Category Archives: contempt

FOIA contempt proceedings against University of Exeter

Non-compliance by a public authority with the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 is rarely a particularly serious matter for the public authority: a delay in responding, or a failure to disclose what should be disclosed, or wrong reliance on exemptions will at most normally only result in a public decision notice by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), and there are hundreds of those issued each year, which pass with barely any attention.

Where it can get serious is where the public authority fails to comply with an order by the ICO, or where, upon a case having been appealed to the First-tier Tribunal (FTT), the FTT has made an order for disclosure. Sections 54 and 61, respectively, of FOIA, empower the ICO and the FTT to treat the failure to comply as offence of contempt of court, and certify the offence to the Upper Tribunal, which has the power to commit for contempt. In principle, as I understand it, the Upper Tribunal could, if it agreed there was a contempt, impose a period of imprisonment or a fine (the powers here are not contained in the Upper Tribunal Rules, but in YSA (Committal for contempt by media) [2023] UKUT 00075 (IAC), the Upper Tribunal (in a non-FOIA case) said that as the Upper Tribunal Rules do not expressly deal with contempt certifications, then the Upper Tribunal should, so far as it can, adopt the contempt provisions of part 81 of the Civil Procedure Rules.

I’m not aware of any FOIA case where the Upper Tribunal (or the High Court, which had the jurisdiction until the Data Protection Act 2018 amended FOIA and conferred jurisdiction on the Upper Tribunal) has actually made a contempt committal. But the latest case to make its way to the Upper Tribunal, to consider whether to do so, involves the University of Exeter. The University was asked under FOIA for the names of attendees, and the organisations they represented, at two University groups – the Exeter Community Panel and the Resident Liaison Group. The University refused, citing data protection concerns (and relying on the exemption at section 40(2) FOIA), and the ICO agreed. However, the FTT disagreed (these were public facing groups and attendees would have had no reasonable expectation that their names would be kept private) and ordered disclosure. This, however, the University did not do, and upon being chased by the applicant, indicated that at least some of the information no longer existed, because of (undocumented) oral right to be forgotten requests made by attendees after the FTT had ordered disclosure (which raised s77 FOIA questions). As the FTT pointed out, the University had supplied the withheld information to the ICO and to the FTT itself for the purposes of the original proceedings, and it was “less than credible that the Respondent cannot recover that information and provide it to the Applicant”.

The FTT was satisfied therefore, that this was a “wilful”, “flagrant” and continuing failure to comply with its order – “a contrived and persistent failure that is still ongoing”.

The FTT nonetheless still urged the University to fully comply with the order, as doing say “may mitigate any action taken by the Upper Tribunal”.

Compliance with FOIA is not voluntary for a public authority. Still less so is compliance with orders of a court.

The views in this post (and indeed most posts on blog) are my personal ones, and do not represent the views of any organisation I am involved with.

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FOIA costs decision against applicant for failing to withdraw contempt application

A freedom of information requester is facing costs in what seems to have been a bit of a shambles before the First Tier Tribunal (FTT). I think this is rather concerning, albeit slightly convoluted, and, frankly, the whole thing is not assisted by a judgment that is strewn with errors and lacks coherence. In what follows I’ve had to piece together some of the information missing, or unclear, from the judgment.

It appears that the requester (AHB) had made a Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) request to the Royal Mint on 19 June (not July, as the FTT judgment says) 2021 for information about its “Garbled Coin Policy” in relation to repatriated UK currency. On 16 July 2021 The Royal Mint replied with what appears to have been a short narrative response. AHB complained to the Information Commissioner (ICO) on 28 September 2021, and ten months later the ICO held (very peremptorily, and rather oddly, I would say) that the Royal Mint held no information in relation to the original request.

AHB then appealed to the FTT and in a judgment of 3 October 2023 (the “2023 judgment”) the FTT held that the ICO had either or both erred in law, or in the exercise of his discretion, because the Royal Mint held further information in relation to the request. It issued a judgment constituting a substitute decision notice (SDN), under which the Royal Mint was ordered to issue a fresh decision within 35 days of the date on which the SDN was promulgated. The judgment specifically says “Failure to comply with this decision may result in the Tribunal making written certification of this fact pursuant to section 61 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and may be dealt with as a contempt of court”. The Royal Mint had chosen not to join itself to those proceedings and neither AHB nor the ICO had applied for it to be joined.

It is not at all clear, from the judgment, what happened next, but it appears that the SDN, with its Order that the Royal Mint issue a fresh response, was not served on the Royal Mint itself (presumably this error arose from its not having been a party, although it was aware of the proceedings). Then, on 9 December 2023, having received no fresh response, and no doubt taking his cue from the SDN, AHB made an application to the FTT under section 61(4) of FOIA for the Royal Mint to be certified to the Upper Tribunal for contempt of court.

It appears that the FTT finally served the SDN on the Royal Mint on 22 December 2023 (the judgment at several points has this as the obviously impossible “22 December 2024”).

One assumes, at this point, that, although the SDN was not served on the Royal Mint until the time of 35 days from 3 October 2023 had already passed, the Order in the SDN still had effect. That being the case, it appears to have been incumbent on the Royal Mint’s lawyers to make an urgent application, for instance for compliance with the Order to be waived, for relief from sanctions and for a new date for compliance to be set. Instead, they did not take action until 3 January 2024, when they wrote to the FTT suggesting that a response would be provided within a further 35 days. However, this was just correspondence – no actual application was made.

Eventually, a response was issued by the Royal Mint in relation to the SDN, on 5 February 2024, more than two-and-a-half years after AHB made his request.

AHB’s application for a contempt certification was still live though, and here I pause to observe that, on the information available, I am not surprised he took no action to withdraw it. He had been vindicated by the FTT’s SDN of 3 October 2023, and he was unaware that the SDN had erroneously not been served on the Royal Mint (in fact, it is not at all clear at what point he did become aware of this). In any case, as no application was made by the Royal Mint for further time, the Order in the SDN must still have been in effect. In fact the judgment alludes to this when it notes that AHB was “indicating” in his contempt application that the final Royal Mint response “was provided 125 days after the Substituted Decision Notice was issued and 90 days later than directed”.

In any event, the FTT declined to certify the failure to comply on time as contempt, because

whilst the Tribunal does consider that the Respondent could have acted more diligently on becoming aware of the Substituted Decision Notice, by applying for an extension of time and requesting permission to extend the time set out in the SDN, the Tribunal does not consider that [the Royal Mint’s lawyer] wilfully avoided complying with the order. The Tribunal accepts that he was simply not aware of the appropriate course of action to take in circumstances where a Court or Tribunal imposed a deadline that had already been missed. In any event, the approach taken is not sufficiently serious to warrant certification to the Upper Tribunal for contempt and the application is refused. [emphasis added]

I will pause here to say that it’s unusual, to say the least, for a court to accept a submission that a solicitor was not aware of what to do when in receipt of an order of a court. Most judges would be quite intolerant of such an argument.

But the story does not end there. In submissions dated 17 July 2024 the Royal Mint then “indicated an intention to pursue an application for the costs ‘of and associated with’ the [contempt] application”. Under rule 10 of The Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (General Regulatory Chamber) Rules 2009 the FTT may make an order in respect of costs but only if it considers that a party has acted unreasonably in bringing, defending or conducting the proceedings.

And, remarkably, the FTT acceded to the costs application, on the grounds that AHB did not withdraw his application for the FTT to certify the Royal Mint’s (undoubted) failure to comply with the 3 October 2023 Order, after he had finally received the fresh response of 5 February 2024. The FTT also took into account AHB’s reference to pursuing a “campaign” to encourage greater transparency.

But does this mean AHB has “acted unreasonably in…conducting the proceedings”? I’m far from convinced (in fact, I’m not convinced). The FTT says

The Tribunal does not consider that it is reasonable (or that any other reasonable person would consider it reasonable) for an application for a party to be certified to the Upper Tribunal for contempt of court to be used as part of a campaign to encourage greater transparency…The Tribunal considers that the obligation to deal with cases fairly, justly, and proportionately in circumstances where the Applicant accepts that he was in appropriately [sic] pursuing a “campaign” for other purposes and where the chances of success in relation to the Tribunal actually certifying the contempt may be limited may justify the making of a costs order against the Applicant.

Well, if I’m to be considered a reasonable person, then I do not think it unreasonable for a person to decide not to withdraw such an application where they have waited more than two-and-half years for an answer from a public authority to a simple FOIA request, and where the public authority has failed to comply with an Order, because its lawyer chose not to acquaint himself with procedural rules. Unreasonableness imposes a very high threshold, and this is shown by the fact that costs awards are extraordinarily rare in FOIA cases in the FTT (from my research I have only found two, in the twenty-odd years FOIA has been in effect, and one of those was overturned on appeal). AHB may have been tenacious, perhaps overly so, and he may have ancillary reasons for (some of) his conduct, but – again – that does not connote unreasonableness.

Costs have not yet been awarded, as the FTT has adjourned for submissions on AHB’s means, and a breakdown of the Royal Mint’s costs.

I should end by saying there may be other material not in the public domain which provides a gloss on AHB’s conduct of the proceedings, but one can (and must) only go on what is in the public domain.

The views in this post (and indeed most posts on this blog) are my personal ones, and do not represent the views of any organisation I am involved with.

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Verging on contempt

Where the Information Commissioner serves a decision notice on a public authority, under section 50(3)(b) of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA), it is a legal notice and a failure to comply may be treated by the High Court (or in Scotland, the Court of Session) as if the authority had committed a contempt of court. It is, therefore (and to state the obvious) a serious matter not to comply. The process involves the Commissioner “certifying” to the court that there has been a failure to comply.

Yet, a recent FOIA disclosure by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) reveals that it currently has two such cases where it has referred non-compliance by one particular public authority to its own solicitors to initiate (or at least consider) certification proceedings. The rather remarkable thing is that the public authority in question is the government department with overall responsibility for FOIA policy – namely, the Cabinet Office.

The disclosure reveals no more in the way of detail – we do not know what the cases relate to, or what the current progress is (other than court proceedings have not yet commenced). However, it is very rare for a case actually to proceed to certification (in fact, I can only recall one case relating to a s50(3)(b) decision notice, and that was instead certified to the High Court by the First-tier Tribunal under section 61 of FOIA (as it applied then)).

It is worth pointing out that it doesn’t necessarily follow that, if there were a finding of contempt, sanctions would be imposed. Although a committal application or fines are, in principle, available, the Court could merely make a public finding that the Cabinet Office had breached the obligation to respond to the decision notice, but impose no further punishment.

Over the years the Cabinet Office has been subject to much criticism for its approach to FOIA – some of it, quite frankly, fully justified. However, there have been encouraging signs of improvements more recently, with its response to the “Clearing House” review, and its setting up of an Information Rights User Group (of which I am a member), although the latter has not fully kicked off yet, as far as I can understand.

However, it is a terrible look for the primus inter pares of government departments, and the one which holds the brief for FOIA policy, to be faced with potential contempt proceedings for failure to do what the law, and the regulator, requires it to do. Although the original FOIA request to the ICO was not mine, I’ll be interested to see if any updates are given.

The views in this post (and indeed most posts on this blog) are my personal ones, and do not represent the views of any organisation I am involved with.

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Lots of FOI contempt applications in the wings

A new piece on the Mishcon de Reya site: the First-tier Tribunal is dealing with at least eight applications to certify contempt of court for failure by public authorities to comply with decision notices.

FOI enforcement starts to get serious?

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