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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Belhaj & Anor v Director of Public Prosecutions & Anor [2018] UKSC 33 (4 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2018/33.html Cite as: [2018] 4 All ER 561, [2019] AC 593, [2018] WLR(D) 441, [2018] 3 WLR 435, [2018] Crim LR 1012, [2018] 2 Cr App R 33, [2018] UKSC 33 |
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[2018] UKSC 33
On appeal from: [2017] EWHC 3056 (Admin)
JUDGMENT
Belhaj and another (Appellants) v Director of Public Prosecutions and another (Respondents)
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before
Lady Hale, President Lord Mance Lord Wilson Lord Sumption Lord Lloyd-Jones
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JUDGMENT GIVEN ON |
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4 July 2018 |
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Heard on 22 March 2018 |
Appellants |
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1st Respondent |
Ben Jaffey QC |
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John McGuinness QC |
Helen Law |
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Tom Little QC |
(Instructed by Leigh Day & Co) |
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(Instructed by The Government Legal Department) |
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2nd Respondent |
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James Eadie QC |
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Ben Watson James Stansfeld |
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(Instructed by The Government Legal Department) |
Respondents:
(1) Director of Public Prosecutions
(2) Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
Lord sumption (with whom Lady Hale agrees)
1. The factual background to this appeal is set out in the judgments of this Court in Belhaj v Straw [2017] AC 964. In short summary, the first Appellant, Mr Belhaj, was a political opponent of the government of Colonel Gadaffi in Libya. He and his wife Ms Boudchar (the second Appellant) contend that they were abducted and maltreated by agents of Malaysia, Thailand and the United States, and eventually “rendered” to the Libyan authorities, by whom they were imprisoned, tortured, and subjected to other serious maltreatment. The Appellants allege that this was done with the connivance of the British Secret Intelligence Service and in particular that of Sir Mark Allen, who is said to have been a senior officer of that service. We make no finding about that, any more than the courts below did. Her Majesty’s Government has neither confirmed nor denied that Sir Mark was involved in these events, and references to him in this judgment should be read in that light. In parallel proceedings, the Appellants have sued the British Government for damages. The present appeal arises out of an investigation commenced by the Metropolitan Police in 2012 into possible criminal offences committed in the course of this history.
5. Closed material procedure is a derogation from ordinary principles of forensic justice because it necessarily limits the ability of a litigant or a defendant in criminal proceedings to deploy his case. The degree of limitation will depend on the arrangements made to represent his interests in some other way, although no one suggests that these arrangements can entirely make good the adverse effect on him. There are nonetheless cases in which, notwithstanding that closed material procedure represents imperfect justice, the alternative is no justice at all. For that reason, the European Court of Human Rights has held that closed material procedure may be justified in some cases. In A v United Kingdom (2009) 49 EHRR 29, para 205. the Court observed that
“… even in proceedings under article 6 for the determination of guilt on criminal charges, there may be restrictions on the right to a fully adversarial procedure where strictly necessary in the light of a strong countervailing public interest, such as national security, the need to keep secret certain police methods of investigation or the protection of the fundamental rights of another person. There will not be a fair trial, however, unless any difficulties caused to the defendant by a limitation on his rights are sufficiently counterbalanced by the procedures followed by the judicial authorities (see, for example, Doorson v Netherlands (1996) 22 EHRR 330, para 70; Van Mechelen v Netherlands (1998) 25 EHRR 647; para 58, Reports 1997-III; Jasper v United Kingdom [GC] (2000) 30 EHRR 441, paras 51-53; SN v Sweden, No 34209/96, para 47, ECHR 2002-V; and Botmeh and Alami v United Kingdom (2008) 46 EHRR 31, para 37.”
The Strasbourg court in that case held that the use of closed material procedure before the Special Immigration Appeals Commission could be consistent with the Convention, provided that it was strictly necessary in the interests of national security. It considered that the interests of the complainant were sufficiently protected by the use of a special advocate, in those cases where the defendant was given enough information about the allegations against him to enable him to give meaningful instructions to the special advocate. More recent Strasbourg jurisprudence has softened the latter requirement in a case where, even in the absence of such disclosure, resort to closed material procedure was proportionate and the proceedings as a whole were fair: Kennedy v United Kingdom (2011) 52 EHRR 4, paras 184-187, as applied in Tariq v Home Office (JUSTICE intervening) [2012] 1 AC 452.
6. However, the mere fact that the use of closed material procedure may represent a fair balance between national security and the demands of procedural justice does not mean that the courts have power to adopt it. The rule at common law is that, with very limited exceptions, no material can be put before the court in litigation, civil or criminal, without being disclosed to the parties. The rule was reaffirmed for criminal cases in R v Davis [2008] 1 AC 1128 in the special context of the anonymisation of witness evidence. In civil proceedings it was reaffirmed in Al Rawi v Security Service (JUSTICE intervening) [2012] 1 AC 531, which concerned the use of closed material procedure in the context of allegations somewhat similar to those made by the Appellants in the present case. These decisions are authority for the proposition that the adoption of closed material procedure is not within the inherent jurisdiction of the courts and requires specific statutory authority. Closed material procedure has been authorised by statute for proceedings before certain specialised tribunals. It was authorised in proceedings before the SIAC by sections 5 and 6 of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997, and provision was made for its use by the Investigatory Powers Tribunal under section 69(4) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000. However, until the enactment of the Justice and Security Act 2013, the High Court had no general statutory power to receive closed material.
“(3) The court may make such a declaration if it considers that the following two conditions are met.
(4) The first condition is that -
(a) a party to the proceedings would be required to disclose sensitive material in the course of the proceedings to another person (whether or not another party to the proceedings), or
(b) a party to the proceedings would be required to make such a disclosure were it not for one or more of the following -
(i) the possibility of a claim for public interest immunity in relation to the material,
(ii) the fact that there would be no requirement to disclose if the party chose not to rely on the material,
(iii) section 17(1) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (exclusion for intercept material),
(iv) any other enactment that would prevent the party from disclosing the material but would not do so if the proceedings were proceedings in relation to which there was a declaration under this section.
(5) The second condition is that it is in the interests of the fair and effective administration of justice in the proceedings to make a declaration.”
“Relevant civil proceedings” are defined by section 6(11) as
“any proceedings (other than proceedings in a criminal cause or matter) before -
(a) the High Court,
(b) the Court of Appeal,
(c) the Court of Session, or
(d) the Supreme Court.”
“Sensitive material” is defined in the same subsection as
“material the disclosure of which would be damaging to national security.”
9. The making of a section 6 declaration is the necessary precondition for an application under CPR Part 82, made under powers conferred by section 8 of the Act. Part 82.6 provides for the court to sit in private and in the absence of any party and his legal representatives, inter alia for the purpose of securing that information is “not disclosed where disclosure would be damaging to the interests of national security.” The Act and rules made under it contain a number of safeguards. First, section 7 requires the court to keep a section 6 declaration under review and to revoke it if it considers that the declaration is no longer in the interests of the fair and effective administration of justice in the proceedings. A formal review must in any event be conducted once pre-trial disclosure has been completed: section 7. Secondly, the law officers may appoint a special advocate under section 9, and generally will. Thirdly, section 14(2)(c) provides that nothing in sections 6 to 13 “is to be read as requiring a court or tribunal to act in a manner inconsistent with article 6 of the Human Rights Convention”. Fourthly, the Secretary of State is required by section 13 to appoint a reviewer to review and report on the operation of these provisions.
10. The parallel proceedings (Belhaj v Straw) brought in support of the Appellants’ claim to damages are unquestionably “relevant civil proceedings”. Popplewell J, to whom they have been assigned, has made a section 6 declaration in relation to them. In his judgment on the application for the declaration, he said, [2017] EWHC 1861 (QB), para 60(5)-(6):
“Whilst this is a matter for more detailed consideration at the section 8 stage, it appears to me to be very unlikely that the material could be put into open or made available to the claimants or their legal representatives in a way which would better promote a fair and effective trial than a closed material procedure. As I have observed, much of the material can only properly be understood and weighed in the context of a substantial part of the material as a whole, such that gisting is unlikely to provide a realistic solution in most instances. Sittings in private and/or the use of confidentiality rings are unlikely to provide a satisfactory solution, both because of the risk of disclosure, even inadvertent, and because of the hobbling effect on the conduct of the claimants’ case if, as is almost inevitable, they were themselves to be excluded from the confidentiality ring … These claims are brought not only against the Government, but against two named individuals who both wish to have a real and fair opportunity to defend themselves, but who cannot do so unless there is a closed material procedure.”
That judgment has not been appealed.
11. In the judicial review proceedings, the Appellants’ application for permission to apply for review came before Jeremy Baker J on paper. He ordered that it should be adjourned to a rolled up hearing at which both permission and the substantive claim would be considered. The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs then applied for a section 6 declaration. His application concerned a narrower range of material than that covered by Popplewell J’s declaration in the civil action. It related in practice to three documents: the full decision letters of Ms Hemming and Mr McGill and the advice of Treasury Counsel. It is clear from the letters in which the CPS decisions were communicated to the Appellants that the analysis of the evidence in those three documents was substantially based on secret material. However, the Secretary of State’s application was met with a challenge to the court’s jurisdiction on the ground that the judicial review proceedings were “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter.”
12. The Divisional Court (Irwin LJ and Popplewell J) dealt with that challenge as a preliminary issue [2017] EWHC 3056 (Admin). They held that the present proceedings were not “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter”. Their reasons can fairly be summarised in two propositions. First, proceedings by way of judicial review of a prosecutorial decision do not decide criminal liability. They are a means of holding the executive, in the form of the prosecuting authorities, to account. Such proceedings should properly be categorised as civil, even if their subject matter is a potential criminal prosecution. Secondly, the alternative to closed material procedure was likely to be a successful application by the Secretary of State for public interest immunity, with the result that the sensitive material would be entirely removed from the scrutiny of the court, instead of being available on the basis of limited disclosure. That was an outcome which would probably be unjust to one or other party. The Divisional Court certified the following point of public importance suitable for consideration by this court:
“Does a case where claimants seek judicial review of a decision by the Director of Public Prosecutions not to prosecute an individual constitute ‘proceedings in a criminal cause or matter’, within the meaning and for the purposes of section 6(1) and 6(11) of the Justice and Security Act 2013? As a consequence, is there jurisdiction in such a case to entertain an application for a declaration under section 6 of that Act, that a closed material application may be made to the court?”
13. Mr Jaffey QC, who appeared for the Appellants, took it as his starting point that closed material procedure represents a curtailment of fundamental common law rights. Therefore, it was said, in accordance with the principle of legality, any statutory provision relied upon as authorising it should be given the narrowest possible construction: R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Simms [2000] 2 AC 115, 131 (Lord Hoffmann). The principle is that general or ambiguous words cannot normally be taken to authorise a curtailment of fundamental rights because “there is too great a risk that the full implications of their unqualified meaning may have passed unnoticed in the democratic process.” Parliament must “squarely confront what it is doing and accept the political cost.”
14. Valuable as that principle is, I do not think that it helps to resolve the question at issue on this appeal. The Justice and Security Act 2013 made significant and acknowledged inroads into the common law principle as applied to “relevant civil proceedings”. It did this, subject to specific safeguards, on the ground that the interests of justice might well require the withholding of evidence from a party if the dispute cannot otherwise be tried fairly and consistently with the demands of national security. As the House of Lords held in Al-Rawi, the existence and extent of the court’s jurisdiction to adopt closed material procedure is a matter for Parliament. That involves a balance between the potentially conflicting interests of national security and justice, which Parliament has drawn in the Act of 2013 by authorising the procedure subject to the statutory safeguards. This leaves little scope for any presumption that Parliament does not intend to curtail fundamental common law rights. Parliament plainly did intend to curtail them in what it conceived to be a wider public interest. The only questions are on what conditions and in what proceedings. Those questions must be answered on ordinary principles of construction, without presumptions in either direction. In R (Sarkandi) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2016] 3 All ER 837, para 58, Richards LJ, delivering the only reasoned judgment in the Court of Appeal, put the point in terms on which I cannot improve:
“The 2013 Act is one of those in which Parliament has stipulated that a closed material procedure may be permitted by the court. It represents Parliament’s assessment of how, in relevant civil proceedings, the balance is to be struck between the competing interests of open justice and natural justice on the one hand and the protection of national security on the other, coupled with express provision in section 14(2)(c) to secure compliance with article 6. It is certainly an exceptional procedure, and in the nature of things one would expect it to be used only rarely, but the conditions for its use are defined in detail in the statute. In the circumstances there is, in my judgment, no reason to give the statutory provisions a narrow or restrictive construction, save for any reading down that may be required, in accordance with the terms of the statute itself, for compliance with article 6. Subject to that point, the provisions should be given their natural meaning and applied accordingly.”
15. In my opinion, the Appellants are entitled to succeed on this appeal because in its ordinary and natural meaning “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter” include proceedings by way of judicial review of a decision made in a criminal cause, and nothing in the context or purpose of the legislation suggests a different meaning.
16. The first point to be made is perhaps the most obvious one, namely that although the High Court has only very limited original criminal jurisdiction, it has an extensive criminal jurisdiction by way of review. It is a feature of English criminal procedure that many decisions made in the course of criminal proceedings or in relation to prospective criminal proceedings are subject to judicial review in the High Court, mainly but not only in cases where there is no statutory avenue of appeal. The High Court’s review jurisdiction extends in principle to the exercise of any official’s functions in relation to the criminal process. These include police decisions to investigate or charge (R v Comr of Police of the Metropolis, Ex p Blackburn [1968] 2 QB 118) or to administer cautions (R (Aru) v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2004] 1 WLR 1697); decisions of prosecutors whether or not to prosecute (R (Corner House Research) v Director of the Serious Fraud Office (JUSTICE Intervening) [2009] 1 AC 756, para 30), or of the Director of Public Prosecutions whether to consent to a prosecution (R v Director of Public Prosecutions, Ex p Kebilene [2000] 2 AC 326); and decisions of the Attorney General whether to take over a prosecution or enter a nolle prosequi (Mohit v Director of Public Prosecutions of Mauritius [2006] 1 WLR 3343). It also exercises an analogous jurisdiction by way of writ of habeas corpus over the detention of suspects. The High Court’s supervisory jurisdiction over the criminal process is not limited to the decisions of officials. It extends to the decisions of magistrates’ courts and to those of the Crown Court other than in relation to trial on indictment. For this purpose the Crown Court, although a superior court of record, is treated as if it were an inferior tribunal: see sections 28(2) and 29(3) of the Senior Courts Act 1981. The categories of case giving rise to judicial review of the Crown Court include a variety of orders held not to have been made in relation to trial on indictment, such as orders in proceedings against a person found unfit to plead, orders binding over an acquitted defendant; or orders made in the exercise of the Crown Court’s appellate jurisdiction. The main categories are reviewed by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in R v Manchester Crown Court, Ex p Director of Public Prosecutions [1993] 1 WLR 1524, 1530. The High Court’s powers of review have also been held to extend to any excess of jurisdiction by the Crown Court, even in relation to a trial on indictment: R v Maidstone Crown Court, Ex p Harrow London Borough Council [2000] QB 719. It follows that judicial review as such cannot be regarded as an inherently civil proceeding. It may or may not be, depending on the subject-matter. What is clear is that it is an integral part of the criminal justice system, whose availability is in many cases essential to the fairness of the process and its compliance with article 6 of the Human Rights Convention. It is against this background that one must construe the phrase “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter” as it appears in section 6(11) of the Justice and Security Act 2013.
17. The phrase itself is of some antiquity. It has been used since the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 to define a category of appeals which were excluded from the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal. Under section 47 of that Act, there was no relevant right of appeal to the Court of Appeal from a decision of the High Court “in a criminal cause or matter”. The corresponding provision today is section 18(1)(a) of the Senior Courts Act 1981. Section 151 of the 1981 Act, which substantially reproduces the relevant definitions in section 100 of the Act of 1873 and section 225 of the Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act 1925, provides that “cause” means “any action or any criminal proceedings”, and “matter” means “any proceedings in court not in a cause”. Thus defined, these words have been held to refer to the proceedings which supply the subject matter of the relevant decision: Ex p Alice Woodhall (1888) 20 QBD 832. The phrase, in the words of Lord Esher MR, at p 836 of the report of that case
“applies to a decision by way of judicial determination of any question raised in or with regard to proceedings, the subject-matter of which is criminal, at whatever stage of the proceedings the question arises.”
This decision was approved by the House of Lords in Provincial Cinematograph Theatres Ltd v Newcastle upon Tyne Profiteering Committee (1921) 90 LJ (KB) 1064, in particular at pp 1067-1068 (Lord Birkenhead LC). Accordingly, in the former case the phrase embraced a decision concerning acts preliminary to criminal proceedings, including habeas corpus applications in extradition proceedings; and in the latter decisions concerning the resolution of a local authority to prosecute for profiteering under wartime regulations. These authorities, and others to the same effect have been carefully analysed by the Divisional Court and the exercise need not be repeated here. Their effect is sufficiently stated in the speech of Lord Wright in Amand v Secretary of State for Home Affairs [1943] AC 147. The case concerned a Dutch serviceman who had been arrested for desertion and brought before a magistrate who ordered him to be handed over to the Dutch military authorities under the Allied Forces Act 1940. An application for habeas corpus was rejected by a Divisional Court. The Court of Appeal held that they had no jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from the Divisional Court. Lord Wright said, at pp 159-160:
“The words ‘cause or matter’ are, in my opinion, apt to include any form of proceeding. The word ‘matter’ does not refer to the subject-matter of the proceeding [before the Divisional Court], but to the proceeding itself. It is introduced to exclude any limited definition of the word ‘cause’. In the present case, the immediate proceeding in which the order was made was not the cause or matter to which the section refers. The cause or matter in question was the application to the court to exercise its powers under the Allied Forces Act and the order, and to deliver the appellant to the Dutch military authorities. It is in reference to the nature of that proceeding that it must be determined whether there was an order made in a criminal cause or matter.”
In other words, the “matter” before the Divisional Court was the order made by the magistrate to hand the Appellant over to the Dutch military authorities. Lord Wright went on, at p 162, to say:
“The principle which I deduce from the authorities I have cited and the other relevant authorities which I have considered, is that if the cause or matter is one which, if carried to its conclusion, might result in the conviction of the person charged and in a sentence of some punishment, such as imprisonment or fine, it is a ‘criminal cause or matter’. The person charged is thus put in jeopardy. Every order made in such a cause or matter by an English court, is an order in a criminal cause or matter, even though the order, taken by itself, is neutral in character and might equally have been made in a cause or matter which is not criminal.”
In other words, Lord Wright was treating the proceedings in the Divisional Court as an integral part of the “matter” before the magistrate. Since the latter was criminal in nature, so too was the former. Clearly, the principle thus stated has its limits. A decision on an application collateral to the exercise of criminal jurisdiction, such as an application for the release of documents referred to in court, will not necessarily itself be a decision in a “criminal cause or matter”. On that ground, the Court of Appeal held in R (Guardian News and Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court [2011] 1 WLR 3253 that an application for judicial review of a court’s refusal to provide the press with copies of documents referred to at a hearing of a criminal cause or matter was not a criminal cause or matter.
19. In Barras v Aberdeen Steam Trawling and Fishing Co Ltd [1933] AC 402, the House of Lords held that
“It has long been a well established principle to be applied in the consideration of Acts of Parliament that where a word of doubtful meaning has received a clear judicial interpretation, the subsequent statute which incorporates the same word or the same phrase in a similar context, must be construed so that the word or phrase is interpreted according to the meaning that has previously been assigned to it.”
per Viscount Buckmaster at p 411; cf Lord Russell of Killowen at pp 441-442, Lord Macmillan at p 446. The effect of this principle is to treat certain hallowed formulae as terms of art, to be applied like statutory definitions, on the footing that Parliament must have intended to adopt them. The reason for Lord Buckmaster’s reference to a “similar context” is connected with his reference to words “of doubtful meaning”. The assumption is that the words are not self-explanatory and have derived the meaning given to them on the earlier occasion from their statutory context. Hence the probability that Parliament intended, when it later used the same doubtful expression in the same statutory context, that the meaning would be supplied from the existing judicial dictionary. In R (Guardian News and Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (No 2) [2013] QB 618, doubts were expressed in the Court of Appeal about the force and value of the principle. But it is well established, and was recently endorsed by this court in R (N) v Lewisham London Borough Council [2015] AC 1259, para 53 (Lord Clarke). It remains good law, provided that one bears in mind that it is no more than a presumption, even in cases where the statutory context is similar in both enactments. The Barras principle is therefore of little assistance in construing the phrase “criminal cause or matter” in the very different context of the Justice and Security Act 2013.
Lord mance:
28. The primary purpose of introducing a closed material procedure in civil proceedings was to avoid situations in which there was relevant material which could not on public interest grounds be disclosed, with the result that one party (commonly the Crown) would be effectively unable to advance its case or the court might simply conclude that the whole case had become un-triable (Carnduff v Rock [2001] EWCA Civ 680; [2001] 1 WLR 1786).
31. In criminal proceedings, the position in relation to sensitive public interest material is addressed by the Public Interest Immunity (“PII”) procedure, whereby a judge is shown the material in the absence of the accused. The procedure ensures that the Crown must either disclose potentially exonerating material or withdraw the proceedings: see the discussion in Al Rawi v Security Service (JUSTICE intervening) [2011] UKSC 34; [2012] 1 AC 531 and Tariq v Home Office (JUSTICE intervening) [2011] UKSC 35; [2012] 1 AC 452.
36. One possibility, not explored in submissions, is that, since there is sensitive material on the basis of which the Crown had taken its decision not to prosecute but which cannot, on public interest grounds, be disclosed, the Crown would be entitled to the benefit of the presumption or regularity of its decision: see R (Haralambous) v Crown Court at St Albans (Secretary of State for the Home Department intervening) [2018] UKSC 1; [2018] 2 WLR 357, paras 47 to 52, citing inter alia R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p Rossminster Ltd [1980] AC 952 and R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p T C Coombs & Co [1991] 2 AC 283.
Lord lloyd-jones: (dissenting) (with whom Lord Wilson agrees)
38. I would have dismissed this appeal for the following reasons.
Interpretation - The principle of legality
39. On behalf of the Appellants, Mr Jaffey QC submits that closed material procedures are a serious curtailment of the fundamental rights to open and natural justice. He places at the forefront of his submissions the following observations by Lord Dyson in Al-Rawi v Security Service (JUSTICE intervening) [2012] 1 AC 531, paras 47-48:
“In my view, it is not for the courts to extend such a controversial procedure beyond the boundaries which Parliament has chosen to draw for its use thus far. It is controversial precisely because it involves an invasion of the fundamental common law principles to which I have referred. …
The common law principles to which I have referred are extremely important and should not be eroded unless there is a compelling case for doing so. If this is to be done at all, it is better done by Parliament after full consultation and proper consideration of the sensitive issues involved. It is not surprising that Parliament has seen fit to make provision for a closed material procedure in certain carefully defined situations and has required the making of detailed procedural rules to give effect to the legislation.”
Relying on Lord Hoffmann’s speech in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Simms [2000] 2 AC 115, Mr Jaffey submits that Parliament cannot be taken to have intended to abrogate fundamental rights with ambiguous, rather than express language. He submits that the principle of legality applies to the present case with the result that the courts should presume that, in the absence of clear express language or necessary implication, the use of general words is nevertheless intended to be subject to the basic rights of the individual. As a result, he submits, the words “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter” in section 6, Justice and Security Act 2013 should, if necessary, be given an expansive meaning so as to reduce the scope of availability of the closed material procedure.
40. I readily accept that to hold a closed material hearing is a restriction of the common law principles of open justice and natural justice. As this court made clear in Bank Mellat v Her Majesty’s Treasury (No 2) [2014] AC 700 (per Lord Neuberger PSC, at paras 2-4, with whom Baroness Hale, Lord Clarke, Lord Sumption and Lord Carnwath JJSC agreed), a closed hearing offends the principle of open justice, which is fundamental to the dispensation of justice in a modern, democratic society, and, by denying a party a right to know the full case against him and the right to test and challenge that case fully, is even more offensive to the fundamental principle of natural justice. While these principles may, exceptionally, be required to yield if justice cannot otherwise be achieved, claims that adherence to these principles is not attainable in particular circumstances will always require the most intense scrutiny.
42. In my view, this approach by the legislature leaves no scope for the application of the principle of legality. A restrictive interpretation to general words lest, as Lord Hoffmann put it in Simms (at p 131), “the full implications of their unqualified meaning may have passed unnoticed in the democratic process”, would be inappropriate here. On the contrary, the elaborate scheme of Part 2 of the Justice and Security Act 2013 demonstrates that Parliament was fully aware of the implications for civil liberties of the exercise it was attempting to perform. This is Parliament’s assessment of the appropriate balance. There is, therefore, no call for a narrow or restrictive interpretation of these provisions, subject to the express provision in section 14(2)(c) requiring them to be read in a manner consistent with article 6 ECHR. Appropriate safeguards are already built into the structure of the legislation. (R (Sarkandi) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2015] EWCA Civ 687; [2016] 3 All ER 837 per Richards LJ, at para 58.) As Popplewell J observed in the parallel civil proceedings brought by Mr Belhaj and Mrs Bouchar, Belhaj v Straw [2017] EWHC 1861 (QB) at para 26:
“A closed material procedure is in Parliament’s view one which serves the fair and effective administration of justice, and for that reason consideration of the second condition cannot turn on the aspects of the process which are necessarily part of the incursion into the principles of public and natural justice which are inherent in the closed material procedure itself; consideration must focus on the particular nature of the proceedings and sensitive material in question.”
(See also McGartland v Attorney General [2015] EWCA Civ 686, per Richards LJ at para 35; F v Security Service [2013] EWHC 3402 (QB); [2014] 1 WLR 1699 per Irwin J at paras 36 and 41; Abdulbaqi Mohammed Khaled v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2017] EWHC 1422 (Admin) per Jay J at para 25.)
Interpretation - the Barras principle
44. The Appellants also rely on the principle of interpretation known as the Barras principle which, they submit, has the effect that where Parliament uses a word or phrase in legislation and it has received a clear judicial interpretation, it will be assumed that when the legislator subsequently chooses to use the same word or phrase in a similar context it is intended to have the same meaning. The principle takes its name from Barras v Aberdeen Steam Trawling and Fishing Co Ltd [1933] AC 402 where Viscount Buckmaster stated at p 411:
“It has long been a well-established principle to be applied in the consideration of Acts of Parliament that where a word of doubtful meaning has received a clear judicial interpretation, the subsequent statute which incorporates the same word or the same phrase in a similar context, must be construed so that the word or phrase is interpreted according to the meaning that has previously been assigned to it.”
45. This approach was endorsed, obiter, by a majority of the Supreme Court in R (N) v Lewisham London Borough Council [2014] UKSC 62; [2015] AC 1259. Lord Hodge (with whom Lord Wilson, Lord Clarke of Stone-cum-Ebony and Lord Toulson JJSC agreed) stated (at para 53):
“It suffices for me to say that where Parliament re-enacts a statutory provision which has been the subject of authoritative judicial interpretation, the court will readily infer that Parliament intended the re-enacted provision to bear the meaning that case law had already established: Barras v Aberdeen Steam Trawling and Fishing Co Ltd [1933] AC 402, 411-412, Viscount Buckmaster. Applying that in the present case, one can readily conclude, as I have, that the word ‘dwelling’ in the phrase ‘let as a dwelling’ in the [Protection from Eviction Act 1977] must bear the same meaning as it had in section 31 of the Rent Act 1965 and in the phrase ‘let as a separate dwelling’ in the Rent Acts.”
(Cf Lord Carnwath at paras 83-88; Baroness Hale at para 167.)
46. Lord Neuberger (at paras 142-147) accepted that, if Parliament has re-enacted a statutory provision in identical words after it had been interpreted as having a certain meaning by the courts of record, there is some attraction in the notion that the Parliamentary intention was that the provision should have that meaning. However, he stated that he was far from convinced that the principle can be regarded as correct, at least in the absence of some additional factor in favour of maintaining the interpretation previously adopted. Here he referred to observations in Farrell v Alexander [1977] AC 59 and A v Hoare [2008] 1 AC 844. I share the reservations expressed by Lord Neuberger but, as will become apparent, it is unnecessary to come to a concluded view on this point in the present case.
“‘Cause’ shall include an action, suit, or other original proceeding between a plaintiff and a defendant, and any criminal proceeding by the Crown.
…
‘Action’ shall mean a civil proceeding commenced by writ, or in such other manner as may be prescribed by Rules of Court; and shall not include a criminal proceeding by the Crown.
…
‘Matter’ shall include every proceeding in the Court not in a cause.”
This line of authority has been addressed in considerable detail in the judgment of the Divisional Court. It is not necessary to do so here as it is clear that, under the relevant legislation relating to routes of appeal including the current provision in section 18(1)(a), Senior Courts Act 1981, proceedings such as the instant proceedings would be classified as proceedings in a criminal cause or matter. Indeed, that is the basis on which the Supreme Court has heard this appeal from the Queen’s Bench Division, Divisional Court. For present purposes it is sufficient simply to refer to the following examples of the application of the words in that context.
1) In Ex p Pulbrook [1892] 1 QB 86 a judge in chambers gave permission pursuant to the Law of Libel Amendment Act 1888 to bring proceedings for criminal libel. The proposed defendant sought to appeal. This raised the question whether the order was made in “criminal proceedings” within the Rules of the Supreme Court. The Divisional Court, referring by analogy to section 47 of the 1873 Act, considered that the permission was granted in a criminal cause or matter within the meaning of that provision.
2) In Provincial Cinematograph Theatres Ltd v Newcastle Upon Tyne Profiteering Committee (1921) 90 LJ (KB) 1064 the Committee took a decision to institute criminal proceedings against the appellants for breach of regulations. The appellants attempted unsuccessfully to challenge that decision by certiorari. On appeal to the Court of Appeal that court held that the judgment under appeal had been delivered in a criminal cause or matter and that no appeal lay to the Court of Appeal by virtue of section 47 of the 1873 Act. The House of Lords upheld the Court of Appeal. Approving Pulbrook, Lord Birkenhead LC observed (at p 1067) that, although such an order is not necessarily followed by any proceedings, it had rightly been held that no appeal lay against the order to the Court of Appeal because it had been made in a criminal matter.
3) In Amand v Home Secretary [1943] AC 147 the House of Lords held that an application for habeas corpus, following the detention in England of a national of the Netherlands for being absent without leave from the Netherlands military, was an application in a criminal cause or matter within section 31(1)(a), Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act 1925 and that, accordingly, the Court of Appeal had no jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
4) In R (Aru) v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2004] 1 WLR 1697 the Court of Appeal held that an official caution was a criminal matter within section 18(1)(a), Supreme Court Act 1981 and that the Court of Appeal had no jurisdiction to hear an appeal in judicial review proceedings challenging the caution.
5) Challenges by way of judicial review to decisions to prosecute or not to prosecute are heard by a Divisional Court and then, as a criminal cause or matter, any appeal lies directly to the House of Lords. (R v Director of Public Prosecutions, Ex p Kebilene [2000] 2 AC 326; R (Corner House Research) v Director of Serious Fraud Office [2009] 1 AC 756. See also R (Pretty) v Director of Public Prosecutions [2002] 1 AC 800.) Although in none of these cases was any point taken on jurisdiction, this well-established usage is clearly correct.
50. The context of the authorities on routes of appeal and the present context are so very different that I find it impossible to derive any assistance from those authorities. Moreover, it is apparent that there were strong reasons for giving the phrase in question a particularly broad meaning in the former context. As Irwin LJ observed in the Divisional Court in the present case (at para 75), historically the caution shown in interpreting these words must initially have been governed by the desire to avoid blurring the lines of appeal and encroaching upon longstanding, discrete criminal jurisdiction, recently subject to statutory reorganisation and reform. Furthermore, there was an understandable reluctance on the part of a civil court to entertain anything akin to an appeal in a criminal matter. Thus in Ex p Alice Woodhall (1888) 20 QBD 832 we find the following statement in the judgment of Lord Esher MR (at p 835):
“The result of all the decided cases is to shew that the words ‘criminal cause or matter’ in section 47 should receive the widest possible interpretation. The intention was that no appeal should lie in any ‘criminal matter’ in the widest sense of the term, this court being constituted for the hearing of appeals in civil causes or matters.”
(See also Ex p Schofield [1891] 2 QB 428 per Lord Esher MR at pp 430-431; Ex p Pulbrook per Mathew J at p 89.)
51. Secondly, it is clear that the phrase “criminal cause or matter” need not have one meaning but may be interpreted differently depending on its statutory context. In R (Guardian News and Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court [2011] EWCA Civ 1188; [2011] 1 WLR 3253 a district judge had refused an application by the applicant newspaper that it be provided with copies of documents referred to but not read out in an open hearing in extradition proceedings. The applicant sought judicial review of the decision and appealed by way of case stated. The Divisional Court dismissed the claim and the appeal. The Court of Appeal, (Lord Neuberger MR, Jackson and Aikens LJJ) granting permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal, considered that the application had been wholly collateral to the extradition proceedings and that the district judge’s order had not involved an exercise of his criminal jurisdiction nor had it any bearing on the extradition proceedings. Accordingly, it held that the Divisional Court’s judgment had not been made in a criminal cause or matter within section 18(1)(a) of the Senior Courts Act 1981. In R (Guardian News and Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (No 2) [2012] EWCA Civ 420; [2013] QB 618, the question arose whether the previous decision had any impact on the powers of the Criminal Procedure Rule Committee which under section 68 and 69 of the Courts Act 2003 are limited to making rules in relation to the Crown Court and the Magistrates’ Court when they are dealing with “any criminal cause or matter”. Hooper LJ concluded (at para 106):
“Mr Perry, rightly in my view, said that the words ‘any criminal cause or matter’ must have a different meaning in section 68 of the Courts Act 2003 than they do in section 18(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981. To give the words ‘any criminal cause or matter’ in section 68 a narrow meaning would lead to the undesirable result that issues such as those dealt with in Part 5 of the Criminal Procedure Rules (and in other parts of the Rules) would have to be the subject of rule-making by some other body. That cannot have been the intention of Parliament: …”
Lord Neuberger MR agreed (at para 110):
“I agree with what is said in para 106 that ‘criminal cause or matter’ in section 68(b) of the Courts Act 2003 does not necessarily have the same meaning as the identical expression in section 18(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981, and that, if the expression in the 1981 Act has the meaning ascribed to it in the earlier decision in this case …, then it has a different meaning in the 2003 Act.”
(See also Al Fawwaz v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 468 (Admin) per Wyn Williams J at para 6.) If the basis of the Barras principle is that Parliament must be assumed to be aware of authoritative judicial decisions defining a particular word or phrase, it must, as a result of Guardian News (No 2), have been aware prior to the enactment of the Justice and Security Act 2013 that “criminal cause or matter” need not have one meaning but may be interpreted differently depending on its statutory context. To my mind, this is fatal to the Appellants’ reliance on the Barras principle.
Interpretation in the context of Justice and Security Act 2013
53. It is, therefore, necessary to consider the words in the context of this particular statute and to consider the purpose of the exclusion of “proceedings in a criminal cause or matter” from this closed material procedure. Here, it is permissible to refer to the Justice and Security Green Paper Cm 8194/2011, which preceded the Justice and Security Act 2013 and to the Explanatory Notes to the Bill and the Act in order to cast light on the contextual setting and in order to give a purposive interpretation of the legislation (Fothergill v Monarch Airlines [1981] AC 251 per Lord Diplock at p 281; R (Westminster City Council) v National Asylum Support Service [2002] UKHL 38; [2002] 1 WLR 2956 per Lord Steyn at para 5). The Green Paper states that its proposals are aimed to “better equip our courts to pass judgment in cases involving sensitive information” and to “protect UK national security by preventing damaging disclosure of genuinely national security sensitive material” (Foreword). An indication of the purpose of the specific exclusion of proceedings in a criminal cause or matter from the new procedure is provided by the following passage (at p 7):
“Criminal vs Civil: Why criminal proceedings are out of scope for this Paper Civil and Criminal proceedings in England and Wales are fundamentally different. In civil cases, the courts adjudicate on disputes between parties under the civil law. In criminal cases, it is usually the state which prosecutes individuals for the commission of criminal offences; where defendants are convicted, they face criminal sanctions including imprisonment. Due to the understandably more onerous requirements of the right to a fair trial in criminal cases, the rules concerning the use and protection of sensitive evidence are different to those in civil cases.
Criminal proceedings have the strictest requirements under article 6 of the ECHR regarding the disclosure of sensitive material. Long-standing procedures, generally supported by all parties, are in place:
• The evidence that the prosecutor uses in court to secure a conviction is never withheld from the accused. …”
The passage then refers to disclosure to an accused of all relevant material, the use of public interest immunity procedures, the power of the court to overrule a public interest immunity certificate and the discretion which would permit a prosecutor to withdraw a prosecution rather than disclose sensitive material. It then states:
“In civil claims, as [Her Majesty’s Government] is a defendant, there is no possibility of withdrawing from the case, so the ability to protect sensitive material is entirely dependent on PII claims.”
In addition, a glossary (at p 68) which distinguishes civil and criminal proceedings, reinforces the view that the purpose of the exclusion is to prevent its use in criminal proceedings:
“Civil proceedings
For the purposes of this Green Paper any court or tribunal proceedings which are not criminal in nature are referred to as civil proceedings. Civil proceedings include, but are not limited to, areas such as public law (ie judicial review), negligence, family law, employment law, property law and commercial law.
By contrast, criminal proceedings involve an accusation by the state (or in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, occasionally by way of private prosecution) that the accused has committed a breach of the criminal law which, if proved, would lead to conviction and the imposition of a sentence. Crimes are generally wrongs which affect the public as a whole, so that the public has an interest in their detection and punishment.”
It then concludes with the statement that:
“The proposals outlined in the Paper do not affect criminal proceedings” (at p 68).”
54. The Explanatory Notes to the Justice and Security Bill, clause 6(7) provided:
“51. Subsection (7) defines ‘relevant civil proceedings’. This sets the range of civil proceedings in which a declaration under subsection (1) may be made. ‘Relevant civil proceedings’ are defined as proceedings in the High Court, the Court of Appeal or the Court of Session which are not criminal proceedings.”
The Explanatory Notes to the Justice and Security Act 2013 simply states:
“67. Section 6 enables certain courts hearing civil (but not criminal) proceedings, namely the High Court, the Court of Appeal, the Court of Session or the Supreme Court, to make a declaration that the case is one in which a closed material application may be made in relation to specific pieces of material.”