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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Khan, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWHC 105 (Admin) (26 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/105.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 105 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
R (on the application of Sheraz KHAN [as a managing partner of EXMOOR SURGERY]) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Jennifer Gray (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 19 October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Karen Steyn QC :
Introduction
The Facts
(1) "Management qualification equivalent to MBA (Masters in Business Administration)";(2) "Experience of dealing with QOF [Quality Outcomes Framework] and CQRS [Clinical Quality Reporting System] and managing finance within General Practice(s)";
(3) "Working in primary care or health or social sector experience"; and
(4) "Expert level skills on patient management software i.e. Systemone and Intradoc".
The Legal Framework
"Sponsorship plays 2 main roles in a migrant's application for permission to come to, or remain in the UK to work …:
- it provides evidence that the migrant will fill a genuine vacancy that cannot be filled with a suitably qualified or skilled settled worker, …
- it involves a pledge from the sponsor that it accepts all of the duties expected when sponsoring the migrant."
"Tier 4 is a similar, but obviously not identical, system for licensing educational institutions to sponsor students from outside the EEA to enter and remain in the UK. In that context, Lord Sumption has observed, in R (New London College Ltd) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] 1 WLR 2358 at 2372, paragraph 29:
'There are substantial advantages for sponsors in participating [in the Tier 4 scheme], but they are not obliged to do so. The rules contained in the Tier 4 Guidance for determining whether applicants are suitable to be sponsoring institutions, are in reality conditions of participation, and sponsors seeking the advantages of a licence cannot complain if they are required to adhere to them.'
The same is obviously true for those who seek the advantage of a Tier 2 licence."
"To assess suitability criteria we look at whether:
- you have human resource and recruitment systems in place to meet, or continue to meet your sponsor duties. We may judge this by visiting you either before or after your licence is granted. …
- you can offer a genuine vacancy which meets the criteria of the category you are applying to be licensed for
- you have an unspent criminal conviction for a relevant offence …
- we have any evidence of previous non-compliance by you"
(Original emphasis.)
"employment – in respect of Tier 2 (General) licences we will assess whether you can offer genuine employment which meets the Tier 2 (General) criteria on skill level and appropriate rates of pay
Below are 2 examples of circumstances in which we may not be satisfied you can offer genuine Tier 2 (General) employment.
…
Example 2
You tell us you require or have already sponsored a person in a managerial role which appears unnecessary. This could be if you are a small fast food outlet and you tell us you need, or have appointed a full time business development manager, HR manager or publicity manager.
Note: these examples are not exhaustive."
"Tier 2 allows UK employers to employ nationals from outside the settled workforce and Croatian nationals to fill skilled jobs which cannot be filled by settled workers. A migrant sponsored under any Tier 2 category must not displace a suitable settled worker, which means that you can only offer a job to a migrant you wish to sponsor under Tier 2 if there is no suitable settled worker available to fill the vacancy." (Emphasis added)
"28.1 The resident labour market test is there to protect the settled workforce and means that you must advertise the job you want to recruit for to give settled workers a chance to apply. You can only recruit a migrant if:
- you have completed a resident labour market test in accordance with this guidance and can show that no suitable settled worker is available to fill the job or
- the job is exempt from the resident labour market test
28.2 A suitable settled worker means any settled worker who has the skills and experience you are seeking. If you find that you have more than one candidate with all the necessary skills and experience you advertised for, where one is a settled worker and the other is a migrant, you must appoint the settled worker even if the migrant is more skilled or experienced. The only exception is if the job falls within one of the PhD standard occupation classification (SOC) codes listed below, when you can appoint a migrant if they are the most suitable candidate."
(Emphasis added)
The Decision
"We are not satisfied that the role of Business Development Manager is a genuine role within your organisation and that you can offer genuine employment which meets the Tier 2 General criteria.
Annex 1 Paragraph (n) of the Tier 2 & 5 Sponsor Guidance 04/16 states that we will refuse your application if the information available to us suggests that you do not yet have in place a process necessary to comply with your duties as a sponsor.
Annex 1 Paragraph (o) of the Tier 2 & 5 Sponsor Guidance 04/16 states that we will refuse your application if you are applying under Tier 2 and we are not satisfied that you can offer genuine employment that cannot be filled by a resident worker, and/or that meets the Tier 2 requirements."
(Original emphasis)
"Record Keeping and Recruitment
Our Compliance Officer is not satisfied that you have demonstrated a genuine attempt to recruit from the resident labour market, thus failing to meet paragraphs 15.14, 15.15 and 15.19 of the sponsor guidance.
…
There were a total of 42 candidates for the Business Development Manager's job. Out of these 42 only 2 were interviewed (including the migrant). Our Compliance Officer looked through a selection of other candidates [who] were rejected and it appears that some of these have the qualifications and NHS experience to effectively carry out the role. For example: [Candidate 857] (Immigration Status – ILR) was rejected but meets the requirements as stated on job advertisement. There was no information available as to why this candidate was not considered for the position or why he was rejected.
In addition, the education requirement (Masters) of the role has been found to be exaggerated to be difficult for a settled worker to meet.
There were other candidates with Degree qualifications and experience who could have been considered for the position. It appears the role has been created specifically for the migrant as there wasn't a valid justification as to why an overseas worker is required to fill this role in-line with 15.14 and 15.15 of the Sponsorship Guidance.
In view of the above, our Compliance Officer was not satisfied that your organisation has [made] a genuine attempt to recruit within the EU/UK labour force.
You do not have a robust system in place to meet PBS [points-based system] requirements in relation to record keeping and recruitment.
Skill Level
From the information provided, the role of Business Development Manager is not believed to be a genuine role within your organisation.
It is noted that your representative's letter of 18/07/2016 states, 'the surgery has a dedicated accountant and outsources its payroll.'
…
Paragraph 17.7 of our published guidance states that we may also make checks with other government departments. We have contacted the Occupation Information Team at the Office of National Statistics (ONS). They have confirmed that they would allocate SOC code 1241 to the job description.
…
1241 Health Care Practice Managers
…
Related job titles:
- Clinic manager
- GP practice manager
- Veterinary practice manager
Salary rates: New entrant: £20,800 Experienced: £25,900
Health Care Practice Managers (SOC code 1241) are skilled to NQF Level 4.
From 14th June 2012 applicants entering Tier 2 must have been offered a job which meets a National Qualification Framework Level 6 on the Tier 2 Codes of Practice and in the Tier 2 & 5 Policy Guidance for Sponsors. …
We are not satisfied that the position you wish to fill, either falls within an exception or is a skilled occupation at or above National Qualification Framework (NQF) level 6 (or the equivalent in Scotland).
Genuine Vacancy
In this case we do not consider that the role is of a sufficiently skilled level to meet the Tier 2 (General) requirements and that the role has been exaggerated to make it appear to meet the requirements of Tier 2 in order to enable Ms Palanisamy to stay in the UK.
…
Paragraph 15.15 of our published guidance states:
A genuine vacancy is one which:
- requires the jobholder to perform the specific duties and responsibilities for the job and meets all of the requirements of the tier and category – if you have already assigned a CoS the vacancy must be for the duration of the CoS
- does not include dissimilar and/or lower-skilled duties
We may request additional information and/or evidence from you or the migrant to establish this requirement, and may refuse the migrants application if this is not provided within our deadline.
Below are 3 examples of vacancies that are not considered to be genuine.
- one which contains an exaggerated or incorrect job description to deliberately make it appear to meet the requirements of the tier and category when it does not
- for a job or role that does not exist in order to enable a migrant to come to, or stay in, the UK
- advertisements with requirements that are inappropriate for the job on offer, and have been tailored to exclude resident workers from being recruited"
(Original emphasis)
(1) The Defendant conceded that Candidate 857 was not a suitable settled worker with the skills and experience the Claimant was seeking, accepting the Claimant's explanation that Candidate 857 "did not have the required primary care experience as stipulated in the job advertisement and this was the reason he was excluded from the shortlist of suitable candidates".(2) The Defendant disclosed that when the ONS had been asked to advise as to the appropriate SOC code for the job to which Ms Palanisamy had been appointed, a portion of the job description had been omitted. The Defendant also provided copies of its relevant communications with the ONS.
Analysis
(1) the Defendant's conclusion that Exmoor Surgery had not demonstrated a genuine attempt to recruit from the residential labour market was irrational;(2) the assertion that requiring applicants to have an MBA (or equivalent management qualification) was exaggerated to make it difficult for a settled worker to meet was irrational;
(3) reliance on the fact that the surgery has a dedicated accountant and outsources its payroll in support of the conclusion that the role of BDM was not genuine shows a lack of understanding of business structures and functions and was irrational; and
(4) the Defendant's conclusion that the job filled by Ms Palanisamy met SOC code 1241 (GP practice manager), rather than the higher level SOC code 3545 (BDM), was based on (a) the view of the ONS in circumstances where the ONS was provided with an incomplete job description and/or (b) a misconception as to the ONS's view.
(i) Compliance with the residential labour market test
(ii) Requirement of an MBA or equivalent
(iii) Accountancy and payroll tasks
(iv) Standard occupation classification (SOC) 3545 or 1241
(1) This statement was expressly made subject to the caveat that the Standard Occupation Classification "was designed to base the unit group code on a job title", which ONS noted that UKVI had not provided.(2) In response, UKVI informed ONS that "the sponsor states the job title is a Business Development Manager (SOC 3545) NQF level 6" and asked ONS whether this would alter the assessment of the allocated SOC code. ONS replied by return in these terms:
"If we had received this job title with the below job description, we would have replied to the customer as follows:We code according to a set of rules. We firstly check if the occupation title is in our Index of Occupations therefore based on the information provided we would usually advise unit group 3545.However the skills, tasks and qualifications outlined suggested that the role may fit better in 1241." (emphasis added)The Defendant submitted that she took the email to mean that ONS first looked at the job title, which was indicative, and based on the job title alone they would normally advise unit group 3545. However, the skills, tasks and qualifications outlined in the in the job description suggested that the role may fit better in 1241. In other words, the Defendant submitted that when referring to the "information provided" the ONS meant the job title alone (even though the information which had been provided to the ONS consisted of the job title and job description). Even if this understanding were right, it would not provide a proper basis for saying in the decision letter that the ONS confirmed they would allocate SOC code 1241. Far from confirming that "they would allocate SOC code 1241", the ONS said that applying their rules, based on the information provided, "we would usually advise unit group 3545", albeit that based on partial information (the job description alone) they had suggested SOC code 1241 may be a better fit. Moreover, given that the ONS had been provided with the both the job title and the job description, it would be more natural to read the ONS's reference to "the information provided" as encompassing both pieces of information.(3) In addition, UKVI had inadvertently failed to provide the complete job description. As a result, the ONS's view that, leaving aside the job title, the identified skills, tasks and qualifications might fit better into SOC code 1241, was based on an incomplete understanding of the required skills, tasks and qualifications.
"Having reviewed the job description further, in light of your client's representations and the response from the ONS, it is maintained that the reason for refusal should be upheld. It is submitted that by omitting the above section from the job description, it would not make a material difference to the response from the ONS and the job would still be classified under SOC code 1241 as opposed to SOC code 3545" (emphasis added).
Conclusion
An Apology