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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 >> Islam, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWCA Civ 500 (26 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/500.html Cite as: [2019] 4 WLR 63, [2019] EWCA Civ 500, [2019] WLR(D) 185 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
Upper Tribunal Judge Kamara
JR/14899/2015 judgment of 16 November 2016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
LADY JUSTICE ROSE
____________________
The Queen oao SAIFUL ISLAM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Zane Malik (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 March 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rose:
The relevant immigration rules
i) In sub-paragraph (b) that the applicant has a minimum of 75 points under paragraphs 35 to 53 of Appendix A relating to investment or business activity;ii) in subparagraph (c) that the applicant has a minimum of 10 points under paragraphs 1 to 15 of Appendix B relating to English language proficiency;
iii) in subparagraph (d) that the applicant has a minimum of 10 points under paragraphs 1 to 2 of Appendix C relating to funds available to maintain the migrant.
"(m) The Secretary of State reserves the right to request additional information and evidence to support the assessment in (h) … and to refuse the application if the information or evidence is not provided. Any requested documents must be received by the Secretary of State at the address specified in the request within 28 calendar days of the date of the request."
i) that since before 11 July 2014 and up to the date of his application he has been continuously engaged in business activity and has been either registered with HM Revenue and Customs as self-employed or registered with Companies House as a director of a business;ii) he has been working since before 11 July 2014 and up to the date of his application continuously in a qualifying occupation and provides the specified evidence in paragraph 41-SD.
"39B(a) Where these Rules state that specified documents must be provided, that means documents specified in these Rules as being specified documents for the route under which the applicant is applying. If the specified documents are not provided, the applicant will not meet the requirement for which the specified documents are required as evidence.
(b) Where these Rules specify documents that are to be provided, those documents are considered to be specified documents, whether or not they are named as such, and as such they are subject to the requirements in (c) to (f) below.
…
(d) Specified documents must be originals, not copies except where stated otherwise.
(e) Specified documents must contain, or the applicant must provide, full contact details to allow each document to be verified".
"(e) If the applicant is applying for leave to remain, and has, or was lasted granted, leave as a … Tier 1 (Post-Study Work) Migrant, he must also provide the following evidence that he meets the additional requirements set out in Table 4:
. . .
(iii) one or more of the following specified documents covering (either together or individually) a continuous period commencing before 11 July 2014 … up to no earlier than three months before the date of his application:
(1) advertising or marketing material, including printouts of online advertising, that has been published locally or nationally
(a) showing the applicant's name (and the name of the business if applicable) together with the business activity; or
(b) where his business is trading online, confirmation of his ownership of the domain name of the business's website.
(2) article(s) or online links to article(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, 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 UK trade body linked to the applicant's occupation; …"
"245AA. Documents not submitted with applications
(a)Where Part 6A or any appendices referred to in Part 6A state that specified documents must be provided, the Entry Clearance Officer, Immigration Officer or the Secretary of State will only consider documents that have been submitted with the application, and will only consider documents submitted after the application where they are submitted in accordance with subparagraph (b).
(b) If the applicant has submitted specified documents in which:
(i) Some of the documents in a sequence have been omitted (for example, if one bank statement from a series is missing);
(ii) A document is in the wrong format (for example, if a letter is not on letterhead paper as specified); or
(iii) A document is a copy and not an original document; or
(iv) A document does not contain all of the specified information;
the Entry Clearance Officer, Immigration Officer or the Secretary of State may contact the applicant or his representative in writing, and request the correct documents. The requested documents must be received at the address specified in the request within 7 working days of the date of the request.
(c) Documents will not be requested where a specified document has not been submitted (for example an English language certificate is missing), or where the Entry Clearance Officer, Immigration Officer or the Secretary of State does not anticipate that addressing the omission or error referred to in subparagraph (b) will lead to a grant because the application will be refused for other reasons.
(d) If the applicant has submitted a specified document:
(i) in the wrong format; or
(ii) which is a copy and not an original document; or
(iii) which does not contain all the specified information, but the missing information is verifiable from:
(1) other documents submitted with the application,
(2) the website of the organisation which issued the document, or
(3) the website of the appropriate regulatory body;
the application may be granted exceptionally, providing the Entry Clearance Officer, Immigration Officer or the Secretary of State is satisfied that the specified documents are genuine and the applicant meets all the other requirements. …"
Mudiyanselage
"56. … occasional harsh outcomes are a price that has to be paid for the perceived advantages of the PBS process. It is important not to lose sight of the fact that the responsibility is on applicants to ensure that the letter of the requirements of the PBS is observed: though that may sometimes require a good deal of care and attention to detail, because of the regrettable complexity of the Rules, it will normally be possible to get it right."
"58. … Identifying exactly what that phrase is intended to cover needs some unpacking. It cannot have been intended that a document that simply showed none of the specified information at all would be covered by the rule. If, to take an extreme example by way of illustration, the requirement were that the document showed that an applicant had a PhD but what was submitted showed instead that he or she had only an MA, that could not sensibly be described as a case where the document "did not contain all of the required information": it did not contain the essential information required and would simply be the wrong document. That is common sense, but it is reinforced by the phraseology of "not … all of the specified information". It is accordingly, I believe, necessary to distinguish between, on the one hand, cases where the information which is missing is so wholesale as to affect the fundamental character of the document and, on the other, cases where it is secondary, so that it makes sense to say that the document is still of the kind specified albeit that it does not contain the particular information in question. Such a distinction seems to me to reflect the underlying policy behind the rule, as reflected in the reference in the introductory section of the Guidance to "minor errors"."
"92 … If it were necessary to decide the point I think that the answer would depend on whether the documents in question were simply undated or whether they bore dates showing that they covered a different period from that specified. In the former case it would be natural to describe the advertising materials as specified documents and the missing dates simply as specified information which they failed to contain, but in the latter it seems to me that a document which is required to cover period A but which on its face covers period B is simply the wrong document: the distinction may seem fine but I believe that it makes sense. As it happens, it appears to be the case that some of the materials supplied by Mr Khan were dated and some were not; but even in relation to those which were not he would have fallen at the next hurdle because even the undated materials were in fact from the wrong period and he would therefore not have been able to supply the missing information."
"145. … These are hard edged decisions but the requirements of the PBS, the Rules and the Guidance are precise. Those who seek to make applications of this nature must take the utmost care to ensure that they comply with the requirements to the letter; they cannot expect discretionary indulgence beyond the very limited areas provided by evidential flexibility. To such extent as this is not already obvious, it would be of value if any form or document made available to applicants to assist them made clear the vital importance of ensuring that the material provided meets the precise requirements of the Rules on the basis that it cannot be assumed that there will be a subsequent chance to correct or supplement that which has been provided."
The refusal of Mr Islam's application
"(1) advertising or marketing material, including printouts of online advertising, that has been published locally or nationally
(a) showing the applicant's name (and the name of the business if applicable) together with the business activity; or
(b) where his business is trading online, confirmation of his ownership of the domain name of the business's website."
i) Six print outs of online advertising:a) The first is dated 12 August 2014 {page 149}. It gives the name of the company Legend Marketing Company Ltd and contains a detailed description of the company's business. It also provides contact details of the company's consultants Mr Saiful Islam and Mr Rahman.b) The second is dated 18 November 2014 {151} and contains the name of the company Legend Marketing Company Ltd but the print out is in too small a font to be read, even with a magnifying glass.c) The third is an undated print out from the website 'Scoot' {151} also containing the name of the company, again with a detailed description of the business and referring to "Mr Saif" in a customer endorsement. It states that the company has been trading since 2012 and gives the year of Scoot's copyright in the material as 2014.d) The fourth is dated 18 February 2015 {158} and gives the name and a brief description of the company as marketing consultants in Lincoln.e) The fifth is dated 27 April 2015 from the Sun Newspaper and shows the name and a short description of the company but beyond that the print is too small to read.f) The sixth is dated 16 July 2015 {161} and gives the name and short description of the company but no further details.ii) Four copy leaflets or brochures:
a) The first leaflet contains the name of the company and a description of its business and says that it was printed on 3 July 2013.b) The second leaflet is identical to the first but says it was printed on 12 March 2014.c) The third leaflet is the same as the first two but was printed on 8 July 2014.d) The fourth is a more substantial brochure printed on 4 May 2014 and is the only brochure which names Mr Islam as the company consultant, with a picture of him. {148}
"The leaflets that you supplied are dated 03 July 2013 and 12 March 2014. They therefore do not cover a continuous period commencing before 11 July 2014 up to no earlier than three months before the date of your application. You have also failed to provide evidence that they have been published locally or nationally. Leaflets that you have provided do not meet the requirements of paragraph 41-SD(e)(iii)(1) of Appendix A of the Immigration Rules …".
The Upper Tribunal's Decision
"[Counsel's] argument was that the applicant's documents, when considered cumulatively, met the requirements of the Rules and this was allowed for in the Rules. That argument is unattractive. A straightforward reading of the Rule indicates that the reference to "one or more" is to the possibility of an applicant providing specified documents which fall within one or more of the four categories. It is not an invitation to submit a plethora of documents which do not meet the seven separate requirements required under the first category."
"41. … The grounds assert that there is only one reason for refusal. However, that argument is not entirely accurate because it is evident that there were multiple deficiencies with each item of evidence provided in support of that application, even if the deficiencies all related to advertising or marketing material or the registration of the domain name. Accordingly, even had the applicant been invited to submit evidence to show that his material had been published locally or nationally, this would not have addressed the fact that none of the documents he submitted met the timeframe required under the Rules.
…
43. It was properly open to the respondent to decide that the applicant failed to provide the evidence required by [paragraph 41-SD(e)(iii)(1)(a) and (b)] for the reasons set out above. Owing to the multiple difficulties with the applicant's evidence, this cannot be considered a case falling within 245AA(b)(iv), that is "A document" does not contain all of the specified information. In the applicant's documents, not one met the seven components set out in SD-41(e)(iii) and his application was not rescued by the submission of the domain name of his website."
The appeal
Did Mr Islam's documents satisfy the requirements of paragraph 41-SD(e)(iii)(1)?
i) Must each of the specified documents on which Mr Islam relies to cover the relevant period show that it has been published locally or nationally or is it enough that they have in fact been published locally or nationally? If there is no such requirement then the Respondent was wrong to reject Mr Islam's application on the grounds that he had failed to provide evidence of this. If there is a requirement that the documents show this, Mr Islam accepts that although the internet screen shots inherently show that they are published at least nationally, the brochures on which he relies to cover the end of the relevant period do not show this.ii) Did the documents on which Mr Islam relies to cover the period all comply with paragraph 41-SD(e)(iii)(1)(a) by showing his name and the name of the business together with the business activity? If they did, then the Respondent was wrong to reject his application on this ground. If they did not, was this a deficiency that could be remedied in response to a request under paragraph 245AA(b)(iv)? If so, the Respondent was wrong to decline to exercise her discretion to ask Mr Islam for the additional information.
Lord Justice Floyd
Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President of Tribunals