrew any suggestion of bad faith, for which there is indeed not a shred of evidence.
16. The only evidence that there might be documents within the Attorney General's department, other than memoranda and advice which are subject to legal privilege, lies in a response from a senior official in the Attorney General's department to a request for "all material and representations which influenced the Attorney General to issue this fresh certificate". The senior official responded - "In order to consider your request further, please would you explain why you consider that disclosure might be made of material some of which is, on the face of it, subject to legal privilege and to what issue in the appeal any such material might relate". It was the implication that there was some material not subject to legal privilege that led the applicant's legal advisers to contemplate an application to compel disclosure of that material. The issue in question, they said, was "the adequacy of the specialty arrangements". It should be recorded that the Attorney General did disclose, after some hesitation, the diplomatic note from the Australian High Commission, and the senior official explained that "[t]he new certificate was issued in order to record accurately the terms of the arrangement which exists with Australia as set out in the diplomatic note".
17. Counsel for the applicant submitted that the material, assuming it exists, might throw light on the alleged lack of "structural impartiality" in the office of the Attorney General in relation to his functions under the 2004 Law. It is agreed that the Attorney General fulfils responsibilities which, under the equivalent UK Act, are undertaken by the Secretary of State. In England and Wales, an application for extradition on behalf of a foreign country will be handled by the Crown Prosecution Service. The argument therefore is that the actions of the Attorney General's department in receiving the Australian application for extradition and initially presenting it to the Magistrate are incompatible with the quasi judicial functions of the Attorney General in determining whether to issue an extradition order. The resolution of those arguments is, of course, a matter for consideration by Commissioner Tucker in due course in the context of the applicant's appeal, and we should not trespass on the Commissioner's territory. The only relevance for our purpose is whether there are any grounds for supposing that documentary material exists which might influence Commissioner Tucker in his consideration of the applicant's arguments in relation to the alleged want of "structural impartiality". The mere expression of the question in those terms underlines the difficulties faced by the applicant in this petition. The determination of the question which we have just posed is a matter for the exercise of judicial discretion; a case management issue. It is not for this Court to interfere with such a decision unless satisfied not only that it is plainly wrong, but also that it will lead to a substantial injustice. Commissioner Tucker clearly had regard to the arguments put forward by counsel for the applicant. He expressed himself satisfied that there was no further material information in the possession of the Attorney General which would assist the applicant. He formed the view that the issues in the case could be determined by having regard to the second specialty certificate and to the diplomatic note which preceded it. It was a case management decision which fell well within the parameters of the judge's discretion.
18. Counsel for Australia contended that the proposed application for documents from the Attorney General was in any event a device to get around the rule that discovery does not lie against a sovereign state requesting extradition. The issue arose in Jenkins and Benbow v USA [2005] EWHC 1051 (Admin), where the extradition of the two appellants was being sought by the USA. During the course of his judgment, Sedley LJ stated at paragraphs 24 and 25:-
19. At paragraphs 29-30, he continued:-
20. The process in that case was of course at a different stage, but the principle nonetheless holds good. We agree that in this jurisdiction discovery does not lie against a foreign requesting state and, to the extent that the applicant might be seeking documents which emanate from Australia, he is not entitled to them.
Conclusion
21. We think it is worth repeating the passages cited from two English cases by Birt, Deputy Bailiff, in AG v Michel and Gallichan. In R v Chaaban [2003] EWCA Crim 1012, the judge stated at paragraph 35:-
22. In R v Jan Jisl [2004] EWCA Crim 696, the court stated at paragraph 114:-
23. It is for the trial judge to balance numerous issues during the course of a trial or an appeal, including whether or not to grant an adjournment. There is no right of appeal against an interlocutory decision in a criminal case, but, if such a decision is wrong and leads to injustice, it can be corrected by the Court of Appeal or, in the case of extradition proceedings, by the Privy Council. It seems to us that it will be very rare indeed that a decision of a judge in a criminal case will be suitable for review by a petition of doléance. This is not, and never was, an appropriate matter to bring before the Superior Number by way of doléance. We will not, on this occasion, visit any financial penalty upon the applicant or his legal advisers, but that should not be taken as an indication of what the Court might do in any future comparable case. The petition is dismissed.