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Neutral Citation no.
[2008] NIQB 53 |
Ref:
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WEA7162 |
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Judgment: approved by the Court for handing down
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Delivered: |
20/05/2008 |
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(subject to
editorial corrections)* |
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION (JUDICIAL
REVIEW)
AN APPLICATION BY JOSEPH CONNOR FOR JUDICIAL
REVIEW
WEATHERUP J
[1] This is an application for judicial review of
the decisions of a Governor at HMP Maghaberry on 22
January 2008 on the adjudication of the applicant on a
charge of failing to obey a lawful order. The issue
concerns the circumstances in which, on the adjournment
of an adjudication hearing, an interim transcript may be
required to be produced for the prisoner in order to
facilitate legal advice on the further conduct of the
resumed hearing. Ms Quinlivan appeared for the applicant
and Dr McGleenan for the respondent.
[2] The applicant is serving a sentence of twelve
years’ imprisonment at HMP Maghaberry. On 27 October
2007 he was scheduled to receive a domestic visit but
the visit did not proceed. On 31 October 2007 the
applicant asked a prison officer if he could have the
visit re-arranged. An exchange then took place between
the applicant and the prisoner officer which resulted in
the applicant being charged with the offence against
discipline of disobeying a lawful order. The officer
was PO Hutchinson and in his statement reporting the
incident he described how he was unlocking the prisoners
for breakfast on Roe 3 where the applicant was housed.
The applicant enquired about the re-instatement of his
visit and PO Hutchinson informed him that he would not
be getting his visit reimbursed “as by all accounts it
was his visitor’s behaviour that caused him to lose the
visit”. The applicant was then abusive to the prison
officer and when he started to make his way up the
landing PO Hutchinson ordered him to lock up on two
occasions. When the applicant ignored both orders PO
Hutchinson instructed PO Weise to activate the alarm.
PO Hutchinson’s account was supported by the statements
of PO Stewart and PO Weise.
[3] In his affidavit grounding the application
for judicial review the applicant disagreed with the
contents of the statements made by the prison officers.
He stated his understanding that the 25 October 2007
visits had been cancelled for all prisoners because an
alarm had been set off and not because of the actions of
the applicant’s visitors. He stated that when he had
the exchange with PO Hutchinson he went from his cell
towards the laundry and did not hear any order being
given and was not aware that there was any issue until
he was returned to his cell after the alarm had been
activated.
[4] The adjudication opened before Governor
Cromie on Friday 2 November 2007. The adjudication was
adjourned for the applicant to receive legal advice and
for the production of CCTV evidence of the events at Roe
3. The adjudication reconvened on Friday 23 November
2007 when evidence was heard from PO Hutchinson and PO
Stewart and they were questioned by the applicant. The
hearing was again adjourned as PO Weise was
unavailable.
[5] After the hearing was adjourned on 23
November 2007 the applicant’s solicitor wrote to the
Governor at HMP Maghaberry on 30 November 2007
requesting copies of the charge sheet and statements and
also requesting a transcript of the questioning of the
prison officers on 2 November 2007 (which should have
been a reference to 23 November 2007). The letter was
forwarded to the General Office HMP Maghaberry where
Governor Kennedy arranged for the copy charge sheet and
statements to be forwarded to the applicant’s
solicitor. In relation to the request for a transcript
Governor Kennedy went to the office to obtain
information about the status of the adjudication. He
was not aware of any details relating to the
adjudication but was informed by staff that the
adjudication had not been concluded. He did not require
a transcript to be produced for the applicant’s
solicitor. The applicant’s solicitor’s letter was
placed on the adjudication file for the consideration of
the adjudicating Governor.
[6] By letter to Governor Kennedy dated 18
December 2007 the applicant’s solicitor made a further
request for the transcript of the questioning of the
prison officers. Governor Kennedy returned to the
office to determine the state of the adjudication and
again found that the adjudication had not been
completed. Governor Kennedy directed that the
applicant’s solicitor’s letter be placed on the
adjudication file for Governor Cromie to deal with the
issue when the adjudication resumed. By a further
letter to Governor Kennedy dated 15 January 2008 the
applicant’s solicitors again requested a transcript of
the questioning of the prison officers. Governor
Kennedy had no recollection of having received the
letter of 15 January 2008.
[7] The hearing reconvened on Tuesday 22 January
2008 when the applicant refused to attend. Governor
Cromie viewed the CCTV and heard the evidence PO Weise
in the absence of the applicant. During the course of
the hearing on that day Governor Cromie adjourned on
four occasions to speak to the applicant. On the first
occasion he adjourned to advise the applicant to attend
the hearing, but the applicant refused. On the second
occasion he adjourned for the applicant’s comments after
Governor Cromie had viewed the CCTV. On the third
occasion he adjourned for the applicant’s comments after
he had heard the evidence of PO Weise. Having then
found the applicant guilty of the disciplinary offence
Governor Cromie adjourned on a fourth occasion to ask
the applicant if he had anything to say in mitigation.
On reconvening the hearing Governor Cromie made an award
that included eight days cellular confinement.
[8] The applicant’s grounds for judicial review
were as follows:
(i) That the conduct of the adjudication was
unfair, in that it was conducted in circumstances where
the applicant’s solicitors had sought access to
documentation relevant to the adjudication for the
purpose of advising the applicant and the respondent
failed to provide the documentation to the applicant or
his solicitors.
(ii) That the refusal to provide the documents to
the solicitors meant that the applicant was denied
access to legal advice in a manner which was practical
or effective.
(iii) The punishment imposed upon the applicant was
unfair and unjust in all the circumstances.
(iv) That, in failing to address the question of
whether or not on the facts of the instant case the
applicant’s solicitor should be provided with the
transcript of the adjudication as they had requested,
the respondent behaved irrationally.
(v) That the decision to refuse to provide the
applicant with access to the transcript of the
adjudication and to the facts of the instant case was
Wednesbury unreasonable.
(vi) That the respondent’s approach to the
determination of whether an interim transcript should be
disclosed during the course of an adjudication is unduly
rigid and amounts in effect to an unlawful fettering of
discretion to determine whether or not an interim
transcript should be provided on the facts of the
instant case.
[9] The applicant’s solicitor’s reason for
requesting the transcript was to assist the applicant in
his contention that the prison officers were untruthful
in stating that the applicant had refused to obey a
lawful order. The applicant wished to challenge the
suggestion that the reason for the cancellation of
visits on 25 October 2007 related to the conduct of the
applicant’s visitors. The applicant was aware that
another prisoner made a complaint about the cancellation
of visits and the complaint form was returned on 5
November 2007 advising the prisoner that visits had been
cancelled because there had been a breakdown of the
electronic systems and a decision was taken on health
and safety grounds that visits be cancelled and
rescheduled. The applicant exhibited a copy of the
complaint form to confirm the explanation offered to the
other prisoner for the cancellation of visits on 25
October 2007. Accordingly, in the light of the
transcript, the applicant wished to obtain legal advice
from his solicitor on the development of this point at
the resumed hearing of the adjudication.
[10] In relation to the production of transcripts
of adjudications Governor Cromie stated that they were
generally not provided. He referred to the very
significant administrative burden that would be imposed
on staff if transcripts were required for many hundreds
of adjudications conducted each year. He pointed out
that a prisoner may ask for the tape recording of an
adjudication to be played back during the hearing.
Governor Kennedy stated the transcripts were usually
only produced when judicial review proceedings had been
lodged by an applicant or where there were other
exceptional circumstances. He had not sent a transcript
to the applicant’s solicitor because there was no
transcript in existence and the adjudication remained
incomplete. He referred to the applicant’s solicitor’s
letter and stated that there was nothing exceptional
about the applicant’s case that would warrant production
of the transcript.
[11] Governor Cromie noted that at the resumed
hearing on 22 January 2008 the applicant refused to
attend the adjudication, but did not raise any complaint
about the absence of a transcript when Governor Cromie
spoke to him. In his grounding affidavit the applicant
stated that he declined to attend the adjudication on 22
January 2008 because he had not received legal advice
from his solicitor because the prison authorities had
not provided the transcript of the adjourned
adjudication hearing. The applicant did not inform
Governor Cromie that this was his reason for refusing to
attend the adjudication.
[12] The transcript of an adjourned adjudication
hearing has been described in these proceedings as an
interim transcript. A request for an interim transcript
should, where possible, be a matter for the adjudicating
Governor, who would have knowledge of all the relevant
circumstances. In the event the applicant’s solicitor’s
letter was sent to the General Office and the letter was
placed on the adjudication file. The second solicitor’s
letter was sent to Governor Kennedy, as he had responded
to the first solicitor’s letter, and again the letter
was placed on the adjudication file. Governor Kennedy
had no knowledge of the adjudication and was not in a
position to assess whether there were circumstances that
would have warranted the production of an interim
transcript.
[13] It is not apparent that Governor Cromie made
any decision in respect of the production of an interim
transcript. Governor Cromie referred to the
administrative difficulties that would arise if there
were to be wholesale production of transcripts. However
the production of interim transcripts is likely to be a
limited exercise because it will arise where there has
been an adjournment of the adjudication and an interim
transcript is sought for the resumed hearing. Governor
Cromie also referred to the facility for the tape
recording of an adjudication hearing to be played back
to a prisoner. That is a facility that may be necessary
in the interests of fairness in the course of an
adjudication or when an adjourned hearing has been
reconvened, to assist in the recollection of the earlier
proceedings. It is not a facility that would have
assisted in the present case where the applicant
required the interim transcript in order to consult with
legal advisors prior to the reconvened hearing.
[14] Prison adjudications are intended to deal with
disciplinary charges in a speedy and reasonably informal
manner, consistent with the overall requirement for
fairness to all concerned. A decision on the production
of an interim transcript prior to the resumed hearing of
an adjourned adjudication should, where possible, be an
issue for the adjudicating Governor. The approach of the
prison authorities is that such interim transcripts
would only be produced in exceptional circumstances.
That is an approach that the applicant challenges as
being unduly rigid and amounting to a fettering of
discretion. However I am satisfied that the approach is
entirely appropriate and reflects the reality of the
context in which such requests would be made.
[15] In the context of prison adjudications it is
to be expected that, consistent with expedition,
informality and fairness, interim transcripts would only
be required in exceptional circumstances. The necessity
for the production of an interim transcript may arise
because of the complexity of the proceedings or of the
need to address legal issues or of the limited capacity
of the applicant to deal with the proceedings or other
exceptional circumstances.
It
would not be appropriate to attempt any exhaustive
statement of the circumstances in which interim
transcripts may be provided as it would be a matter for
the discretion of the adjudicating Governor in the
circumstances of each case.
[16] However there is no evidence that Governor
Cromie addressed the issue in the present case. The
request in the solicitor’s letter was on the
adjudication file. It was not necessary for the
applicant to raise the issue with the Governor as the
matter was already the subject of correspondence.
However the applicant’s solicitor’s letter did not
explain the reason that the transcript was required and
the Governor might have rejected the request on that
basis or he might have asked the applicant’s solicitor
for the reason for the request.
[17] In the judicial review proceedings the
applicant advances the reason for the production of an
interim transcript on the basis of a challenge to the
credibility of the prison officers’ account of events at
the applicant’s cell in the light of the different
explanations for the cancellation of visits on 25
October 2007. This was an issue taken up by the
applicant in cross-examination of PO Hutchinson on 23
November 2007. PO Hutchinson agreed that he had told
the applicant that he would not be getting his visits
reimbursed because his visitors had been responsible for
the cancellation of the visits on that day. PO
Hutchinson described himself as the messenger but he
could not remember who it was who had told him about the
applicant’s visitors. The applicant stated that an
investigation was being conducted into the visits on the
date of the exchanges on 31 October 2007. The
complaints form exhibited by the applicant confirms a
complaint received on 29 October 2007 and a response on
5 November 2007 confirming an alarm breakdown as the
cause of visit cancellation.
[18] I do not accept that a copy of the interim
transcript for the examination and cross-examination of
the prison officers on 23 November 2007 would have
assisted the applicant to receive any legal advice in
challenging the credibility of the prison officers. The
prison officers had already been cross-examined and the
issue of credibility had been raised and the dispute
about the cause of the cancellation of the visits had
been raised. The applicant had the prison officers’
statements and had received legal advice before the
hearing of 23 November 2007. Although the issue of
production of the interim transcript was not considered
by the adjudicating Governor I am satisfied that in the
circumstances of the present case there was no
requirement for the production of an interim transcript.
There was no unfairness to the applicant in not
receiving legal advice on the transcript of the evidence
given on 23 November 2007.
[19] The applicant contends that the award of
eights days cellular confinement was an unfair
punishment in the circumstances. The Governor noted
that the applicant had two previous disciplinary
matters, one of which concerned refusal to obey an
order. The Governor also took into account that the
applicant had refused to co-operate with the process on
22 January 2008. By affidavit Governor Cromie expands
on the punishment issue by indicating that the applicant
was a prisoner in the separated Republican wing where
issues of order and obedience are particularly
important. He states that because of previous
difficulties with segregated prisoners a charge of
disobeying an order is considered a serious matter. The
applicant refers to another prisoner in separated
conditions whose punishment was less severe. The
details of the other prisoner’s circumstances were not
known to Governor Cromie or to the Court. There is no
basis for concluding that the disciplinary award was
unfair or disproportionate.