The High Court dismissed an application challenging the lawfulness of a prisoner's transfer from one prison to another after being committed for civil contempt of court. The court found that, although the original committal order specified a particular prison, once lawfully detained, the individual became a 'prisoner' under the relevant legislation, and the prison authorities were entitled to transfer him for operational, safety, and disciplinary reasons. The court rejected arguments that the civil nature of the contempt or the wording of the committal order limited the power to transfer, holding that the legislation applies to all prisoners regardless of the nature of their detention, so long as safety and management considerations justify the transfer.
civil contempt of court – prison transfer – committal order – interpretation of prison legislation – Rules of the Superior Courts (RSC) – Prisons Acts – Criminal Justice (Administration) Act 1914 – prison management – court order compliance – lawfulness of detention – delegation of Ministerial powers – judicial reasoning on transfer powers