Access To Justice Closed Off: Feature
Access To Justice Closed Off: Feature
Access To Justice Closed Off: Feature
June 2015
Judicial review
During the consultation on proposals to
limit legal aid funding for judicial review,
the vast majority of respondents indicated
that most judicial review applications
were settled successfully prior to the
permission application being determined.
Despite this, the government brought into
force provisions that meant legal aid
providers would not be paid on a judicial
review application unless permission were
granted or, if the matter were settled prior
to permission without costs being
awarded to the claimant, at the discretion
of the Legal Aid Agency (LAA): the Civil
Legal Aid (Remuneration) (Amendment)
(No 3) Regulations 2014 SI No 607.
These changes had a chilling effect as
many legal aid providers simply did not
have the financial resources to take on
work at risk and the potential for the
LAA to exercise its discretion in the
providers favour offered little comfort.
In R (Ben Hoare Bell and others) v The Lord
Chancellor [2015] EWHC 523 (Admin), 3
March 2015, these regulations were held
to be unlawful. Beatson LJ found no
rational link between the provisions and
their stated purpose of incentivising
providers to focus more sharply on the
proper application of the merits test before
applying for funding. The judgment
focused on three scenarios where putting
providers at risk of non-payment did not
What to do
Judicial review remains within scope for
legal aid under the Legal Aid, Sentencing
and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012
(LASPO). It is unlikely that the new
Conservative government will respond to
the general concerns raised by Beatson LJ
in Ben Hoare Bell and revoke the Civil Legal
Loss of home
Loss of home remains within scope for
legal aid but trespassers are now
excluded from the definition of loss of
home (see LASPO Sch 1 Pt 1 para 33).
This means Gypsies and Travellers on an
unauthorised encampment facing county
court eviction action by a local or other
public authority where that authority is
acting unlawfully (eg by flouting
government guidance on welfare
assessments) will be unable to get legal
aid to defend that action. The national
shortage of authorised stopping places for
Gypsies and Travellers, estimated to be
almost 6,000 pitches (see the Equality and
Human Rights Commissions 2009 research
report, Assessing local housing authorities
progress in meeting the accommodation needs of
Gypsy and Traveller communities in England,
by Philip Brown and Pat Niner), means
unauthorised encampment is often a
necessity rather than a choice and eviction
can have a severe impact on families, and
children in particular. It is, therefore, vital
that legal representation is available in
order to ensure that such steps are lawful
and that the local authority has complied
with its duties.
What to do
Gypsies and Travellers can still seek to
judicially review the decision to evict, as
Lord Wallace of Tankerness confirmed
during debates on the LASPO bill in the
June 2015
What to do
The disputes mentioned above that are
not within scope for legal aid, if not
resolved by negotiation between the park
owner and the occupier, would have to go
to tribunal, where there is no availability
of legal aid in any event (the First-tier
Tribunal (Property Chamber) in England
and the Residential Property Tribunal in
Wales). An attempt could be made to
obtain exceptional case funding (ECF)
though doubtless this would be very
difficult (see below).
Exceptional funding
During the passage of the LASPO bill
through parliament, the government
stated that ECF would act as a vital safety
net and indicated that it was intended to
ensure that the failure to provide advice
and representation to someone does not
result in a breach of article 6 of the
European Convention on Human Rights
(the convention) the right to a fair
No Mad Laws
The No Mad Laws campaign has been
co-ordinated by Gypsies, Travellers and
their support groups and representatives
to highlight the disastrous effect that the
coalition governments legal aid and
judicial review reforms have had on
members of those communities (reforms
that are unlikely to be reversed by the
new Conservative government). Legal aid
can be especially important to Gypsies
and Travellers given that Romani Gypsies
and Irish Travellers fare the worst of any
ethnic groups in terms of health and
education.
Practical examples of the difficulties
that can be caused can be found in
Effects of the Reforms on the No Mad
Laws website.
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What to do
Obviously, legal aid providers can continue
to make ECF applications; whether they
will want to do so is another question
entirely. If ECF is refused, the only
recourse is, perhaps ironically, to seek
funding to pursue a judicial review against
the director of legal aid casework for the
refusal. The authors have experience of
three cases where either a judicial review
had to be lodged or at least threatened
before ECF was granted.