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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> TD (Paragraph 297(i)(e): “sole responsibility”) Yemen [2006] UKAIT 00049 (24 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2006/00049.html Cite as: [2006] UKAIT 00049, [2006] UKAIT 49 |
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TD (Paragraph 297(i)(e): "sole responsibility") Yemen [2006] UKAIT 00049
Date of hearing: 12 April 2006
Date Determination notified: 24 May 2006
TD |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER, SANA'A | RESPONDENT |
"Sole responsibility" is a factual matter to be decided upon all the evidence. Where one parent is not involved in the child's upbringing because he (or she) had abandoned or abdicated responsibility, the issue may arise between the remaining parent and others who have day-to-day care of the child abroad. The test is whether the parent has continuing control and direction over the child's upbringing, including making all the important decisions in the child's life. However, where both parents are involved in a child's upbringing, it will be exceptional that one of them will have "sole responsibility".
The Immigration Judge's decision
"Sole responsibility"
"297. The requirements to be met by a person seeking indefinite leave to enter the United Kingdom as the child of a parent, parents or a relative present and settled or being admitted for settlement in the United Kingdom are that he:
(i) is seeking leave to enter to accompany or join a parent, parents or a relative in one of the following circumstances:
…
(e) one parent is present and settled in the United Kingdom or being admitted on the same occasion for settlement and has had sole responsibility for the child's upbringing; …"
Leading Tribunal decisions
"We have heard argument about the meaning of 'sole responsibility' and clearly the first sentence of [the relevant immigration rule] cannot reasonably be construed in its most strictly literal terms. It appears plain to us that there must be in nearly all cases some form of responsibility of the relative or grandmother with whom the child lives: the responsibility for seeing that the child attends school, the responsibility for seeing that the child is fed and clothed in as reasonable a manner as can be afforded, the responsibility for ensuring that the child has medical attention when needed, and so on. We do not therefore think that literal or absolute sole responsibility of the parent in the United Kingdom could ever be established. In this case whilst we agree with the view of the adjudicator that the issue of sole responsibility is not one to be decided only between parent and parent we do not think that it is more apt to say that there has been an abdication of responsibility in this case. The mother has sent money regularly for the child's upkeep and, as the adjudicator says, she retains a close interest in, and affection for, her daughter. Considering all the circumstances ... we concluded that this was a case in which it was shown that the parent in the United Kingdom had had sole responsibility for the child's upbringing."
"The decision in every case will depend on its own particular facts, and this will involve consideration, inter alia, of the source and degree of financial support of the child and whether there is cogent evidence of genuine interest in and affection for the child by the sponsoring parent in the United Kingdom."
"On the evidence we are unable to say that the roles of all except [the appellant's mother] were in substance to act simply on directions from [the appellant's mother]. The period of separation between mother and daughter was some 13 years at the date of decision. To find that [the appellant's mother] exercised sole responsibility for [the appellant's] upbringing for that period even in a broad sense we would require positive and precise evidence of regular contact, consultation and decision taking Such evidence is not before us."
Court of Appeal cases
"One is that the issue of sole responsibility for the child's upbringing is not to be decided only between the child's parents. There may be cases where the conclusion is that there has been a sharing of responsibility between the parent who is settled here and some other relative, or other person possibly, in the country where the child has been left when the parent came here.
The second point which is also established is that the words 'sole responsibility' have to carry some form of qualification in that the rule envisages that a parent who is settled in the United Kingdom will or may have had the sole responsibility for the child's upbringing in another country. Obviously there are matters of day-to-day decision in the upbringing of a child which are bound to be decided on the spot by whoever is looking after the child in the absence of the parent settled here, such as getting the child to school safely and on time, or putting the child to bed, or seeing what it has for breakfast, or that it cleans its teeth, or has enough clothing, and so forth. ... The question must be a broad question."
"Each case must depend on its own facts considered broadly."
"Direction and control of the upbringing are also factors which are part of the total fact pattern ... . Another matter was of course the extent of contact that the mother had had with the child since the mother went to the United Kingdom and the reasons why the contact had not been more ... .".
"First, [the adjudicator] found that there was no evidence whatsoever of the grandmother consulting the sponsor – that is to say, the mother – regarding the appellant. Secondly, he found that the appellant herself, when interviewed, evidently believed that all the decisions regarding her education and upbringing were made by her grandmother who had full responsibility and who consulted nobody."
"9. While legal responsibility under the appropriate legal system will be a relevant consideration, it will not be a conclusive one. One must also look at what has actually been done in relation to the child's upbringing by whom and whether it has been done under the direction of the parent settled here." (our emphasis)
"The general guidance is to look at whether what has been done in relation to the upbringing has been done under the direction of the sponsoring settled parent."
"the importance of the parent with responsibility, albeit at a distance, having what can be identified as direction over or control of important decisions in the child's life."
Two-parents cases
"The appellant's father accompanied the appellant to the interview. That in itself demonstrates that he had not abdicated responsibility for her. On top of that, the appellant used to stay with him on her way to her grandmother from her school. Furthermore, the appellant's father stated that he was happy for the appellant to live with him although she felt comfortable with the sponsor. The appellant's father stated that he paid for the school fees and that her grandmother paid for household things. In addition, he gave her money whilst she was at school."
"since any responsibility exercised by her father need not be derived from her mother, and might put in doubt the mother's 'sole responsibility'."
"the adjudicator effectively found that the father is doing nothing for the child beyond the bare fact of living with her on reasonably good terms.... Moreover ... that is in a house belonging to the mother, so that even his bare presence and any help that that might be to the child, is derivative from the mother and essentially part of her arrangements for the child rather than his own."
Discussion
"297. The requirements to be met by a person seeking indefinite leave to enter the United Kingdom as the child of a parent, parents or a relative present and settled or being admitted for settlement in the United Kingdom are that he:
(i) is seeking leave to enter to accompany or join a parent, parents or a relative in one of the following circumstances:
(a) both parents are present and settled in the United Kingdom; or
(b) both parents are being admitted on the same occasion for settlement; or
(c) one parent is present and settled in the United Kingdom and the other is being admitted on the same occasion for settlement; or
(d) one parent is present and settled in the United Kingdom or being admitted on the same occasion for settlement and the other parent is dead; or
(e) one parent is present and settled in the United Kingdom or being admitted on the same occasion for settlement and has had sole responsibility for the child's upbringing; or
(f) one parent or a relative is present and settled in the United Kingdom or being admitted on the same occasion for settlement and there are serious and compelling family or other considerations which make exclusion of the child undesirable and suitable arrangements have been made for the child's care; and..."
Summary
i. Who has "responsibility" for a child's upbringing and whether that responsibility is "sole" is a factual matter to be decided upon all the evidence.
ii. The term "responsibility" in the immigration rules should not to be understood as a theoretical or legal obligation but rather as a practical one which, in each case, looks to who in fact is exercising responsibility for the child. That responsibility may have been for a short duration in that the present arrangements may have begun quite recently.
iii. "Responsibility" for a child's upbringing may be undertaken by individuals other than a child's parents and may be shared between different individuals: which may particularly arise where the child remains in its own country whilst the only parent involved in its life travels to and lives in the UK.
iv. Wherever the parents are, if both parents are involved in the upbringing of the child, it will be exceptional that one of them will have sole responsibility.
v. If it is said that both are not involved in the child's upbringing, one of the indicators for that will be that the other has abandoned or abdicated his responsibility. In such cases, it may well be justified to find that that parent no longer has responsibility for the child.
vi. However, the issue of sole responsibility is not just a matter between the parents. So even if there is only one parent involved in the child's upbringing, that parent may not have sole responsibility.
vii. In the circumstances likely to arise, day-to-day responsibility (or decision-making) for the child's welfare may necessarily be shared with others (such as relatives or friends) because of the geographical separation between the parent and child.
viii. That, however, does not prevent the parent having sole responsibility within the meaning of the Rules.
ix. The test is, not whether anyone else has day-to-day responsibility, but whether the parent has continuing control and direction of the child's upbringing including making all the important decisions in the child's life. If not, responsibility is shared and so not "sole".
The appellant's case
"I find that the parents of the Appellants have a shared but differing responsibility for the Appellants. Neither parent in this case has sole responsibility, and I accept that with the constraints of living in the UK the Sponsor has done all that he can hope to do to maintain support, and keep in touch with the Appellants. However real that telephone contact is, it is not a day to day responsibility which has been left fully with the Appellants' mother. The Sponsor has played almost no physical part in the upbringing of the Appellants – even the oldest Appellant can only have met his father on about 3 or 4 occasions. The Sponsor elected to work in this country but otherwise delegated all day to day care to the mother. I conclude this is a case where responsibility is shared, and it cannot be said the Sponsor has sole responsibility."
Decision
A GRUBB
SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE
Date: