Afghanistan
[2014] UKUT 102 (IAC)
and
MM (Unfairness; E&R)
Sudan
[2014] UKUT 105 (IAC). The fair hearing principle may be viewed as the unification of the two common law maxims
audi alteram partem
and
nemo judex in causa sua
,
which combine to form the doctrine of natural justice, as
it w
a
s formerly known
. These two maxims are, nowadays, frequently expressed in the terms of a right and a prohibition, namely the litigant’s right to a fair hearing and the prohibition which precludes a Judge from adjudicating in a case in which he has an interest.
7.
Further refinements of the fair hearing principle have resulted in the development of the concepts of apparent bias and actual bias. The latter equates with the prohibition identified immediately above. In contrast, apparent bias, where invoked, gives rise to a somewhat more sophisticated and subtle challenge.
It entails the application of the following test:
“
The question is whether the fair minded observer, having considered the facts, would conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was bias.
”
See
Porter v
Magill
[2001] UKHL 67, at [103].
In
Re Medicaments
[2001] 1 WLR 700, the Court of Appeal provided the following exposition of the task of the appellate, or review, court or tribunal:
“
The Court must first ascertain all the circumstances which have a bearing on the suggestion
that the Judge was bias. It must then ask whether those circumstances would lead a fair minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility … that the Tribunal was bias. The material circumstances will include any explanation given by the Judge under review as to his knowledge or appreciation of those circumstances.
”
In
Lawal
v
Northern Spirit
[2003] UKHL 35, the House of Lords reiterated the importance of first identifying the circumstances which are said to give rise to apparent bias.
8.
The authorities place due emphasis on the requirement that the hypothetical reasonable observer is
duly informed
. This connotes that the observer is in possession of all material facts. See, for example,
Taylor
v
Lawrence
[2002] EWCA Civ 90, at [61] – [63]. Furthermore, the hypothetical fair minded observer is a person of balance and temperance, “
… neither complacent nor unduly sensitive or suspicious
”, per Lord Steyn in
Lawal
at [14]. Finally, it is appropriate to emphasise that the doctrine of apparent bias has its roots in a principle of some
longevity
and indisputable pedigree, namely the requirement that justice not only be done but manifestly be seen to be done: see, for example,
Davidson v
Scottish Ministers
[2004] UKHL 34.
Decision
9.
On behalf of the Appellant Ms Charlton submitted that the “
retirement home
” comment was indicative of the Judge’s adverse inclination against her client’s case which, she suggested, was manifest in certain other parts of the operative passages in the determination. In developing this argument, she relied on:
(a)
The Judge’s statement that there was no evidence that the Appellant spoke English and that this would be considered a barrier to integration.
(b)
His observation that if the Appellant were to find medication and personal assistance expensive in
Nigeria
, her daughter’s financial resources could be deployed to this end and, in particular, her daughter’s second home
in the
United Kingdom
could be sold if necessary.
(c)
The indifference to the interests of others viz the daughter and grandchildren which this statement displayed.
Focusing
particularly
on the “
retirement home
” comment, Ms Charlton submitted that this was belittling to and insulting of both the Appellant and her daughter and, further, overlooked that thanks to the daughter the Appellant had at all times been fully self-supporting.
10.
The question in this appeal is whether the decision of the FtT is vitiated by apparent bias and, hence, unsustainable in law by re
ason of the passage quoted in [5
] above. We are satisfied that the assessment of the hypothetical fair minded, reasonable and properly informed observer would be as follows. First, there is no suggestion (much less any evidence) that the Judge has
, or had,
any predisposition against persons such as this Appellant or is anti-immigrant or anti-immigration generally. Second, as the permission Judge noted, the determination, read as a whole, displays “
cogent evidence based reasoning
”. To this we add the modest adjustment that, at the stage of the Judge’s reasoning,
evidence
had, of course, matured into
findings
,
an important distinction
: see
M
K Pakistan
[2013] UKUT
00641
(IAC)
. Furthermore, there is no challenge to
any
of the
judge’s
findings on the basis of irrationality or the disregard of material evidence or the intrusion of immaterial factors.
We observe that the presence of any of these vitiating elements could, in principle, lend sustenance to the Appellant’s complaint of apparent bias. However, none is evident.
11.
The hypothetical observer would also note the balanced, considered and neutral terms in which the Judge has expressed himself in a series of important passages, beginning at [40] and ending at [53]. It is noteworthy that within these passages the Judge has accurately and adequately summarised the medical and other evidence adduced on behalf of the Appellant.
No issue is taken with these assessments or summaries. Furthermore, the language throughout these passages is that of the dispassionate, disinterested adjudicator giving primacy to the requirement of impartiality enshrined in the statutory judicial oath of office.
We further consider that the observer would not be troubled by the other passages in the determination highlighted on behalf
of the Applicant, noted in [9
] above, either singly or in combination. These passages embody statements which are unexceptional, considered and balanced.
12.
At this juncture, we consider it appropriate to reproduce the relevant paragraph, [51] in its entirety:
“
While
[the daughter’s]
desire to care for the Appellant in the
UK
is natural and understandable neither could have had any legitimate expectation that the Appellant would be allowed to remain unless she was able to bring herself within the requirements of the Immigration Rules. There is a great deal of authority to the effect that the
UK
is not a retirement home for the rest of the world.
”
The immediately ensuing paragraph begins with the following:
“
I have not been satisfied that the Appellant would be returned to
Nigeria
in a state of destitution or that there are compelling and/or compassionate circumstances such that she should be granted leave outside the Immigration Rules.
”
The hypothetical reasonable observer would, in our view, find
an element
of empathy in the passages of the FtT’s determination reproduced above. The observer would further take into account that superior courts have expressed themselves in terms comparable to those of the challenged statement
and
would readily conclude that the Judge had in mind pronouncements of this
genre
in the “
retirement home
” sentence in [51].
13.
Such pronouncements a
r
e exemplified particularly in
EV (Phillipines) v
SSHD
[2014] EWCA Civ
8
74, at [60]:
“
J
ust
as
we cannot provide medical treatment to the world so we cannot educate the
world”.
Somewhat comparable is the
statement of Lord Nicholls in
N v
SSHD
[2005] UKHL 31, at [17]:
“
But, as the
Strasbourg
jurisprudence confirms, Article 3 cannot be interpreted as requiring contracting states to admit and treat AIDS sufferers from all over the world for the rest of their lives ….
True it is that a person who comes here and receives treatment while his application is being considered will have his hopes raised. But it is difficult to see why this should subject this country to a greater obligation than it would to someone who is turned away at the port of entry and never receives any treatment.
”
We bear in mind that one of the traits of the hypothetical observer is that he is properly informed. He would, therefore, be aware of these other judicial pronouncements, emanating from higher courts and would conclude that this is what the FtT Judge must have had in mind when he made the “
retirement home
” comment. The consideration that the Judge’s statement can be traced to authoritative judicial sources would fortify the observer’s confidence in the impartiality of the Tribunal. Still further reassurance would be provided by the truism that, day and daily, there are countless examples in the FtT and Upper Tribunal of cases not dissimilar to that of the Applicant failing on Article 8 ECHR grounds
, properly so
.
T
he hypothetical observer would
also
take into account the stream of judicial pronouncements, spanning many years, that Article 8 confers no right to select the country in which one wishes to enjoy and develop family life.
Finally, the hypothetical observer would be influenced by the assessments and considerations in [11] and [12] above.
14.
We consider that the linguistic formula selected by the Judge was unfortunate. It had the potential to cause offence and we accept that, in this instance, it did so.
It was insensitive.
It further had the potential to convey to the Appellant and her mother an unfavourable impression of the legal process in which they had been involved
, generating a
sense of unease. We are satisfied that it had this effect. The interface between the judiciary and society is of greater importance nowadays than it has ever been. In both the conduct of hearings and the compilation of judgments, Judges must have their antennae tuned to the immediate and wi
der audiences. As the decision
in
AA
N
demonstrates, Judges must be alert to the sensitivities and perceptions of
others, particularly in a multi-
cultural society. We consider that st
atements of the kind which stimul
ated the grant of permission to appeal in the present case should be avoided. The interaction of most litigants with the judicial system is a transient one and it is of seminal importance that the fairness, impartiality and detached objectivity of the judicial office holder are manifest from beginning to end.
15.
Drawing the various strands together and
given our analysis in [10] – [14
] above, w
e
are satisfied that the hypothetical observer would conclude,
following careful and informed reflection
, that the decision of the FtT
is fair, balanced, considered and, above all, impartial. We, in turn, conclude without
reservation
that the challenge based on apparent bias is devoid of merit and substance.
C
onclusion
16.
We dismiss the appeal accordingly and affirm the decision of the FtT.
THE HON. MR JUSTICE MC
CLOSKEY
PRESIDENT OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER
Date:
23
September 2015
- ppeal
- ‘there is a great deal of authority to the effect that the United Kingdom is not a retirement home for the rest of the world’
- Governing Legal Principles
- Afghanistan
- MM (Unfairness; E&R)
- Sudan
- Magill
- Re Medicaments
- Northern Spirit
- duly informed
- Lawrence
- Scottish Ministers
- evidence
- findings
- K Pakistan
- SSHD
- onclusion
- Date:
