KERE1337
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
_________
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY KEVIN McCANN
FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
________
KERR J
Kevin McCann ("the applicant") is currently a
remand prisoner at HM Prison, Crumlin Road, Belfast.
At a governor's adjudication held on 16 April 1993, he was
found guilty of an offence against prison discipline. He
wishes to challenge the lawfulness of the decision of the
Governor. In order to do so, he made application for leave
to apply for judicial review of the adjudication. Leave
was granted by Carswell J (as he then was) on 28
April 1993.
In order to prosecute the judicial review challenge, an
application for legal aid was made on behalf of the
applicant on 6 May 1993. On 13 May 1993, the applicant's
solicitors were informed that this application had been
refused by a Certifying Committee. An appeal against the
refusal was lodged. It was considered by the Legal Aid
Committee on 23 July 1993 and the refusal to grant legal
aid was confirmed. By letter of 26 July 1993, the Legal
Aid Department of the Law Society informed the applicant
that the refusal was "on the grounds that it appeared
unreasonable in the particulars circumstances of the case
that [he] should receive legal aid".
By this application, the applicant seeks judicial
review of the decision of the Legal Aid Committee to
refuse legal aid.
The statement filed under Order 53 set out the basis of
the challenge to the Legal Aid Committee's decision as
follows:-
"(a) in refusing legal aid, the Legal Aid
Department failed to take into account all relevant
matters, in particular they disregarded the following:-
(i) the fact that leave had been granted by a High
Court Judge on the basis that the applicant had an
arguable case;
(ii) the written opinion of junior counsel that the
applicant had a reasonable case;
(iii) the decision of the Court of Appeal in England
in Ex parte Hughes;
(b) in the light of the three factors referred to
above, no Legal Aid Department could reasonably have
concluded that the applicant had no reason or prospect
of success at a judicial review."
The manner in which this statement is pleaded and in
particularly the reference to R v Legal Aid Department
ex parte Hughes reflect the perception of the
applicant and his advisers that the Legal Aid Committee's
decision was taken on the basis that the applicant did not
enjoy a reasonable prospect of success in his application.
On the filing of the first affidavit on behalf of the
respondent it became clear that this perception was
misconceived. Ms Jane McDonald, the Chairman of the
Committee which took the decision to refuse legal aid,
deposed that the refusal was based not on the "legal
merits" test set out in Regulation 7f of the Legal
Aid (General) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1965 but
rather on the basis of Regulation 7g which provides:-
"If the appropriate Committee refuse an application
for a Certificate, they shall notify the applicant,
stating that the application has been refused on one or
more of the following grounds -
(g) that it appears unreasonable that he should
receive legal aid in the particular circumstances of the
case (whether as a result of any discretion given to the
appropriate Committee under any provision of these
Regulations or otherwise);"
When the reason for the Committee's decision became
manifest, Mr O'Rourke (who appeared on behalf of the
applicant) presented a submission on an entirely different
basis from that foreshadowed by the Order 53 statement and
the applicant's original affidavit. While expressing
understandable surprise at this turn of events, Mr
Thompson (who appeared for the respondent) did not object
to the case being considered by me on this reformulated
basis. In its refined and modified condition the
applicant's case resolved the following propositions:-
- No reasonable committee
cognisant of all the material factors could have reached
the decision arrived at by the Legal Aid Committee in
this instance.
- The Legal Aid Committee
failed to give due weight to the possibility that the
ultimate effect of the Governor's decision might be to
delay the applicant's release from custody in that, on a
further disciplinary hearing, the circumstance that the
applicant had this adverse adjudication on his record
could lead to an award of loss of remission.
- The Committee failed to have
regard to the high probability that the applicant would
be successful in his judicial review challenge to the
Governor's decision.
I intend to deal with the last of these submissions
first. It was submitted strongly on behalf of the
applicant that he had an unanswerable case for judicial
review of the Governor's award because of the delay in
holding the adjudication. No contrary argument was
advanced on behalf of the respondent.
It was therefore submitted that the virtual certainty
of success in the application should have been a potent
factor in favour of the grant of legal aid and the failure
of the Legal Aid Committee to take it into account
rendered its decision to refuse legal aid invalid.
The reasons for refusal of legal aid are set out in
paragraphs 4 and 5 of the first affidavit of Jane McDonald
as follows:-
"4. The Committee refused the appeal on the grounds
that it appeared unreasonable that the applicant should
receive legal aid in the particular circumstances of the
case, in accordance with Regulation 7g of the Legal Aid
and Advice General Regulations 1965. I refer to the
notification of refusal dated 26 July 1993 specifically
setting out the statutory ground of refusal.
5. Regulation 7g is a ground for refusal of legal aid
distinct from 7f. In 7f one is dealing with the `legal
merits' approach. In 7g there is a wider issue: is it
reasonable that in the circumstances of this particular
case bearing in mind the advantage to be obtained by the
applicant for legal aid the substantive proceedings and
the cost to the public purse of doing so, that the
applicant should be in receipt of legal aid to advance
his case. A standard often adopted by the Committee is
to determine whether or not it is likely that the
applicant for legal aid, if possessed of sufficient
resources, would use those resources to fund his own
case. In the context of Kevin McCann's application for
legal aid consideration was given to the nature of the
case, the personal circumstances of the applicant and
the penalty imposed by the prison governor, and reached
the conclusion that in this particular case and the
circumstances of it, it was unreasonable that McCann
should be given legal aid to any extent."
Neither in this affidavit nor in the submissions made
on behalf of the respondent to this court was it suggested
that the Legal Aid Committee had given consideration to
the high probability of success for the applicant. Mr
O'Rourke submitted that this omission was fatal to the
validity of the decision and he developed his argument on
this theme in the following manner. The reasoning of the
Legal Aid Committee (as outlined in Ms McDonald's
affidavit) depends on an assessment of the cost
effectiveness of the application. The evaluation of the
advantage to the applicant pitted against the cost to the
public purse is par excellence a cost effective exercise.
It was argued by Mr O'Rourke, however, that such an
exercise is by definition flawed if it fails to take into
account the chances of success particularly if these are
extremely high since (in those circumstances) the prospect
of the public purse being required to fund the application
may be negligible or remote. In this context, he drew
attention to the Notes for Guidance in the 1993 Legal Aid
Handbook which at p.65 deals with the Cost Benefit
approach. The principle is stated as follows:-
"Principle.
If the application is to take proceedings in which
the estimated costs to the applicant are likely to
exceed the value of any benefit gained by the applicant,
a grant of legal aid will not be justifiable:
(a) to the applicant if it raises expectations which
cannot be satisfied because any award will be absorbed
by payment of a contribution and/or the statutory
charge;
(b) to the courts if time and resources are used up
by cases which would not be pursued in the absence of
legal aid because the applicant, were he/she a person of
moderate means, would not have paid privately for the
proceedings;
(c) to the taxpayer if money is spent for nothing,
i.e. if the award in the proceedings is not sufficient
to cover the statutory charge."
It is important to note that the standard to be
applied is expressed in this way:-
"Standard.
Legal aid should only be granted to pursue a case in
which costs are likely to exceed the value of any
benefit gained thereby where:
(a) there is a high prospect of success and the
opponent is likely to indemnify the applicant for the
legal costs; or
(b) what is at stake is of such overwhelming
importance to the applicant that it overrides the
question of costs."
Mr O'Rourke submitted that the applicant satisfied the
requirements of both exceptions. In the present context,
however, it is the first of these which is important. It
was argued for the applicant that even if this was a case
in which costs are likely to exceed the value of any
benefit claimed thereby (which was not accepted) since the
applicant enjoyed a high prospect of success he was
entitled to the exception which this passage recommended.
Although it was not clear whether these notes for
guidance or similar provisions applied in Northern
Ireland, Mr Thompson was not disposed to argue (in my
view, correctly) that the Legal Aid Committee in refusing
an application for legal aid on a cost effective basis
would be entitled to disregard the prospects of success in
the case and the likelihood that the applicant's opponent
would be required to indemnify the applicant for his legal
costs. Quite independently of the guidance from the Legal
Aid Handbook, it seems to me to be elementary that if a
Legal Aid Committee decides to refuse an application on
the basis that the potential cost to the public purse
outweighs the benefit that would accrue to the applicant,
it must take closely into consideration whether there will
in fact be any cost to the legal aid fund. It can only do
so by making some assessment of the chances of success for
the applicant. This Legal Aid Committee does not appear to
have carried out such an assessment. This omission must
render its decision invalid and the decision must
therefore be quashed.
My conclusion on this aspect of the case effectively
disposes of the application but since it is my intention
to remit the case to the Legal Aid Committee for its
further consideration, it may be helpful if I were to make
some brief observations on the other arguments presented
on behalf of the applicant, without expressing any
concluded view on them.
It was forcefully argued by Mr O'Rourke that the
possibility that the applicant might be penalised in
future disciplinary proceedings by the existence of the
adjudication and award of April 1993 was a factor of the
utmost importance which cannot have been given due weight
by the Committee.
In her second affidavit filed on 10 November 1993, Ms
McDonald dealt with the topic in this way:-
"3. ... I can say from my own experience and also
from that of the Legal Aid Committee in dealing with
applications of the sort brought by the applicant in his
substantive case, that we are experienced in prisoners'
cases. In general terms, we would know, as I know
myself, that a `conviction' of a disciplinary offence
within the prison can count against a prisoner in future
disciplinary proceedings and, indeed, might ultimately
affect his prospects of obtaining parole. This applies
equally in respect of a remand prisoner as a convicted
prisoner. I, personally, would doubt whether or not a
conviction of this sort would ultimately make any
difference to the way in which the applicant might be
dealt with in future disciplinary proceedings or on his
application for parole, but can say that in a general
way the effects of his `conviction' in this regard would
have been present to the members of the Committee and
were present to my own mind at the time of refusing him
legal aid for his substantive proceedings."
The expression of doubt as to the effect that the
adjudication and award might have on future disciplinary
proceedings appears to be impressionistic or intuitive
rather than the product of any empirical knowledge or
research. I am not in a position to make a fully informed
judgment as to the likelihood of the award affecting the
applicant in future disciplinary proceedings. I am well
aware, however, that, after conviction, a prisoner
adjudicated guilty on an offence against discipline faces
a range of possible penalties one of which is loss of
remission and that this is not infrequently a feature of
awards by governors and Boards of Visitors. It appears to
me that the existence of a previous `conviction' and award
must at least increase the risk in future disciplinary
proceedings of an award involving loss of remission or of
an enhanced penalty involving a longer period of loss of
remission than might otherwise be imposed.
In those circumstances, I believe that a Legal Aid
Committee would wish to reflect very carefully before
deciding to withhold legal aid from a prisoner whose
liberty might be imperilled even for a limited period by
being denied the opportunity to challenge the validity of
the adjudication and award made against him. Moreover, I
do not consider that this possibility can be dismissed as
lightly as appears to have been done by Ms McDonald in the
paragraph of her affidavit which I have quoted.
I do not suggest that the possibility of an enhanced
award in future disciplinary hearings will inevitably and
automatically require the grant of legal aid to pursue a
challenge to a governor's award. Nevertheless, where such
a distinct risk has been identified (even if it is a
slender one) I believe that the circumstances in which
legal aid should be withheld will be exceptional.
Since it is unnecessary for me to do so, I do not
propose to make a finding on whether the Legal Aid
Committee in this instance failed to give due weight to
the possible future effect of the existence of the
adjudication and award and on whether, by reason of this
and the other factors canvassed on the applicant's behalf,
their decision was one which no reasonable Committee could
have reached. I believe, however, that the Legal Aid
Committee which considers the application anew will
require to examine closely the possibility of the
applicant being disadvantaged at future disciplinary
proceedings before withholding legal aid in this case.
In this context, it is appropriate for me to echo the
regret expressed by Ms McDonald in her second affidavit
and repeated by Mr Thompson in the course of his
submissions that neither solicitor nor counsel on behalf
of the applicant attended the Legal Aid Committee which
decided the applicant's appeal.
The Legal Aid Committee is composed of experienced and
able lawyers drawn from both branches of the profession
who give generously of their time to carry out this
important work and, on the whole, they do so in exemplary
fashion. The Committee is entitled to expect the
co-operation of lawyers acting on behalf of applicants in
attending committee meetings to present and elucidate the
case for the grant of legal aid. In the course of the
hearing of this application Mr O'Rourke (who, it should be
said, was not originally retained in the case) was at
pains to emphasise how important the outcome of the
proposed judicial review of the Governor's award was to
the applicant. It is unfortunate that this perception of
the importance of the case did not bring about the
attendance of solicitor or counsel at the Committee
meeting of 23 July 1993 not least because a different
conclusion might well have been reached had the Committee
had the benefit of the arguments canvassed on the
applicant's behalf before me.
Accordingly, for the reasons that I have given, I will
quash the decision of the Legal Aid Committee and remit
the matter to the Committee for its further consideration
in light of the observations which I have made as to the
correct approach to be taken to the application for legal
aid. I would expect the applicant to be represented before
the reconvened committee at least by his solicitor if not
also by counsel. I do not know whether it is possible that
the applicant's appeal can be heard by a differently
constituted committee. If that is possible, the Committee
may wish to consider whether that would be appropriate but
I do not direct it.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
_________
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY KEVIN McCANN
FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
________
J U D G M E N T
of
KERR J
__________