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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 >> Kaur & Anor v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWCA Civ 1101 (1 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1101.html Cite as: [2019] WLR(D) 367, [2019] 4 WLR 94, [2020] Imm AR 36, [2019] EWCA Civ 1101 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEGGATT
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
____________________
JADGEEP KAUR ASHMEET SINGH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Zane Malik (instructed by the Government Legal Dept) for the Respondent
Hearing Date: 13 June 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Coulson:
Introduction
The Factual Background
"We have considered your application on behalf of the Secretary of State and your application has been refused under the Immigration Rules. This decision has been made in line with the Immigration Rules.
A decision has also been made to remove you from the UK by way of directions under section 47 of the Immigration Asylum Nationality Act 2006...
You were required to submit documentary evidence that you have been accepted onto a course of study with a licensed Tier 4 Sponsor and you were given a period of 60 days to do so. That period of 60 days ended on 12 October 2015.
This process of delaying consideration for 60 days is now the Secretary of State's standard policy for applicants who find that, through no fault of their own, their sponsor has been revoked. This has been arrived at following a high court ruling which stated that it would be fair to allow all applicants to have 60 days in which to address this change of circumstance, whereas previously the application would have been refused.
"Therefore the Secretary of State is not prepared to give any additional time as 60 days has been deemed to be suitable and, in order to be fair and consistent, this is applied to everyone in that situation. As you have not complied with this request within that 60 day period, we are refusing your application under 322(9) of the Immigration Rules. As you have been refused under one of the general grounds we are also refusing your application under 245ZX(i).
The Secretary of State has considered whether the particular circumstances of your case merit the exercise of discretion. Having considered those circumstances the Secretary of State is satisfied that the refusal remains appropriate and is not prepared to exercise discretion in your favour.
We wrote to you on 13 August 2015 giving you 60 days, to 12 October 2015 in which to submit further information but have not received a response to date. Therefore your application has been assessed on the documentation previously submitted and available at the time of consideration."
"11… The First Appellant claims that none of the colleges that she visited would issue a CAS without sight of her original passport. However, she has not provided any supporting evidence of this because she claims that they refused to issue anything in writing. Frankly, I do not find that credible. 60 day extensions in these circumstances are common, and I have heard many similar cases and I know that it is standard practice of the respondent to retain the original passport and that prospective colleges will accept an attested copy and can be guided by the explanatory leaflet. Whilst the Respondent acted discourteously in failing to answer the First Appellant's letters, I do not think that she acted unfairly under the circumstances. The Respondent discharged her common law duty. The First Appellant had an adequate opportunity to enrol at another institution and had the necessary documentation to do so."
"16 The appellant did not make out before the Judge that the actions of the Secretary of State were in anyway procedurally unfair in providing an attested copy of the passport and an explanatory leaflet. The Secretary of State was arguably entitled to retain the passport in the circumstances of this case where, without lawful leave to remain in the United Kingdom, the appellants were removable. Their application was refused as the first appellant did not have a valid CAS and their leave had been curtailed.
"17 The appellants failed to produce sufficient evidence before the First-Tier Tribunal to show that sufficient inquiries had been made of the colleges in question. The Judge expresses surprise at the claim the colleges were not willing to set out their position in writing and during his submissions Mr Kotas referred to difficulties that may have been experienced by the appellant in doing no more than speaking to a receptionist who, understandably, may have advised the prospective applicant who is not a British national that a copy of their passport was required."
It is common ground that the last sentence of paragraph 16 was wrong: leave had not been curtailed at the time that the original passport was retained. However, as explained below, that error does not affect the outcome of the appeal.
The Second Appeal
Threshold Point
"Failure by an applicant to produce within a reasonable time information, documents or other evidence required by the Secretary of State to establish his claim to remain under these Rules..."
It is not necessary, for the purposes of this appeal, to address Mr Muman's argument that in some way this should be read by adding in words to say that any failure had to be a failure by the applicant and not a third party, although I should say that, for my own part, it is never attractive to interpret rules or regulations by adding in words which are not there. But I accept the narrower formulation that, even if the failure to produce the necessary documents was that of the applicant, if that failure was itself the result of an act or omission on the part of the SSHD, then refusal of leave to remain on the basis of that failure would prima facie be unlawful.
(a) The SSHD had provided the appellant with an attested copy of her passport and what was called an explanatory leaflet which the appellant could have shown to prospective educational institutions.
(b) The appellant provided no evidence to support her bare assertions that such educational institutions as she approached would not agree to take her without sight of her original passport.
(c) The appellant's account to that effect was "not credible".
(d) It was the standard practice of the SSHD to retain a passport. In such circumstances, educational institutions accepted attested copies of a passport and would be guided by the explanatory leaflet.
(e) The Secretary of State's failure to respond to the appellant's letters during the relevant period was discourteous but did not give rise to illegality.
(f) The appellant was given an adequate opportunity to enrol at another institution and had the necessary documentation to do so.
Ground 1: Marcellana
Ground 2: The Discretion to Retain
"17 Retention of documents
Where a document comes into the possession of the Secretary of State or an immigration officer in the course of the exercise of an immigration function, the Secretary of State or an immigration officer may retain the document while he suspects that -
(a) a person to whom the document relates may be liable to removal from the United Kingdom in accordance with a provision of the Immigration Acts and
(b) retention of the document may facilitate the removal."
"(1) This section applies if -
(a) the person who has limited leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom applies to the Secretary of State for variation of the leave,
(b) the application for variation is made before the leave expires and,
(c) the leave expires without the application for variation having been decided.
(2) The leave is extended by virtue of this section during any period when -
(a) the application for variation is neither decided nor withdrawn,
(b) an appeal under section 82(1) of the Nationality, Asylum Immigration Act 2002 could be brought, while the appellant is in the United Kingdom, against the decision on the application for variation... or
(c) an appeal under that section against that decision, brought while the appellant is in the United Kingdom, is pending (within the meaning of section 104 of that Act)."
"Where a valid passport is retained and removal could take place on that passport, it is not necessary to retain original copies of other valuable documents although you must retain photocopies of them. It is necessary to retain original documents however where they may be needed to effect the removal of the spouse or child of the migrant.
This applies if:
- The migrant is unlawfully present in the UK, for example, an overstayer or illegal entrant
- The migrant has been refused asylum or humanitarian protection and has no other basis of stay in the UK
- The migrant has been refused leave to remain whether or not they had a right of appeal in the UK (unless they have an existing period of leave, other than under 3C or 3D of the Immigration Act 1971)
- A decision under section 47 of the Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006 has been made
- Leave to enter or remain has been curtailed with the result that the migrant has no outstanding leave, if you curtail leave to 60 days you must return the valuable documents because the migrant still has valid leave to remain."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Leggatt:
Lord Justice Floyd:
"Cases, so far as regards the law, are most useful, but when they are applied to particular facts, they, as a rule, are of little service. Each case depends on its own particular facts, and the facts of almost every case differ"