[2022] UKSC 15
On appeal from: [2017] EWCA Civ 2112
JUDGMENT
SC (Jamaica) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lady Arden
Lord Hamblen
Lord Stephens
15 June 2022
Heard on 19 October 2021
Appellant
Raza Husain QC
Simon Cox
Eleanor Mitchell
(Instructed by Birnberg Peirce LLP)
Respondent
Zane Malik QC
Tom Tabori
(Instructed by The Government Legal Department)
LORD STEPHENS: (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lady Arden and Lord Hamblen agree)
1.Introduction
There is a real risk to SC of inhuman or degrading treatment, in contravention of article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (“ECHR”) in urban but not in rural parts of his country of origin, Jamaica. So, his deportation to that country by the Secretary of State for the Home Department (“SSHD”), as a foreign criminal, would be unlawful unless he “can reasonably be expected to stay” in the rural areas of Jamaica (“internal relocation”). In allowing an appeal from a deportation order made by the SSHD the First-tier Tribunal Judge Kamara (“the F-tT judge”) held that SC could not reasonably be expected to internally relocate in Jamaica. In arriving at her decision as to the reasonableness of internal relocation she did not consider what was “due” to SC as a result of his criminality.
The first issue in this appeal is whether SC’s criminal conduct in the UK is a factor relevant in determining if he could reasonably be expected to stay in a rural area of Jamaica, so that, for instance, his criminality may turn internal relocation from what would otherwise be unreasonable into what is reasonable based on a value judgment of what is “due” to him as a criminal. Accordingly, does internal relocation in Jamaica, which is unreasonable apart from SC’s criminal conduct in the UK, become reasonable because he has committed serious offences in the UK?
The second issue, which arises if SC’s criminal conduct is not relevant to internal relocation, is whether the F-tT judge erred in law in holding that SC could not reasonably be expected to stay in a rural area of Jamaica.
The third issue is whether the F-tT judge erred in her assessment of sections 117C(4)(b)-(c) of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (“the NIAA 2002”) and para 399A(b)-(c) of the Immigration Rules in holding that SC is socially and culturally integrated in the UK and there would be very significant obstacles to his integration in Jamaica.
The fourth issue is whether the F-tT judge erred in law in embarking on a freestanding assessment of article 8 ECHR, applying the wrong test and failing to give sufficient weight to the public interest in SC’s deportation.
2.Factual background
There is no challenge to the findings of fact made by the courts below which have been summarised in an agreed statement. Accordingly, SC’s present well-founded fear of being persecuted because his mother is a lesbian and that lesbians and those associated with them, including their children, are persecuted in Jamaica, is not disputed. Nor is there any dispute as to the catalogue of abuse to which SC and his mother were subjected when they lived in Jamaica nor as to the present real risk which SC faces of suffering serious harm in urban parts of Jamaica because of his association with his mother.
SC is a national of Jamaica, born in 1991. He lived with his mother in Kingston until she left Jamaica for the UK in August 1999. SC was then cared for by his maternal grandmother in Kingston until he joined his mother in the UK in December 2001 at the age of ten. He has remained in the UK since then. He is heterosexual.
SC’s mother is also a national of Jamaica. She worked as a go-go dancer in clubs. She is a lesbian, who sequentially entered into relationships with three Jamaican women between 1994 and 1999. Homosexuals are harassed and persecuted in Jamaica and SC’s mother, her family and her female partners were subjected to intense violence between 1995 and 1999 which ultimately caused SC’s mother to flee Jamaica seeking refuge in the UK.
The violence was mostly at the hands of gang members who frequented the clubs in which SC’s mother worked. She was beaten, stabbed, and raped by them, because she was a lesbian. These assaults often took place in front of SC (then aged between three and seven years old). Furthermore, not only did SC witness the violence perpetrated on his mother but also on one occasion gang members attempted to rape him and abducted him for a short while. To avoid the violence SC’s mother and her then partner went into hiding in the countryside, but not only did the gangs, in particular the Sunlight Crew, seek them out but also word had got around to minor gangs in the countryside, who then assaulted SC’s mother and her partner.
Further details as to the degree of violence inflicted by reason of SC’s mother’s sexual orientation include that the Ramsey Road Gang in Jamaica had, because SC’s mother is a lesbian, shot her two brothers (who had survived). Other gang members had physically and verbally abused her mother and threatened her sister. A further sexual assault occurred in June 1999 when SC’s mother was held down at gunpoint by four teenagers who threatened to “blow her head off” if she did not leave the area. They forced her to have oral sex with them and when SC’s maternal grandmother tried to intervene, they also assaulted her. They threatened to kill not only SC’s mother but also her whole family, if she reported the matter to the police. After this incident, in fear of her life, SC’s mother decided to leave Jamaica and to join one of her brothers in the UK.
Threats to kill SC’s mother’s family in Jamaica because of her sexual orientation continued after she left Jamaica. Even in London SC’s mother was being threatened by gang members, especially members of the Sunlight Crew. For instance, she recounts that some three years after leaving Jamaica whilst on her way home by bus with SC a member of that gang screamed at her “Sodomite … you not dead yet? You must die.”
In December 2002 SC’s mother applied for asylum in the UK with SC as her dependant. The claim, which was based on persecution suffered because of SC’s mother’s sexuality, was refused by the SSHD (to whom, for convenience, I will throughout refer as female). On appeal to an Immigration Adjudicator, R J Oliver, SC’s mother gave evidence that she did not believe that she and her partner could avoid the harassment and persecution anywhere in Jamaica as there was a general intolerance of homosexual people. She said:
“They call us sodomites and feel they are justified in treating us like animals because they believe homosexuality is an evil practice.”
SC’s mother stated that she believed that because this view was widely held that the government had done nothing to afford protection to homosexual people and she had no confidence in the police offering her protection. The Adjudicator found that SC’s mother’s evidence fitted in well with the background information material showing the violent persecution of homosexual people in Jamaica and the lack of protection available to them from the authorities. By a decision promulgated on 2 September 2003 the Adjudicator found SC’s mother’s evidence credible, accepted that she was a refugee and allowed her appeal. On 9 October 2003, and as a consequence of the Adjudicator’s decision, SC’s mother and SC were granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK as refugees.
SC has committed several criminal offences. His offending history began during 2005 when he was reprimanded for destroying or damaging property. In 2006 he received two warnings for taking a motor vehicle and destroying or damaging property. Between November 2007 and 2012 he acquired 14 criminal convictions for a total of 28 offences. These include a conviction for robbery on 1 November 2007; convictions for three robbery offences, attempted robbery and common assault in 2008; a conviction for assault and having an article with a blade in 2009; having an article with a blade in 2010 and using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour in 2011. In addition, SC has been convicted of nine offences relating to the police, courts or prisons and several driving offences.
On 11 June 2012 SC was convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, having an article with a blade, and breach of an anti-social behaviour order. SC was sentenced to a period of two years’ detention in a young offender institution for the assault conviction. As a result, SC fell within the definition of a “foreign criminal” in section 32(1) of the UK Borders Act 2007 (“the UKBA 2007”) and in section 117D(2) of the NIAA 2002, being a person (a) who is not a British citizen, (b) who is convicted in the United Kingdom of an offence, and (c) who has been sentenced to a period of imprisonment (as defined in section 38(1) of the UKBA 2007 and in section 117D(4) of the NIAA 2002) of at least 12 months. Section 32(5) UKBA 2007 provides that the SSHD “must make a deportation order in respect of a foreign criminal” subject to certain exceptions which are set out in section 33. Section 33(2) provides that a foreign criminal is not to be deported where that would breach that person’s ECHR rights or the UK’s obligations under the 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its Protocol (“the Refugee Convention”).
On 22 January 2013, the SSHD wrote to SC (having previously invited representations from him) to inform him that by reference to article 1C of the Refugee Convention, the circumstances in which he had been recognised as a refugee had ceased to exist and accordingly, she ceased his refugee status (“the refugee status decision”). There is no statutory appeal against the refugee status decision.
On 20 March 2013 the SSHD made an “automatic” deportation order against SC as a foreign criminal under section 32(5) of the UKBA 2007 on the basis that his circumstances did not fall within any of the exceptions to automatic deportation in section 33 (“the deportation decision”). The deportation decision is an immigration decision (see the analysis in Ali v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2016] UKSC 60; [2016] 1 WLR 4799, para 5). Accordingly, there is a statutory appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (“F-tT”) under section 82 of the NIAA 2002. The permissible grounds of appeal, which are set out in section 84 NIAA 2002, at that time included that the immigration decision was not in accordance with immigration rules or that the decision was otherwise not in accordance with the law or that removal of the appellant from the United Kingdom in consequence of the immigration decision would breach the United Kingdom’s obligations under the Refugee Convention or would be unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 as being incompatible with the appellant’s ECHR rights.
SC lodged his appeal with the F-tT on 27 March 2013 under section 82 of the NIAA 2002. On 6 March 2015 the F-tT judge allowed SC’s appeal on the basis that he faced a real risk of being subjected to further serious ill-treatment in contravention of article 3 ECHR if he were removed to Jamaica and that it would not be reasonable to expect SC to seek to reside in another area of Jamaica to avoid his persecutors - Appeal number DA/00649/2013. The F-tT judge’s findings in relation to article 3 ECHR determined the appeal but the F-tT judge also held SC’s deportation would be contrary to his rights under article 8 ECHR. On 21 October 2015 the SSHD’s appeal to the Upper Tribunal (“UT”) was dismissed by Upper Tribunal Judge Canavan (“the UT judge”) - [2015] UKAITUR DA/00649/2013 (21 October 2015). On 20 December 2017 the Court of Appeal (Davis LJ, Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President of Tribunals, and Henderson LJ) set aside the decisions of both Tribunals, remitting SC’s appeal from the SSHD’s decision to be heard afresh by the First-tier Tribunal (“F-tT”) - [2017] EWCA Civ 2112; [2018] 1 WLR 4004. On 18 May 2021 permission to appeal was granted by a panel of the Supreme Court (Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Leggatt and Lord Stephens).
3.The Legal Context
In this section, I set out the legal context to the present case. Annex 1 to this judgment sets out the various amendments made to the applicable scheme during these proceedings.
(a)UKBA 2007
Section 32 of the UKBA 2007 under the heading of “Automatic deportation”, in so far as relevant, provides:
“(1)In this section ‘foreign criminal’ means a person -
(a)who is not a British citizen,
(b)who is convicted in the United Kingdom of an offence, and
(c)to whom Condition 1 or 2 applies.
(2)Condition 1 is that the person is sentenced to a period of imprisonment of at least 12 months.
[…]
(4)For the purpose of section 3(5)(a) of the Immigration Act 1971 (c 77), the deportation of a foreign criminal is conducive to the public good.
(5)The Secretary of State must make a deportation order in respect of a foreign criminal (subject to section 33).”
A deportation order in section 32 and 33 of the UKBA 2007 is defined in section 38(4)(c) of the UKBA 2007 as meaning an order under section 5 and by virtue of section 3(5) of the Immigration Act 1971. Section 5 of the Immigration Act 1971 provides that a deportation order made against a person is “an order requiring him to leave and prohibiting him from entering the United Kingdom”. It also provides that “a deportation order against a person shall invalidate any leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom given him before the order is made or while it is in force.” Section 5(5) gives effect to the provisions of Schedule 3 with respect to the removal from the United Kingdom of persons against whom deportation orders are in force. In particular, paragraph 1 of Schedule 3 provides that, where a deportation order is in force against any person, the Secretary of State may give directions for his removal to a country or territory specified in the directions being either (a) a country of which he is a national or citizen; or (b) a country or territory to which there is reason to believe that he will be admitted.
Section 32(4) provides that the deportation of a foreign criminal is conducive to the public good for the purpose of section 3(5)(a) of the Immigration Act 1971 which provides:
“A person who is not a British citizen is liable to deportation from the United Kingdom if - (a) the Secretary of State deems his deportation to be conducive to the public good.”
So, rather than it being a matter for the SSHD to decide under section 3(5)(a) of the Immigration Act 1971, Parliament has stated in section 32(4) of the UKBA 2007 that it is conducive to the public good to deport “foreign criminals”; see RU (Bangladesh) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWCA Civ 651, paras 11 and 34.
It is accepted that SC falls within the description of a foreign criminal in section 32(1) and (2) as he is not a British citizen, he has been convicted in the UK of an offence and he has been sentenced to a period of imprisonment of at least 12 months. Accordingly, his deportation is deemed to be conducive to the public good under section 32(4). By virtue of section 32(5) the SSHD is obliged to make a deportation order in respect of SC (ie, automatic deportation) subject to section 33.
Section 33 of the UKBA 2007 provides for exceptions to both section 32(4) and 32(5) (“Exceptions”). The only relevant Exception in this case is the first part of Exception 1, which is where removal of the “foreign criminal” in pursuance of the deportation order would breach his rights under the ECHR. In so far as relevant, section 33 provides:
“(1)Section 32(4) and (5) -
(a)do not apply where an exception in this section applies (subject to subsection (7) below), and
(b)are subject to sections 7 and 8 of the Immigration Act 1971 (Commonwealth citizens, Irish citizens, crew and other exemptions).
(2)Exception 1 is where removal of the foreign criminal in pursuance of the deportation order would breach -
(a)a person’s Convention rights, or
(b)the United Kingdom’s obligations under the Refugee Convention.
[…]
(7)The application of an exception -
(a)does not prevent the making of a deportation order;
(b)results in it being assumed neither that deportation of the person concerned is conducive to the public good nor that it is not conducive to the public good;
but section 32(4) applies despite the application of Exception 1 or 4.”
Section 33(7) sets out the consequences of an Exception applying in a particular case. It stipulates that the application of an Exception does not prevent the SSHD from making a deportation order against a “foreign criminal”, nor will it result in it being assumed either that deportation of the “foreign criminal” concerned is, or is not, conducive to the public good. There is a further nuance in the case of Exceptions 1 and 4. The proviso to section 33(7) stipulates that in those cases, despite the application of those Exceptions, section 32(4) will continue to apply. This is relevant in the present case because SC relies on Exception 1, that is on his ECHR rights, as an answer to the SSHD’s obligation to deport under section 32(5). Accordingly, as SC is a “foreign criminal” who challenges a deportation order made by the SSHD under section 32(5) of the UKBA 2007, on the basis that his removal would infringe his ECHR rights and it would be disproportionate to deport him, it is not open to him to argue that his deportation is not conducive to the public good, nor is it necessary for the SSHD to prove that it is. In such cases it will be so under the proviso to section 33(7) of the UKBA 2007; see RU (Bangladesh) v Secretary of State for the Home Department at paras 12 and 34; Ali v Secretary of State for the Home Department at para 12.
The SSHD’s deportation decision was made on the basis that SC’s circumstances did not fall within any of the exceptions to automatic deportation in section 33 so that there was a requirement to make a deportation order; see Ali v Secretary of State for the Home Department at para 13. SC contends that the deportation decision was not in accordance with the Immigration Rules and that the decision was otherwise not in accordance with the law. However, SC primarily focussed on his contention that the deportation decision would breach his rights under articles 3 and 8 ECHR and the United Kingdom’s obligations under the Refugee Convention. SC was unsuccessful before the F-tT judge in his contention that his deportation would breach the UK’s obligations under the Refugee Convention. There has been no appeal against that finding. This appeal mainly concerns whether the deportation decision would breach SC’s rights under articles 3 and/or 8 ECHR or is not in accordance with the Immigration Rules. Accordingly, it is appropriate to summarise the legal principles in relation to both of those articles and the relevant Immigration Rules.
(b)Articles 3 and 8 ECHR
Article 3 ECHR provides:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
The approach to the application of article 3 ECHR in the context of a deportation order requires the court to ask itself whether deportation to the country of origin would expose a person to a real risk of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment within article 3 ECHR. Deportation would expose a person to a breach of article 3 ECHR “where substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned faced a real risk of being subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment” (Vilvarajah v United Kingdom (1991) 14 EHRR 248, para 103) (emphasis added); see also Soering v United Kingdom (1989) 11 EHRR 439, para 91.