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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> STARRED MM and others(Out of time appeals) Burundi [2004] UKIAT 00182 (7 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00182.html Cite as: [2004] INLR 482, [2004] Imm AR 515, [2004] UKIAT 00182, [2004] UKIAT 182 |
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APPEAL No. MM and others(Out of time appeals) Burundi * [2004] UKIAT 00182
STARRED
Date of hearing: 14 May 2004
Date Determination notified: 7 July 2004
MM and others | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
Introduction
The Facts
MM
CN
MG
The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
"101(1) A party to an appeal to an adjudicator under section 82 or 83 may, with the permission of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal, appeal to the Tribunal against the adjudicator's determination on a point of law.
102(1) On an appeal under section 101 the Immigration Appeal Tribunal may –
(a) Affirm the adjudicator's decision
(b) Make any decision which the adjudicator could have made …
(c) In reaching their decision on an appeal under section 101 the Tribunal may …
103(1) Where the Immigration Appeal Tribunal determines an appeal under section 101 a party to the appeal may bring a further appeal on a point of law –
(a) Where the original decision of the adjudicator was made in Scotland, to the Court of Session, or…
(3) The remittal of an appeal to an adjudicator…is not a determination of the appeal for the purposes (of the Act)." (Our underlining.)
The 2003 Rules
"10(1) Where a notice of appeal is given outside the applicable time limit in rule 7, the appellant must –
(a) state in the notice of appeal his reasons for failing to give the notice within that period, and
(b) attach to the notice of appeal any written evidence upon which he relies in support of those reasons.
(2) Where the respondent receives a notice of appeal outside the applicable time limit, he may treat the notice as if it had been given in time, if satisfied that by reason of special circumstances it would be unjust not to do so."
"10(6) If the appellant files evidence under paragraph (4), an adjudicator must decide whether the notice of appeal was given in time.
(7) Where the notice of appeal was given out of time, the adjudicator may extend the time for appealing if satisfied that by reason of special circumstances it would be unjust not to do so.
(8) The adjudicator must decide the issues in paragraph (6) and (7) –
(a) without a hearing; and
(b) on the basis of the documents filed by the respondent and any written evidence filed by the appellant.
(9) The appellate authority must serve notice of the adjudicator's decision on the parties."
"14(1) This Part applies to appeals to the Tribunal from the determination of an adjudicator."
"53(1) This rule applies where an adjudicator or the Tribunal determines an appeal or an application for permission to appeal under any of Parts 2, 3 or 4 of these Rules.
(2) The appellate authority must record the decision of the adjudicator or the Tribunal and the reasons for it.
(3) Unless a rule provides otherwise, the appellate authority must serve on –
(a) every party; and
(b) any representative acting for a party,
a written determination containing the decision of the adjudicator or the Tribunal and the reasons for it."
Earlier Tribunal decisions
"8. … It is common ground, as we understand it, between the parties, that if that is in truth a determination as defined by Rule 2 or as intended by the relevant provisions of the 1999 Act, then it would amount to an implied dismissal of the Appellant's appeal and would carry a right of appeal (subject, again, to requirements as to notice and time) to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal. If on the other hand, the document signed by the Adjudicator is not a determination as defined, it is difficult to see that there could be a right of appeal to this Tribunal."
"12. … if an Adjudicator decides that there is no jurisdiction to hear an appeal for some reason other than time, then it is right that that decision should be subject to examination and re-determination by the Tribunal, because what the Adjudicator may have done is to decline to hear an appeal which was in fact valid and pending before him. In the present case, unless the Adjudicator decides to exercise an inclusionary discretion in order to hear an appeal which at its inception is invalid, then there is no appeal before the Adjudicator."
Conclusions on the jurisdiction issue
The effect on the individual appeals
"Under the Rules the letter of 8th October could only be used to challenge the fact that the Appeal was lodged out of time, but the letter concedes that it was lodged out of time."
This, she said, showed that he had ignored the explanation for the delay provided by the then solicitors and had treated that explanation as going solely to whether the appeal was in time. She is right that the Adjudicator erred in that paragraph because although the reasons for any extension should appear in the Notice of Appeal (Rule 10 (1) (a)), Rule 10 (8) requires the written evidence to be considered in deciding whether to extend time; the failure to comply with the Rules does not preclude other evidence showing the reason for the extension being sought. But her argument is without sound foundation when the decision is read as a whole. It is clear that the Adjudicator did consider the explanation on its merits and rejected it as insufficient. He was right to do so. He said in paragraph 6:
"I take the view that the Appeal having been lodged out of time, no explanation whatsoever has been put forward as to why that had happened. The letter of 8th October makes mention of the lateness being neither the Appellant's fault nor Asghar & Co's fault, but I have been given no explanation at all as to whose fault it was. I can only assume that it was the fault of the Appellant."
Which Rules apply to MG?
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
PRESIDENT