Ireland - High Court, 25 January 2011, T.D., N.D. and A.D. v Minister for Justice 2011 IEHC 37

Ireland - High Court, 25 January 2011, T.D., N.D. and A.D. v Minister for Justice 2011 IEHC 37
Country of Decision: Ireland
Country of applicant: South Africa
Court name: High Court (Hogan J.)
Date of decision: 25-01-2011
Citation: 2011 IEHC 37
Additional citation: 2010 No.405 J.R.

Keywords:

Keywords
Effective remedy (right to)

Headnote:

This case involved a challenge to the transposition of the Procedures Directive into Irish domestic law which appeared to be barred by a special time limitation period of 14 days applicable to challenges to asylum/deportation decisions. The Court found that a Member State is entitled to apply a national limitation period even in respect of those cases where the Member State in question has failed properly to transpose the relevant Directive, provided that the limitation period complies with the principles of equivalence and effectiveness. The Court found that the strict 14 day time limit provided for in section 5 of the Illegal Immigrants Trafficking Act, 2000, is not equivalent to the limitation period for judicial reviews in other broadly similar areas (generally 6 months) and is not effective because it is so short a time. In the circumstances, the limitation period could not be pleaded or relied upon against the applicants. 

Facts:

The applicants in this case were a mother and two children from South Africa who came to Ireland in April of 2009 and claimed asylum. The Refugee Applications Commissioner recommended that they not be declared refugees in May of 2009. This recommendation was affirmed on appeal by the Refugee Appeals Tribunal in July of 2009. The Minister for Justice then formally refused the refugee status application in August of 2009. An application for subsidiary protection was then made but this was unsuccessful.  Deportation orders were made against all 3 applicants in March of 2010. The applicants challenged the making of these deportation orders by way of judicial review but they also challenged the earlier (refugee) decisions of the Commissioner and Tribunal. The applicants claimed that the procedures provided for by the Refugee Act 1996 were incompatible with Art 23 and 39 of the Asylum Procedures Directive 2005/85/EC and that they were deprived of an effective remedy against the refugee decisions at first instance (see D v. Refugee Applications Commissioner and Others [2011] IEHC 33).

The application for judicial review in respect of the refugee decisions was issued months outside the special 14 day time limit for such applications prescribed by section 5 of the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Act 2000. Even the challenge to the deportation order was issued two days out of time. At the hearing of the application for leave for judicial review, the Minister asserted that the applicants should not be granted leave because the proceedings were issued out of time. They were, in effect, statute barred.  The applicants argued that the claim was based upon the Procedures Directive and that they could only be barred from asserting EU rights if the special time limits in relation to challenges to asylum/deportation decisions, set down by section 5 of the illegal Immigrants Trafficking Act, 2000 complied with the principles of equivalence and effectiveness as required by EU law.

Decision & reasoning:

The Court (Hogan J.) found that the principle of equivalence demanded that the time limits in question be comparable to those applied in other broadly similar judicial review actions.  The Court compared the special 14 day time limit for asylum/deportation cases with the general 3/6 month time limit for judicial reviews provided for under Order 84 of the Irish Rules of the Superior Courts and with other special limitation periods such as the one which applies in relation to planning decisions (8 weeks). The Court concluded that section 5 did not comply with the principle of equivalence.

The Court also held the 14 day time limit could make it excessively difficult for applicants to exercise their procedural rights (following ECJ decisions in cases such as Pontin Case C-63/08  [2009] ECR I -000) and that although the High Court could extend the time for the bringing of an application under section 5, the provision might still leave an applicant in a position whereby he or she could not predict with any degree of certainty how that power might be extended in any given case, giving rise to a lack of predictability and consistency. The Court concluded that section 5 did not comply with the principle of effectiveness.

Because the judicial review was, in effect, a claim based upon the Procedures Directive, section 5 failed the requirements of equivalence and effectiveness and could not be impleaded or relied on by the State against the applicants.

Outcome:

Leave for judicial review was granted with the necessary extensions of time to challenge the refugee decisions.  

Subsequent proceedings:

Unusually, the Court granted a certificate for appeal to the Supreme Court of a leave decision on the basis that it was a matter of considerable public importance. The decision was appealed to the Supreme Court but the appeal has not yet been heard (and may not be for some time) (as at November 2011).

Observations/comments:

A very interesting extension of the principle of equivalence.

Relevant International and European Legislation:

Cited National Legislation:

Cited National Legislation
Ireland - Order 84A Rule 4 of the Rules of the Superior Courts (Ireland)
Ireland - Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Act 2000 - Section 5

Cited Cases:

Cited Cases
CJEU - C-62/00 Marks & Spencer
CJEU - C-63/08 Pontin
CJEU - C-208/90 Emmott v Minister for Social Welfare
CJEU - C-228/96 Aprile
CJEU - C-246/09 Bulicke
CJEU - C-261/95 Palmisani
CJEU - C-338/91 Steenhorst-Neerings
CJEU - C-445/06 Danske Slagterier
Ireland - CS v. Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2005] 1 I.R. 343

Follower Cases:

Follower Cases
Ireland - High Court, 28 October 2010, P.M. v Minister for Justice and Law Reform, Attorney General and Ireland, [2011] IEHC 409
Ireland - High Court, 11 January 2012, P.I., E.I. (An Infant) and J.N.I. (An Infant) v Minister for Justice and Equality, [2012] IEHC 7