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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MB (Somalia) v Entry Clearance Officer [2008] EWCA Civ 102 (20 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/102.html Cite as: [2008] INLR 590, [2008] Imm AR 490, [2008] EWCA Civ 102 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Insert Lower Court Judge Name here
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
MB (SOMALIA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Katherine Olley (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Thursday 24 January 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson :
"317 The requirements to be met by a person seeking indefinite leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom as the parent, grandparent or other dependent relative of a person present and settled in the United Kingdom are that the person:
(i) is related to a person present and settled in the United Kingdom in one of the following ways:
(a) mother or grandmother who is a widow aged 65 years or over; or
(b) father or grandfather who is a widower aged 65 years or over; or
(c) parent or grandparents travelling together of whom at least one is aged 65 or over; or
(d) a parent or grandparent aged 65 or over who has remarried but cannot look to the spouse or children of the second marriage for financial support; and where the person settled in the United Kingdom is able and willing to maintain the parent or grandparent and any spouse or child of the second marriage who would be admissible as a dependant; or
(e) a parent or grandparent under the age of 65 if living alone outside the United Kingdom in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances and mainly dependent financially on relatives settled in the United Kingdom; and
(f) the son, daughter, sister, brother, uncle or aunt over the age of 18 if living alone outside the United Kingdom in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances and mainly dependent financially on relatives settled in the United Kingdom; and
(ii) is joining or accompanying a person who is present and settled in the United Kingdom or who is on the same occasion being admitted for settlement; and
(iii) is financially wholly or mainly dependent on the relative present and settled in the United Kingdom; and
(iv) can, and will, be accommodated adequately, together with any dependants, without recourse to public funds, in accommodation which the sponsor owns or occupies exclusively; and
(iva) can, and will, be maintained adequately, together with any dependants, without recourse to public funds; and
(v) has no other close relative in his own country to whom he could turn for financial support; and
(vi) if seeking leave to enter, holds a valid United Kingdom entry clearance for entry in this capacity."
"Parents and Grandparents
1. Introduction
The requirements of Paragraphs 317 -319 must be met in all cases including the maintenance and accommodation requirements. For further guidance see Part 8, Section 1 Annex I – maintenance and accommodation. In addition to the normal requirements applicants seeking leave to enter or remain under the provisions of Paragraph 317(i)(e) must additionally be living alone in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances.
Widowed, single, separated or divorced parents of any age may also be considered under Paragraph 317(i)(e) and also parents travelling together who are both under 65."
The facts
The first AIT decision
"56. Article 8 of the 1950 European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (the Human Rights Convention) is advanced on behalf of the appellant. It is settled that this country has the right under international law to control the entry of non-nationals into its territory. Indeed, the effective enforcement of immigration control is a legitimate aim under Article 8.2. I fully acknowledge the concerns of the sponsor and the appellant's other family in this country and that the sponsor has visited the appellant in Kenya following her departure from Somalia. I also note that the sponsor left Somalia in 1995, leaving the appellant in Somalia, together with her own mother. It was seven years later that the appellant left Somalia and travelled to Kenya. She and the sponsor have therefore been apart for some ten years. The sponsor is able to visit the appellant, his mother, in Kenya and, indeed, has done so in the past. He continues to maintain her and he agrees that he would be in a position to continue to maintain and support her in Kenya in the future. I have made my findings above with regard to the medical conditions as described by both the appellant and the sponsor.
57. I note the judgment of the court of Appeal in Huang and Others and that I may allow an appeal (against removal or deportation) brought on Article 8 grounds if, but only if, I conclude that the case is so exceptional on its particular facts that the imperative of proportionality demands an outcome in the appellant's favour notwithstanding that she cannot succeed under the Immigration Rules. I would have to find that the case is truly exceptional. I take this judgment to apply also to appeals such as this where an appellant is seeking entry into the United Kingdom and raises Article 8 on her behalf.
58. I take into account the age of the appellant; my findings under the Immigration Rules; the ability of the sponsor to visit the appellant and to continue to maintain her in Kenya; my finding that I relied more upon her description of her health than that of the sponsor; and all the submissions made to me. I find this not to be a truly exceptional case as envisaged within Huang and Others. I find that the decision of the respondent to refuse entry to the appellant is proportionate to the legitimate aims of the respondent in seeking to enforce effective immigration control and is lawful. I find that there are no substantial grounds for believing that the rights of this appellant or the sponsor, under Article 8 of the Human Rights Convention are violated by the respondent's decision."
The AIT decision on reconsideration
"…although he did not appreciate it, the Immigration Judge's decision to look at the facts of the appellant's case by reference to paragraph 317(i)(e), in order to see if she could be said to be living alone in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances, is precisely the approach required of caseworkers by Chapter 8, section 6, Annex V (Dependant Relatives, Parents and Grandparents) of the Immigration Directorate's Instructions. This states that:-
Widowed, single, separated or divorced parents of any age may also be considered under paragraph 317(i)(e)…"
"41. In the present case, the distinction drawn between widows and separated women is similarly justifiable. The rationale for including widows cannot be dismissed as purely evidential in nature. On such a view, most if not all the distinctions drawn by the Rules could be so characterised, in that they are driven by the desire to identify those who, as a general matter, should be accorded means of access to and residence in the United Kingdom. A widow is by definition a person whose husband has died and who, whatever else her position may be, cannot look to him for companionship and support. Marital separation, by contrast, is a concept that can cover a wide range of different factual and legal circumstances. Any judicial rewriting of paragraph 317(i)(a) so as to include separated women would not only result in casting the net far wider than the individual circumstances of the appellant; it is also unnecessary in the light of the appellate structure of the 2002 Act, whereby an appellant can achieve success by invoking human rights as a free-standing ground of appeal and showing that, despite her failure to come within the Rules, she is entitled to succeed under Article 8 (see paragraph 26 above)."
"43. The policy inherent in paragraph 317, whereby a different set of requirements applies to certain persons aged sixty-five or over, compared with others who must show that they satisfy the high threshold inherent in paragraphs (e) and (f), is not to be taken as a recognition by the Secretary of State that any dependant relative aged sixty-five or over is as such entitled to be admitted, because to do otherwise would violate Article 8. Many people today enjoy good or relatively good health, after attaining the age of sixty-five. Even if the requirement as to age in paragraph 317 represented a recognition by the Secretary of State that, in general terms, a person aged sixty-five or over is more likely than a younger person to experience illness or infirmity, attaining the age of sixty-five is plainly not the pivot on which turns a person's entitlement to enter or remain on human rights grounds. If it were, there would be no scope in such cases for the requirements in paragraph 317(iii) to (v). The instruction at paragraph 3.2 of section 6 of the IDI is in no sense an acknowledgment to the contrary. It is an expression of pragmatism and compassion on the part of The Secretary of State, which does not have the effect of enhancing the human rights of the class of persons concerned.
44. So far as the issue of being separated as opposed to widowed is concerned, the Tribunal has already found that the distinction drawn by the Rules is such that, on a proper analysis, there is no lacuna in paragraph 317(i)(a). There is a good reason why widows are treated differently from separated women. The same is true of widowers in paragraph 317(i)(b). But even if we are wrong, the weight to be accorded to that factor, when addressing the issue of proportionality, must necessarily be affected by (1) the policy of the Secretary of State, in paragraph 1 of section 6, to bring widowed, single, separated and divorced parents of any age within the scope of paragraph 317(i)(e); and (2) the finding of the Immigration Judge, applying paragraph 317(i)(e), that the appellant did not meet the requirement of living alone in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances. The Immigration Judge's findings on this issue are well-reasoned and cogent. Even if there were to be a lacuna in paragraph 317(i)(a), of the kind asserted by the appellant, it cannot realistically be said that his decision might have been different."
"…Given that the Immigration Judge took the approach he did to paragraph 317(i)(e), his specific findings on Article 8 at paragraphs 56 to 58 of the determination cannot be criticised. Having examined the appellant's case on the basis of paragraph 317(i)(e), and having found that she failed to comply with the Immigration Rules, the Immigration Judge considered whether Article 8 nevertheless demanded a decision in her favour. In so doing, he plainly was aware of the appellant's age, as he had found it to be. He had regard to the fact that the sponsor, now in his late thirties, had been apart for some ten years from the appellant and that he was able to visit her in Kenya as, indeed, he had done in the recent past. The Immigration Judge also had regard to his clear and detailed findings regarding the appellant's medical condition. There was, furthermore, ample evidence to the effect that the appellant's life with her friends in Mombassa, taken together with the other findings of the Immigration Judge, was not such as to compel the conclusion that her case was one where, having taken into account all the considerations weighing in the respondent's favour, the appellant's family life would be so prejudiced as to breach Article 8."
The issues
The first issue: the true construction of rule 317(i)
"In any event, apart from the Convention, I would have assumed that Parliament did not intend to create any greater impediment than necessary to the ability of those settled in this country to enjoy family life here. It is therefore in my view appropriate to adopt a purposive construction to the rules, particularly as they are not to be construed strictly as if they were statutory provisions, but sensibly in accordance with their natural meaning and purpose, bearing in mind that they are not intended to enact a precise code but frequently give only a broad indication of how a discretion is to be exercised."
The second issue: is para 317(i)(a) irrational because it excludes separated women aged 65 or over?
The third issue: is para 317(i)(a) unjustifiably discriminatory as between widows and separated women contrary to the appellant's rights under article 14 of the Convention?
"Secondly, while the courts, as guardians of the right of the individual to equal respect, will carefully examine the reasons offered for any discrimination in the first category, decisions about the general public interest which underpin differences in treatment in the second category are very much a matter for the democratically elected branches of government."
"The Secretary of State clearly has power under the Immigration Act to make distinctions in the Immigration Rules. A distinction between one's mother (or stepmother) on the one hand and one's spouse's mother on the other hand is a distinction which is obviously justifiable as the sort of distinction which had to be drawn when the Secretary of State decides which family members are to be entitled to settlement in the Untied Kingdom. It is not a matter in which a right to respect for the individuality of the human being is at stake. It is a matter of social policy, well within the competence of the Secretary of State and Parliament. We very much doubt whether the situation of mothers is so closely analogous to that of mothers-in-law that a distinction between them needs any justification at all. Whether or not it does, the difference between them in this context is not a matter of human rights. "
The fourth issue: article 8 of the Convention
"Even when an individual's circumstances fall squarely within the rationale of a relevant immigration rule or policy and so accord with its "spirit" albeit not its "letter", a "near miss" does not of itself mean that an expulsion decision constitutes a disproportionate interference with an appellant's right to respect for private or family life".
Overall conclusion
Postscript
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
"Widowed, single, separated or divorced parents of any age may also be considered under paragraph 317(i)(e) and also parents travelling together who are both under 65."
Lord Justice Laws: