[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Vagh, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWCA Civ 1253 (23 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1253.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1253 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice Singh
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF MINAXI VAGH |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Bilal Rawat (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
The legislation
'4B. Acquisition by registration: certain persons without other citizenship
(1) This section applies to a person who has the status of –
(a) British Overseas Citizen …
(2) A person to whom this section applies shall be entitled to be registered as a British Citizen if –
(a) he applies for registration under this section,
(b) the Secretary of State is satisfied that the person does not have, apart from the status mentioned in subsection (1), any citizenship or nationality, and
(c) the Secretary of State is satisfied that the person has not after the relevant day renounced, voluntarily relinquished or lost through action or inaction any citizenship or nationality.
(3) For the purposes of subsection 2(c), the "relevant day" means –
…
(b) in any other case, 4 July 2002.'
More facts
'Ministry of External Affairs presents its compliments to the High Commission for Britain and has the honour to inform that a large number of British Overseas Citizens living in India are approaching the Ministry of Home Affairs of the Government of India for issue of non-citizenship certificates stating that they have not acquired Indian citizenship.
It is understood that the esteemed High Commission is insisting on production of non-citizenship certificates from the Government of India. In this regard, the Ministry of Home Affairs has requested this Ministry to convey to the esteemed High Commission that a foreigner who is staying in India on a valid foreign passport and visa can not be a citizen of India at the same time, as dual citizenship is not permitted by the Government of India so far. Likewise, a citizen of India who acquires foreign citizenship automatically ceases to be a citizen of India under Section 9(1) of the Citizenship Act, 1955 of the Government of India.
Accordingly, the esteemed High Commission is, therefore, requested not to insist on non-citizenship certificates issued by the Government of India, from each and every individual. Instead, a certificate issued by the Foreigners' Regional Registration Office of the Government of India to the effect that the person is registered with them as a foreigner should suffice for this purpose. …'
'A large number of British Overseas Citizens of Indian origin living in the UK have been approaching us for issue of certificates stating that they are Indian citizen [sic].
We write to confirm that under the provisions of the Indian Constitution and the Citizenship Act 1955, an Indian Citizen ceases to be an Indian national if he/she acquires the Citizenship of any foreign state. Therefore any person of Indian origin holding a foreign passport including British Overseas Citizenship passport, would cease to be a citizen of India and any Indian Passport held by him/her would be void. It is also confirmed that current Indian Laws do not permit dual nationality. In this context, a copy of note verbal [sic] No T-432/3/2003 dated 28 May 2003 addressed to the British High Commission, New Delhi issued by the Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi is enclosed herewith for information [and I have just quoted from it].
In view of the above we would be grateful if you would not insist on individual certificates from people of Indian origin holding any foreign passport including British Citizen passport.'
'One of the requirements for registration under Section 4B … is that the applicant does not hold another citizenship. [The appellant] has supplied an Indian passport with her application but has not been able to provide a specific letter from the Indian authorities confirming that this was issued in error and that she is not now a citizen of India. Although Indian citizenship law would indicate that [the appellant] may have lost her Indian citizenship at the age of eighteen the fact is that she arrived in the United Kingdom on an Indian passport and in line with our policy we will require a specific letter from the Indian authorities confirming that it was issued in error and that she is not now a citizen of India.'
'The application was considered under Section 4B … but was refused because we could not be satisfied that [the appellant] met the statutory requirement not to have renounced, voluntarily relinquished or lost through action or inaction any citizenship or nationality.
[The appellant] arrived in the United Kingdom on an Indian passport and only obtained a [BOC] passport on 6 August 2009 when she was in the United Kingdom. Under the terms of Indian citizenship law she is regarded as having lost Indian citizenship at the age of 18 as she held another citizenship.
However, for the purposes of consideration of applications under section 4B … I enclose below an extract from the Nationality Staff Instructions [in Annex D to Chapter 12 of such Instructions]:
'2.4 Where it appears that an applicant has been issued with a formal document (e.g. a passport or certificate) describing the person as a citizen of another country, but information held about that country's nationality laws indicates that dual nationality is not permitted, it should not be assumed that the document was issued incorrectly. Instead, further enquiries should be made along the lines of 2.3 above. In particular, the applicant should be asked to provide a letter from the relevant authorities confirming that:
• the document concerned was issued in error, and
• the applicant was at no time a citizen of that country or lost the citizenship of that country on a specific date.'
The letter continued:
'Applicants are requested to provide this information with their application but we also wrote to [the appellant's] representatives on 30 October 2009 requesting this information but, when it was not forthcoming, the application was refused correctly in line with our procedures.
Citizenship, and the means by which it may be acquired, is defined in the British Nationality Act 1981 and the regulations made under it. The policy on which working practices in the [UKBA] is based is set out in the Nationality Staff Instructions which are available for viewing on the Home Office Website [the address of which was then given]. Generally applications are decided by reference to this guidance. Where individual circumstances are not precisely covered by policy guidance and there may be scope for exercising discretion, beyond that which is contained in the staff instructions, then the application will be considered according to its particular merits by reference to agreed precedents, or in especially compelling cases by creating a precedent where this can be justified. Applications which are not covered by staff instructions or matched by agreed precedents or which justify the creation of a new precedent must fall for refusal.'
'2.3 If applicants claim to have tried, unsuccessfully, to obtain a letter confirming non-possession of another citizenship, they should be asked to give their written consent to our writing direct to the authorities of the country concerned. If applicants do not give their consent to this within a reasonable time, after being reminded, they will not have established their entitlement to registration and they should be notified that their applications are refused.'
'2. Claims to have no other citizenship or nationality
2.1 If applicants have declared that they have another citizenship or nationality, they will not be eligible for registration. Even if an applicant declares that he has no other citizenship or nationality, it is possible that he will hold one because one of his parents holds a non-British citizenship or nationality or because the applicant has been registered or naturalised in a country in which he has resided. For these reasons, applicants are requested to supply statements from the authorities of the country or countries concerned confirming that they do not have have its/their citizenship or nationality. Such letters of confirmation should not be taken at face value if they appear to contradict any information we hold about the citizenship laws of the countries concerned. …
2.7 Applicants of Indian origin
2.7.1 Indian citizenship law does not, in general, allow for dual nationality. The only exception to this is for children who are dual nationals by birth. However, even minors who are dual nationals by birth will automatically lose Indian citizenship if they acquire a passport in their other nationality.
2.7.2 More information about Indian citizenship law is contained in Annex H to Chapter 14 …' (Emphases as in the original)
'1. The following summary of the main provisions of Indian citizenship Law reflects the provisions of Indian citizenship law and statements made by the Ministry of Home Affairs, India by letter to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office on 27 January 2006. It does not aim to be, nor should be taken as, definitive. Only the Indian authorities can provide definitive advice on their citizenship law. However, the information should normally be sufficient to determine an applicant's eligibility for British nationality where this turns on his/her possession, or not, of Indian citizenship.
2. The principal legislation is the Citizenship Act 1955, as amended by the Citizenship (Amendment) Act 1986, the Citizenship (Amendment) Act 1992 and the Citizenship (Amendment) Act 2003. …
6. Dual Nationality
6.1 Our understanding is that Indian citizenship cannot normally be held in combination with any other citizenship. Section 9 of the 1955 Act provides that
"Any citizen of India who by naturalisation, registration or otherwise voluntarily acquires … the citizenship of another country … shall, upon such acquisition, … cease to be a citizen of India".
6.2 This means that no adult (18 and over) can hold Indian citizenship in conjunction with any other nationality or citizenship – but see 6.6 below.
6.3 Further, if an Indian minor obtains another nationality or citizenship (for example by registration as a BN(O)) the child will automatically lose its Indian citizenship. This applies even where the registration is made by the parents/guardian on behalf of the child.
6.4 The only exception to this general ban on dual citizenship is where a child is a dual national by birth. In such cases that child can remain a dual citizen until either:
a. they obtain a passport in their other citizenship (while under the age of 18); or
b. they reach the age of majority (18)
6.5 If a child who is a dual national by birth fails to renounce their other citizenship prior to reaching the age of majority or acquires a passport in their nationality before reaching the age of 18 they will lose Indian citizenship.
6.6 If despite the prohibition on dual nationality, an applicant has been issued with a passport or other formal document describing him as an Indian citizen, it should not be assumed that it has been issued incorrectly. In such cases, we should write to the applicant/agent along the lines explained in paragraph 4.5 of Annex D [that is in fact a reference to paragraph 4.5 in Annex D to Chapter 14, which is in essentially the same terms as paragraph 2.4 in Annex D to Chapter 12].'
The judge's judgment
'… she is not bound simply to accept assertions by an applicant for British citizenship that he or she is not in truth a national of another state, when for example they have come to this country using an apparently lawful and properly issued passport of that country.'
'If, notwithstanding the background of the claimant holding a South African passport and her dealings with the South African authorities in relation to obtaining travel documents, she wished to assert that, contrary to appearances, she was not a South African national, the onus clearly was upon her to adduce relevant evidence (including, so far as appropriate, expert evidence in relation to South African law). She attempted to adduce some evidence about foreign law (although not proper expert evidence) in relation to the legal position in South Africa and Zimbabwe with her letter of 26th November 2010, but such materials as she did then put forward were clearly insufficient to displace the clear picture which had emerged from everything else she had said and done to give the clear impression that she is indeed a South African national.'
'22. … the question which the Secretary of State was called upon to ask and answer in the present context by section 4B(2)(b) is essentially a question of fact on which the primary judgment must be, as is common ground, that of the Secretary of State. As is common ground, that judgment by the Secretary of State on that question of fact can only be impugned by way of judicial review if her view of the facts was irrational, in other words one which no reasonable Secretary of State could reach on the evidence before her, if she were properly directing herself.
23. In my judgment, it is quite impossible to say that the defendant's assessment of the facts in the present case was irrational. She was entitled, in my view, to place reliance as she did upon the rebuttable presumption, not an absolute one, that an explanation needs to be given as to how and why the claimant was able, apparently lawfully, to travel on an Indian passport. The fact that she had that Indian passport is something the Secretary of State is prima facie entitled to regard as being evidence that the claimant has Indian nationality. As has been pointed out on behalf of the defendant, the current application form for an Indian passport, includes, as one would expect, a question to be answered to the effect: are you a citizen of India by birth, descent, registration or naturalisation? The answer, it would seem, has to include not only that the person is indeed a citizen of India but by what means they have acquired that citizenship ….
26. As I have already indicated, the defendant is entitled to make a much more fundamental submission, which I accept, that it is simply not for the courts of this country to engage in their own interpretation of and possibly speculation about the meaning of Indian nationality and constitutional law. As was said in the Mucelli judgment [R (Vullnet Mucelli) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 95 (Admin)] …, such questions of foreign law are questions which need to be addressed by evidence including expert evidence and the courts of this country, who are not well versed in the nuances of the relevant foreign constitutional and statutory instruments should not embark upon their own interpretation and analysis of those instruments.
27. The Secretary of State, in my judgment, was perfectly entitled to take the view that the apparent and lawful acquisition by the claimant of Indian nationality, at some point, perhaps it may be through marriage or long residence in India, which led to her travelling on an Indian passport to this country called for cogent explanation by and on behalf of the claimant.
28. It was perfectly reasonable, in my view, for the Secretary of State to take the view that, particularly having regard to the natural comity between nations which one expects in this context to expect a letter or some other written evidence from the Indian authorities, clearly explaining whether, for example, the issuing of an Indian passport to the claimant had simply been a mistake.'
The appeal
Discussion and conclusion
'Are you a citizen of India by: (B)irth/ (D)escent/ (R)egistration/ (N)aturalisation; ….
If you have ever possessed any other citizenship, please indicate previous citizenship ….'
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Lord Justice McFarlane :