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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 >> RO (India) v Entry Clearance Officer [2008] EWCA Civ 1525 (29 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1525.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1525 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM & IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
[AIT No: OA/52009/2006]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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RO (INDIA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER |
Respondent |
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Ms K Olley (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"19. I have first considered whether there is a family life between the sponsor and the Appellants. I accept that a family life within the meaning of Article 8 does not normally exist between an adult child and its parent however on the facts of this appeal I find after considering the oral evidence of the sponsor that the bonds between the parties are very strong. I find that there is evidence of a relationship of emotional dependency which exceeds the natural bonds of affection which exist between a parent and child of any age. Having determined that there is a family life in existence I have considered whether the consequent interference in that family life caused by the refusal of entry clearance is proportionate and in accordance with the law."
"25. Given the positive decision in NH in factually similar circumstances, and given that there is no need for me to find that the Appellants' circumstances amount to exceptional circumstances, I find that the interference with this family life is sufficiently serious to amount to a breach of rights protected by Article 8 especially when the change in the legislation which led to this application was stated to 'correct an historical wrong'. Accordingly I allow this appeal under Article 8."
"The Immigration Judge found that the appeals cannot succeed under the Immigration Rules because the appellants, who are fit and healthy, are not financially dependent on the Sponsor; are not living in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances; and are living together in India (ie one brother and 2 sisters who were at the time of the Respondent's decision aged 27, 29 and 31). On this basis her failure to explain the conclusion in paragraph 19 that there is family life between the Sponsor and the Appellant capable of engaging Article 8 at all, may amount to a material error of law. She may also in her assessment of proportionality have misunderstood and misapplied NH, where the facts were different from this appeal and not similar as stated in the determination. In NH the appellants were wholly financially dependent on the Sponsor, satisfied most of the requirements of the Immigration Rules, and were between the ages of 18 and 25, which is material when considering the BOC issue."
"18. I agree with the submission made by Ms Aggarwal. In view of the upper age limit of 25 under the voucher scheme the appellants' appeal cannot succeed. Furthermore, the Immigration Judge misapplied NH. There are no similarities between NH and the appellant's case. In NH each appellant was found to be wholly or mainly dependent on the sponsor and most of the requirements at paragraph 317 were met whereas in this case the immigration judge found that the appellants do not meet all the requirements of paragraph 317.
19. In the light of the Immigration Judge's finding that the appellants do not meet the requirements of paragraph 317, and the fact that the appellants do not meet the requirements in NH, I find that the Immigration Judge..materially erred in law in allowing the appeal under Article 8 by application of NH. In the light of the findings made by the Immigration Judge, I find that the appeals of the appellants cannot succeed after Huang"
"11. The question is not whether the Appellants would meet the requirements of the Scheme if it were applied today, the question is whether the Appellants would have been eligible for entry under the Scheme if it had applied to the sponsor from the outset, as it should have done. On the facts of this case there is arguably sufficient evidence to give rise to at least the possibility that, had she not been excluded from the scheme, the sponsor would have applied for British citizenship, and sought to move to the UK with her daughters, before any of them reached the age of 25."
"she failed to consider whether or not the evidence in the case was sufficient to establish the existence of family life between the Appellants and their mother."
"I find that there is evidence of a relationship of emotional dependency which exceeds the natural bonds of affection which exist between a parent and child of any age."
That is the reasoned basis for the finding. It is true she does not describe or narrate the evidence but that would be in effect to give reasons for reasons. Secondly, Immigration Judge Graham in my view correctly perceived the true significance of the voucher scheme. Its operation prevented or may have prevented an earlier application by the appellants to join their mother in the United Kingdom. Thirdly, there is no error of law in Immigration Judge Graham's reference to "the positive decision in NH in factually similar circumstances" -- paragraph 25 of her determination. Of course, there were factual differences between the two cases but Mr Gill is surely correct to submit that the principal feature of that case and this was the holding that an immigration judge was entitled to give considerable weight to the historical wrongs done to British overseas citizens. This is how it is put at paragraph 11 of Mr Gill's supplementary skeleton argument:
"The central feature about NH (which is common to this case) is that the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal, in a determination upheld by the Court of Appeal, held that in assessing whether a refusal to allow adult children to join a former CUKC/BOC who was now settled in the UK (indeed, in that case, as here, a person who is now a British citizen) breached the right to family life. An immigration judge was entitled to give very considerable weight to the historical discrimination against 'East African Asians', the barriers created in terms of their ability to come and settle in the UK with their children, and the subsequent recognition by the UK Govt that those historical wrongs needed to be undone."
I may break off there. Mr Gill notes the reference in the judgment of my Lord, Sedley LJ, in NH at paragraph 47. With respect I need not read it out. In those circumstances as I have said I would accept Mr Gill's overall submission that there was no error of law in Immigration Judge Graham's decision. I should observe that Miss Olley this morning also sought to persuade us that in dealing with proportionality Immigration Judge Graham did not properly follow the reasoning of the House of Lords in Huang. There is no reference in paragraph 25 of her decision to the likely infrequency of cases in which a disproportionate effect will be found to be the consequence of a removal prima facie in breach of Article 8. I do not agree that there is any such flaw in paragraph 25. It is to be noted that the so-called "exceptionality test" laid down in this court in the Huang case was expressly disavowed in their Lordships' House and the reference to the number of cases in which disproportionality is likely to arise is not offered by way of a legal test or criterion but rather as a description or prediction of the number of cases where disproportionality might be found.
Lord Justice Sedley:
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins:
Order: Appeal allowed.