S.R & L.A v The Minister for Justice and Equality

JurisdictionIreland
JudgeMr. Justice Haughton,Ms. Justice Faherty
Judgment Date03 October 2023
Neutral Citation[2023] IECA 227
CourtCourt of Appeal (Ireland)
Docket NumberCourt of Appeal Record Number: 2022/107, 2022/108
Between/
S.R.
Appellant/Applicant
and
The Minister for Justice
Respondent
L.A.
Appellant/Applicant
and
The Minister for Justice
Respondent
L.A.
Applicant/Appellant
and
Minister for Justice
Respondent

[2023] IECA 227

Costello J.

Faherty J.

Haughton J.

Court of Appeal Record Number: 2022/107, 2022/108

High Court Record Number: 2020/881 JR

THE COURT OF APPEAL

Immigration and Asylum – Special Student Scheme – Application for judicial review of refusal to grant appellants permission to remain under the Scheme

Facts: The appellants, Indian and Pakistani nationals respectively, had entered the State on student visas. They had both subsequently married EU nationals, and after some procedural history had applied for permission to remain under the Special Student Scheme. These permission applications were refused and further, leave to bring judicial review was refused by the High Court. The matter now came before the Court of Appeal.

Held by the Court that the appeals would be refused. The appellants had failed to establish that the decisions and the review decisions in these cases were unlawful and that they ought therefore to be quashed by this Court. The Court’s role was to consider were the criteria of the scheme correctly interpreted and applied? In Faherty J’s view they were, and the appellants had failed to establish the contrary.

Haughton J handed down a concurring judgment.

UNAPPROVED
[No Redaction Needed]

CONCURRING JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Haughton delivered on the 3 rd day of October 2023

1

. In this judgment I set out my principal reasons for concurring with the comprehensive judgment delivered herein by Ms. Justice Faherty. I respectfully do not agree with the judgment delivered herein by Ms. Justice Costello.

2

. These appeals again highlight the danger for administrative decision-makers of adopting boiler-plate language in stating that all relevant material has been considered. To quote fully the dictum O'Donnell C.J. in Balz v. An Bord Pleanála [2019] IESC 90 referred to by Faherty J. in her judgment:-

“[46]. It is unsettling, for example, that when an issue arises where it is suggested that the Inspector (and therefore the Board) has not given consideration to a particular matter, it should be met by the bare response that such consideration was given (for a limited purpose) and “nothing has been proven to the contrary”. Similarly, while the introductory statement in the Board's decision that it has considered everything it was obliged to consider, and nothing it was not permitted to consider, may charitably be dismissed as little more than administrative throat-clearing before proceeding to the substantive decision, it has an unfortunate tone, at once defensive and circular. If language is adopted to provide a carapace for the decision which makes it resistant to legal challenge, it may have the less desirable consequence of also repelling the understanding and comprehension which should be the object of any decision.”

3

. Albeit that Balz was a planning judicial review under the Planning and Development Act, 2000, it has resonance with the present appeals. It concerned Wind Energy Development Guidelines 2006 which the appellant, in a submission to the Board, had argued were scientifically out of date and no longer widely accepted in so far as they concerned wind turbine sound emissions. The Inspector's report on the proposed development, which was adopted by the Board, effectively ignored these submissions on the basis that the Board was obligated to have regard to the 2006 Guidelines and whether they were out of date was not a relevant planning consideration. However the Supreme Court, overturning my own decision in the High Court, held that the Board had an obligation to engage with the submissions, and it was not apparent from the language used in its decision, in which it adopted the Inspector's report, that it had done so.

4

. I respectfully do not agree with Costello J. at para. 109 of her judgment that the remarks of O'Donnell C.J. in Balz are to be confined on the basis that the Board was simply attempting to make its decision resistant to legal challenge. In my view he was voicing a wider criticism of the use of formulaic words to indicate that relevant materials have been taken into account when there is nothing else in the decision that shows that to be the case.

5

. In the present appeals under para. 3.7 of the Special Scheme the Minister had an obligation to consider whether the applicants “have been of good character and conduct prior to your arrival and since your arrival in the State”, and to do so, as Faherty J. succinctly puts it, “in the round”. As I said in Talla v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2020] IECA 135, writing for this court in the context of a naturalisation application –

“[37]…The Minister in determining whether a person is of ‘good character’ must undertake a comprehensive assessment of each applicant's character as an individual. While criminal convictions, or the commission of offences, are relevant to this enquiry and assessment, it is wider in scope that that, and the outline facts and any mitigating circumstances, the period of time that has elapsed since the last conviction, and other factors that may be relevant to character, must all be taken into consideration.”

6

. I do not agree with the submission of counsel for the respondent, which finds favour with Costello J., in her judgement, that the comparison with naturalisation jurisprudence is, in this respect, inapt. It is of course true that the Special Scheme is not made pursuant to a statutory power, and does not deal with constitutional or Convention rights, and is a purely administrative scheme made pursuant the executive power of the State to control entry and residency. But, while it confers no right to residency on applicants, and the onus is on them to show eligibility, applicants nonetheless have the right to have their applications duly considered and decided, to be advised of the reason(s) for ineligibility or refusal, and on request to have a review of the decision undertaken that has regard to additional documentary evidence submitted. There is also no question but that such review decisions are subject to judicial review.

7

. In this regard it is significant that the form for requesting review by the Minister expressly permits the inclusion of “new information” and requires that “[Y]ou should provide documentary evidence with this application to back up your reason.” It is, as Costello J. says at para. 79 of her judgment, implicit that the reviewer will consider the new material where the is additional documentary evidence. While this does not make it a de novo assessment, in the sense that the reviewer is not simply reassessing from scratch the material that was before the first decision maker and making a fresh decision on that, it does have a new element. I cannot see how the reviewer can properly carry out the task of review without undertaking full consideration of the material accompanying the original application along with, and in light of, the new material (as well as any information obtained through “ancillary checks” undertaken by INIS). The fact that the Scheme is non-statutory or may be characterised as ex gratia does not absolve the Minister from the obligation on review to carefully consider all the material in the light of the new information, and to do so “in the round”.

8

. I also respectfully disagree with a key part of the judgment of Costello J. (paras. 84–88) where she compares para. 3.7 to para. 3.6 in the Scheme, which requires that applicants have “no adverse criminal record in the State or any other jurisdiction”, and failure to disclose such criminal convictions in any jurisdiction renders an application ineligible.

9

. Firstly, para.3.6 is a “black and white” eligibility criterion which is absolute in its terms, and if there is a conviction the applicant cannot be eligible for residency under the Scheme. However para. 3.7 is very differently worded. It requires that the applicant “have been of good character and conduct prior to your arrival and since your arrival in the State”. It requires the Minister to make a moral judgment, and is not absolutist in its terms. While one person might regard particular behaviour as making a person “not of good character” or “not to have been of good conduct”, it will not necessarily be so regarded by another.

10

. Secondly, while it is the case (as Costello J. points out) that s. 15 of the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act, 1956 (as amended) refers only to “good character” as a qualification criterion, I do not agree that an analogy to that section means that in para. 3.7 of the Scheme “good conduct” should be disaggregated from “good character”. Equally I cannot agree that a finding of a single example of behaviour that can properly be characterised as not “good conduct” leads to automatic ineligibility such that “the decision maker is not required to conduct a more holistic assessment of the individual's character as the decision maker would if he or she were operating a statutory scheme” ( per Costello J. at para.88). The Scheme says in para.2 that decisions will be made “solely on the merits”, and I do not believe it was intended in para.3.7 to thereby impose on applicants a requirement of perfect conduct. The inclusion of “good character and conduct” together in para. 3.7 suggests that if there is questionable conduct it should be considered and weighed in the light of the applicant's general character, and it is still open to the decision maker to reach an overall conclusion that an applicant is of “good character” despite such conduct. In my view had the drafters intended a disjunctive effect such that bad conduct on its own would lead to automatic ineligibility this would have been stated expressly, and I believe the...

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4 cases
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