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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 >> SH (Iran) & Anor v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWCA Civ 1469 (12 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1469.html Cite as: [2015] Imm AR 352, [2015] INLR 272, [2014] EWCA Civ 1469 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
SIMLER J
CO/1067/2012; CO/10240/2012;
CO/1363/2012; CO/3550/2012
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
BURTON J
CO/528/2012
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL AGAINST THE DISMISSAL OF CLAIMS FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW Between : SH (IRAN) NA (IRAN) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL AGAINST THE REFUSAL OF PERMISSION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW Between : AN (IRAN) SJ (IRAN) BA (IRAN) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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CASE NUMBER: C4/2013/1851 IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT BURTON J CO/528/2012 IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW Between : BA (ETHIOPIA) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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PAUL TURNER (instructed by Barnes Harrild & Dyer Solicitors) for the Appellant.
JULIE ANDERSON (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent.
Hearing dates: 2nd & 3rd October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis :
Introduction
Background facts
(1) SH (Iran)
(2) NA (Iran)
(3) AN (Iran)
(4) SJ (Iran)
(5) BA (Iran)
(6) BA (Ethiopia)
The legal background
The principal issues on the applications
The judgments below
(a) The judgment of Simler J
" the policy applicable to the cases in the legacy programme to be applied by CRD (and later CAAU) remained at all material times the general law as it stood at the time of consideration of an applicant's case in the same way as elsewhere in UKBA . The legacy programme created no new rights."
I agree with that.
"45. However, there is a difference between an aim or aspiration to conclude unresolved cases and an obligation (whether as a matter of legal obligation or by reference to a policy) to do so. To succeed on this argument, the Claimants must establish a commitment the breach of which amounts to a public law error. The evidence does not establish anything more in my judgment, than an aim to consider every case and make a decision in every case that was capable of being decided. There was no binding commitment made by Dr Reid when the Legacy Programme was established, whether to Parliament, the public, or to each legacy applicant to conclude these cases, still less to do so by any particular date (see paragraph 102 Geraldo and following). Nor is there any material to establish a binding commitment or policy adopted to do so at any later stage.
46. Since inclusion of a case within the legacy programme gave rise to no new rights or additional expectation of the grant of leave, the only expectation an individual could have is to have his or her case considered in accordance with current law and practice, and if leave was not granted removal could therefore be expected. Accordingly, it is difficult to see why once a person has received a decision refusing the grant of leave and is therefore to be removed, but has not actually been removed, that person's case under the legacy programme should not be regarded as concluded by such a decision."
She went on at a later stage to say this:
"61. Although the Legacy Programme had, as its intention, the sorting out of the backlog of cases by granting some sort of leave or removing individuals, that aim or rationale does not entail that a person neither granted leave nor removed has not yet had a "legacy decision" or a concluded case for these purposes.
62. The purpose of the legacy programme was to review the backlog and to divide cases into those who should be given leave to remain from those who ought to be removed. Moreover, since the legacy programme was operational only and gave rise to no additional rights or expectations of the grant of leave, if leave was not granted following a review, removal could be expected. But as the court held in Che, there is a difference between a decision granting leave and a refusal of leave resulting in a removal decision and the commencement of the removal process. Inevitably, the process for removal is not instantaneous and may be lengthy. However, it begins with notification that leave has not been granted and that removal will therefore take place. At this point, an individual so notified has received a valid legacy decision: his case has been reviewed, it has been concluded that leave is not appropriate, so that he has had his legacy decision, and the removal process, starting with notification has begun. The mere fact that such an individual has not been removed (even after a number of years), does not alter this position and mean that his case under the legacy programme has not been concluded. Any delay in enforcing the individual's removal gives rise to no legal rights or unlawfulness the individual is not only free to, but legally obliged to, leave the UK voluntarily."
(b) The judgment of Lewis J
"23. The position, in my judgment, is this. What the Defendant has to do is decide to grant leave, which she has declined to do, or seek to effect removal. She has started that latter process quite clearly in the letter of 16 September 2010 because she has decided as a starting point that there is no reason why removal should not go ahead. So, in my judgment, it is semantic to try and say there has to be a conclusion, and conclusion means removal. A more realistic approach would be there has to be a decision on the relevant criteria, and either the grant of leave or the beginning of the process to effect removal. And, in my judgment, on the material before me, the Secretary of State is in the process of doing that last stage."
Disposition
"102. I find it quite impossible, on any objective reading of those statements, bearing in mind the context in which they were spoken (a Ministerial statement setting out a number of aims and objectives for the new UKBA) to read such an unambiguous binding commitment or promise to 'legacy individuals' into Dr Reid's words. At most, in my judgment, they were aspirational, setting out a clear declaration of an objective namely an aim to deal with the unresolved cases within five years or less but nothing more.
103. It is significant in this context that the claimants have chosen not to pursue their claims based on 'legitimate expectation'. Such a claim could not begin to be made out absent evidence of a clear unambiguous statement of practice or promise from which it would be contrary to principles of good administration for the Minister to resile, absent good reason to do so (see Laws LJ in R (Nadarajah) v SSHD [2005] EWCA Civ 1363, at paras 68, 69) which evidence in my judgment is clearly absent here. The only legitimate expectation which these claimants had was that their cases be determined by the current law and policy as at the date of determination and this is what each obtained."
Those findings were endorsed by the Court of Appeal in refusing permission to appeal. I would approve the decision of King J. Indeed, it would be surprising if the decision had been otherwise. It would connote that, if actual removal were not capable of being effected, the Secretary of State may have inflexibly committed himself to a position whereby applicants are necessarily to be granted leave to remain which they might not otherwise have got under the Rules (including paragraphs 395C and then 353B and the holistic approach there applicable). Any other conclusion would also not be consistent with Dr Reid's express statements to the House that there would be no amnesty and that "all cases will be dealt with on their individual merits". I would also take the opportunity of expressing my respectful agreement with the judgment of the Extra Division of the Court of Session (Inner House) on this point in the case of DM v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] CSIH 29.
"6. At the heart of much of the litigation over the years have been eventually largely fruitless and in my judgment misconceived attempts by Claimants to show that there was a special and more favourable policy which should be applied to those in the Legacy Programme, derived from a target or aim as to the date by when decisions would be made. This target then was elevated into a legitimate expectation; missing it was said to create unlawful delay such as to create an historic injustice, leading to arguments that particular forms of leave should be granted, that policies should be treated as frozen, that particular periods of residence should be given great weight, all deriving from a misreading of policy and especially of alleged policy documents at a level below the EIG."
"24. The first point to note about the Legacy Scheme is that it did not confer additional substantive rights on the Legacy cohort. Its purpose was administrative and organisational. It bore no resemblance to an amnesty: see Geraldo v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWHC 2703 (Admin), at paragraph 40 (King J). The substantial first instance jurisprudence on the Legacy Scheme was recently and admirably reviewed by Ouseley J in Jaku v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWHC 605 (Admin)
25. To a significant degree, reliance on the Legacy Scheme in this case reflects that misconception. The reality is that if a legacy case was being considered at a time when Paragraph 395C was in force, it was applied. If consideration came after the repeal of Paragraph 395C, it was not applied. Absent other features bringing a case within the Rashid principle (and, as I have held, there was none in this case), being a legacy case conferred no particular entitlement on the appellant and he cannot build a claim of entitlement to consideration under Paragraph 395C on the mere fact of his having been within the legacy cohort."
Conclusion
"22. In the end, the Claimant's case stands or falls on the mantra that legacy cases are special, that effectively the only two choices are removal or indefinite leave to remain, and that anyone who happens to have been accepted as a legacy case is entitled to benefit from that special treatment. That has been comprehensively rejected in this Court, for reasons which have been extensively set out in earlier judgments."
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
Lord Justice Aikens: