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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> KM (Bangladesh) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWCA Civ 437 (21 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/437.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 437 |
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ON APPEAL FROM UPPER TRIBUNAL
Upper Tribunal Judge Kekic
IA/24868/2013
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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KM (Bangladesh) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Mr Russell Fortt (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Secretary of State
Hearing date: 10 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President:
"The Tribunal file shows that the notice of hearing was properly served on both the appellant at Flat 4, 47 Bignold Road and his representatives at 108A Whitechapel Road on 7 March 2014 as was the determination on 29 April 2014. I do not accept that all four items of correspondence could have gone astray. In the circumstances I refuse to admit this application which in any event could not have succeeded given the sustainable findings of the Tribunal."
a. Whether this court has jurisdiction to hear the application;
b. Whether there are any merits on the facts and, if so whether there are any prospects of success in satisfying the second appeals test; and
c. If the court has jurisdiction to consider the permission application, whether there is a solution to the issue of delay.
a. If the PD to CPR 52 which sets out the special provisions relating to appeals from the IAT is construed in a similar way to the right of appeal provisions in schedule 4 of the 1999 Act, an applicant could always be in time to seek permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal however out of time the applicant had been in seeking permission to appeal from the tribunal;
b. That cannot be right. The concept of refusal in the CPR PD is not necessarily the same as in the 1999 Act. The PD refers to the tribunal rules which provide for two ways in which an application for permission to appeal may be refused: either on the merits or on the basis of lack of jurisdiction. The PD relates to the former not the latter;
c. If the special provision of the PD does not apply, the general rules relating to appeals remain which provide for a fixed time within which an application for permission to appeal must be made from the substantive decision. That time period runs not from the AIT's decision on permission to appeal but from the substantive AIT decision and unless extended it follows that the period within which an appellant must apply for permission to appeal a substantive decision to the court of appeal will have expired.
"These two applications for permission to appeal to this court and for an extension of time were listed together so that the court could have the opportunity to revisit its earlier decision in Ozdemir v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWCA Civ 167 ( Ozdemir ), within the new statutory regime which includes both the formation of the new Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) and also the now quite well-established fast-track procedures for handling a certain category of asylum-seeker."
"[6] No party who appears before the court, including the Secretary of State, have made submissions to us other than that we should follow Ozdemir. If we did not follow Ozdemir, the consequence would be, no doubt, in a number of cases that an application for permission to apply for judicial review in the High Court would have to be made, with a consequent oral hearing in the High Court and perhaps a consequent application for permission to appeal to this court, leading to the cost and delay which has disfigured our system for processing challenges to asylum decisions in the past. In my judgment, this court should regard itself as bound by the decision of the Court of Appeal in Ozdemir."
"[7] … [The decision in Ozdemir] is a satisfactory conclusion to come to, particularly as it is one which is fully supported by the Secretary of State because it does set out a workable way in which the Court of Appeal and practitioners can approach these cases where, for whatever reason, an application for permission to appeal was not lodged with the IAT in time."
[…]
"[10] In any event, if the application for permission to appeal is not made in time, every day that passes from the time that the AIT is without jurisdiction is likely to weaken the chances of this court being willing to grant an extension of time. Parliament has made clear its wish that applications for permission to appeal to this court should be made promptly. This court will do nothing to thwart the wish of Parliament. Of course there may be those exceptional cases where it would be a manifest injustice, on account of the particular facts, if the court would not be willing to entertain an appeal out of time. But those are likely to be exceptional cases."
"[6] In short, it is now settled that if an application for permission to appeal to this court is not filed with the IAT during the prescribed ten-day period, this court will nevertheless have jurisdiction to entertain an "out-of-time" application so long as the applicant has first applied to the IAT and been turned away on the grounds that it no longer has any jurisdiction to grant relief."
Lord Justice Underhill:
(1) The special time limit for appeals from the UT in para. 3.3 of the Practice Direction does not apply where the UT has refused permission on the basis of non-compliance with time-limits rather than on the merits.
(2) Instead the ordinary time limit in (now) CPR 52.12 (2) applies.
(3) Since ex hypothesi the application to the UT was out of time the application to the CA will be even more so, but the CA can grant an extension under CPR 52.15 if satisfied that the missing of the original deadline (and any subsequent delay) was justifiable. This will involve considering the same matters as the UT will have done, if it refused an extension; but it is not, as such, an appeal from the UT's decision.