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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 >> Jayaraman, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 2545 (15 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2545.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2545 |
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ON APPEAL FROM UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UTJ Martin
JR4369/2016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
The Queen on the Application of Jayaraman |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Julie Anderson (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
The legal framework
"34A. Where an application form is specified, the application or claim must also comply with the following requirements:
…
(iv) if the application form and/or relevant guidance notes require the applicant to provide biometric information, such information must be provided as specified,
(v) an appointment for the purposes specified in subparagraph (iv) must be made and must take place by the dates specified in any subsequent notification by the Secretary of State following receipt of the application, or as agreed by the Secretary of State.
…
34C. Where an application or claim in connection with immigration for which an application form is specified does not comply with the requirements in paragraph 34A… the following applies:
(a) Subject to sub-paragraph (b), the application will be invalid and will not be considered. ...
(b) The decision maker may contact the applicant or their representative in writing and give the applicant a single opportunity to correct any omission or error which renders the application invalid, save for failure to enrol their biometric information. The amended application and/or any requested documents must be received at the address specified in the request within 10 business days of the date on which the request was sent."
The facts
"Thank you for your email, a letter has been sent to Mr [Jayaraman] as directed today.
Please advise your client that they should enrol as soon as possible on receipt of the letter."
"We wrote to you on 17 December 2015 to notify you that your client's application or claim was invalid due to non-enrolment of biometrics. We told you the specific reasons for this and gave you the opportunity to provide the required fee, additional information or documentation. Your client has failed to do so within the specified timescale and, for the reasons set out below your client's application or claim is being rejected as invalid."
The reason for the decision was given later in the document in these terms:
"You must attend at a participating Post Office, to provide your biographical and biometric information by the dates specified in any such notification we send you following receipt of your application, or as otherwise agreed by us. Despite being asked to do this on two occasions, your client has failed to enrol their biometrics in the give timeframe." (sic)
The letter informed Mr Jayaraman that his passports were being retained and that he was liable to removal. He was also served with notice in form IS.96 that he was liable to be detained and that he must report to an immigration official on 10 February.
The decisions of the Upper Tribunal
"4. On the applicant's behalf it is said that the Secretary of State, in response to an email sent from his solicitors on 4 January, varied the timescale within which the applicant should provide his biometric information, and, in issuing a letter saying that she was treating the application as invalid on 22nd January, had acted unlawfully, and it is said the letter referred to in that email of 7 January was never received.
5. With regard to that, I find the grounds do not have merit. The letter was sent, quite properly, as it was requested to, to the applicant's representatives on 17 December. What possessed the representatives to send a letter by second-class post three days before Christmas is beyond me; however, that is what they did, and, not surprisingly, the letter was not received within a reasonable time, or at all. The representatives, having been told that that that letter had not been received, then emailed the Secretary of State, on 4th January, who said that a second letter would be sent. It is reasonable to suppose from that that the Secretary of State was agreeing to amend the timescale. However, the solicitors had the original letter (of which a copy was sent to the applicant on 17th December) and they had the document which had to be taken to the post office by the applicant. The solicitors could and should have indicated to their client that he should take that letter immediately and do as was required. They did not, and indeed did nothing until when, on 22 January, more than 10 days after the email of 7 January, the Secretary of State rejected it as invalid. The fact that the Secretary of State referred only to the letter of 17 December in that letter makes no difference whatsoever.
6. The Secretary of State cannot be said that to have acted unfairly in following the procedures she is required to do, and cannot be held responsible for the actions of the post office or the solicitors in this case, and any remedy that the applicant may have is not against the Secretary of State. For that reason, the grounds are unarguable, and permission is refused."
Submissions
Conclusions
Lady Justice Sharp:
Note 1 Since November 2016, the process is somewhat different: see current Paragraphs 34, 34A and 34B on valid and invalid applications. [Back]