FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL (INFORMATION RIGHTS)
Appeal against the Information Commissioner’s Decision Notice: IC-387981-N0T4
Appellant: Mr Philip Swift
Respondent: Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)
Public Authority: National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) reference 2233/2025
04/04/2025 Date of Request
11/04/2025 Date of NPCC Response
20/05/2025 Date of Internal Review response
05/11/2025 Date of ICO Decision notice
30/11/2025 Date of Tribunal Submission
SKELETON ARGUMENT
of the APPELLANT
PHILIP SWIFT
1. Introduction
- The Appellant challenges the ICO’s Decision Notice upholding the NPCC’s reliance on section 14(1) FOIA (vexatious request).
- The Appellant submits that the decision was incorrect in law and fact, and that the NPCC did not apply FOIA properly.
- The request was made for a serious, legitimate public-interest purpose relating to the transparency and accountability of NaVCIS — a policing entity operating within police systems but funded by the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA) on a reward-per-seizure basis.
- The NPCC’s reasons do not satisfy the high threshold for s.14(1) set by Dransfield v ICO & Devon CC [2012] UKUT 440 (AAC).
2. Issues for Determination
The Tribunal is asked to determine:
- Whether the NPCC correctly applied section 14(1).
- Whether the ICO erred in accepting NPCC’s assertions without evidence.
- Whether the NPCC improperly failed to consider:
- section 12 (cost limit);
- section 16 (duty to advise/assist);
- section 3(2)(b) (information held by a body performing functions for NPCC — NaVCIS).
- Whether the request should be remitted for a fresh response under FOIA.
3. Legal Framework
- Section 14(1) disapplies the duty to respond only where a request is “vexatious”.
- Under Dransfield:
- The threshold is high;
- The authority must evidence grossly oppressive burden, harassing behaviour, no serious purpose, or abuse of process;
- The decision must be proportionate and based on evidence, not assertion.
- Persistent or thematic FOI use does not equate to vexatiousness.
- The existence of a serious public interest weighs strongly against a s.14 finding.
4. NPCC’s Reasons and Why They Fail
(1) Alleged “similar requests”
- No evidence of overlap or duplication was provided.
- ICO guidance requires clear demonstration of similarity; NPCC only listed reference numbers.
- The Appellant’s requests concern different questions (PNC processes,
NaVCIS/FLA contract, annotation policies, statistical data).[1]
(2) “191 internal emails”
- Internal workflow emails are not evidence of FOIA burden.
- No breakdown, time calculation, or relevance assessment provided.
- Burden must relate to retrieval, extraction or redaction — not internal communications.
(3) Time required to retrieve/review information
- This is normal FOIA work; if excessive, the correct exemption is section 12, not section 14.
- NPCC did not consider s.12 nor engage with s.16 despite invitations to narrow.
(4) Senior management involvement
- Internal management processes cannot be attributed to the requester.
- Authorities must not inflate burden by internal escalation or inefficient practice.
(5) Appellant’s “prompt replies causing distress”
- Responding promptly is normal and reasonable.
- There is no evidence of harassment or abusive contact.
- ICO guidance explicitly states that persistence and follow-up are not indicators of vexatiousness.
5. Public Interest and Serious Purpose
- NaVCIS operates within police systems (PNC LoS markers, referrals, seizures) yet is funded through an incentive-based model:
- £200 per referral;
- £1,000 + 8% of bottom-book value per UK seizure;
- Higher fees for overseas seizures.
- Independent bodies (World Bank StAR Initiative, Spotlight on Corruption, Transparency International) warn that reward-per-recovery models create risks of perverse incentives and require strong transparency safeguards.
- NaVCIS activity directly impacts individuals’ property rights, especially where classification of “stolen” vs “obtained by fraud” determines title under English law.
- Police seizure is discretionary under PACE; property may lawfully be left with an innocent possessor pending enquiries.
- In this context, scrutiny of processes, data accuracy, and NaVCIS/FLA financial arrangements is plainly in the public interest.
6. NPCC’s Failure to Consider Information Held by NaVCIS (s.3(2)(b))
- NPCC relies heavily on NaVCIS-generated data for national purposes (FOI 422/2024 confirms NaVCIS supplies referral and seizure data to NPCC).
- NPCC may therefore hold information on its behalf within the meaning of s.3(2)(b).
- NPCC took no steps to ascertain what NaVCIS held before claiming burden — a procedural defect.
7. ICO’s Errors
- The ICO accepted NPCC’s claims at face value without requiring evidence.
- The ICO did not address the applicability of s.12 or s.16.
- The ICO failed to consider the serious purpose/public interest, contrary to Dransfield.
8. Conclusion and Relief Sought
- The NPCC has not shown that the Appellant’s request is vexatious under s.14(1).
- The Appellant has acted reasonably and for a legitimate public purpose.
- The NPCC’s refusal is procedurally and substantively flawed.
- The Appellant respectfully requests that the Tribunal:
- Allows the appeal;
- Sets aside the ICO’s Decision Notice;
- Directs the NPCC to issue a fresh response under section 1 FOIA, properly considering sections 12, 16, and (where applicable) 3(2)(b).
[1] Removed – the request post-dates the subject request, flowed from it
