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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 >> Wang & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2021] EWCA Civ 679 (11 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/679.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 679, [2021] 4 WLR 70, [2021] WLR(D) 271, [2021] Imm AR 1339 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER
UTJJ Rimington and Jackson
[2019] UKUT 393 (IAC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF JIE WANG AND ANOTHER |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Zane Malik QC and Julie Anderson (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 20 April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Popplewell:
Introduction
The Tier 1 (Investor) Migrant rules
Money and Investment |
Points |
The applicant:
(a) has money of his own under his control in the UK amounting to not less than £1 million, or
(b) (i) owns personal assets which, taking into account any liabilities to which they are subject, have a value of not less than £2 million, and
(ii) has money under his control and disposable in the UK amounting to not less than £1 million which has been loaned to him by a UK regulated financial institution.
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30 |
The applicant has invested not less than £750,000 of his capital in the UK by way of UK Government bonds, share capital or loan capital in active and trading UK registered companies, subject to the restrictions set out in paragraph 65 below and has invested the remaining balance of £1,000,000 in the UK by the purchase of assets or by maintaining the money on deposit in a UK regulated financial institution.
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30 |
The investment referred to above was made: (1) within 3 months of the applicant's entry to the UK, if he was granted entry clearance as a Tier 1 (Investor) Migrant ... |
15 |
"In Tables 7 to 9B "money of his own under his control" and "money under his control" exclude money that has been secured against where another party would have a claim on the money if the loan repayments were not met" [except in limited circumstances set out in the remainder of the paragraph].
"Investment excludes investment by the applicant by way of:
(a) ….
(b) "Open-ended investment companies, investment trust companies, investment syndicate companies or pooled investment vehicles,
…"
"'Active and trading UK registered companies' means companies which:
(a) have a registered office or head office in the UK;
(b) have a UK bank account showing current business transactions; and
(c) are subject to UK taxation."
The Maxwell/Eclectic Scheme
(1) a loan agreement between MAM and the migrant, under which MAM lent the migrant £1 million (or in one case £5 million);
(2) a services agreement between the migrant and Maxwell Holding Limited, MAM's parent company ("Maxwell Holding"); and
(3) a loan agreement between the migrant as lender and Eclectic as borrower, under which the migrant invested the £1 million in Eclectic by way of a five-year loan, convertible into equity at Eclectic's option.
Ms Wang's contractual documents
(1) Under clause 2.1 MAM agreed to make available a facility of £1 million subject to the terms of the agreement. By clause 2.2 the purpose of the facility was said to be to enable Ms Wang to meet the requirements of the UK Border Authority for a Tier 1 (Investor) visa. Clause 2.2 provided: "the Facility will be used for AID." AID stood for Authorised Investment Destination and was defined by clause 1.1(i) as meaning "investments in share capital or loan capital in active and trading UK registered companies." AID Company was defined by clause 1.1(j) as meaning "company for purposes of AID."
(2) By clause 6.2.2 the loan term was five years. By clause 5.1 the loan was to carry interest at 3% per annum which was payable quarterly in arrears. The five-year term was, however, subject to clause 4.1 which provided: "Date of the repayment is determined by [MAM] in its sole discretion, considering symmetric repayment from the AID Company to Borrower."
(3) By clause 6.1 there were various obligations on Ms Wang which were required to be fulfilled prior to draw down. One of them, at clause 6.6, was "to sign a loan agreement or share purchase agreement with the AID Company".
(4) Clause 11.1 provided that if the competent UK authorities refused to issue a Tier 1 (Investor) visa to Ms Wang for any reason, "this agreement loses force."
The SSHD Decision
The Upper Tribunal decision
Submissions on the appeal
(1) The Rules should be interpreted in a way which makes them accessible, clear and transparent, such that an applicant should be able to know simply by reading them how to comply. Against that background, the Upper Tribunal was wrong to make any reference to Ms Wang's motives for entering into the Maxwell/Eclectic Scheme and wrong to place any reliance on whether or not the investment was commercially attractive. It was inherent in the Investor Migrant scheme that a visa would be the reward for making the necessary investment, and so the Rules contemplated both that the obtaining of such visa might be the motivation for the investment, and that its value to the migrant might outweigh any disadvantages in the commercial terms of the investment. In any event questions of motive and commercial attractiveness involved subjective judgments lacking any objective criteria, and had no proper place in a points based system where an applicant should be able to determine simply and clearly whether he or she earned the points necessary to qualify.
(2) In relation to row 1 of Table 8B, the question was simply whether the funds were under her control. That was a question to be determined by reference to her legal rights and obligations under the MAM loan agreement, which clearly provided that she had a choice as to what investment to make with the proceeds of the loan, at least within the wide ambit of investment in any AID company.
(3) The Upper Tribunal was wrong to conclude that by clause 3.7.4 of the services agreement Ms Wang had ceded the choice of the investment to MAM. MAM was not a party to the services agreement and therefore the services agreement could not have created any rights or obligations between MAM and Ms Wang. Moreover clause 3.7.4 referred not to the initial investment, but to changes in investments thereafter in order to comply with the requirements in Rule 245EE(c)(ii), and paragraph 65C(b) of Appendix A, to maintain the value of the investment at £1 million or more throughout the period during which it was required to be maintained.
(4) As to whether Eclectic was excluded as a qualifying entity under paragraph 65(b), it was not sufficient simply to hold that it shared some of the characteristics of the four excluded entities there identified. It had to constitute one of those four specific types of investment vehicle. It did not do so, because they were terms which had a defined meaning for statutory, regulatory or fiscal purposes and the Eclectic investment did not fall within such defined meaning of any of the four specified entities.
Grounds 1 and 2: control
"I agree that question-marks over the commercial viability of a proposed investment or the fact that the applicant in making it may be motivated primarily by an intention to move to the UK are not—at least as far as appears from the provisions to which we were taken—as such reasons for refusing an application. However, even if they are inadmissible as considerations in their own right, they are plainly material to the central question of whether the applicant is indeed intending to make the qualifying investment at all: that would be obvious anyway, but it is reinforced by the explicit language of paragraph 245DB(g). That was clearly the purpose for which the ECO relied on these factors, and I can see no basis for holding that the conclusion that he reached was perverse."
Paragraph 61A
Restrictions on use
Ground 3: qualifying investment
Lord Justice Nugee:
Lord Justice Underhill, VP: