[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 >> Raza, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2016] EWCA Civ 36 (28 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/36.html Cite as: [2016] Imm AR 682, [2016] EWCA Civ 36 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Ms D K GILL (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
The Queen on the application of Raza |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Zane Malik (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 19th January 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The facts
Patel
"19 The salient facts in the present case are as follows:-
1) The appellant was lawfully present in the United Kingdom with leave to remain as a student and was a bona fide student.
2) He made a bona fide application for an extension of stay as a student at a college which was an approved sponsor at the time of the application;
3) Unbeknown to the appellant the college was removed from the list of approved sponsors by the Home Office during the time it was considering the application;
4) Removal of the college from the list of sponsors was taken at about the same time as the decision to refuse the application, there was therefore no opportunity for the appellant to be informed of the consequences on his application of the respondent's action."
"22 Where the applicant is both innocent of any practice that led to loss of the sponsorship status and ignorant of the fact of such loss of status, it seems to us that common law fairness and the principle of treating applicants equally mean that each should have an equal opportunity to vary their application by affording them a reasonable time with which to find a substitute college on which to base their application for an extension of stay to obtain the relevant qualification. In the curtailment cases, express Home Office policy is to afford sixty days for such application to be made.
23 Although we accept that there is no such policy for refusal cases, fairness requires that such cases be treated in broadly the same way. The applicant must be given an equal opportunity before refusal of application to amend it in the way we have described. This was clearly not done in this case. The Home Office knew that it had suspended the college in January 2010 but no one else did. The applicant could not have known that subsequently the college's status as an approved sponsor was revoked before his application for an extension of stay was decided.
24 It is obviously unfair for the Secretary of State to revoke the college's status after the application has been made when it was an approved sponsor and not to inform the applicant of such revocation and not afford him an opportunity to vary the application.
25 None of this applies where the applicant has not been a bona fide student at the college where he is seeking to extend his stay, or where he has participated in the practices that may have led the college to lose its sponsorship status, or where he has had actual knowledge of the cessation that the termination of the college's status as a sponsor either before the application for an extension of stay was made or shortly thereafter and when he had adequate opportunity to amend the application by seeking to substitute an approved college for an unapproved one."
"For the future, having clarified the requirements of fairness and how they are to be met in an individual case, we would expect the UKBA in a case of this kind where the particular circumstances identified at para [22] above are met to inform the applicant that the college is no longer on the approved list of sponsors and that a period of sixty days will be allowed for any variation of the application that the applicant may wish to make before it is determined. If the applicant fails to respond to the invitation there has been no breach of the duty of fairness."
"2 Where a sponsor licence has been revoked by the Secretary of state during an application for variation of leave and the applicant is both unaware of the revocation and not party to any reason why the licence has been revoked, the Secretary of State should afford an applicant a reasonable opportunity to vary the application by identifying a new sponsor before the application is determined."
was in too absolute terms since it was material to consider what the student knew or ought to have known (and when) about what was happening at the college. I shall assume for the moment that Patel was correctly decided.
Discussion
Policy Guidance
"If the student was not involved in the reasons why the Tier 4 sponsor had their licence revoked we will delay the refusal of his/her application for 60 days to allow the student to regularise his/her stay or leave the UK. The action a student can take to regularise his/her stay in the UK depends on what leave he/she has."
"The applicant must be applying for leave to remain for the purpose of studies which commence within 28 days of the expiry of the applicant's current leave to enter or remain or, where the applicant has overstayed, within 28 days of when that period of overstaying began."
"(m) The applicant must not be in the UK in breach of immigration laws except that any period of overstaying for a period of 28 days or less will be disregarded."
"7.18 There will be a number of safeguards to ensure that the amended rules are fair and proportionate:
- Where an applicant submits an application before their previous period of leave to enter or remain expires, but the application is rejected as invalid after their leave expires, the 28-day window in which the application may be submitted as an overstayer will start from the date on which the application was rejected, rather than when leave expired.
- Caseworkers will continue to have discretion to consider exceptional cases. Applicants who have overstayed by more than 28 days may provide evidence of exceptional circumstances which prevented them from submitting their application in-time."
It seems to me unlikely that the appellant would be able to bring himself within these provisions.
Is Patel good law?
Naved
EK (Ivory Coast)
"[38] The authorities in which the general public law duty of fairness has been found to impose additional obligations on the Secretary of State in the context of the PBS have been materially different from the present case. It has been held that where the Secretary of State has withdrawn authorisation from a college to issue CAS letters, fairness requires that she should give foreign students enrolled at the college a reasonable opportunity to find a substitute college before removing them: Patel (revocation of sponsor licence – fairness) India [2011] UKUT 00211 (IAC); Thakur (PBS Decision – Common Law Fairness) Bangladesh [2011] UKUT 00151 (IAC); and see Alam at para. [44]. But that requirement was found to arise where there had been a change of position of which the Secretary of State was aware, and indeed which she had brought about, in circumstances in which the students were not themselves at fault in any way, but had been caught out by action taken by the Secretary of State in relation to which they had had no opportunity to protect themselves. In the present case, by contrast, the Secretary had no means of knowing why the Appellant's CAS letter had been withdrawn and was not responsible for its withdrawal, and the fair balance between the public interest in the due operation of the PBS regime and the individual interest of the Appellant was in favour of simple operation of the regime without further ado."
"Fairness requires the Secretary of State to give an applicant an opportunity to address grounds for refusal, of which he did not know and could not have known, failing which the resulting decision may be set aside on appeal as contrary to law …"
if that was intended to lay down a principle formulated in that bald way.
Pokhriyal
Kaur
"both Rahman[1] and EK (Ivory Coast) are binding authority on the question whether the Secretary of State should, as a matter of fairness, give notice to an applicant for leave to remain or the Tier 4 Sponsor that she considers there to be a deficiency in the CAS before making an adverse decision on that basis. There is no such obligation"
Another obstacle?
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
Note 1 Rahman v SSHD [2014] EWCA Civ 11 where Naved was distinguished [Back]