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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Omar Stephens v IC & Crown Prosecution Service (Freedom of Information Act 2000) [2011] UKFTT EA_2010_0193 (GRC) (1 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2011/2010_0193.html Cite as: [2011] UKFTT EA_2010_193 (GRC), [2011] UKFTT EA_2010_0193 (GRC) |
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For the reasons set out below the Tribunal decides that:
(1) the Commissioner's and CPS's applications to strike out the appeal are dismissed;
(2) the Information Commissioner's decision notice dated 15 November 2010 is "not in accordance with the law;"
(3) the decision notice should be set aside and a "substituted decision notice" issued by the Tribunal;
(4) the parties may make any representations they wish in relation to the terms of the substituted decision notice provided they are received by the Tribunal by 1600 on 17 June 2011.
Reasons for Decision
Background and request for information
1. Previous convictions of the deceased and all of the prosecution witnesses in the case.
2. All material which discloses information that may have been communicated by lay witnesses e.g. previous witness statements, unused witness statements, CAD Messages, Officers IRB's and CRIS.
3. All material which directly, or indirectly reveals that the case against the defendant has been, obtained, prepared and processed by the Police Officers, e.g. crime reports, CAD messages, memos, action and message forms and other operational documents.
4. All documentation the defendant is entitled to.
5. Any information indicating the background to this offence which is consistent with the defendant innocence; for e.g. names and details of other suspects and their previous convictions.
6. All information indicating that the integrity of the evidence or of the integrity of the prosecution witnesses, or the inferences to be drawn from that or their evidence is in doubt.
7. Information as to the reliability of the observations made by the Prosecution witnesses; for e.g. any disciplinary or police complaint commission action on the investigation taken against any of the police officers involved in dealing with this offence.
8. Any and all, other information which could reasonably be expected to assist the defence. (sic)
In order to process your request for information, I have reviewed and considered all the material the CPS holds in relation to R v Omar Stephens … I can confirm that the CPS does hold information in relation to your request, however the information is exempt from disclosure under section 30, 40(1), 40(2) and 42 of the Freedom of Information Act. Please see the attached section 17 notice which explains the reasons for not disclosing the requested information.
Attached was a document headed "S17 Notice under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 WITHHOLDING INFORMATION." The document gives a certain amount of information about the various exemptions relied on (including the unsurprising fact that the CPS instructed prosecuting counsel) but does not relate them to any particular information or category of information coming within the terms of the request. The decision in that letter was upheld in a review letter dated 27 July 2009 which stated that a proper assessment had been made and a reasonable decision reached; there was still no attempt to relate the claimed exemptions to any particular information requested.
The Information Commissioner's decision
When citing section 40(1), the [CPS] did not specify to which of the complainant's requests it believed this exemption to be engaged. The Commissioner has assumed, therefore, that [it] cited this exemption in relation to all of [Mr Stephens'] requests. In forming a conclusion as to whether this information would constitute the personal data of [Mr Stephens], the Commissioner has taken into account the wording of the requests and what this suggests about the nature of the information requested.
It seems clear from this passage that the Commissioner did not take steps to find out anything about the content of the information which the CPS actually held which came within the terms of Mr Stephens' request nor which exemptions were claimed in relation to what information. Nevertheless he went on to decide in paragraph 18 of the decision notice that all the information requested by Mr Stephens was his own personal data and thus absolutely exempt under section 40(1) of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and (at paragraph 21) that the CPS had therefore correctly "cited" that section. It followed from these conclusions that no consideration was given to the other exemptions relied on by the CPS. The Commissioner also stated at paragraph 20 of the decision notice that the [CPS] had failed to comply with section 17(1)(b) in failing to specify the sub-sections of sections 30 and 42 relied on; we do not entirely understand this finding, particularly so far as it relates to section 42.
The appeal
The information which the CPS has identified as coming within the scope of the request are (sic) set out in the table attached to this present document as Annex A. The information shown in the table is taken from a document that was prepared by the CPS in May 2009 as part of its consideration of [Mr Stephens'] Freedom of Information Act request…
The CPS, as part of its consideration of [Mr Stephens'] request, also identified three exemptions other than section 40(1) which the CPS at the time assessed as being applicable in relation to certain categories of information falling within the scope of the request [namely sections 30, 40(2) and 42]…
The particular categories of information to which the CPS considered these three exemptions to apply were (and therefore are) identified in the table attached hereto as Annex A … The CPS's reasons for deciding that [Mr Stephens] did not have a right to access any of the information under the FOIA were set out in the section 17 Notice, a copy of which is attached hereto as Annex B.
For reasons which are not entirely clear to us there are two similar but not identical versions of Annex A; neither has been supplied to Mr Stephens at any stage but both list numerous documents or categories of documents and specify in relation to each which particular exemption(s) is relied on; it is notable that in one of the versions of the document section 40(1) is relied on in only about a third of cases (in the other version section 40 is referred to without distinguishing between subsections (1) and (2)). We also note that the documents listed in Annex A appear to comprise all of the papers that would be held by the CPS relating to Mr Stephen's murder trial or a very substantial portion of them.
(1) Whether we should accede to the Commissioner's and the CPS's applications to strike out the appeal;
(2) If not, whether the Commissioner's decision notice was "in accordance with the law";[3]
(3) If not, what steps the Tribunal should now take.
We will set out our conclusions in that order.
Should the appeal be struck out under rule 8(3)?
(1) rule 8(3), in contrast to rules 8(1) and (2), expressly gives the Tribunal a discretion ("The Tribunal may strike out…");
(2) the power is stated to be exercisable when the Tribunal considers "…there is no reasonable prospect of the appellant's case … succeeding" and not (for example) when "no reasonable grounds of appeal have been pleaded";
(3) rule 22(2)(g) unsurprisingly provides that a notice of appeal must include "the grounds on which the appellant relies" but the Tribunal has a general power to waive any requirement of the rules (see rule 7(2)(a));
(4) it was well-established that the Information Tribunal could adopt an inquisitorial approach if appropriate and take reasonable steps to assist parties at a disadvantage; there is no reason to think that the First-tier Tribunal should adopt a different approach in dealing with information rights cases and the relevant rules of procedure appear strongly to support the validity of adopting an inquisitorial approach in appropriate cases;[6]
(5) section 50(1) of the 2000 Act requires the Tribunal to allow the appeal or issue a substituted decision notice if it "… considers … that the notice against which the appeal is brought is not in accordance with the law"; it does not say something to the effect (for example) that it should allow an appeal if it finds that the grounds of appeal advanced are well-founded.
The CPS argues that it is important to preserve the principle that it is for the appellant to set out a case in his grounds of appeal in order to promote the orderly conduct of proceedings and to ensure that the Commissioner and any other respondent know the case they have to meet and can decide their responses accordingly.[7] We accept that that is indeed an important principle but we do not accept it is an absolute one since it is clearly open to the Tribunal under the rules of procedure to define the issues it wishes to resolve and to call on the parties to submit evidence and representations on such issues; in this case, for example, although the Tribunal did not formally define the issue as to whether the information requested by Mr Stephens was in fact his "personal data" in its directions, it was clearly the only substantive finding in the Commissioner's decision and the Tribunal judge's doubts on the point were made quite clear in the email dated 4 March 2011, so that both the Commissioner and the CPS must have been perfectly well aware that on the hearing of the appeal it would be for them to support the Commissioner's finding at paragraph 18 of the decision notice if they saw fit to do so. We are therefore of the view that in some (perhaps rare or even exceptional) circumstances the Tribunal can decide not a strike out an appeal brought under section 57 of the 2000 Act even if no reasonable grounds have been advanced by the appellant and that in so far as the Colliass case may suggest otherwise we respectfully decline to follow it.
Was the Commissioner's decision notice "in accordance with the law"?
Does the data "relate to" the living identifiable individual [Mr Stephens], whether in his personal or family life, business or profession? … The view of the Commissioner on this point is that, as all the information requested relates to the crime for which the complainant was convicted, it is clear that this all also relates to the complainant.
The Commissioner in that paragraph equates information which "relates to the crime" of which Mr Stephens was convicted with information which "relates to" him (for the purposes of the relevant definition in section 1(1) of the Data Protection Act 1998). It seems to us that some of the information requested by Mr Stephens related only tenuously to the crime of which he was convicted (eg previous convictions of the deceased and prosecution witnesses), but, in any event, the equation made by the Commissioner cannot, we think, be correct in the light of the Court of Appeal's decision in Durant v Financial Services Authority[9] where Auld LJ said the following in a much cited passage in the course of giving guidance as to what was "personal data":
It seems to me that there are two notions which may be of assistance. The first is whether the information is biographical in a significant sense … The second is one of focus. The information should have the putative data subject as its focus rather than some other person with whom he may have been involved or some transaction or event in which he may have figured or have had an interest … In short, [personal data] is information that affects his privacy whether in his personal or family life, business or professional capacity
What order should the Tribunal make?
Disposal
Signed
HH Judge Shanks
Dated: 1 June 2011
IN THE FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
GENERAL REGULATORY CHAMBER
(INFORMATION RIGHTS)
Case No. EA/2010/0193
ON APPEAL FROM:
Information Commissioner
Decision Notice ref FS50273690
Dated 15 November 2010
Appellant: Omar Stephens
Respondents: (1) Information Commissioner
(2) Crown Prosecution Service
Date of decision: 20 June 2011
Supplementary Decision
For the reasons set out in the Tribunal's decision dated 1 June 2011 and below the Tribunal sets aside the Information Commissioner's decision notice dated 15 November 2011 and substitutes the following decision notice.
Substituted decision notice
Public authority: Crown Prosecution Service
Complainant: Omar Stephens
Decision
The Public Authority failed to deal with the Complainant's request for information dated 20 April 2010 in accordance with Part I of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 in that it failed to comply fully with section 17 thereof.
Action Required
The Public Authority must by 1600 on 18 July 2011:
(1) carry out a fresh consideration of the Complainant's request;
(2) supply the Complainant with any information which it considers ought properly to be supplied to him which has not already been;
(3) to the extent that it considers that any information requested is not required to be released, serve a notice under section 17 clearly identifying the information in question, the exemption relied on and why it applies (including, where appropriate, any relevant public interest considerations).
Dated 20 June 2011
Signed
HH Judge Shanks
Reasons
Signed
HH Judge Shanks
Dated 20 June 2011
Note 1 See paras 5 and 6 of the Decision Notice. [Back] Note 2 See decision notice paras 33 and 34. [Back] Note 3 See section 58(1)(a). [Back] Note 4 It is more likely that he is simply making the point that the information is of concern to him which is not the same as saying it is his “personal data” for the purposes of the legislation. [Back] Note 5 See para 16 of the decision which states “The Tribunal has to consider whether the Appellant has addressed the substance of the IC’s Decision Notice so as to provide reasonable grounds of appeal. If he has failed to do this the appeal has no realistic prospect of success.” [Back] Note 6 See eg rules 2(2)(c), 2(2)(d), 5(1), 5(3)(d), 6(1), 15(1)(d), 17(2). [Back] Note 7 See para 19 of the notice of application dated 28 February 2011. [Back] Note 8 See para 8 of the decision notice quoted above at para 5. [Back] Note 9 [2003] EWCA Civ 1746 [Back] Note 10 See para 2 above. [Back] Note 11 This has been interpreted in effect as meaning “and/or.” [Back]