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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 >> Sabir & Ors, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWCA Civ 1173 (18 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1173.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1173 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Deputy Judge Helen Mountfield QC
CO/10639/2013
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of (1) Shahid SABIR & Other and (2) Asif MEHMOOD) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Mathew Gullick (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
(A) Introduction
(B) The background facts
(A)
"(1) Advertising or marketing material, including printouts of online advertising, that has been published locally or nationally, showing the applicant's name (and the name of the business if applicable) together with the business activity;
(2) Article(s) or online links to articles(s) in a newspaper or other publication showing the applicant's name (and the name of the business if applicable) together with the business activity;
(3) Information from a trade fair(s) at which the applicant has had a stand or given a presentation to market his business, showing the applicant's name (and the name of the business if applicable) together with the business activity, or
(4) Personal registration with a trade body linked to the applicant's occupation."
(B)
"... one or more contracts showing trading. If a contract is not an original the applicant must sign each page of the contract. The contract must show:
(1) the applicant's name and the name of the business;
(2) the service provided by the applicant's business; and
(3) the name of the other party or parties involved in the contract and their contact details, including their full address, postal code, landline phone number and any email address"
The judge called these requirements, appearing in sub-paragraphs (iii) and (iv) respectively, "the genuine business requirement" and "the contract details requirement".
(C) The proceedings in the High Court
"The issue of course before you today is as to the rationality of the rules…".
"I am sorry; this submission has taken me somewhat by surprise…The challenge that has been advanced by the claimants is of course two-fold; firstly that both the requirements that they failed to meet are irrational; and secondly, or in the alternative, that they should have been contacted in order to correct any errors under the [evidential] flexibility rules.
If it is now being submitted that the claimants in fact submitted material that satisfied the rules and therefore their applications ought to have been granted irrespective of any other matters, then as it were that is news to me".
"I am grateful to my learned friend. I do apologise for the compilation of the bundle; it is somewhat out of my control, but I would simply observe that I believe the reason why this may be something which has not come to everyone's attention previously is because these documents do not appear to have been in the claim bundle (inaudible)".
Then the judge said,
"All right. What I propose to do, Mr Saini, is to hear your submissions on the law on those two grounds which are the grounds that I have understood and you and Mr Gullick can talk outside about what was in fact submitted and it may be that the documents exist which mean that your clients could meet that requirement anyway because they could submit them in a fresh application".
"33. In my judgment, the evidential requirements of paragraph 41-SD(c)(iii) cannot be said to go beyond that which the Secretary of State may legitimately require for this purpose. That paragraph provides a range of types of evidence which can be provided to demonstrate these matters. One satisfactory form of proof is marketing material containing sufficient evidence of the genuineness of the business and of the entrepreneur's link to it. Marketing materials, which are within the applicant's own control, can reasonably be expected to explain (as required) what the business is, the business name and to demonstrate the link between the applicant or applicants and the business".
"36. I accept, on the basis of the observations of the Upper Tribunal in Shebl that the Secretary of State is entitled to require evidence of genuine trading, and must be entitled to require sufficient details of genuine contract or contracts to make enquiries if she wishes to do so. I accept that she has a wide discretion as to the means of doing this. I see the sense of requiring a physical address for such a client, to enable the genuineness of its existence to be checked easily if required. I see the sense of requiring some other form of ascertainable contact details.
37. However, I also accept the Claimants' argument that by making an absolute requirement that the client business must have a landline telephone and must contain details of it in the contractual documentation in order for that documentation to 'count' as proof of genuine trading, the Secretary of State has created an evidential rule which is partial between those who contract with a business which happens to have a landline (but need not have any mobile telephone or email details) and those who contract with a business which happens to have only a mobile telephone, (though also email details) or where the landline details can be supplied but are not included in the contractual documentation itself. I see no rational justification for that distinction. ... "
"7. In respect of the requirements of paragraph 41-SD9(c)(iii) [sic] of Appendix A, points were not granted because the material which the Claimants had submitted with their application by way of advertising material in attempt to show that they were working, which constituted on-line advertising material, did not include the nature of the business linked to the Claimants' names. In fact, there is material in the bundle (such as business cards and a website entry) which in combination, do link the Claimants' names to the business and would – if they had been submitted – appear to have satisfied the requirements of paragraph 41-SD9(c)(iii)(1) [sic]. Whether this material was created after the application or before, it was not suggested that this was submitted at the relevant time, and it was not part of the case before me that the Defendant had erred by failing to accept that such material existed."
"Observation: I am bound to respectfully mention as a potential point of appeal that the evidence of what advertising material was submitted has been reversed and the opposite actually applies. It would appear the Court may have misunderstood the evidence submitted by the Claimants in this regard.
Clarification: The Claimants confirmed in their witness statements before the Court, that by way of advertising material, their OISC representative submitted printouts from their company website under cover of letter dated 19th September 2012 [see Trial Bundle/Part1/A61 and A109-A111]. This evidence was supplemented by the submission of their leaflet and business cards under cover of letter dated 29th March 2013 in response to an information request from the Defendant made to their OISC representative [see Trial Bundle/Part2/A34-A38] which took place before their applications were refused. At the hearing, confusion arose as to whether the online advertising material was in fact sent by their OISC representative but was omitted from consideration by the Defendant's Refusal Letters. That argument it is true to say was not pursued on their behalf[1]. Nonetheless, the Claimants have always maintained that their leaflet and business cards were submitted and this is not in contention as those materials are clearly mentioned in the Defendant's Refusal Letters [see Trial Bundle/Part2/A17 and Trial Bundle/Part1/A15 respectively]. Therefore, the complaint in the Refusal Letter was that the advertising material did not state the nature of the Claimants' business related to leaflet, not the website (as wrongly stated in the draft judgment) and it was additionally complained by the Defendant that the advertising material did not state the names of either Claimant.
Conclusion: Therefore, the evidence proven to have been submitted consist [sic] of the business cards and leaflet and consideration still needs to be given as to whether these materials in combination link the Claimants' names to the business. Consequently, I am obliged to state that it is not clear why Ground 2 fails based on current reasoning".
"I am conscious that the opportunity to submit post-judgment corrections is not meant to engender further argument between the parties and so have not at this stage responded to Mr Saini's 'observations as to outstanding matters'. If the Deputy Judge wants the Secretary of State to respond to Mr Saini's observations please do let me know".
"Counsel for the Claimant did not appear to have full instructions on what had been submitted by the OISC representative at the relevant time, and in observations on the draft judgment (received the day before the judgment was due to be handed down, and too late for me to seek observations from counsel for the Respondent), has raised observations about what was or was not submitted. I am not in a position to decide what of the evidence in the bundle before me was submitted at the relevant time, but in any event, understood the claim to be based on a submission as to the legality of the rules. Counsel for the Claimant did not advance an argument that it had been Wednesbury unreasonable for the applications to be refused based on the Secretary of State's own interpretation of the Immigration Rules".
(D) The application for permission to appeal to this court
"SUMMARY OF GROUNDS OF APPEAL
The Appellants respectfully submit that the Deputy Judge has committed a material error of fact in her judgment, concerning Ground 2 below. This error renders the judgment liable to be quashed for unlawfulness and unfairness, pursuant to E v Secretary of state for the Home Department [2004] EWCA Civ 49 and R (Alconbury Ltd) v Secretary of State [2001] UKHL 23.
The Appellants ask the Court to note that whilst Ground 2 was unsuccessful below, Ground 1 fell to succeed in theory given that the immigration rule in question was deemed to be ultra vires.
But for Ground 2's erroneous failure (given that the Deputy Judge made clear findings that the immigration rules were ultra vires on Wednesbury irrationality terms), the Appellants would have succeeded on Ground 1.
Consequently, the Appellants request this Court to quash the judgment in relation to Ground 2 due to a material error of fact, but to uphold the judgment in relation to Ground 1, which findings should form part of a substantive judgment and result in the Appellants' resultant success on both grounds.
CONCLUSION
The Appellant maintains that the Secretary of State's decisions are unlawful for the reasons given.
Accordingly permission should be granted.
The appeal ought to be allowed"
"18. The issue underlying Ground 1 of the claims was whether the Appellants satisfied the immigration rules regarding advertising requirements.
19. The Appellants highlight that, submissions and arguments aside, the Deputy Judge herself accepts that the material in the claim bundle before her indicated that the Claimants'/Appellants' names were linked to their business and would appear to satisfy the immigration rules had it been submitted". [italics in original]
"24. Therefore, whilst the arguments advanced on the Appellants behalf focussed on the vires of the immigration rules, the Appellants have always maintained throughout these proceedings that their leaflet and business cards were submitted and were before the Secretary of State when a decision was taken and the Respondent has never sought to deny this fact.
25. Consequently, if the Deputy Judge's conclusion is that Ground 1 would [have] succeeded if those advertising materials had been submitted, then the claim should have clearly succeeded on Ground 1 because those materials were submitted as confirmed in the Refusal Letters from the Secretary of State; and had this happened, the vires argument regarding Ground 1 would have become academic and fallen away". [emphasis and italics in original]
"37. ... (a) Re the Advertising materials requirement: The advertising material submitted by the Appellants and before the Secretary of State demonstrates that their business was linked to their identities across their advertising material, namely their leaflet and business cards; and
(b) Re the Contract 'Landline' requirement: The immigration rules requiring the creation and submission of a contract with a third party client where a landline number must be specified are Wednesbury irrational and are stuck down".
The skeleton thereafter also asked for declarations and other orders in similar terms to those sought below. However (a) and (b) (quoted above) were at the forefront of the relief section and were entirely new.
"It is arguable that there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal. The effect of the mix-up after judgment was reserved requires proper consideration, and the appellants should be allowed to argue their grounds of appeal, as elucidated in their skeleton argument".
(E) The application to set aside the permission to appeal order
"52.9 – (1) The appeal court may-…
(b) set aside permission to appeal in whole or in part;…
(2) The court will only exercise its powers under paragraph (1) where there is a compelling reason for doing so…"
"The power to set aside a grant of permission to appeal is given by Rule 52.9(2) of the Civil Procedure Rules and requires a compelling reason for so doing. I would remind those thinking of making such applications, as the note in the White Book reminds them, that this is not an opportunity to have an early shot at knocking out a weak appeal or an appeal which is now thought to be weaker than it once was. But it must be the case that if a respondent can show the court that the judge was misled by an appellant, not necessarily deliberately, into giving permission to appeal, that may well be a compelling reason within the rule. It must, however, it seems to me, involve showing (a) that the materials put before the judge were inaccurate or incomplete; (b) that these deficiencies had a bearing upon the grounds on which permission to appeal was given; and (c) very importantly, that but for them permission to appeal would not have been given".
"The Deputy Judge stated in her draft judgment that had certain evidence been submitted, the application would have succeeded and the claim for judicial review would also have succeeded; but as that evidence had not been submitted, the claims should fail".
Lord Justice Davis:
Lord Dyson, Master of the Rolls:
Note 1 “However, it is now apparent that the website material only surfaced for the first time during these proceedings when it was attached to the Defendant’s Supplementary Bundle of Documents and so could not have been raised sooner than that anyhow [Trial Bundle/Part1/A60-A90]”. (Mr Saini’s footnote.) [Back]