[2023] UKSC 14
On appeal from: [2021] NICA 67
JUDGMENT
Morgan and others (Respondents) v Ministry of Justice (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Sales
Lord Hamblen
Lord Burrows
Lord Stephens
19 April 2023
Heard on 22 February 2023
Appellant
Sir James Eadie KC
Tony McGleenan KC
Philip McAteer BL
Jason Pobjoy
(Instructed by the Crown Solicitor’s Office (Belfast))
Respondents – Seamus Morgan, Terrence Marks
John Larkin KC
Terence McCleave BL
(Instructed by McNamee McDonnell Solicitors (Newry))
Respondent – Kevin Heaney
Ronan Lavery KC
Bobbie Rea BL
(Instructed by ML White Solicitors (Newry))
Respondent – Joseph Lynch
Barry MacDonald KC
Joseph O’Keeffe BL
(Instructed by Phoenix Law (Belfast))
Respondent – Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland
Ciaran Murphy KC
Samuel Magee KC
David Russell BL
(Instructed by Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland (Belfast))
LORD STEPHENS (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Sales, Lord Hamblen and Lord Burrows agree):
Introduction
Article 7(1) of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the ECHR”) provides:
“No one shall be held guilty of any criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a criminal offence under national or international law at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the one that was applicable at the time the criminal offence was committed.”
The second sentence of article 7(1) concentrates on a comparison between the penalty imposed and the penalty that was applicable at “the time the criminal offence was committed”. However, as the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (“the ECtHR”) stated at paras 88 – 89 of its judgment in Del Río Prada v Spain (Application No 42750/09) (2014) 58 EHRR 37, the term “imposed” used in the second sentence of article 7(1) cannot be interpreted as excluding from its scope “all measures introduced after the pronouncement of the sentence”. A wider interpretation and application of article 7(1) is required to render the rights practical and effective, not theoretical and illusory. Accordingly, measures taken by the legislature, the administrative authorities or the courts after the final sentence has been imposed or while the sentence is being served may fall within the scope of the prohibition of the retroactive application of penalties enshrined in article 7(1) of the ECHR.
This appeal raises an issue as to whether the enactment of section 30 of the Counter-Terrorism and Sentencing Act 2021 (“the 2021 Act”), which inserted article 20A into the Criminal Justice (Northern Ireland) Order 2008 (“the 2008 Order”), is a measure which falls within the scope of the prohibition of the retroactive application of penalties in article 7(1) of the ECHR.
Under article 7 of the 2008 Order, Seamus Morgan, Terence Marks, Joseph Matthew Lynch, and Kevin John Paul Heaney (“the respondents”) had each been sentenced by Colton J to determinate custodial sentences for terrorist offences. Under article 8 of the 2008 Order, Colton J specified custodial periods in respect of each of the respondents as being one half of the term of their sentences with the effect that as soon as the respondents had served the custodial period the Department of Justice was required to release the respondents on licence. However, the new article 20A of the 2008 Order restricted early release for prisoners serving fixed-term sentences for certain terrorist offences, known as “terrorist prisoners”. The effect of article 20A as it applied to the respondents, who were all then serving their determinate custodial sentences for terrorist offences, was that instead of being automatically released on licence without reference to the Parole Commissioners at the halfway points of their sentences, their cases would be referred at the two-thirds point of their sentences to the Parole Commissioners, which would not direct their release on licence unless satisfied that it was no longer necessary for the protection of the public that the respondents should be confined.
To the extent that the provisions in article 20A of the 2008 Order apply to terrorist prisoners, such as the respondents, who were already serving a fixed term sentence for a terrorist offence, they can be described as “retroactive”. However, whether the legislation is a measure which falls within the scope of the prohibition of the retroactive application of penalties in article 7(1) of the ECHR depends on whether (a) the legislature had redefined or modified the scope of the penalty imposed by the trial court on the respondents; or (b) whether the changes made by article 20A of the 2008 Order were changes to the manner of execution of the sentences imposed on them.
This appeal raises a further issue as to whether the enactment of section 30 of the 2021 Act, which inserted article 20A into the 2008 Order, breached the quality of law requirement in article 5(1) of the ECHR under which a national law authorising deprivation of liberty must be sufficiently accessible, precise, and foreseeable in its application to avoid all risk of arbitrariness.
On an appeal against their sentences to the Court of Appeal, the respondents contended that the measure taken by the legislature in enacting section 30 of the 2021 Act, inserting article 20A into the 2008 Order, retroactively redefined or modified the scope of the penalty imposed on them whilst they were serving their sentences so as to fall within the scope of the prohibition of the retroactive application of penalties in article 7(1) of the ECHR. As an issue arose as to the compatibility of section 30 of the 2021 Act and article 20A of the 2008 Order with the ECHR, the Ministry of Justice was joined as a party to the appeal. It was contended on behalf of the Ministry of Justice that the changes made by article 20A of the 2008 Order were changes to the manner of execution of the sentences imposed on the respondents so that the changes did not fall within the scope of the prohibition contained in article 7(1) of the ECHR.
On appeal to the Court of Appeal, the respondents also contended that according to the law in force at the time that they were sentenced, they would have been entitled to automatic early release on licence at the halfway point of their sentences. They also contended that it could not have been foreseen that the law would be changed to prevent their automatic release, nor could it have been foreseen that their release on licence prior to the expiry of their determinate custodial sentences would depend on the approval of the Parole Commissioners. Accordingly, it was submitted that the legislature, by enacting section 30 of the 2021 Act which inserted article 20A into the 2008 Order, breached the quality of law requirement contained in article 5(1) of the ECHR.
On 22 December 2021, Maguire LJ delivered the judgment of the Court of Appeal with which judgment Treacy LJ and Horner J agreed; [2021] NICA 67. The Court of Appeal determined that there was a breach of article 7(1) of the ECHR as the penalty imposed by the trial judge had been subject to redefinition or modification of its scope. The breach related to both the increase in the length of the custodial period and to the role to be played by the Parole Commissioners in determining whether actual release on licence could occur. As the Court of Appeal considered that this conclusion was sufficient for the purposes of determining human rights compliance, it left to one side the question of whether there was also a breach of article 5 of the ECHR.
In relation to the appropriate remedy, the Court of Appeal concluded that, in accordance with section 3 of the Human Rights Act 1998 (“the HRA 1998”), section 30 of the 2021 Act could not be read and given effect in a way which was compatible with article 7(1) of the ECHR. The Court of Appeal determined that the appropriate remedy was to grant a declaration under section 4 of the HRA 1998 “to the effect that [section 30 of] the 2021 Act is in breach of article 7 in the ways described in the text of the judgment”. The declaration did not affect the validity, continued operation or enforcement of section 30 of the 2021 Act, and article 20A of the 2008 Order continued to apply to the respondents.
Pursuant to section 5(4) of the HRA 1998, the Ministry of Justice applied for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court against the declarations of incompatibility made by the Court of Appeal. The respondents sought leave to cross-appeal on several grounds including whether the legislative provisions were incompatible with articles 5 or 6 of the ECHR and in relation to the Court of Appeal’s approach to remedy.
On 12 May 2022, the Supreme Court granted permission to appeal to the Ministry of Justice and granted permission to cross-appeal to the respondents but confined to the ground in relation to article 5 of the ECHR.
The relevant statutory provisions in Northern Ireland prior to the 2021 Act in relation to the imposition of a determinate custodial sentence
In relation to the imposition of a determinate custodial sentence, I will set out the relevant statutory provisions which were in force in Northern Ireland prior to the enactment of the 2021 Act and which were followed by Colton J when imposing sentence on each of the respondents.
Article 7 of the 2008 Order, under the heading “Length of custodial sentences” and in so far as relevant, provided:
This Article applies where a court passes a sentence—
of imprisonment for a determinate term; ...
… the sentence shall be for such term (not exceeding the permitted maximum) as in the opinion of the court is commensurate with the seriousness of the offence, or the combination of the offence and one or more offences associated with it.
….”
In forming any opinion under article 7(2) as to the term of the sentence, article 9(1) of the 2008 Order provides that “a court shall take into account all such information as is available to it about the circumstances of the offence or (as the case may be) of the offence and the offence or offences associated with it (including any aggravating or mitigating factors)”. Furthermore, in forming such opinion, a court is obliged to disregard the release provisions in articles 8 and 17 of the 2008 Order; see R v Bright[2008] EWCA Crim 462; [2008] 2 Cr App R(S) 102, at para 41; R v Round[2009] EWCA Crim 2667; [2010] 2 Cr App R (S) 45, at para 44; and R (Abedin) v Secretary of State for Justice [2015] EWHC 782 (Admin), at para 24.
In R (Whiston) v Secretary of State for Justice [2014] UKSC 39; [2015] AC 176 this court held that if a custodial sentence has been imposed, for the duration of the term of the sentence the lawfulness of the prisoner’s detention has been decided by a court in accordance with article 5(1) of the ECHR. Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury, with whom Lord Kerr of Tonaghmore, Lord Carnwath and Lord Hughes agreed, stated, at paras 38–39, that:
… Where a person is lawfully sentenced to a determinate term of imprisonment by a competent court, there is (at least in the absence of unusual circumstances) no question of his being able to challenge his loss of liberty during that term on the ground that it infringes article 5.4 . This is because, for the duration of the sentence period, ‘the lawfulness of his detention’ has been ‘decided … by a court’, namely the court which sentenced him to the term of imprisonment .
That does not appear to me to be a surprising result. Once a person has been lawfully sentenced by a competent court for a determinate term, he has been ‘deprived of his liberty’ in a way permitted by article 5.1(a) for the sentence term, and one can see how it follows that there can be no need for ‘the lawfulness of his detention’ during the sentence period to be ‘decided speedily by a court’, as it has already been decided by the sentencing court. If that is the law, it would follow that Mr Whiston's appeal in this case must fail.”
After imposing a determinate custodial sentence under article 7, a court is then required to address the separate matter raised in article 8 of the 2008 Order of specifying the custodial period. That article under the heading of “Length of custodial period” and in so far as relevant, provided:
This Article applies where a court passes—
a sentence of imprisonment for a determinate term, …, or
…
in respect of an offence committed after the commencement of this Article.
The court shall specify a period (in this Article referred to as ‘the custodial period’) at the end of which the offender is to be released on licence under Article 17.
The custodial period shall not exceed one half of the term of the sentence.
Subject to paragraph (3), the custodial period shall be the term of the sentence less the licence period.
In paragraph (4) ‘the licence period’ means such period as the court thinks appropriate to take account of the effect of the offender’s supervision by a probation officer on release from custody—
in protecting the public from harm from the offender; and
in preventing the commission by the offender of further offences.
Remission shall not be granted under prison rules to the offender in respect of the sentence.”
It is appropriate at this stage to make several points about article 8 of the 2008 Order.
First, the court’s task under article 8 is to specify the custodial period thereby determining the date of the offender’s release on licence. The court in performing that task does not amend the term of the sentence of imprisonment which has been fixed by the court under article 7 of the 2008 Order. Rather, the court’s task is part of a regime by which prisoners are to be released on licence before serving the full term of the sentence imposed. Accordingly, the court’s task is as to the manner of execution of the sentence which it has imposed.
Second, the only order which the court is required to make under article 8 is to specify the custodial period; see article 8(2).
Third, setting the licence period determines the length of the custodial period as the custodial period is the term of the sentence less the licence period; see article 8(4).
Fourth, the legislature has provided that the custodial period shall not exceed one half of the term of the sentence with the effect that the legislature requires the licence period to be at least half of the term of the sentence; see article 8(3). In that way, the court is not entirely free to specify the length of either the custodial period, which cannot exceed half of the term of the sentence, or the length of the licence period, which must be at least half of the term of the sentence. In that sense, the task to be performed under article 8 of the 2008 Order, of determining the date upon which the offender is to be released on licence, is shared with the legislature which has set the parameters within which the court can operate when specifying the custodial period.
Fifth, the court is also not entirely free to extend the licence period. It can only be extended if the effect of the offender’s supervision by a probation officer will protect the public from harm from the offender and prevent the commission by the offender of further offences; see article 8(5) and R v McKeown, R v Han Lin [2013] NICA 28; [2014] NIJB 368 at para 31; R v Somers [2015] NICA 17 at para 25; and R v KT [2019] NICA 42 at para 64.
Sixth, the decision whether to extend the licence period depends on an assessment made at the date sentence is imposed as to the risk posed by the offender at the date when the offender is to be released on licence. In that way, the assessment of risk is not made proximate to the date of release.
Seventh, the purpose of enabling the court to extend the licence period is, for instance, to allow for a community treatment programme of longer duration than half of the term of the sentence or to reduce re-offending by steering and monitoring the behaviour and resettlement of an offender following release on licence; see for example R v KT at para 65.
Eighth, there is a difference in the regimes by which prisoners are to be released on licence as between Northern Ireland on the one hand and England and Wales on the other. In Northern Ireland, the court specifies the custodial period at the end of which the offender is to be released on licence. The position in England and Wales is that if the court imposes a sentence of imprisonment for a term of 12 months or more then pursuant to section 244(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003, “[as] soon as [the] prisoner, …, has served the requisite custodial period, it is the duty of the Secretary of State to release him on licence under this section”. Section 244(3), in so far as relevant, provides that in relation to a person serving a sentence of imprisonment for a term of 12 months or more the requisite custodial period means one-half of his sentence. Accordingly, in England and Wales, when imposing a sentence of imprisonment for a term of 12 months or more, the court has no role to play in determining “the custodial period” or “the licence period”. The release on licence is automatic at the halfway point.
Ninth, article 8(6) of the 2008 Order provides that remission shall not be granted to the offender in respect of the sentence under prison rules.
Tenth, at the end of the custodial period and as set out below, the offender is to be released on licence under article 17 of the 2008 Order; see article 8(2) and para 30 below.
Eleventh, there is a change in terminology in the 2008 Order. In article 8(2), the person to be released on licence is termed “the offender” whilst in article 17 of the 2008 Order, they are termed “the prisoner”. Article 28 is headed “Recall of prisoners while on licence” and refers to the person subject to potential recall as including “a prisoner who has been released on licence under article 17…”. Accordingly, even if the custodial period has ended and the person has been released on licence, they are still referred to as “the prisoner” in the 2008 Order. This change in terminology accurately reflects the legal position that the determinate custodial sentence determines the lawfulness of the person’s detention throughout the term of the sentence; see para 15 above.
Article 16(1) in so far as relevant provided that a “‘fixed-term prisoner’ means a person serving a determinate custodial sentence” and a “‘determinate custodial sentence’ means a custodial sentence for a determinate term”. It also provides, in so far as relevant, that a “‘custodial sentence’ means (a) a sentence of imprisonment; (b) …; (c) …”.
Article 17, under the heading “Duty to release certain fixed-term prisoners” in so far as relevant provided:
As soon as a fixed-term prisoner, …, has served the requisite custodial period, the Department of Justice shall release the prisoner on licence under this Article.
In this Article ‘the requisite custodial period’ means—(a) …, the custodial period specified by the court under Article 8;”
Article 21, under the heading “Duration of licences: fixed-term prisoners” and in so far as relevant, provided:
Where a fixed-term prisoner is released on licence under this Chapter, the licence shall, subject to any revocation under Article 28 …, remain in force for the remainder of the sentence.
….”
Since devolution of criminal justice to the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2010, the licence conditions are set by the Department of Justice; see article 24. However, under article 23, a court which sentences an offender to a determinate custodial sentence of 12 months or more in respect of any offence, when passing sentence, may recommend to the Department of Justice particular conditions which in its view should be included in any licence granted to the offender under article 17 on release from prison. In exercising the powers under article 24 in respect of an offender, the Department of Justice shall have regard to any such recommendation.
Article 27 imposes a duty on a person subject to a licence to comply with such conditions as may for the time being be included in the licence.