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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Amarteifio & Ors v Entry Clearance Officer, Accra [2006] EWCA Civ 1758 (24 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1758.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1758 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No. TH/54059/2003, TH/54065/2003, TH/54075/2003]
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
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JACKSON AMATEI AMARTEIFIO | ||
JONAS AMARKWEI AMARTEIFIO | ||
LEONARD AMARLEI AMARTEIFIO | CLAIMANTS/APPELLANTS | |
- v - | ||
THE ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER, ACCRA | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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MR P PATEL (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"You have applied for a visa with a view to admission to the United Kingdom for settlement as the sons of [the sponsor] but I am not satisfied that you are related as claimed or that your mother is still not living. Furthermore, I am not satisfied that there are serious and compelling family or other considerations which [would] make your exclusion from the United Kingdom undesirable, or that you will be maintained adequately without recourse to public funds."
"Even if she had, she had no evidence that the documents had been served on the Home Office Presenting Officer and the rules then in force, the Immigration and Asylum Appeals Procedure Rules 2003, provide at rule 48.6 that an adjudicator must not take account of any evidence that has not been made available to all the parties."
There is no evidence that the material had been provided to the Home Office Presenting Officer. Accordingly, there is nothing relating to the subsequent submission of that immaterial document that can now give rise to any error of law on the part of the adjudicator or the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal such as to support these appeals.
"I indicated that it was his responsibility to ensure that in the absence of a full file from the respondent there will be no prejudice to his clients' appeals, for example if there was evidence missing about maintenance and accommodation at the date of the decision (the solicitor elected to proceed, stating that the balance was still in his favour, in his view, of the appeal succeeding today rather than being adjourned)."
Then a little later:
"I refused the adjournment, being of the opinion that the respondent had had sufficient time to prepare and comply with the requirements in relation to the service of documents and that it would prejudice the appellants if their appeal did not proceed without any further undue delay."
In the light of that, it plainly cannot be said that there was a procedural irregularity of which the appellants can now complain. Through their solicitor they had the opportunity to place whatever documents were considered to be relevant before the adjudicator. In fact, a bundle of some 149 pages was produced. The solicitor opposed an adjournment. It seems to me that there is no question of any legal error having arisen in relation to that aspect of the case.
"The sponsor stated that at the time of the appellants' application for entry clearance he had three jobs: one with Barnet Council, one at C. B. Baggs Group Ltd. and also one as a security guard in Fenwicks store at Brent Cross. The sponsor stated that from all three he earned in total about £700 per month. Also in 1999 his wife…had worked at Edgware Hospital. In the appellants' bundle there appear copies of payslips in respect of both the sponsor and the sponsor's wife for the relevant period. The payslips for the sponsor's wife appear to show that she earned between £140 and £158 or so each fortnight in July, 1999, increasing to just over £200 per fortnight in October. These documents, combined with the oral evidence of the sponsor indicate [that] there was a total net income into the household of between £1000 and £1,100 net per month at the time of the applications."
Later in her determination she said this at paragraph 48:
"Where I do have difficulty is with the sponsor's ability to maintain the three appellants adequately without recourse to public funds. On his own evidence, his own net income just covered the rent on the property, give or take £10 or so. The income of the sponsor's wife at the time at its highest appeared to be about £100 per week. Thus, the family of five would have to be fed and clothed from that sum, with little more than £20 per week being available for the maintenance of each family member once the family lived together in the United Kingdom. I find that it would be impossible for the sponsor to maintain the appellants adequately on such a small sum."
"In any event the adjudicator erred in failing to properly consider the documentary evidence before her in addition to the sponsor's recollection of his earnings 5 years previously in oral evidence."
"… the household income was around £1000 or £1100 per month. After rent this left £300 or £400 per month which averages £75 per person in a five person household per month. The adjudicator gives no proper reasons as to why she considers £20 per person per week to be inadequate to cover food and clothing for 2 adults and 3 children, particularly given the sponsor and his wife's ability to accumulate significant savings …"
On this basis it was suggested that the adjudicator had not been entitled to conclude that it was impossible for the sponsors to maintain the appellants adequately. It is to be observed that in the second of the three sub-grounds of appeal there is a broad reference to a failure properly to consider the documentary evidence but it is not further particularised. In the third of the sub-grounds, the point being made seems to accept the computation of the adjudicator but criticised it for an inadequacy of reasons.
"The adjudicator erred in finding that the appellants could not be maintained for £25 per week as she gave no reason for such a finding and the fact that the sponsor had savings should have been taken into account."
As I have already related in connection with the first ground, the actual savings balance in August 1999 was of little potential consequence to the matter the adjudicator had had to decide.
"15. There is no error in the adjudicator's finding that the appellants and the sponsor and his wife could not adequately be maintained on either £310 or £410 per month. The tenancy agreement was in respect of rent only. In addition the sponsor would have to pay for fuel, water charges, council tax, food, clothing and travel expenses. There does not appear to have been before the adjudicator any breakdown of the sponsor's living expenses and it is, of course, for the appellants to prove that the maintenance is adequate.
"16. The adjudicator did not have before her details of any savings at the time of the decision. In ou[r] view it was not foreseeable that a couple with a maximum of £410 a month after rent who say they were sending £105 of that to the appellants, could save £4,486 from that sum between the date of the decision 3.8.1999 and 30.11.2001, the first date given in the extract of the bank book. It would mean savings of about £160 a month leaving the sponsor and his wife either £245 or £145 a month to cover all their living expenses. It does not appear that any evidence was given about how these savings were accumulated."
"In our view, the time has now come to accept that a mistake of fact giving rise to unfairness is a separate head of challenge in an appeal on a point of law, at least in those statutory contexts where the parties share an interest in co-operating to achieve the correct result. Asylum law is undoubtedly such an area. Without seeking to lay down a precise code, the ordinary requirements for a finding of unfairness are apparent from the above analysis of the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board Case [[1999] 2 AC 330]. First, there must have been a mistake as to an existing fact, including a mistake as to the availability of evidence on a particular matter. Secondly, the factual evidence must have been "established", in the sense that it was uncontentious and objectively verifiable. Thirdly, the appellant (or his advisors) must not have been responsible for the mistake. Fourthly, the mistake must have played a material (not necessarily decisive) part in the tribunal's reasoning."
Order: Appeal dismissed.