Attorney-General v X

Case

[2008] NZSC 48

20 June 2008

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW ZEALAND

SC 69/2007 [2008] NZSC 48

BETWEENATTORNEY-GENERAL Appellant

AND  X

First Respondent

ANDREFUGEE STATUS APPEALS AUTHORITY

Second Respondent

Hearing:         17 April 2008

Court:            Elias CJ, Blanchard, Tipping, McGrath and Wilson JJ

Counsel:         D B Collins QC Solicitor-General, I C Carter and B J Keith for

Appellant

G M Illingworth QC, C M Curtis and D A Manning for First
Respondent
No appearance for Second Respondent

Judgment:      20 June 2008

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

A        The appeal is allowed.

BThe orders made in the Courts below are set aside and the application for judicial review is dismissed without costs.

REASONS

(Given by Wilson J)

ATTORNEY-GENERAL v X AND ANOR SC 69/2007 [20 June 2008]

Introduction

[1]      The appellant, the Attorney-General, appeals by leave on the question of:

[W]hether s 129T(3)(b) of the Immigration Act 1987 permits those who are subject to a duty of confidence under s 129T of that Act to disclose matters that are confidential in relation to the first respondent to any officer or employee  of  a  Government department  or  other  Crown  agency  for  the purpose of the possible extradition of the first respondent to Rwanda or for the possible prosecution of the first respondent in New Zealand under the International Crimes and International Criminal Court Act 2000.

[2]      At the commencement of the hearing, this Court renewed by consent the orders of the Courts below suppressing publication of the name of the First Respondent  and  of  any  particulars  that  might  lead  to  his  identification,  and prohibiting search of the Court file without the leave of the Court.

[3]      The answer to the question before the Court turns on the interpretation of s 129T, which reads as follows:

129T    Confidentiality to be maintained

(1)Subject  to  this  section,  confidentiality  as  to  the  identity  of  the claimant or other person whose status is being considered under this Part, and as to the particulars of their case, must at all times, both during and subsequent to the determination of the claim or other matter, be maintained by refugee status officers, the Authority, other persons involved in the administration of this Act, and persons to whom particulars are disclosed under subsection (3)(a) or (b).

(2)Compliance with subsection (1) may in an appropriate case require confidentiality as to the very fact or existence of a claim or case, if disclosure of its fact or existence would tend to identify the person concerned, or be likely to endanger any person.

(3)Subsection  (1)  does  not  apply  to  prevent  the  disclosure  of particulars—

(a)To a person necessarily involved in determining the relevant claim or matters; or

(b)To an officer or employee of a Government department or other Crown agency whose functions in relation to the claimant or other person require knowledge of those particulars; or

(c)To the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees or a representative of the High Commissioner; or

(d) In dealings with other countries for the purpose of determining the matters specified in section 129L(d) and (e) (whether at first instance or on any appeal); or

(e)

To the extent that the particulars are published in a manner that is unlikely to allow identification of the person concerned, whether in a published decision of the Authority under clause 12 of Schedule 3C or otherwise; or

(f)

If  there  is  no  serious  possibility  that  the  safety  of  the claimant or any other person would be endangered by the disclosure in the particular circumstances of the case.

(4)

Nor

does  subsection  (1)  apply  to  prevent  the  disclosure  of

particulars in relation to a particular claimant or other person to the

extent  that  the  claimant  or  person  has,  whether  expressly  or impliedly by  their  words or  actions, waived his  or  her  right to confidentiality under this section.

(5)A person who without reasonable excuse contravenes subsection (1), and   any   person   who   without   reasonable   excuse   publishes information released in contravention of subsection (1), commits an offence.

[4]      The first respondent, who is referred to as “X” to protect his anonymity, appealed to the second respondent, the Refugee Status Appeals Authority, against a decision of a Refugee Status Officer declining his application for refugee status.  The Authority refused applications made to it by X for confidentiality to attach to the evidence, and for an adjournment until proceedings for extradition of X to Rwanda or criminal proceedings in New Zealand founded on his alleged actions in Rwanda,1 were finalised.2

[5]      X brought proceedings in the High Court seeking judicial review of the decision of the Authority refusing his applications.3   Baragwanath J granted relief in the form of a declaration.  He held that s 129T, and the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees,4 afforded X an assurance of absolute confidentiality of all evidence filed in his appeal to the Authority.   Any disclosure under s 129T(3)(b)

1      Such a prosecution in New Zealand is possible under the provisions of the International Crimes and International Criminal Court Act 2000.

2      As the body whose decision is subject to review, the second respondent followed the appropriate course of advising by memorandum that it would abide the decision of the Court and would not

be represented at the hearing – see the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Attorney-General v

Maori Land Court [1999] 1 NZLR 689 at pp 695–6.

3      X v Refugee Status Appeals Authority (High Court, Auckland, CIV 2006-404-2650, 14 July

2006, Baragwanath J).

4      (1951) 189 UNTS 150.

could only be for the purpose of determining the claim for refugee status and not for any  other  purposes,  including  extradition  or  criminal  prosecution  in  Rwanda  or New Zealand.5   Alternatively, disclosure of the evidence of X beyond the Authority would prejudice  any  criminal  trial  and  would  if  necessary  be  restrained  by  the High Court.6

[6]      The Attorney-General appealed.7     In the Court of Appeal, counsel for X accepted that Baragwanath J’s interpretation of s 129T “was not required under the Convention or by associated state practice”.8    However, the majority of the Court (William Young P and Chambers J) held that, while the point was “closely balanced”,9  the approach of Baragwanath J to s 129T was broadly correct.10    It is proper,  the  majority  held,  to  restrict  the  scope  of  the  disclosure  permitted  by s 129T(3)(b) to those functions that are “incidental to or consequential upon” the determination of claims to refugee status; disclosure is therefore not permitted to “public servants”11  working in the areas of extradition or prosecution.   In dissent, Ellen  France  J  held  that  “there  is  nothing  on  a  reading  of  s  129T  to  warrant imposition of a limitation to prevent disclosure to those in the extradition or prosecution areas” and, likewise, there is nothing “in the Convention or in state practice that warrants reading the section in the way favoured by the majority”.12

Interpretation of s 129T

[7]      This  appeal  presents  a  stark  choice  between  two  approaches  to  the interpretation of s 129T: does the section restrict disclosure to officials engaged in the determination of refugee status, as Baragwanath J and the majority of the Court of Appeal held, or is disclosure also permitted to other officials for the purposes of extradition or prosecution, as the Authority and Ellen France J concluded?

5 At para [28].

6      At paras [42], [55] and [66].

7 [2007] NZCA 388.

8 At para [43].

9 At para [47].

10 At para [51].

11     The Court of Appeal used this term for ease of reference in lieu of the statutory expression

“officer or employee of a Government department or other Crown agency”.

12     At paras [64] and [65], respectively.

[8]      The  plain  wording  of  the  section  supports  the  latter  interpretation.    All persons involved in the determination of refugee status will, in terms of s 129T(1), be “refugee status officers”, “the Authority”, or “other persons involved in the administration of this Act”.  The following word “and” necessarily implies that the subsequent reference to “persons to whom particulars are disclosed under subs (3)(a) or (b)” is to persons who are not involved in an official capacity in refugee status determination.

[9]      That conclusion is supported by the wording of paragraphs (a) and (b) of subs (3).    Paragraph  (3)(a)  permits  disclosure  to  those,  such  as  interpreters  or witnesses, who are necessarily involved in determining the claims or matters to which subs (1) applies, but whose involvement is not in an official capacity. Paragraph (b) then permits disclosure to additional Government officials, beyond those specifically mentioned in s 129T(1), whose functions require disclosure.  To interpret those words as referring only to officials engaged in the determination of refugee status would be to read them down unnecessarily and unjustifiably.  It would also mean that Parliament had, for no apparent reason and within the same section, used very different wording to refer to the same category of person – those engaged in an official capacity in determining refugee status.

[10]     It  is  significant  that  s  129T(3)(f)  makes  it  clear  that  the  confidentiality obligation imposed by s 129T(1) does not apply if there is no serious possibility that disclosure would endanger the safety of the claimant or any other person.   This exception demonstrates the primary rationale for the confidentiality obligation.

[11]     Section 129T(5) forms an important part of the scheme of the section by making it an offence to contravene, without reasonable excuse, the obligation of confidentiality imposed by s 129T(1).   Those to whom information is disclosed under any of the categories set out in s 129(3) are subject to s 129T(5).   They therefore must not themselves disclose the information unless they do so in conformity with one or more of the paragraphs of s 129T(3) or confidentiality has been  waived  under  s  129T(4).     Unless  one  of  the  paragraphs  applies  or confidentiality is waived, persons to whom disclosure is made under paragraph (b) may not themselves make a disclosure.

[12]     As  a  matter  of  statutory  interpretation,  s  129T(3)(b)  therefore  permits disclosure to those referred to in that paragraph for the purpose of their considering the extradition or prosecution of the first respondent.  Four supplementary questions do however arise:

•      what constitutes the “particulars” to which reference is made in subss (1), (3)

and (4)?

•      to what departments and agencies does s 129T(3)(b) apply?

•for the purpose of that paragraph, what is the test for determining whether knowledge is “required”?

•are  the  provisions  of  the  Convention  relevant  to  the  application  of  the section?

We now address these questions.

[13]     Section 129T(1) refers to the “particulars” of the “case” of an applicant for refugee status.  Section 129T(3) and (4) authorise the disclosure of those particulars in  specified  circumstances.    The  term  “particulars”  should  in  this  context  be construed  as  including  not  only  the  application  as  such  but  also  any  other information produced in support of it.  If the term were limited to the conventional Court meaning of pleadings,13  the protection which s 129T is plainly intended to provide would be severely limited.

[14]     Section 129T(3)(b) imposes two conditions which must be satisfied before disclosure is permitted under that paragraph.  First, disclosure must be to an officer or employee of a Government department or other Crown agency.   Secondly, the functions  of  that  officer  or  employee  must  “require”  disclosure.    The  natural meaning  of  “Government  department”  in  this  context  can  be  taken  from  the definition of “Department” in s 2 of the State Sector Act 1988, which covers “any Department specified in Schedule 1” to that Act.  Similarly, the definition of “Crown

13     As in r 185 of the High Court Rules.

agency” in s 7 of the Crown Entities Act 2004, namely an agency listed in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to that Act, provides a helpful guide to the meaning of that expression albeit  in  subsequent  legislation.14      Knowledge  is  “required”  for  the  purpose  of s 129T(3)(b) if that information is relevant, in the sense of being rationally linked, to the function which is being performed.  Information in support of an application for refugee status will never be relevant to the exercise of the functions of most departments or agencies.

[15]     As noted above,15  counsel for X acknowledged that the interpretation of s 129T adopted by Baragwanath J was not required by the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, or by associated State practice.   That was a proper acknowledgement.  In fact, the provisions of the Convention positively support the competing interpretation. The Convention is given recognition by s 129D of the Act, and is appended to it as Schedule 6.  Article 1F of the Convention provides that:

The provisions of this Convention shall not apply to any person with respect to whom there are serious reasons for considering that:

(a)he has committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity, as defined in the international instruments drawn up to make provision in respect of such crimes;

In a Convention negotiated in the years following the Second World War, this provision was intended to ensure that war criminals could not escape extradition and prosecution by claiming refugee status.  That principle remains relevant, as does the associated  maxim  aut  dedere  aut  judicare,16   which  imposes  an  obligation  to extradite or prosecute.   The ability of this country to give effect to Article 1F(a) would be prejudiced if s 129T(3)(b) were interpreted so as to exclude disclosure to officers and employees considering extradition or prosecution.

14     The definition of “Crown entity” in s 2 of the Public Finance Act 1989 was the most relevant reference in legislation in force in 1999, when s 129T was enacted.

15 At para [6].

16     Literally, “either surrender or submit to justice”.  As Jennings and Watts state in Oppenheim’s

International Law (9th ed, 1996), p 953: “Several multilateral treaties … have adopted the practice of obliging parties either to extradite persons found on their territory but wanted for trial… by another party, or to try such persons themselves.   This principle of aut dedere aut judicare has, for example, been adopted in [named treaties]”.

Result

[16]     Section 129T, properly construed, permits information about the application of X for refugee status to be disclosed to officials who require that information to consider his possible extradition for a crime of a type described in Article 1F(a) or prosecution under the International Crimes and International Criminal Court Act.  It follows that the judicial review proceedings which X brought against the Authority and  the  Attorney-General  must  fail,  with  judgment  for  both  those  respondents. Neither seeks costs.

Comment

[17]     Section 129T addresses both the use of information provided by an applicant for refugee status and the disclosure, in limited and controlled circumstances, of that information.  As a general practice, it will be preferable to determine the application before addressing possible disclosure because the outcome of the application may well inform the question of disclosure.   In the present case, the Authority acted correctly in attempting to resolve the application of X for refugee status prior to the resolution of any question of extradition or prosecution.  In the event of prosecution, any  issues  which  may  arise  out  of  the  application  should  be  addressed  by  the High Court as and when they arise.

[18]     The  outcome  of  the  present  appeal  should  not  be  seen  as  in  any  way detracting from the importance of treating in strict confidence any information provided in support of an application.  The purpose of s 129T is made clear by its heading:    Confidentiality  to  be  maintained.    It  is  entirely  understandable  that statutory confidentiality should attach to the information, much of it likely to be of a personal and sensitive nature, which an applicant provides.   The right to confidentiality should be modified only to the extent strictly necessary to give effect to the limited disclosure which s 129T permits.

[19]     It may be sensible for the Department of Labour, which administers the Immigration Act, to consider the development and adoption of a Code of Practice which could be published.   Such code could lay out the circumstances in which information may be disclosed under any of the categories of s 129T(3), or under s 129T(4).   It could usefully remind recipients that they will commit an offence under s 129T(5) if they themselves release the information contrary to the terms of the section.

Solicitors:

Crown Law, Wellington for Appellant

Marshall Bird & Curtis, Auckland for First Respondent

Edwards Clark Dickie, Auckland, for Second Respondent

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Attorney-General v X [2007] NZCA 388