EA_2007_0060 Corporate Officer of the House of Commons v Leapman & Ors [2008] UKIT EA_2007_0060 (26 February 2008)


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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Corporate Officer of the House of Commons v Leapman & Ors [2008] UKIT EA_2007_0060 (26 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2008/EA_2007_0060.html
Cite as: [2008] UKIT EA_2007_60, [2008] UKIT EA_2007_0060

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Information Tribunal Appeals Numbers: EA/2007/0060, 0061, 0062, 0063, 0122, 0123,
0131
ON APPEAL FROM
Information Commissioner’s Refs: FS50070469, FS50051451, FS50079619,
FS50124671
Heard at Bedford Square, London, WC1
On 7-8 February 2008
Decision Promulgated
26 February 2008
BEFORE
CHAIRMAN
ANDREW BARTLETT QC
and
LAY MEMBERS
DAVID WILKINSON
PIETER DE WAAL
Between
CORPORATE OFFICER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
Appellant
and
INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
Respondent
and
(1) BEN LEAPMAN
(2) HEATHER BROOKE
(3) MICHAEL THOMAS
Additional Parties
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
Representation:
For the Appellant, Eleanor Grey
For the Respondent, Timothy Pitt-Payne
For Ms Brooke, Hugh Tomlinson QC
For Mr Thomas, Philip Coppel
Mr Leapman appeared in person
Decision
The Tribunal dismisses the appeal by the House of Commons. The Tribunal allows the
cross-appeals and substitutes the following decision notices (which for ease of reference
we have combined into one) in place of the four decision notices listed in the heading to
these appeals.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
SUBSTITUTED DECISION NOTICE
Dated 26 February 2008
Public authority: House of Commons
Address of Public authority: House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA
Names of Complainants: Ben Leapman, Heather Brooke, Michael Thomas
The Substituted Decision
For the reasons set out in the Tribunal’s determination, the substituted decision is that all
the information held by the House which falls within each complainant’s request or
requests must be disclosed to that complainant, subject to the following exceptions which
shall be implemented by omission or redaction:
(1)  Any sensitive personal data, relating to the MPs named in the requests,
within the meaning of DPA s2(a), (c) or (e)-(h).
(2)  Personal data of third parties (not the MPs). But this exception shall not
extend to the name of any person to whom the MP paid rent or mortgage
interest which was claimed under ACA.
(3)  The MPs’ bank statements, loan statements, credit card statements, other
personal financial documents, and financial account numbers and financial
reference numbers. This exclusion shall not extend to the names of
mortgagees, chargees or landlords in respect of homes for which ACA was
claimed, or to the amounts of interest or rent which were paid, claimed and
reimbursed under ACA or (subject to the requisite redactions of sensitive or
irrelevant data) to the information submitted in support of such claims contained
on statements of account with mortgagees, chargees or landlords: these items
of information must be disclosed.
(4) The itemised parts of telephone bills listing calls to individual numbers.
(5)  The names and addresses of suppliers or contractors who had regular
access to the MPs’ homes.
(6)  All details relating to the security measures at the MPs’ homes (whether
goods or services), save that where an amount has been identified by the MP
as relating to security, that reference and the total amount attributed to it shall
not be redacted.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
(7) Where a particular MP has a special security reason for keeping the address
of his or her main or second home confidential (for example, because of a
problem with a stalker, or a terrorist or other criminal threat), that address may
be redacted.
The reference above to Ms Brooke’s request is to her request as recast (see paragraph 5
of the Reasons for Decision).
Action Required
The information defined above, relating to each complainant’s request, shall be disclosed
to that complainant within 28 days from the date of this decision.
Dated this 26th day of February 2008
Signed
Andrew Bartlett QC
Deputy Chairman, Information Tribunal
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
Reasons for Decision
Introduction
1.  The duties of Members of Parliament are chiefly carried out at Westminster and in
their constituencies. They often work long hours, and late into the evening. As a
result, MPs for constituencies outside Inner London generally need to reside in two
different places. Since 1971 they have been entitled to claim expenses up to a set
limit to defray the additional costs of hotel bills or a second home. The allowance
which they can claim for this purpose is called the Additional Costs Allowance, or
ACA.
2.  This appeal is concerned with the extent to which the House of Commons
administration must disclose the details of MPs’ ACA claims under the Freedom of
Information Act (“FOIA”). The House claims an exemption which depends upon the
application of certain provisions of the Data Protection Act (“DPA”).
3.  MPs are entitled to claim a number of other allowances, including for staffing, travel,
communication with constituents, and incidental expenses. Travel expenses were
considered by the Tribunal in Corporate Officer of the House of Commons v
Information Commissioner and Norman Baker
[2007] UKIT EA 2006 0015 (“the
Baker case”) and in Corporate Officer of the House of Commons v Information
Commissioner
[2007] UKIT EA 2006 0074 (“the Moffat case”). Our present decision
relates only to ACA and not to any of the other allowances.
The requests for information
4.  The total sum paid annually to each MP in respect of ACA is published in the
House’s publication scheme. Three members of the public sought more details.
5.  Four requests were made to the House of Commons:
(1) On 4 January 2005 Mr Thomas, a journalist who writes under the bye-line
‘Jon Ungoed-Thomas’, made a request for details on the ACA claimed by Tony
Blair in 2001/2, 2002/3 and 2003/4, “specifically, a list of the items totalling
£43,029” under the ACA.
(2) On the same day Mr Thomas also made a request with regard to the ACA
claimed by Margaret Beckett over the same period, asking “exactly what items
the allowances were spent on and the amounts spent on each of the items over
each of the three years” and “if refurbishments or works were paid for out of the
public purse”, “what these refurbishments or works were”.
(3) On 5 January 2005 Mr Leapman, who is also a journalist, requested copies
of the original submissions, with copies of receipts, rental agreements or
mortgage interest statements, from named MPs in support of their claims for
ACA in each of the same three financial years as Mr Thomas’s request. The
named MPs were Tony Blair, Barbara Follett, Alan Keen, Ann Keen, Peter
Mandelson and John Wilkinson.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
(4) Some 14 months later, on 20 March 2006, Ms Brooke, who is a freedom of
information campaigner and freelance journalist, requested a detailed
breakdown of MPs’ ACA. At a later stage, after reference to the cost limit set
under FOIA section 12, her request was recast as being for a detailed
breakdown of ACA claims for 2005/6 and all information held by the House, in
relation to the claims made by Tony Blair, David Cameron, Menzies Campbell,
Gordon Brown, George Osborne, John Prescott, George Galloway, Margaret
Beckett, William Hague and Mark Oaten.
6.  The requests were made to the House of Commons administration, not to the
individual MPs. That was because the House of Commons is a public authority
subject to FOIA, while individual MPs are not. All the requests were refused by the
House, both initially and after internal review.
7.  There was no disclosure which could be given in regard to Mr Galloway, since as
an Inner London MP (constituency: Bethnal Green and Bow) he was in receipt of
London Supplement and was not entitled to and made no claim for ACA. We are
therefore concerned with requests relating to the other 14 individual MPs.
The complaints to the Information Commissioner
8.  Following the refusals the three applicants complained to the Information
Commissioner in April 2005 (Thomas and Leapman) and in July 2006 (Brooke).
9.  The Commissioner, in the course of his investigation of the Thomas and Leapman
requests, asked on 9 September 2005 that the House provide him with access to
the disputed information which it held. Ultimately on 6 June 2006 the Commissioner
issued an information notice requiring the House to make it available. This was
complied with in July 2006. The Commissioner’s decision notices in relation to all
four requests were issued nearly a year later, on 13 June 2007.
10. The Commissioner decided that the House should provide the applicants with a
breakdown of the total annual amounts claimed by each relevant MP for ACA in the
specified years. The breakdown was to be given by reference to 12 categories of
expense set out in the 2005 and 2006 ‘Green Book’. (The Green Book is a House of
Commons publication, which gives details about Parliamentary salaries, allowances
and pensions.) It is not necessary for us to lengthen this decision by summarising
the Commissioner’s reasoning here: his decision notices are available on his
website.
The appeal to the Tribunal
11. Neither the House nor the applicants were content with the Commissioner’s
decisions. The House appealed to the Tribunal, contending that no disclosure
should have been ordered or, alternatively, that the categories of breakdown should
be varied. The applicants sought to resist the appeal and also cross-appealed,
contending that the relevant information held by the House should be disclosed in
full.
12. We are conscious that three years have now elapsed since the first requests. This
is plainly very unsatisfactory. However, the reasons for the long delays were not the
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
subject of evidence or submissions before us and we make no further comment on
them.
The questions for the Tribunal
13. The right of access to recorded information held by public authorities is set out in
FOIA s1. It is subject to a variety of exemptions. In resisting disclosure, the House
has relied throughout on FOIA s40. The part of that section relevant to the present
appeals reads as follows:
(2)  Any information to which a request for information relates is ... exempt
information if-
(a) it constitutes personal data ..., and
(b) ... the first ... condition below is satisfied.
(3) The first condition is-
(a) in a case where the information falls within any of paragraphs (a) to (d)
of the definition of “data” in section 1(1) of the Data Protection Act 1998,
that the disclosure of the information to a member of the public otherwise
than under this Act would contravene-
(i) any of the data protection principles ...
(7) In this section-
“the data protection principles” means the principles set out in Part I of
Schedule 1 to the Data Protection Act 1998, as read subject to Part II of
that Schedule ....
“personal data” has the same meaning as in section 1(1) of that Act.
14. It is agreed by all parties that in the present case this raises the preliminary
question whether all or part of the information requested is “personal data”.
15. It is also agreed that, if the information is personal data, the only data protection
principle at risk of being contravened is the first principle set out in DPA Schedule 1,
namely
Personal data shall be processed fairly and lawfully and, in particular, shall
not be processed unless-
(a) at least one of the conditions in Schedule 2 is met, and
(b) in the case of sensitive personal data, at least one of the conditions in
Schedule 3 is also met.
16. In the course of the hearing of the appeals the applicants made clear that they were
not seeking disclosure of “sensitive personal data” as defined in DPA s2 (which
covers a variety of particularly personal matters such as physical and mental
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
health), and that any such data should be excluded from the disclosure by
redaction.
17. The Schedule 2 condition which is principally relied on by the applicants as
permitting disclosure without breach of the first data protection principle is the
condition in DPA Schedule 2 paragraph 6(1):
The processing is necessary for the purposes of legitimate interests
pursued by ... the third party or parties to whom the data are disclosed,
except where the processing is unwarranted in any particular case by
reason of prejudice to the rights and freedoms or legitimate interests of the
data subject.
18. In this context the type of “processing” we are concerned with is disclosure to the
public. The ‘data subject’ means the MP (or any other person) whose details may
be disclosed. Fair treatment is an element in the “legitimate interests” of the data
subject. In the circumstances of the case it is accepted by the House that disclosure
would be fair and lawful if condition 6(1) were satisfied.
19. Mr Coppel on behalf of Mr Thomas also relied on conditions 5(aa) and 5(d). These
are that the processing is necessary (aa) for the exercise of any functions of either
House of Parliament or (d) for the exercise of any other functions of a public nature
exercised in the public interest by any person.
20. FOIA does not require the public authority to carry out research or create
information, but only to disclose recorded information that is held. The alternative
limb of the appeal by the House arises because the House says it does not hold the
recorded information in categories corresponding with those in the Commissioner’s
decision notice.
21. The questions for us are therefore the following:
(a) whether or to what extent the information held by the House relating to the
ACA claims of the 14 MPs is personal data;
(b)  whether disclosure of some or all of the details requested would be in
conformity with condition 6(1) of DPA Schedule 2;
(c) whether such disclosure would be in conformity with condition 5(aa) or 5(d)
of DPA Schedule 2;
(d)  whether the House can and should be compelled to disclose information
categorised in the manner required by the Commissioner’s decision notice.
22. It was accepted by all parties that the Tribunal has full power to review the
Commissioner’s findings of fact for the purpose of deciding whether the decision
notices were in accordance with the law (see FOIA s58).
Evidence and findings of fact
23. We received in evidence a large quantity of documentation.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
24. Mr Andrew Walker, the House of Commons Director General of Resources, gave
sworn evidence before us. He confirmed his witness statements and told us about
the system of allowances, the House’s publication scheme, the ACA, the
information held, the extent of external scrutiny, and how the requests were dealt
with. He was cross-examined at length by the other parties. In closed session he
produced a representative sample of the information held by the House falling
within the requests, and was cross-examined on behalf of the Commissioner. The
sample consisted of the information held relating to six of the MPs, subject to some
redactions. We did not find it necessary to request sight of any further or
unredacted files. We found him to be a candid and reliable witness on matters of
fact.
25. Where matters of judgment were involved, at times his answers were rather
obviously framed to maintain and justify, or at least not to contradict, the line
adopted by the House in response to the requests, rather than to give a direct
answer to the question. He emphasised that MPs were ultimately accountable
through the ballot box. When pressed on how electors could make informed
decisions without information on the make up of allowance claims, he responded by
referring to the publication scheme with its annual totals and stating that whether
electors needed more specific information was “what the Tribunal was looking at”.
When asked if he thought the present system of allowances commanded public
confidence, he said he could not answer yes or no, while acknowledging that some
concerns had been expressed. Reference was made in cross-examination to the
Prime Minister’s letter of 5 February 2008, which responded to a letter from the
Speaker referring to a proposed “root and branch examination of the current
system” by the Members’ Estimate Committee. When Mr Walker was pressed with
the proposition that his statement was an attempt to defend an indefensible status
quo, he answered that the House authorities would like the requests judged against
the law on their merits, and were also persuaded of the need to carry out a review
without prejudice to the outcome.
26. We received a witness statement from Mr Thomas. This dealt with the making of his
requests, some of the history of the ACA and the amounts claimed, the extent of
external scrutiny, the importance of the information to the public, and comparison
with the position of MSPs in Scotland. The facts in his statement were not
challenged (as opposed to matters of opinion, speculation or argument, which the
House made clear were not accepted). He stated that not providing full information
on ACA claims had led and continued to lead to damaging speculation which
lowered the public opinion of MPs. Mr Walker, when asked about this specific
matter, preferred not to express a view on it.
27. Mr Thomas also relied on a statement by his solicitor, Mr Rupert Earle, which
addressed the January 2008 Report of the Review Body on Senior Salaries entitled
“Review of parliamentary pay, pensions and allowances 2007”, recent news
concerning claims by Mr Derek Conway MP for salaries paid to family members,
and calls for greater openness. We have reminded ourselves that our task is to
decide whether the information requests concerning ACA claimed by the 14 MPs
were dealt with in accordance with FOIA after they were received. We found Mr
Earle’s material useful in so far as it shed light on the situation and proper approach
to disclosure at the time when the requests were dealt with by the House. The
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
subsequent controversy over Mr Conway’s salary claims is not relevant to our
considerations.
28. Ms Brooke relied on a statement by David Banisar, Deputy Director of Privacy
International, and Visiting Research Fellow at the School of Law at the University of
Leeds. This provided an international perspective relating to privacy and freedom of
information, especially in the case of elected officials. We found this of some value,
but of course our duty is to apply the law in force in England and Wales irrespective
of how similar matters may be handled in other countries.
Administration of ACA
29. The source of the power to pay ACA lies in Resolutions of the House relating to
expenditure charged to the Estimate for House of Commons: Members. The
relevant Resolution authorises an allowance in respect of the additional expenses
necessarily incurred in staying overnight away from the MP’s only or main UK
residence for the purpose of performing his or her parliamentary duties. Where the
main residence is in Inner London, the allowance relates to duties performed in the
constituency. Where the main residence is in or near the constituency, the
allowance relates to duties in London. Where the main residence is neither in
London nor in the constituency, the member may notify a choice and then claim
either for London duties or for constituency duties.
30. More detailed provisions for ACA appear in the Green Book. We were provided with
relevant parts of versions published in the years 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005 and 2006.
ACA is subject to a ceiling per MP which alters from year to year in accordance with
an inflation formula. The maxima for the years to which the requests related ranged
from £18,009 for 2001/2 to £21,634 for 2005/6. These figures equate to about 35%
of an MP’s salary before tax. Unlike the salary, the allowance is not subject to
income tax. The current level of ACA is equivalent to £425 per week, which on the
evidence would pay only for a furnished single room flat in central London.
Nevertheless the total spend on ACA of around £10 million per annum is not
insignificant.
31. Members claiming for ACA or travel expenses are currently required to submit a
form ACA1 in which they identify their main home address and, if applicable, the
address of their second home. In order to make a claim, a Member completes an
ACA2 claim form and (depending on circumstances) may provide back up
documents which evidence the relevant expenditure or provide further information.
32. We find the following salient points concerning the administration of ACA to be
established as a result of Mr Walker’s evidence, taking into account the criticisms
made of the evidence by the other parties:
(1)  The ACA1 in use before 2003 only required notification of the main
residential address and a statement making clear whether the MP intended to
claim ACA in London or in the constituency. The second home was not required
to be identified.
(2)  Frequently the largest single item making up an ACA claim is mortgage
interest on the second home. While the ACA2 in use before 2003 provided for
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
certain categories of expense, it was designed without anywhere to state
mortgage interest except under the heading “Other”.
(3) In general, receipts were not required before 1 October 2003. In practice it
was possible for an MP to claim each month for one twelfth of the annual
maximum without independent documentation.
(4)  The Green Book rules and the format of the ACA1 and ACA2 forms were
altered during 2003, as part of a general tightening up of procedures in the
aftermath of the investigation into expenses wrongly claimed by Mr Trend MP.
Before that time the checks made on claims had been cursory.
(5) Following the introduction of tighter procedures, the total spend on ACA fell
by nearly 20 per cent (from £11,968,000 in 2002/3 to £9,712,000 in 2003/4). Mr
Walker was unable to offer any explanation for the drop in 2003/4, but
conceded it was possible that the tighter procedures were “part of the
explanation”.
(6)  Before the 2003 change in procedures ACA was administered without
comprehensive standard instructions. Individual validation officers kept their
own notes, which they used to assist them in determining claims.
(7)  Even today, the guidance on ACA in the Green Book is incomplete. No
definitive statement of the rules for ACA is available to the public, or even to
MPs themselves. It is administered by validation officers with the aid of ‘desk
instructions’, precedent records held on computer, and a confidential list
indicating acceptable costs for certain classes of item based on prices derived
from the John Lewis website. The list is kept secret from Members lest the
maximum allowable prices become the going rate. Members are not trusted to
have access to it.
(8) The recent editions of the Green Book require receipts for hotel expenditure,
but otherwise no receipts for any item up to £250, or for any amount in the case
of food. Some MPs choose to submit receipts notwithstanding that they are not
required.
(9) In the desk instructions, but not in the Green Book, there is a limit of £400
per month on the amount claimable for food. Mr Walker considered that
Members were well aware of the limit on food, but was unable to say by what
means they were made aware, except that those who claimed more than £400
per month would have been advised by individual letters.
(10) In a number of respects the categories of expenditure listed in the Green
Book as being allowable do not match the actual headings on the ACA2 claim
form.
(11)  The Green Book defines the scope of the allowance as reimbursing
Members for expenses “wholly, exclusively and necessarily incurred when
staying overnight away from their main UK residence ... for the purpose of
performing Parliamentary duties. This excludes expenses that have been
incurred for purely personal or political purposes.” The phrase “wholly,
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
exclusively and necessarily” was introduced in 2003. This definition does not
give explicit guidance on how expenditure for mixed purposes is treated (ie,
whether it may be apportioned, or should simply be disallowed), nor does it
match the way the allowance is actually administered. While the current ACA2
form (unlike its predecessor) requires MPs to sign under a rubric which includes
the phrase “wholly, exclusively and necessarily”, the reality is that the
requirements “wholly” and “exclusively” are not widely understood or enforced.
Although not stated in quite these terms by Mr Walker, it was clear from his
evidence that expenditure incurred for dual purposes is routinely allowed in full
and that, subject to reasonableness limits, all second home expenditure is
allowed in full.
(12) Members are encouraged to claim monthly or quarterly, but may claim on
form ACA2 for any period up to a full year.
(13) Members’ practices in how they categorise expenditure and fill in the forms
vary widely.
(14) The framework of rules governing the administration of ACA is said to be
based on the principle that Members are primarily responsible for identifying,
claiming and certifying their own expenditure on allowances, and for the
propriety of that expenditure. Historically, this is because of their constitutional
position as elected representatives.
(15)  There is no check of any kind on items of expense up to £250, which
(subject to the annual maximum amount) may be unlimited in number, or on
food expenditure of up to £400 per month.
(16)  Mr Walker’s department does not check ‘additionality’ on an on-going
basis. If an MP claims the weekly shopping bill, his department assumes that,
because it is claimed, it is additional expenditure necessarily incurred for
Parliamentary duties. If an MP becomes a Minister and is provided with grace
and favour accommodation, the department does not make any inquiry whether
a second home is still needed.
(17)  The MP’s costs while living away from home are treated as if they were
additional even though, for example, the MP would have had to buy and
consume food if staying at his or her main home. The size of the gap between
theory and practice was illustrated by an example given by Mr Walker in his
statement: “a Member can claim the cost of telephone calls using ACA. Those
calls may have been made for personal reasons – the defining factor is that the
Member is staying in London in order to attend the House, not that the calls
themselves were made for Parliamentary purposes.” In other words, telephone
calls made for purely personal purposes, which may have cost the Member
exactly the same amount in call charges if they had been made from the main
home, are reimbursed in full. The cost of such calls is neither wholly nor
necessarily nor exclusively incurred as a result of the MP having to be in
London for Parliamentary duties.
(18)  When receipts for goods or services are submitted, there is not normally
any check on what the Member has used the goods or services for.
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(19)   The National Audit Office is responsible for auditing the financial
statements of the House of Commons: Members. The audit by its nature is
directed to the formation of an opinion that the financial statements give a “true
and fair view” of the state of the financial affairs of the House. Annual
expenditure is between £150 and £200 million. Mr Walker had been told by the
auditors that last year 47 entries in the general ledger for the Members Estimate
had been audited which related to ACA, without anything untoward being found.
(Given the accounting concept of materiality, we would not have expected the
extent of professional audit checks on MPs’ expenses required for the purpose
of signing off the financial statements to be extensive.)
(20)   Suspected abuses of the system may be reported to the House’s
Standards and Privileges Committee. Mr Walker was unable to think of an
example of a formal investigation into an MP’s expense claims which had been
initiated other than as a result of a tip-off or other unauthorised leak of
information.
(21)  The system of allowances is subject to scrutiny by the Review Body on
Senior Salaries at approximately three year intervals.
(22) The Review Body on Senior Salaries recommended in their January 2008
report that the House of Commons should request the National Audit Office to
audit the expenses of a representative sample of some 5-10% of MPs each
year in order to increase public confidence in the system of reimbursement. Mr
Walker expressed surprise at this recommendation. He explained his surprise
by suggesting that the Review Body must have been unaware of the nature of
the current checks. In our view the recommendation was a logical one for the
Review Body to make if they were well aware of the nature of the current
checks.
(23) While the Review Body report indicated that some MPs interpret the term
‘allowance’ as meaning an amount that is allocated regardless of actual
expenditure (paragraph 1.13), Mr Walker emphasised that ACA is supposed to
be solely a reimbursement of actual expenditure necessarily incurred by the
MP.
33. It is not our function to say what system ought to be operated by the House. But we
cannot avoid making some assessment of the existing system, since we cannot
decide the issues which are before us without arriving at a view on the effectiveness
of the existing controls. The laxity of and lack of clarity in the rules for ACA is
redolent of a culture very different from that which exists in the commercial sphere
or in most other public sector organisations today. While we can appreciate that the
emphasis on self-certification is historically derived from Members’ constitutional
position as elected representatives, even if self-certification were considered to be
in principle an acceptable system in modern conditions, the inadequacy of that
approach is manifest as soon as it is appreciated that the Members upon whom the
responsibility of certification is placed do not have access to a clear, coherent and
comprehensive statement of their entitlements such as might enable them to fulfil
that responsibility. Moreover the information which is published in the Green Book
does not match the system as actually administered, and hence as actually
experienced by MPs. In our judgment these features, coupled with the very limited
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nature of the checks, constitute a recipe for confusion, inconsistency and the risk of
misuse. Seen in relation to the public interest that public money should be, and be
seen to be, properly spent, the ACA system is deeply unsatisfactory, and the
shortfall both in transparency and in accountability is acute.
34. Given the evidence which we heard in relation to ACA, we were not surprised to
see the acknowledgment, in the Prime Minister’s letter to the Speaker dated 5
February 2008, of the necessity for “root-and-branch overhaul” of the current
system of MPs’ allowances.
The nature of the information held
35. The information held by the House which falls within the scope of the requests
consists essentially of (a) the information recorded on the ACA1 and ACA2 forms
and (b) the information recorded on supporting documentation supplied by MPs.
36. The old-style ACA1 forms show the address of the MP’s main residence. The new-
style forms contain in addition the address of the second home.
37. The old-style ACA2 forms contain four main headings: “Hotel Accommodation”,
“Residential Accommodation”, “Food”, and “Other Expenses (please specify)”. The
category “Residential Accommodation” is broken down into “(i) Rent/Rates, (ii) Heat
and Light, (iii) Telephone, (iv) Cleaning, (v) Repairs and Maintenance, (vi) Other
(please specify)”. The examples of completed forms which we have seen vary
widely. Some bear figures under a number of headings, others only a single figure.
Some contain additional manuscript comments of an explanatory nature.
38. The new-style ACA2 forms use the following layout:
Total cost of hotel stays attach all receipts £
Mortgage payments (interest only) or rent £
Food
£
Utilities
£
Council Tax/Rates
£
Telephone and telecommunications
£
Cleaning
£
Service/maintenance
£
Repairs/insurance/security
£
Other
£
(please specify)
Other
£
(please specify)
Other
£
(please specify).
39. Again, there was considerable variation in the completed examples shown to us.
Some forms contained a single figure; others were filled in with nine separate
figures. Some contained additional information by way of manuscript comments or
explanations.
40. The supporting documentation which we were shown in closed session consisted of
items such as documents from mortgage lenders, bank statements, council tax bills,
utility bills (including itemised telephone bills), invoices from decorators, other
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tradesmen and other service providers (including security firms and cleaners), and
correspondence between the MP and Mr Walker’s department.
Destruction of data
41. With one exception, the House still holds all the information within the ambit of the
four requests. The exception is that, in relation to the information requested by Mr
Leapman for the year 2001/2 the House now holds only limited information in
regard to Mr Blair, Mr Keen and Mrs Keen, and no information in regard to the other
three members covered by the request. Mr Walker’s explanation was that the files
were marked for routine destruction after the House had concluded its consideration
of the request and had informed Mr Leapman of the outcome of the internal review
(March 2005). It was not until June 2005 that the House received notice of Mr
Leapman’s complaint to the Commissioner, and by that time some of the
information had been destroyed.
42. According to Mr Walker’s evidence the House had no system for ensuring the
retention of requested information during the period after a refusal during which an
applicant could take the matter further by complaining to the Commissioner. FOIA
s50 does not lay down a precise time limit for such a complaint, referring only to
“undue delay”. The Commissioner’s usual practice is to allow a period of 2 months.
It is a criminal offence for a public authority to destroy information to which an
applicant is entitled, with the intention of preventing disclosure: FOIA s77.
43. Here, the destruction occurred because of incompetence rather than intent. Mr
Walker proffered an apology. Certainly it was regrettable. Given the role of the
House of Commons in passing FOIA into law, the House might reasonably have
been expected, even more than other public bodies, to give assiduous attention to
all its provisions.
MPs’ expectations
44. The Speaker wrote to MPs in December 2002 and again in June 2003 in connection
with the publication of annual totals for each of the different allowances in the
House’s publication scheme. The first letter stated that this would meet the House’s
obligation under FOIA. But it was only in 2005 that the ACA forms began to contain
a statement expressly reminding MPs that information held by the House of
Commons administration fell within FOIA.
45. It was suggested to us that these circumstances confined MPs’ reasonable
expectations of how their personal data, submitted to the Fees Office, would be
handled, namely, that they reasonably expected that nothing would be released
except the totals contained in the publication scheme. We found this submission
unconvincing. FOIA was passed into law in 2000. In our view MPs, as part of the
legislature, would or should have been fully aware of the provisions of FOIA which
might affect them. The obligation referred to in the Speaker’s December 2002 letter
would naturally have been understood as the obligation to implement a publication
scheme, which came into force a few days earlier (30 November 2002). Neither
letter made any specific reference to how individual requests for additional
information might be dealt with when FOIA came fully into force. Moreover we noted
a letter in the closed bundle, dated in May 2002, in which Mr Walker’s office
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reminded a particular MP of the importance, in view of FOIA, of providing a
breakdown of expenses requested by the office. We take this as an illustration that
the possibility of a freedom of information request was something which was taken
into account in the handling of MPs’ allowance claims long before the Act was
brought fully into force on 1 January 2005. Indeed, Mr Walker in his evidence
expressly recognised that published guidance available to MPs (such as the Green
Book) was entirely neutral concerning what would happen in respect of requests
under FOIA for information beyond that contained in the publication scheme, that
the House ought to and does deal with such requests on their merits, and that it
was always possible that further information might be released. Thus Ms Grey
appeared to us to accept in her closing submissions that MPs knew or ought to
have known that requests for further information might be made under FOIA.
Public concerns
46. It was accepted by the House that there is a legitimate public interest in how public
money is spent, and in being reassured that it is being spent properly.
47. This legitimate interest is not the same thing as curiosity about MPs’ expenditure.
The level of public curiosity is of no relevance to the issues which we must decide.
It seemed to us that the evidence of Mr Thomas and Mr Earle did not sufficiently
recognise this distinction. The number of news articles on a particular topic may be
an indication of public curiosity but is not a measure of the legitimate public interest.
We nevertheless found parts of their evidence of considerable assistance on the
question of legitimate public interest. Some MPs have themselves expressed
concerns about the adequacy and appropriateness of the system.
48. Mr Thomas and Mr Leapman used as an illustration the claims made by Mr Blair
and Mrs Beckett during the periods when they lived in accommodation provided
free of charge by the Government. Given their living arrangements, what were their
ACA claims actually for? The published figures do not reveal the answer to this
question. It is a proper question, which does not depend upon any suggestion of
wrongdoing. There is a legitimate public interest in knowing what money is spent on
within the rules.
49. On the basis of the evidence which we received, we find as a fact that there is a
long-standing lack of public confidence in the system of MPs’ allowances, dating
from before the time of the particular requests with which we are concerned. In the
particular context of ACA, the extent of information published is not sufficient to
enable the public to know how the money is spent. Nor is the system sufficient to
create public confidence that it is being spent properly.
Legal submissions and analysis
(1) Personal data?
50. Ms Grey for the House and Mr Pitt-Payne for the Commissioner submitted that the
information falling within the requests was personal data. Mr Coppel for Mr Thomas
argued that the figures on the forms were not themselves personal data, albeit
some information on supporting receipts might be. Mr Tomlinson for Ms Brooke
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accepted that personal data was to some extent involved, but submitted that in
general it was very much at the outer edge of private life.
51. We were referred to the definitions of personal data in DPA s1(1) and in the
European Directive 95/46/EC, and to the guidance given by the Court of Appeal in
Durant v Financial Services Authority [2003] EWCA 1746 at paragraphs 21-31,
which we regard as binding upon us. We would also comment that the relative
narrowness of the Court’s view of what constituted personal data is consistent with
the nature of the rights given to the data subject in DPA ss 10-12 and 14. Having
considered the representative information in the closed bundle, in our judgment the
generality of the information held on the ACA forms and in the supporting
documentation is sufficiently related to individual MPs, and sufficiently affects their
privacy, to amount to personal data. Looking at the question from the other end, the
information requested is by its nature personal data, since it relates to the personal
expenditures of 14 particular MPs on their day to day living arrangements. We have
not been persuaded that there is a significant amount of information included within
the requests which is so trivial or anodyne as not to qualify for any protection as
personal data (cf McKennitt v Ash [2006] EMLR 10, per Eady J at paragraph 135-
136, [2006] EWCA Civ 1714, paragraph 22).
(2)General approach to consideration of FOIA s40 and DPA Schedule 2 conditions
52. Ms Grey relied on the conclusion of the Tribunal in the Baker case, at paragraph 50,
that once FOIA s40(2) is engaged, Parliament intended that the request be
considered under the DPA, without further consideration of FOIA.
53. Mr Tomlinson submitted, however, that there was more to be said. The DPA was
intended to give effect to Council Directive 95/46/EC, and we are required to
interpret it, so far as possible, in the light of, and to give effect to, the Directive’s
provisions: see Durant at paragraph 3. Recital 72 of the Directive, which was not
cited to the Tribunal in the Baker case, provides: “Whereas this Directive allows the
principle of public access to official documents to be taken into account when
implementing the principles set out in the Directive ...”. It followed that we must take
into account the principle of public access to official information as enshrined in
FOIA when forming the judgment required in this case by DPA Schedule 2 condition
6.
54. Ms Grey submitted in response that the House had never disputed that the public
good in access to documents was a factor to take into account, and that this was
implicit in the DPA itself. What she resisted was any suggestion that the wider
framework of FOIA somehow gave additional weight to the case for disclosure.
55. In our view recital 72 is relevant, and we are indeed required to take into account
the principle of public access to official information. However, with Ms Grey, we do
not consider that this makes a practical difference to the judgment which we must
make. DPA Schedule 2 condition 6 refers to legitimate interests pursued by the
applicant for disclosure. The public interest in disclosure of official information is an
interest which is relevant for the purposes of condition 6.
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56. The wording of condition 6 requires a judgment to be made, which was referred to
in the Baker case at paragraph 90, reflecting the submissions of counsel, as a
balancing exercise:
“... the application of Paragraph 6 of the DPA involves a balance between
competing interests broadly comparable, but not identical, to the balance
that applies under the public interest test for qualified exemptions under
FOIA. Paragraph 6 requires a consideration of the balance between: (i)
the legitimate interests of those to whom the data would be disclosed
which in this context are members of the public (section 40(3)(a)); and (ii)
prejudice to the rights, freedoms and legitimate interests of data subjects
which in this case are MPs. However because the processing must be
‘necessary’ for the legitimate interests of members of the public to apply
we find that only where (i) outweighs or is greater than (ii) should the
personal data be disclosed.”
57. In the present case we have received fuller submissions as to the precise nature of
the exercise of judgment required by condition 6. Since, as the Tribunal pointed out
in Baker, the exercise is not identical to the application of the public interest test for
qualified exemptions under FOIA, we do not consider it helpful to pursue that
analogy further.
58. While it is proper to recognise the public interest in the disclosure of official
information as being relevant under condition 6, we think it is important not to lose
sight of the principal object of the DPA, which is to protect personal data and allow it
to be processed only in defined circumstances. The first part of condition 6 can only
be satisfied where the disclosure is ‘necessary’ for the purposes identified. The
second part of condition 6 is an exception: even where the disclosure is necessary,
we must still go on to consider whether the processing is unwarranted in the
particular case by reason of prejudice to the rights and freedoms or legitimate
interests of the data subjects.
59. Ms Grey and Mr Tomlinson both submitted, and we accept, that the word
‘necessary’ as used in the Schedules to the DPA carries with it connotations from
the European Convention on Human Rights, including the proposition that a
pressing social need is involved and that the measure employed is proportionate to
the legitimate aim being pursued: see Stone v South East Coast Strategic Health
Authority
[2006] EWHC 1668 (Admin), at paragraph 60. This is because Article 8
(right to private life) is an important source of inspiration for the Data Protection
Directive. When applying the Directive the Court of Justice has interpreted it in the
light of Article 8. Interference with private life can only be justified where it is in
accordance with the law, is necessary in a democratic society for the pursuit of
legitimate aims, and is not disproportionate to the objective pursued: Joined Cases
C-465/00, C-138/01 and C-139/01 Österreichisher Rundfunk and Others [2003]
ECR I-4989 at paragraphs 64-72. Thus in that case (which concerned legislation
requiring disclosure of the names and salaries of public officials) the Court identified
the essential questions as whether there was an interference with private life,
whether the interference was justified by a legitimate aim, and whether the
interference was necessary to achieve the legitimate aim pursued, ie, whether a
pressing social need was involved and the measure employed was proportionate to
the aim (paragraphs 73-94).
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60. In this connection we were much assisted by Dyson LJ’s exposition in Samaroo v
Secretary of State for the Home Department
[2001] EWCA Civ 1139, to which Ms
Grey drew our attention, at paragraphs 13-28. Adapting that exposition to the very
different circumstances of the present case, we consider that for the purposes of
condition 6 two questions may usefully be addressed:
(A) whether the legitimate aims pursued by the applicants can be achieved by
means that interfere less with the privacy of the MPs (and, so far as affected,
their families or other individuals),
(B) if we are satisfied that the aims cannot be achieved by means that involve
less interference, whether the disclosure would have an excessive or
disproportionate adverse effect on the legitimate interests of the MPs (or
anyone else).
61. Question (A) assists us with the issue of ‘necessity’ under the first part of condition
6. Question (B) assists us with the exception: whether the processing is
unwarranted in the particular case by reason of prejudice to the rights and freedoms
or legitimate interests of the data subjects.
62. Ms Grey submitted that a contention that interference is necessary ought to be
established convincingly and not by mere assertion: cf Kelly v BBC [2001] 1 All ER
323 at 337. Mr Coppel emphasised that, once necessity was shown, the burden
was on the House to establish that the interference was unwarranted within the
terms of the exception to condition 6.
(3) Whether disclosure of some or all of the details requested would be in conformity
with condition 6(1) of DPA Schedule 2
63. The contents of the publication scheme, which include the totals paid to MPs for
various allowances, constitute a recognition that in a democracy some personal
data relating to MPs must be published. Mr Walker in his evidence characterised
the debate as being over the degree of release of information which would provide
an acceptable level of accountability. The issues between the parties are over the
appropriate degree of disclosure that is needed, and the seriousness of the
interference with the privacy of MPs.
64. In argument four possible levels of disclosure were identified: (1) the disclosure
already given – ie, the totals in the publication scheme, which the House contends
is where disclosure should end, (2) figures broken down under the headings
ordered by the Commissioner, or alternative headings as contended for by the
House, (3) full details of the actual claims as made, and (4) all information including
that on the receipts and other supporting documents. Progressing from (1) to (4) the
usefulness of the disclosure, from the applicants’ point of view, increases, but the
degree of interference with the legitimate privacy interests of MPs also increases.
65. Our attention was drawn to a range of comparative material. We were shown the
extent of the data made available to the public on the Scottish Parliament website.
This includes details of every item of claim for allowances by every MSP (except for
individual staff salaries), with dates, descriptions, amounts, claim forms, and
supporting receipts. The data released is subject to certain redactions on privacy
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grounds, which include the addresses of MSPs, addresses travelled to, names of
hotels used, and details of third parties. With the sole exception of mileage, which is
detailed in a claim form and reimbursed at a set rate, allowances are only
reimbursed if supported by the relevant invoices or receipts.
66. The Scottish Information Commissioner in Decision 033/2005 (Hutcheon)
considered a request for copies of a particular MSP’s travel claims with details of
supporting mileage, air travel, car hire and taxis. The Scottish Parliamentary
Corporate Body provided the information with redactions. Mr Hutcheon challenged
the redaction of taxi destinations. After specific consideration of DPA Schedule 1
condition 6, the Commissioner held that, although the information was personal
data, the release of the information on taxi destinations would not breach any of the
data protection principles. Safety concerns were raised, but the Commissioner
found that they were not justified on the evidence relating to that particular MSP.
67. In Decision 086/2006 (Sheridan) the Scottish Commissioner considered requests
for details of the claims made by MSPs who used the Edinburgh Accommodation
Allowance to purchase private properties. The Scottish Parliamentary Corporate
Body released the names of the MSPs in question, but refused to provide the dates
on which the properties were bought, the amounts borrowed at the time of
purchase, and whether any of the purchases were made jointly with another MSP.
The Commissioner upheld the refusal. He considered that releasing this additional
data, the purpose of which would be to allow calculation and attribution of profits
from the rise in Edinburgh property prices, rather than to find out the amounts
received by MSPs from public funds (which had been disclosed), would intrude
excessively into MSPs’ private lives and would not amount to fair processing.
68. Mr Banisar’s statement referred to two further decisions:
(1) The Information Commissioner of Ireland, in Case 99168 (Oakley) ruled on
an application by a journalist under the Irish Freedom of Information Act for
access to the details of expenses paid to each member of the Houses of the
Oireachtas. He decided that the public interest in ensuring accountability for the
use of public funds “greatly outweighed” any right to privacy which the members
might enjoy in relation to details of their expenses claims.
(2)  The European Ombudsman for the purpose of draft recommendation
3643/2005/(GK)WP consulted the European Data Protection Supervisor
(“EDPS”) on the correct application of data protection rules to the allowances for
MEPs (Members of the European Parliament). A journalist had sought
disclosure of detailed data, including a breakdown for each of five MEPs of
amounts received in respect of each allowance (for example the salaries
actually paid to assistants) and the details of expenses reimbursed for travel
undertaken in connection with the MEPs’ activities. The Ombudsman regarded
the withholding of the data as maladministration. He reported the opinion of the
EDPS as follows:
Although the position of MEPs did not mean that MEPs should be denied
protection of their privacy, the basic consideration in a transparent and
democratic society had to be that the public had a right to be informed
about their behaviour. The MEPs had to be aware of this public interest. In
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the present case, this was even more evident because it dealt with the
expenditure of public funds, entrusted to the MEPs. ... ... in Joined Cases
C-465/00, C-138/01 and C-139/01 Österreichisher Rundfunk and Others,
the Court of Justice explicitly recognised the objective of monitoring the
proper use of public funds as a justification for interference with privacy.
... ... in so far as it concerned data relating to the MEPs themselves. The
EDPS stated that it seemed obvious that these data had to be disclosed.
69. We found this comparative material valuable in setting the issues in a wider
perspective, and in assisting our evaluation of those parts of the evidence before us
which consisted of opinion and speculation. But we are conscious that the official
expenses in the cases referred to were not the same as the ACA with which we are
concerned, and we must apply the law in force in England to the particular
circumstances relating to the four requests which are the subject of the present
appeals, without being unduly influenced by how related matters may be dealt with
under other laws and in different circumstances.
70. In evidence and submissions the House acknowledged the following legitimate
public interests which would be advanced by further disclosure:
(a)  Understanding the way in which an MP’s accommodation allowance is
claimed and paid.
(b)  Ensuring that an MP’s use of public money is properly accounted for, by
providing public scrutiny of the use of public funds, on the basis that greater
transparency helps to ensure the thrifty and appropriate use of public funds and
to guard against their misuse.
(c)   Encouraging MPs to take better value for money choices in the
accommodation which they choose, or its running costs, etc.
71. To these Ms Brooke added:
(d) Greater awareness of environmental choices made by MPs.
(e) Awareness of MPs’ expenditure in the light of their involvement in debates
and legislation on relevant issues.
72. Mr Thomas’s evidence further highlighted:
(f) An assessment of the amount, breakdown and probity of expense claims is a
useful way of assessing a politician’s probity generally and of measuring them
against their public pronouncements.
(g)  MPs’ claims for expenses have a normative function as a yardstick for
others making claims for public money. Expectations of financial propriety,
openness and transparency are more easily required of other claimants when
those expectations are met by those who make the rules for others.
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(h) The importance of transparency and accountability are heightened where,
as here, the system involves self-certification by the persons claiming the public
money.
(i) Past instances of misuse, and mistakes requiring funds to be repaid, have
demonstrated the legitimacy of public concern over the potential for abuse.
73. The Commissioner identified also:
(j) The concern is not merely the use of public money. It is also pertinent that
MPs are entitled to claim that money solely by reason of the public elected
office which they hold.
(k) Maintaining and enhancing public confidence in the central political
institutions of Parliamentary democracy is a public interest of very considerable
weight. Confidence cannot be increased by withholding disclosure. The limited
publication scheme alone is of restricted utility for building confidence, since it
represents what the House has chosen to publish. Disclosure of more
information as to the operation of the ACA ought to increase public confidence
in the way in which payment of MPs’ expenses is handled.
(l) Disclosure will better inform the long continuing public debate about reforms
to the system of allowances.
74. The public interest factors which we have listed, all of which we accept as genuine
and relevant, are concerned with objectives of transparency, accountability, value
for money, and the health of our democracy. These are legitimate interests of
considerable importance. Given our findings of fact concerning the inadequacies of
the system for claiming and payment of ACA during the years 2001-2006 and the
long-standing lack of public confidence in the system, we conclude that the
disclosure of full detailed information is necessary to meet these objectives. In our
judgment these aims cannot be achieved by means that interfere less with the
privacy of the MPs’ personal data. In particular, they cannot be achieved by the
disclosure in broad categories ordered by the Commissioner.
75. This conclusion is reinforced by Mr Walker’s entirely correct insistence that, for
those who remain MPs, their accountability is ultimately through the ballot box. For
such accountability to be meaningful, electors need to be able to make informed
choices. For that purpose information on the make up of allowance claims is
essential.
76. We would stress that this conclusion is based on the evidence which we have
heard, and relates to the historic information on ACA falling within the requests. It is
not part of our remit to consider whether the same conclusion would follow under
some different system which might be operated in the future. Ms Grey urged on us
that we should not order any disclosure because to do so would short-circuit the
current debate, and the whole matter should be left to the House to decide. We are
unable to accede to that submission. We must decide the present appeals now, in
relation to the historic information requested, and judged as at the time when the
requests were received and dealt with by the House. We cannot be influenced by
the mere possibility that the House might at some future date introduce changes to
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the system, particularly when the nature of the changes is at present entirely
undetermined.
77. We should also add that in reaching our conclusion on necessity we have kept in
mind the scale of the amounts of public money involved, which is not large when
compared with many other kinds of public expenditure (see further paragraph 30
above).
78. Since we have concluded that full detailed disclosure is necessary for the legitimate
interests pursued by the applicants, we must next consider whether such disclosure
would have an excessive or disproportionate adverse effect on the legitimate
interests of the MPs. More precisely, the question is whether that disclosure is
unwarranted in the particular cases by reason of prejudice to the rights and
freedoms or legitimate interests of the MPs (or indeed other persons).
79. In this regard there were a number of factors relied upon by the House which were
the subject of challenge by the other parties and by which we were unimpressed:
(a) It was submitted that the need for public scrutiny was sufficiently fulfilled by
the publication scheme, by the existing system for payment of ACA expenses,
and by the annual audit. Thus there was no ‘pressing social need’ for access to
the information. We have already rejected this on the evidence.
(b) It was suggested that further disclosure would be unfair, having regard to the
history of MPs’ expectations. In our view the evidence did not establish this, as
we have already indicated.
(c) It was said that it would be unfair to expose MPs to criticism for claims that
were properly made under the rules as they were at the time, particularly before
2003. In our view this is a consideration of little weight. The House collectively is
responsible for the rules, and MPs have made their claims under them.
(d) It was feared that further disclosure, even of categorised expenses, would
lead to further questioning of MPs by the media. In our view MPs are
accustomed to dealing with the media. They can choose what response to
make. They may respond, if they think it appropriate, that they are not
themselves subject to FOIA. We would require a great deal of persuading that
there would be something wrong with allowing questions to be put to elected
representatives over how they have spent public money.
(e) It was said that the figures may be misunderstood or false comparisons may
be drawn. If so, the House or MPs will be able to say so.
(f) It was suggested that dealing with further questioning would be a distraction
from more important Parliamentary business. So it may, for a time, but
accountability for the use of public money is not an unimportant matter.
(g) It was submitted that, perversely, the most conscientious MPs, who provided
the most supporting information for their claims, would be exposed to the most
public scrutiny. We would have thought that, subject to safeguards for any
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specially sensitive items of data, the most conscientious MPs would have the
least to fear from disclosure.
(h) Ms Grey argued that many of the issues over ACA raised in the evidence
were quarrels with the nature of the system itself, which could be adequately
debated without further information. In our view the disclosure of further details
would enable a much better informed debate to take place.
(i) Mr Walker asserted that increased disclosure would deter able people from
putting themselves forward for election. This was mere speculation, and no
evidence was adduced that any such effect has been experienced in
jurisdictions where high levels of detail of elected members’ expenses have
been published.
(j) It was pointed out that MPs are not themselves public authorities subject to
FOIA. That is true, but the issue before us is the extent of the obligation of the
House to release information which it holds relating to MPs. We are not
concerned with information held by MPs themselves. There are often public
interests in the disclosure of information held by public bodies which casts light
on the activities of people who are not themselves public authorities. For
example, government departments are public authorities, and disclosure of their
information may cast light on the activities of Ministers.
80. There was no evidence that any of the 14 MPs whose expenses details were
sought had made any communication to Mr Walker’s office requesting that the
details should be withheld.
81. We have considered all the matters put to us by the parties, including those
corresponding to the list at paragraph 63 of the decision in the Moffat case. We
would identify the following considerations as of particular importance in the
circumstances of the present appeals:
(a)  While MPs must from the very nature of their functions be prepared to
accept a greater degree of public scrutiny than the average citizen, that does
not mean that MPs are entitled to no privacy. Their personal data should still be
processed fairly and given a degree of protection that is appropriate, bearing in
mind both their public role and the degree of sensitivity of the particular
information in question.
(b) While the ACA is intended to relate to expenditure incurred by reason of the
MPs’ parliamentary duties, rather than expenditure which is purely personal in
nature, disclosure of the details does involve a substantial element of intrusion
into private life. This is because it relates in part to an MP’s living arrangements.
The private life of any spouse, partner, child or other person living with an MP
may be entwined with the MP’s own. Accommodation arrangements and
expenses may be heavily influenced by private or family considerations.
(c)  Some information within the categories requested could be of particular
sensitivity, either because it is ‘sensitive personal data’ (as defined in DPA s2),
or because its release could have adverse implications for MPs’ personal or
financial security.
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82. These considerations compel us to say that full detailed disclosure, without any
restriction at all, would be unwarranted, because it would have a disproportionate
adverse effect on MPs’ legitimate privacy interests. However, we consider that the
restrictions which are justified are modest. The appropriate disposal of these
appeals, in conformity with DPA Schedule 2 condition 6, involves that full detailed
disclosure both of the information on the ACA forms and of the information on the
supporting documentation should form the starting point, from which certain limited
exceptions must be carved out in order to guard against disproportionate intrusion.
We acknowledge that this will result in a significant degree of intrusion into private
life, and that not every required redaction will be straightforward. But the ACA
system is so deeply flawed, the shortfall in accountability so substantial, and the
necessity of full disclosure so convincingly established, that only the most pressing
privacy needs should in our view be permitted to prevail.
83. One element of the appropriate exceptions is information that would prejudice the
personal security of MPs if placed in the public domain. We were troubled by the
paucity of evidence to enable us to make informed judgments on this aspect. Mr
Walker in his open witness statement said no more than that personal security of
MPs was a factor which needed to be taken into account. When cross-examined on
this he was almost dismissive: ‘all I am saying is, it is a factor to take into account ...
[the information] might be useful to someone wishing them harm’. In answer to
questions from the Tribunal he said that the House and MPs had access to a
number of sources of security advice: the Home Office for Ministers and senior
politicians in relation to major issues of national security, within the House the
Serjeant at Arms, and in addition the Parliamentary security co-ordinator, who had
relevant specialist experience. No advice or evidence from any of these sources
was produced to us. In Mr Walker’s closed written evidence there was a brief
comparison of security expenditure by different MPs on domestic burglar alarms
and other measures. During the closed session he also gave brief oral evidence
that he had received advice against disclosing any details of MPs’ expenditure on
security measures.
84. In the light of the parties’ submissions and the evidence, including our perusal of the
closed bundle, we have decided that the appropriate exceptions to full disclosure of
the information held are as follows:
(1)  Any sensitive personal data, relating to the MPs named in the requests,
within the meaning of DPA s2(a), (c) or (e)-(h). The amount of this will be tiny.
(The categories in DPA s2(b) and (d) do not create a difficulty in the present
context, since the MPs’ political views and trade union membership, if any, in all
cases are or ought to be matters of public knowledge.)
(2)  Personal data of third parties (not the MPs). But this exception shall not
extend to the name of any person to whom the MP paid rent or mortgage
interest which was claimed under ACA, for in such cases the disclosure is
justified notwithstanding the partial invasion of privacy that is involved, given the
extent of the legitimate public interest and the sums potentially involved.
(3)  The MPs’ bank statements, loan statements, credit card statements, other
personal financial documents, and financial account numbers and financial
reference numbers. The two purposes of this exclusion are (a) to emphasise
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
the confidentiality of financial information which happened to be contained on
the supporting documents but was not relevant to the expense claim and (b) to
guard against possible fraudulent use of personal financial information. This
exclusion shall not extend to the names of mortgagees, chargees or landlords in
respect of homes for which ACA was claimed, or to the amounts of interest or
rent which were paid, claimed and reimbursed under ACA or (subject to the
requisite redactions of sensitive or irrelevant data) to the information submitted
in support of such claims contained on statements of account with mortgagees,
chargees or landlords: these items of information must be disclosed.
(4) The itemised parts of telephone bills listing calls to individual numbers.
(5)  The names and addresses of suppliers or contractors who had regular
access to the MPs’ homes. This exception is for security reasons. It should be
interpreted in a commonsense manner in the light of its purpose (for example -
it is not intended to keep confidential the details of suppliers who merely
delivered to the front door, but should result in redaction of details of a
contractor who had access to a garage).
(6)  All details relating to the security measures at the MPs’ homes (whether
goods or services), save that where an amount has been identified by the MP
as relating to security, that reference and the total amount attributed to it shall
not be redacted.
(7) Where a particular MP has a special security reason for keeping the address
of his or her main or second home confidential (for example, because of a
problem with a stalker, or a terrorist or other criminal threat), that address may
be redacted.
85. In relation to item (7), we should explain that we do not consider it is appropriate to
introduce a general exception for the MPs’ addresses. The addresses of well-known
figures such as Mr Blair and Mrs Beckett are in the public domain in any event. All
MPs will be registered as voters, with their names and addresses on the public
electoral register. Details of property ownership are available from HM Land
Registry. Since at least one address of an MP will be in the public domain in any
event, we do not consider that there would ordinarily be a sufficient reason for
keeping a further address confidential, particularly when scrutiny of the identity of
second homes is part of the reason for disclosure of the information under
consideration. We emphasise that redactions under (7) are intended to cater for
genuinely exceptional cases where the address is not already in the public domain
and there is a specific credible threat.
86. Since the exceptions listed as (1)-(7) above were not the focus of detailed
submissions by the parties during the hearing, we gave them a subsequent
opportunity of making written submissions on the detailed wording of the
exceptions, which we have taken into account in finalising the formulations. We
recognise that in some instances the exceptions which we have delineated will
involve judgments on questions of degree. We consider that is unavoidable in the
circumstances.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
(4)  Whether disclosure would be in conformity with condition 5(aa) or 5(d) of DPA
Schedule 2
87. Mr Coppel submitted that disclosure was necessary within the meaning of condition
5(aa) for the exercise of functions of a House of Parliament, or within the meaning
of condition 5(d) for the exercise of other functions of a public nature exercised in
the public interest by any person. For this purpose he argued that it was a function
of the House of Commons to administer the ACA scheme properly and in
accordance with ordinary precepts of accountability; in the absence of any other
effective means, disclosure of the requested information was necessary in order to
secure those ordinary precepts of accountability.
88. We understand the functions of the House of Commons, in the sense intended in
condition 5, as the specific functions of the House of Commons recognised in law.
89. If the argument is that compliance with freedom of information or data protection
legislation is a ‘function’ of the House of Commons in the relevant sense, we
disagree. It is not a ‘function’ of the House of Commons to comply with freedom of
information or data protection legislation any more than it is to comply with
legislation on employment rights or workplace safety; we would regard those
activities as the fulfilment of obligations imposed by general legislation rather than
as specific functions. Even if we are wrong about that, the argument would go
nowhere, since what is required to comply with the relevant legislation is the very
question that we have to decide, and which depends on condition 6.
90. If the argument is that it is a function of the House of Commons to administer the
ACA scheme, simply on the basis that such administration is something that the
House of Commons in fact undertakes, then we do not consider that this falls within
the meaning of the term ‘function’ in condition 5. Even if it does fall within the
meaning of the term, the administration of the ACA scheme, as at the time of the
information requests, did not necessarily involve disclosure of information to the
public. The administration of the scheme was undertaken and completed, however
well or badly, in the years 2001/2, 2002/3, 2003/4 and 2005/6, without the
disclosure which is sought. The real issue is whether at the time of the requests
such disclosure was required and justified by the interests pursued by the
applicants under the test and exception defined in condition 6.
(5)  Whether the House can be compelled to disclose information categorised in the
manner required by the Commissioner’s decision notice
91. In view of our decision on the extent of disclosure required, this question has
become academic. We will record our views briefly.
92. In the course of the hearing the Commissioner was disposed to accept that, on
closer examination, the differences between the information as actually held and
the Green Book categories adopted in his order were such that the House would
have great difficulty in complying with his order. This would take the task of
compliance beyond the obligation in FOIA to disclose information which is actually
held and require the creation of new information, because of the need to make
investigations and judgments for the purpose of recategorisation of expenditure.
The Commissioner helpfully indicated that he would be content with disclosure of
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
annual totals per MP in accordance with the actual categories on the ACA2 forms,
subject to certain further breakdowns, in particular, so far as possible from the
information held, stating separately each of mortgage interest, rent, rates and
council tax, and correcting any obvious errors or omissions of categorisation by
MPs.
93. If we had concluded that this represented the right level of disclosure in accordance
with condition 6, we would have made an order on these lines, requiring additionally
the disclosure (where apparent from the recorded information) of whether the
expenditure related to a London home or a constituency home.
Further considerations
94. The Commissioner has unrivalled experience of making the kinds of judgments
which are required under DPA and FOIA. Because his views properly carry
considerable weight with the Tribunal, we have revisited and reconsidered our
conclusion in the light of the reasoning set out in his decision notices. It seems to us
that the evidence and arguments that have been placed before us go substantially
beyond the material which was the subject of the Commissioner’s consideration,
and that this explains the divergence of our views from his. We wish to record our
gratitude for the very considerable assistance that we received from his
representative, Mr Pitt-Payne, during the hearing, as indeed from all counsel and
from Mr Leapman, all of whom made submissions which were succinct, clear, well-
argued and of high quality.
95. We have also paused, before finalising our decision, to compare the result of the
present appeals and the outcomes in the Baker and Moffat cases. In Baker the
requesters sought, in relation to the annual totals for travel expenses, a breakdown
by mode of travel for each MP. In the Moffat case, further breakdown was
requested for one MP to the extent of (1) a global figure for spouse’s expenses, (2)
number of trips by some modes of travel, (3) average cost of some individual trips
by some modes of travel, (4) total mileage for car travel, (5) number and cost of taxi
journeys, and (6) total of EU travel. To the extent that they were held, these details
were ordered by the Commissioner and by the Tribunal to be disclosed. In neither
case did the question arise what further information might be disclosable if a more
detailed request were made. The present appeals have involved a different
allowance and some very different considerations, as set out in paragraphs 32-33
above, which played no part in the two former decisions.
Conclusion and remedy
96. For the reasons which we have set out above, we differ from the Commissioner in
regard to the correct application of DPA Schedule 2 condition 6 in relation to the
requests which form the subject matter of these appeals. Accordingly, we conclude
that the Commissioner’s decision notices were to that extent not in accordance with
the law. We dismiss the House’s appeal, allow the cross-appeals and substitute the
combined decision notice set out above.
97. The information respectively requested by the several applicants must be disclosed
to them, subject to the exceptions which we have set out, within 28 days from the
date of this decision.
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Appeal Number: EA/2007/0060 and others
98. Our decision is unanimous.
Signed
Andrew Bartlett QC
Deputy Chairman
Date 26 February 2008
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