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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Bennett v IC [2008] UKIT EA_2008_0033 (25 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2008/EA_2008_0033.html Cite as: [2008] UKIT EA_2008_0033, [2008] UKIT EA_2008_33 |
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Information Tribunal Appeal
Number: EA/2008/0033 Information Commissioner’s Ref:
FS50114962 |
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Preliminary Hearing Heard at
Procession House, London, EC4 On 5th September
2008 |
Decision Promulgated 25
September 2008 |
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BEFORE |
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CHAIRMAN
ANNABEL
PILLING
and
LAY MEMBERS
JACQUELINE BLAKE MARION
SAUNDERS |
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Between |
JOHN BENNETT |
Appellant |
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and |
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INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
Respondent |
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Decision |
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The Tribunal grants the
application of the Information Commissioner and this Appeal is struck out
under Rule 9 of the Information Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules
2005. |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033:
Reasons for Decision
Introduction
1. Mr. Bennett was involved
in an incident on 4 March 2004 involving police officers from the Devon
and Cornwall Constabulary. He later made a complaint against the police
officers for the use of excessive force when he was arrested. This
complaint was investigated by the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary’s
Professional Standards and Performance Department and, subsequently, by
the Independent Police Complaints Commission.
The Request for Information
2. By letter dated 12 April
2005, Mr. Bennett requested that Devon and Cornwall Constabulary (the
“Police”) provide him with “copies of statements and pocket books of the
three officers involved in the incident at the Castle, Bude on 4 March
2004 which was dealt with by the Professional Standard Department” and “a
copy of statement from Kenneth Peter Bennett”.
3. The Police replied
substantively on 31 May 2005, outside the 20 day statutory time for
compliance, refusing to provide the information sought claiming that it
was exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (the
“FOIA”) under sections 30(1), 40(2) and 41. At that stage, the Police did
not rely on section 40(1), which was raised during the investigation by
the Information Commissioner. The Police explained further that Mr.
Bennett may be entitled to some of the information sought under the Data
Protection Act 1998 (the “DPA”) and stated that it had forwarded his
details to its Data Protection Unit to contact Mr. Bennett
separately.
4. Following correspondence
with the Information Commissioner, Mr. Bennett requested an internal
review of the Police’s decision on 20 February 2006.
The |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033:
internal review upheld the
original decision and Mr. Bennett was notified of the outcome on 23 March
2006.
The complaint to the Information
Commissioner
5. On 4 April 2006 Mr.
Bennett contacted the Information Commissioner to complain about the way
the Police had handled his request for information.
6. In March 2007 the
Information Commissioner began to investigate the substantive complaint
and concluded that the disputed information amounted to Mr. Bennett’s
personal data and was therefore exempt from disclosure under section 40(1)
of the FOIA. A public authority need not comply with the duty to disclose
under section 1 of the FOIA where any of the absolute exemptions provided
for by the FOIA apply. Section 40(1) of the FOIA is an absolute exemption.
This means that the information is not disclosable regardless of any
public interest there may be in disclosure. As a result, the Information
Commissioner did not go on to consider the other exemptions claimed. A
Decision Notice was served dated 12 March 2008 setting out the reasons for
this conclusion.
7. The Information
Commissioner also determined that the Police had breached various parts of
section 17 of FOIA as follows:
i) section 17(1) in that it
exceeded the statutory time limit for responding to a
request;
ii) section 17(1) in that it
failed to issue a refusal notice in respect of the statements of the
police officers (as opposed to the notebooks of the police officers and
the statement of the other individual); and
iii) section 17(1)b in that it
failed to specify section 40(1) of the FOIA as an exemption and section
17(1) (c) in that it failed to state why that exemption
applied. |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033: |
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The Information Commissioner did
not require any remedial action to be taken in respect of
these.
The Appeal to the Tribunal
8. On 24 March 2008 Mr.
Bennett appealed to the Tribunal against the Decision Notice “in its
entirety”. Three separate Grounds of Appeal were set out:
a) that the Information
Commissioner found against the Police under section 17(1) of FOIA but went
on to explain that he did not intend to take the issue
further;
b) that the Information
Commissioner did not recommend to the Police that the Police could edit
the statements; and
c) that the Information
Commissioner does not appear to have asked for an explanation from the
Police as to why the Police only have statements from two of the three
officers involved in the incident.
9. The Information
Commissioner served a Reply dated 21 April 2008 submitting that the Notice
of Appeal disclosed no valid grounds of appeal and applying for the appeal
to be struck out under Rule 9 of the Information Tribunal (Enforcement
Appeals) Rules 2005, alternatively to dismiss the appeal on the merits
under Rule 10 of the Information Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules 2005
on the basis that the appeal does not have a realistic prospect of
success.
10. A Directions hearing was
held on 20 June 2008. Mr. Bennett was given the opportunity to reframe his
appeal and, specifically, to provide written representations as
to:
i) what reasonable grounds of
appeal were disclosed in the Notice of Appeal such that the appeal should
not be struck out under Rule 9;
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033:
ii) the reasonable prospect of
success such that the appeal should not be dismissed summarily under Rule
10;
iii) why an oral hearing would be
necessary if he disagreed with the Information Commissioner’s view that
the matter could properly be dealt with by way of a paper
hearing.
11. Mr. Bennett did not
avail himself of this opportunity and no further representations were
received. The Tribunal is aware that Mr. Bennett and his wife suffer from
ill health and have been caused distress arising out of this matter but we
must proceed to consider the application to strike out under Rule 9 on the
material available.
The Powers of the Tribunal
12. The Tribunal’s powers in
relation to appeals under section 57 of the FOIA are set out in section 58
of the FOIA, as follows:
(1) If on an appeal under
section 57 the Tribunal considers-(a) that the notice against which the
appeal is brought is not in accordance with the law, or
(b) to the extent that the
notice involved an exercise of discretion by the Commissioner, that he
ought to have exercised his discretion differently,
the Tribunal shall allow the
appeal or substitute such other notice as could have been served by the
Commissioner; and in any other case the Tribunal shall dismiss the
appeal. |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033:
On such an appeal, the
Tribunal may review any finding of fact on which the notice in question
was based.
13. Under Rule 4 of the
Information Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules 2005, an appeal against a
Decision Notice must be made in writing and must state the grounds of
appeal.
The Issues for the Tribunal
14. The Information
Commissioner has applied for the appeal to be struck out under Rule 9 of
the Information Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules 2005 on the basis
that the Notice of Appeal discloses no reasonable grounds of appeal. The
material parts of Rule 9 provide as follows:
9. (1) ……. where the
Commissioner is of the opinion that an appeal does not lie to, or cannot
be entertained by, the Tribunal, or that the notice of appeal discloses no
reasonable grounds of appeal, he may include in his reply under Rule 8(2)
above a notice to that effect stating the grounds for such contention and
applying for the appeal to be struck out.
(2) An application under
this rule may be heard as a preliminary issue or at the beginning of the
substantive appeal.
(3) ……
15. There is currently no
guidance provided for the Tribunal on the circumstances in which it will
be appropriate to strike out an appeal under Rule 9. Unlike the summary
dismissal of an appeal under Rule 10, the Rules do not prescribe the
procedure to be followed, save to allow the Tribunal the discretion to
deal with the application as a preliminary issue or at the beginning of
the substantive appeal. |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033: |
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16. The Tribunal did not
consider it to be in the interests of either party, or in the wider public
interest, for this matter to proceed to a full hearing in light of the
application made by the Information Commissioner for the appeal to be
struck out. It may be that there will be occasions in which it is
considered appropriate to direct that the parties prepare for the
substantive hearing before the application under Rule 9 is determined but,
bearing in mind the inevitable costs and time that would be expended, we
are of the opinion that these occasions will be rare.
17. Although no procedure
for the determination of an application under Rule 9 is prescribed by the
Rules, the Tribunal considered it appropriate in this case to adopt the
procedure prescribed under Rule 10. As outlined above, Mr. Bennett was
notified that the Tribunal proposed to determine the issue, he was given
the opportunity to make written representations against the proposal and
to request the Tribunal to hear oral representations.
18. The first question for
the Tribunal is to define what amounts to a reasonable ground of appeal.
The Tribunal must then go on to apply that definition to the grounds of
appeal advanced by Mr. Bennett in his Notice of Appeal. If there is no
reasonable ground of appeal, the Tribunal must grant the application of
the Information Commissioner for the appeal to be struck out under Rule
9.
19. We consider that the
language used in Rule 9 is unambiguous. A reasonable ground of appeal is
one that is readily identifiable from the Notice of Appeal, relates to an
issue the Tribunal has jurisdiction to decide and is realistic not
fanciful.
20. We have considered each
of the three grounds of appeal contained within Mr. Bennett’s Notice of
Appeal.
That the Information
Commissioner found against the Police under section 17(1) of FOIA but went
on to explain that he did not intend to take the issue
further;
21. The Information
Commissioner did not order any remedial steps in relation to the breaches
of section 17 because the matters had, in effect, been resolved by
the
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033: |
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subsequent responses and
disclosure. Requiring the Police to comply with section 17 at this stage
would not serve any practical purpose. Complaints relating to the way in
which the Information Commissioner and his staff dealt with the complaint
are not matters for this Tribunal. Our jurisdiction is limited to the
consideration of the Decision Notice and related matters as outlined
above. This is not, therefore, a ground of appeal.
That the Information
Commissioner did not recommend to the Police that the Police could edit
the statements
22. The Police had informed
Mr. Bennett that he may be entitled to some of the requested information
under the DPA. Where a public authority identifies that information
requested under the FOIA is in fact the applicant’s personal data it
should advise them of this fact and automatically process the request
under the DPA, albeit subject to any applicable fee and necessary
identification.
23. Mr. Bennett in fact made
a subject access request under the DPA on 6 June 2006. The Police
disclosed some information but Mr. Bennett was dissatisfied with the
outcome and complained to the Information Commissioner under section 42 of
the DPA. An assessment was carried out and the outcome communicated to Mr.
Bennett by letter dated 19 June 2006. The Police have subsequently made
further disclosure to Mr. Bennett. He has now received redacted copies of
the pocket notebooks of the three officers.
24. As the Information
Commissioner had concluded that the information amounted to personal data,
he had no power in a Decision Notice issued under the FOIA to go on to
consider whether the applicant is entitled to any personal data under the
DPA. In other words, the only recourse open to Mr. Bennett with regard to
personal data is to submit a request for assessment to the Information
Commissioner. Since the assessment was concluded in June 2006 the
Information Commissioner has issued new guidance about what is personal
data. The Information Commissioner has indicated that in light of this new
guidance and Mr. Bennett’s complaint that the police should have been
recommended to disclose edited versions of the |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033:
statements, the matter will be
passed back to the Data Protection Casework division for reconsideration,
although Mr. Bennett was advised that this did not necessarily mean that
either the original Data Protection Assessment or Decision Notice was
incorrect or that the new review would lead to the disclosure of the
information sought.
25. This does not, therefore, amount to a ground of
appeal against the Decision Notice.
That the Information
Commissioner does not appear to have asked for an explanation from the
Police as to why the Police only have statements from two of the three
officers involved in the incident.
26. The Information
Commissioner in his Reply, acknowledged that this was not specifically
detailed in the Decision Notice. Although there is no requirement on the
Information Commissioner to give specific details of the investigation, he
explains that this issue was raised with the Police. The Police advised
that no record of a third statement had been found and that they were
happy to confirm to Mr. Bennett that this information is not held. This
criticism of the Information Commissioner does not amount to a ground of
appeal; the Tribunal has no jurisdiction over such matters.
Conclusions
27. We consider that the
language used in Rule 9 is unambiguous; a reasonable ground of appeal is
one that is readily identifiable from the Notice of Appeal and is
realistic not fanciful.
28. For the reasons set out
above, we have concluded that the Notice of Appeal discloses no reasonable
ground of appeal and accordingly the appeal must be struck out under Rule
9 of the Information Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules
2005. |
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Appeal Number EA/2008/0033: |
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29. Our decision is unanimous.
Signed:
Annabel Pilling
Deputy Chairman
Date 10 September 2008 |
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10 |
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