DECISION AND REASONS
1. Th is is an appeal by the Secretary of State. The respondent, whom we shall call “the claimant” , is a national of Egypt who appealed to the First-tier Tribunal against the refusal of his protection claim. That claim was based on his assertion that, if returned to Egypt, he would be at risk as being, or being perceived to be, a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood. It has at all relevant stages been recognised that the claim stands or falls with the credibility of the claimant ’s account of his past activities in Egypt. 2. Substantial documentation was prepared for the hearing before the First-tier Tribunal, including the papers submitted to the Secretary of State and a record of the claim ant’s interview, other documents relating to his family members, supporting evidence from individuals who know him, and country material, including a report by Dr Alan George. The appeal was listed for hearing before Judge P J M Hollingworth o n 24 January 2019. The claiman t was called, and began to give his evidence. He was cross-examined by Mr Hogg, a Presenting Officer. There was a series of questions about ill-treatment he had described in his oral evidence , but which, Mr Hogg put to him, he had not previously detailed. Mr Hog g then went on to ask the claim ant questions about his connection with the Muslim Brotherhood and the Freedom and Justice Party. The claim ant indicated that he had advocated civil disobedience, but was not in any way linked to any political party. He had had one or two thousand leaflets printed. 3. At this point in the claim ant’s cross-examination there was an interr uption. The judge records in his decision as follows: “13. At this point there was an application for adjournment by Learned Counsel to take a further statement for the Appellant and seek further evidence in relation to the issue of the Appellant’s support for the opposition to the government in Egypt. Mr Hogg objected to this. I made the following decision. The scope of the case had significantly altered during cross-examination and unfairness arose to the Appellant in relation to the scope of the case as presented to the Tribunal on the basis of the witness statement submitted. The adjournment was granted to rectify this.” 4. Mr Dixon indicated to us that, save possi bly in some wholly formal sense, it was not right to say that he had asked for an adjournment. The initiative had come from the judge. Whether or not that is right, the matters leading up to it are wholly unclear. The grounds of appeal, drafted by a Presenting Officer who was not the Presenting Officer at the hearing, assert that the claim ant had claimed both to be a member and not to be a member of the Freedom of Justice Party and the Muslim Brotherho od. It is far from clear to us that any claim to have been a member of either of th ose bodies appears in the claim ant’s own account. Given, however, his claimed association with both parties, we cannot see that there could have been any objection to Mr Hogg’s asking him for clarification. Unfortunately , the judge did not take the opportunity to set out either what the issue was or his reasons for resolving it in the way he did. 5. The principal ground of appeal by the Secretary of State is that the resulting decision, allowing the appeal, after a series of further events which we shall set out in due course, was unfair. The judge, without any apparent reason for doing so, gave the claim ant an opportunity to improve his case at a point where questions and cross-examination wer e getting difficult. The claim ant ’s response, made by Mr Dixon in writing and orally, is that the judge considered that the questions about the claim ant’s activity appeared to extend beyond what was in his wi tness statement. We do not think that that is right or that it would give any good reason for granting the adjournment. 6. During the course of taking evidence, a judge’s role has to be merely supervisory. In dealing with representatives, and in assessing their submissions, the judge is entitled to take a role as interventionist and active as he considers appropriate. But while evidence is being taken, he should limit himself to making sure that the evidence is given as well as may be. He should be alert to the witness’s welfare; he should check that there are no obvious problems with interpretation. He will ensure that there are no undue interventions from the other side, reminding representatives, if necessary, that they will have an opportunity in due course to ask their questions. When both sides have finished their examination, he may ask questions of his own by way of clarification; if he does, he should give both sides an opportunity to ask any further q uestions arising from hi s. If there are any questions which are manifestly unfair, he might simply direct that they be not asked, or if already asked, not answered. It is not, however, easy to see how a re levant question about the claim ant’s own life and activities could be unfair. If a new issue is raised and is thought to be of importance, it may possibly be necessary to supplement evidence by some means: but that in itself would not be a reason for adjourning during the course of taking evidence. 7. If something exceptional happens during a hearing, causing a disruption of the normal course of events, such as the cont inuous taking of evidence , it is essential that the judge should record exactly what happened and why; who said what, and what decision the judge made and on what basis. In that way any subsequent challenge to the judge’s action on the grounds of fairness or appropriateness can be properly dealt with. 8. In this case we have no basis for saying that the judge acted properly in taking the extraordinary step of granting, possibly of his own motion, an adjournment to allow the claimant to supplement his evidence during the course of a cross-examination challenging his credibility. Without an explanation or justification, his action has to be seen as an error of law in breaching procedural expectations and inducing a sense of unfairness. To that extent, it appears to us that his decision was affected by error of law. 9. It is not at all clear what, if that error stood alone, would be the appropriate remedy. It is not now said that there were other matters which the Secretary of State would have wanted to put to the claim ant, but that an opportunity did not arise. Th e damage, if it were damage, had already been done by the granting of the adjournment, enabling the claim ant to put together what further material he chose, and cannot be remedied. It may, however be, that we should have decided that, in order to erase any sense of unfairness, the matter should be reheard. 10. As it happens, however, the error which we have identified does not stand alone. 11. The case resumed before the j udge on 23 May 2019. The claim ant adopted a new witness statement, made on 15 April 2019, and Mr Hogg resumed hi s cross-examination. The claim ant was re-examined. His wife was called to give oral evidence and was cross-examined. Submissions were then made. At this point the judge’s decision throws some (very little) light on what happened earlier. Mr Hogg is noted as having begun his cross-examination by reference to a new witness statement from Dr Maha Azzam, describing himself as Head of the Egyptian Revolutionary Co uncil and noting that the claim ant “was part of the setting up of the Freedom of Justice Party” and “was actively involved in canvassing for the party”. Further detail in the judge’s description of the re-examination of the claim ant and the evidence of his wife suggests that one of the questions was whether he was accurately described as one of the founders of the Freedom of Justice Party. If that was the issue which the judge considered so important that it was n ecessary to interrupt the claim ant’s evidence in order to obtain further material, it is surprising that the judge appears to reach no conclusion on the evidence now before him on that issue. 12. What is much more to the point is that it is very difficult indeed to see what were the judge’s conclusions and on what evidence he based those conclusions. Paragraphs 14-17 are, for the most part, a narrative of the evidence given on 23 May 2019, in continuous prose. There is no attempt anywhere in the decision to assemble evidence under a subject matter. Instead, each question and answer is set out simply as it was given. A comparison with the judge’s note seems to show that this part of the decision is simply a transcript of the notes the judge took during the hearing. 13. It appears that the reasons for the judge’s decision allowing the appeal are to be derived largely from paragraphs 20 to 22. Those three paragraphs extend over pages 10-17 of the decision. Paragraph 2 0, which begins “In the refusal letter the R e spondent has accepted that the A ppellant is a national of Egypt”, is nearly two pages long. Paragraph 21, which begins “The Appellant described the work which he did”, is over a page long . Paragraph 22, which begins “The Respondent has set out an analysis of the Appellant’s claims in relation to his arrest and that which took place in Egypt” extends over more than four pages, some 4,200 words in all, with no structure. Each of these paragraphs consists of a mix of references to part of the evidence, parts of the submissions, parts of the respondent’s letter of refusal, comments by the judge and, from time to time, sentences beginning “I find”. Undoubtedly the end result is that the judge concludes that every point raised by the respondent as a matter of credibility has been suff iciently explained by the claim ant. What is difficult is to understand the extent to which, and the reasons why, the judge has concluded that the explanations are satisfactory. It would, we think, be possible to draw support for that proposition from a number of places in the decision. For simplicity, we will cite only the closing passage of paragraph 22: “22 . … The Respondent applied
