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Cite as: [2001] EWHC Admin 251

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ADIO v. SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOME DEPARTMENT [2001] EWHC Admin 251 (5th April, 2001)

Case No: CO/1604/2000

Neutral Citation Number: [2001] EWHC Admin 251

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

QUEENS BENCH DIVISION

ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

Royal Courts of Justice

Strand, London, WC2A 2LL

Thursday 5th April 2001

B e f o r e :

THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON


LAJA OMO ADIO

Claimant


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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

Defendant

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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of

Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street

London EC4A 2AG

Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838

Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)

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Miss Yinka Adedeji & Mr. A Berry Hoday (instructed by the Eureka Law Centre for the Claimant)

Miss Elisabeth Laing (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor for the Defendant)

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Judgment

As Approved by the Court

Crown Copyright ©

MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON:

1. The Claimant is a Nigerian national who has been in this country since 1993. He claims to have arrived on 24 July 1993 by air with a visitor's visa issued to him in Lagos. On 3 December 1993 he applied for a permit to remain and to work here as a working holiday-maker. He was represented by a firm called Songhai Advisory Services. When he made his application, he claimed that his passport had been stolen. He was interviewed by the Immigration Service on 7 September 1994. He was accompanied by Mr David Musa of Songhai Advisory Services. I shall return to what he said at the interview later. As a result of his interview, the Immigration Service decided that he was an illegal immigrant, and he was immediately served with a notice to that effect known as Form IS151A.

2. On the same day he claimed asylum. Miss Adedeji, who has presented his case with ability, clarity and courage, suggested that he did so while in a state of panic. There is no evidence to that effect. More significantly, he was to revive his claim for asylum later, when there could be no suggestion of panic. The claim for asylum, of course, involved the assertion that he had a genuine belief that if he returned to Nigeria he would be the subject of persecution. That seems to me to be inconsistent with a claim to want to be here for a working holiday, which implies that at the end of the holiday the Claimant will return home. More obvious is the fact that there was no mention of any fear of persecution when he was interviewed.

3. Within 2 weeks of his interview, on 22 September 1994, he married Frances Oyebanji. On 30 September 1994 he submitted an application to remain on the basis of his marriage. On 16 November 1994 he withdrew his claim for asylum in favour of an application to remain here as the spouse of a UK citizen and resident.

4. On 20 November 1996, the Secretary of State rejected his claim to remain as a spouse, on the application of his policy not to grant leave to remain to those who take on family or financial commitments after enforcement proceedings have been commenced. On the following day the Claimant reinstated his asylum application. On 22 November his representatives made a formal application for asylum on his behalf.

5. On 1 August 1997 the Claimant was interviewed for the purposes of the determination of his claim to asylum.

6. The Secretary of State rejected the Claimant's asylum claim on 9 September 1997, on the basis that it was not genuine but fabricated. The Claimant appealed against that decision, and also sought exceptional leave to remain on medical grounds and on the ground that by then he and his wife had 2 young children.

7. On 19 September 1997 the Secretary of State gave directions for the Claimant's removal. His removal was deferred pending his appeal against the rejection of his claim to asylum.

8. On 9 November 1998 the Special Adjudicator rejected the claim for asylum. She rejected much of the Claimant's evidence. She did not accept the Claimant's explanation for not claiming asylum "either on arrival or at the earliest opportunity given that he claims that he left Nigeria because he feared that he would be killed". However, she recommended that the Secretary of State consider the grant of exceptional leave in view of the Claimant's residence in this country since 1993, his marriage, the birth of his 2 children, his wife's ill health, his epilepsy and the lack of any immediate family in Nigeria.

9. The Claimant sought to appeal to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal. On 21 December 1998 the Immigration Appeal Tribunal refused leave to appeal "bearing in mind (the Special Adjudicator's) assessment of the lack of credibility of the applicant".

10. On 16 September 1999 the Secretary of State again served notice of removal on the Claimant, again on the express basis that he was an illegal entrant.

11. The Secretary of State reconsidered the Claimant's position in the light of the Special Adjudicator's recommendation on 3 February 2000. He decided not to accede to the recommendation, and that arrangements for the removal of the Claimant to Nigeria should proceed.

12. On 27 March 2000 the Claimant was again served with notice of removal as an illegal entrant.

13. These proceedings were begun on 4 May 2000. The application for judicial review was supported by affidavits of the Claimant and his wife. The order in respect of which relief is sought was stated to be: "Directions for removal of the Claimant from the UK on 17/4/2000: the decision was dated 27/3/2000". The notice of removal dated 27 March 2000 was attached to the Claimant's originating application. No other decision of the Secretary of State or anyone else was so attached.

14. The Secretary of State subsequently again reconsidered the Claimant's position and notified his decision by letter dated 29 January 2001. That letter explained at length why the Secretary of State remained of the view that leave to remain should be refused. It also explained why the Secretary of State maintained his decision notwithstanding the interference with the family life of the Claimant and his family that might result.

15. In opening the case for the Claimant, Miss Adedeji who was not responsible for the claimant's Form 86 or his skeleton argument, stated that there were three grounds for the application for judicial review: that the removal of the Claimant from the UK would interfere with the family life of the Claimant and his wife and children, contrary to Article 8 of the ECHR; that his removal would be inconsistent with the legitimate expectation created by the recommendation of the Special Adjudicator; and that the determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant was unjustified. She rightly decided not to press the first two grounds. As to the first, the Court of Appeal in ex parte Mahmoud [2000] All ER (D) 2191 upheld a similar decision of the Secretary of State on the basis that "there were reasonable grounds for his conclusion that deportation of the appellant (was) necessary in the interests of an orderly and fair control of immigration and (therefore) his right to respect for his family life was not violated". It is not possible to distinguish this case from that.

16. As to the second, the skeleton argument of the Claimant recognises that a recommendation of a Special Adjudicator does not create a relevant legitimate expectation that the Secretary of State will implement it: see Sakala [1994] Imm AR 227. The Special Adjudicator is independent of the Secretary of State, and his recommendations cannot bind the Secretary of State in any way.

17. That leaves the third ground, that the Claimant was wrongfully determined to be an illegal entrant. That determination took place in 1994. It could have been the subject of challenge and judicial review then. It was not. Instead, as has been seen, the Claimant sought other bases to justify his remaining here. During the course of Miss Adedeji's opening, I expressed concern as to that delay. Miss Adedeji's response was that what was challenged was the decision of 27 March 2000, in respect of which there had been no delay. The fact that that decision depended on one made some years before did not alter that fact, particularly since the finding that the Claimant was an illegal entrant was a jurisdictional fact on which the decision of the Secretary of State in 2000 depended. In any event, she submitted, the single Judge had given leave to apply for judicial review; the application for judicial review expressly referred to and challenged the finding in 1994 that the Claimant was an illegal entrant; and in accordance with the decision of the House of Lords in R v Criminal Injuries Compensation Board, ex parte A [1999] 2 WLR 974 it was too late for the Secretary of State to challenge the grant of leave on the ground of delay on the part of the Claimant.

18. This interchange led to production and examination of the order of the single Judge granting leave. As will be seen, its provisions are contradictory. Miss Laing informed me that the Treasury Solicitor had made enquiry of the Administrative Court Office, and been told that it was a grant of leave. Having considered the matter further, Miss Laing belatedly submitted that the order did not give leave to the Claimant to apply for judicial review, and alternatively did not amount to a grant of leave to challenge the 1994 determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant. In the further alternative, she applied to set aside the grant of leave, if there was such, on the ground of the Claimant's gross delay since 1994 in applying to set aside that determination.

19. In consequence, the issues to be determined in this case proliferated. The principal issues in this case are:

(i) Was the order of the single Judge a grant of leave to apply for judicial review?

(ii) If so, was it necessary for the Claimant to apply to set aside not only the decision of 27 March 2000, but also the 1994 determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant on which it was based?

(iii) If so, did the leave granted extend to the challenge to the 1994 determination?

(iv) If so, should the Defendant be permitted, at this late stage, to apply to set aside the grant of leave on the ground of the Claimant's delay?

(v) If so, should the grant of leave be set aside?

(vi) If the Claimant succeeds on the above issues, and may otherwise be entitled to relief, should it be refused in the exercise of the Court's discretion under section 31(6) of the Supreme Court Act 1981, on the basis that it would be detrimental to good administration to grant relief?

(vii) If the answer to (vi) is "No", is the 1994 determination or the 2000 decision liable to be quashed?

I shall consider them in the above order.

(i) Was there a grant of leave?

20. The relevant parts of the order, which was notified to the Claimant on 12 June 2000, are as follows:

Following:-

Consideration of the documents only;

Order ... : Application granted.

Observations for the applicant:-

List for oral hearing. The Secretary of State should be invited to attend and comment on the grounds.

21. Although coming under the heading "Observations for the applicant" the sentence "List for oral hearing" is an order of the Judge. It, and the next sentence, are inappropriate for a grant of leave. Those provisions are used when the Judge orders an oral hearing between the parties of the application for leave. They are wholly unnecessary when leave is granted.

22. I have no doubt that the insertion of the words "Application granted" was unintended. The Judge would not have inserted the two sentences under the heading "Observations for the applicant" if he had intended to grant leave. However, given that the words "Order ... : application granted" are so categoric, the fact that the inconsistent provisions to which I have referred are under the heading "Observations", and the tardiness of the Secretary of State in challenging the status of the order, I shall proceed on the assumption that the order was a grant of leave.

(ii) Was it necessary for the Claimant to seek leave to challenge the 1994 determination?

23. My instinctive answer to this question was "Yes". Otherwise, anyone in the position of the Claimant in this case could avoid the consequences of his inexcusable delay by putting forward matters requiring further consideration by the Secretary of State and then promptly seeking judicial review of the decision given on consideration of the new matters. To permit the original decision to be reviewed in such circumstances would wholly undermine both the policy behind, and the application of, section 31(6) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 and RSC Order 53 rule 4, which applied to these proceedings. It would result, as here, in decisions being investigated and having to be justified, and being liable to being set aside, years after they were made.

24. That my initial answer is indeed the law appears from the unreported judgments of Richards J in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Foster (given on 13 October 1998), and of Lightman J and the Court of Appeal in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Sheikh given respectively on 20 November 1998 and on 30 April 1999.

25. Furthermore, contrary to Miss Adedeji's submission, it makes no difference that the determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant was a jurisdictional fact on which the decision of 27 March 2000 depended. A governmental decision is valid unless and until set aside, and is not to be treated as a nullity: see the authorities referred to in de Smith, Woolf and Jowell, Judicial Review of Administrative Action, at p 260, fn 18. In fact, both Foster and Sheikh were illegal entrant cases.

26. Furthermore, Order 53 rule 4(1) of the Rules of the Supreme Court, formerly provided:

An application for permission to apply for judicial review shall be made promptly and in any event within three months from the date when grounds for the application first arose unless the court considers that there is good reason for extending the period within which the application shall be made.

The "grounds for the application first arose" in the present case in September 1994.

(iii) Did the leave granted extend to the challenge to the 1994 determination?

27. Given the general terms of the order on the application for leave the answer to this question must be found from the terms of the paper application before the single Judge.

28. In the Claimant's Form 86, the decision in respect of which relief was sought, which I have set out at paragraph [13] above, did not mention the determination that the applicant was an illegal entrant. In the space headed "If there has been any delay include the reasons here" the following statement appeared:

Messrs Howe and Co, solicitors to whom my file was transferred for further action applied for legal aid but got no answer. I had to seek help from the Eureka Law Centre.

This statement may have been appropriate to justify the delay after the service of the notice of removal dated 27 March 2000. It could not have referred to or sought to justify the delay since 1994.

29. Under the heading "Relief Sought" the Form referred to the Secretary of State's failure to implement the recommendation of the Special Adjudicator made in his decision of 24 September 1999, and the Secretary of State's decision in February and March 2000 to remove the Claimant. The 1994 determination was not mentioned or referred to.

30. The determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant was referred to in paragraph 1 of the "Grounds on which relief is sought" under the heading "Legal Matrix". Even there, however, the date of the determination was not given, although the date of the interview was. The paragraphs of the form under the heading "Factual Background" referred to the service of "Illegal Entry" documents on 7 September 1994. Part C of the Grounds concerned the medical background to the application and part D referred to the Special Adjudicator's decision.

31. The "Submissions of Law" referred to the Secretary of States error in law in determining that the applicant was an illegal entrant, but again gave no date for that decision.

32. The applicant's affidavit in support of his application did refer to the service of illegal entry documents on him on the 7th of September 1994, but did not contain any facts on the basis of which it could be seen that he was challenging the determination that he was an illegal entrant. He did not depose to the facts or circumstances relating to his entry to this country in 1993 or to the facts and circumstances relating to the determination by the Secretary of State that he was an illegal entrant. He only deposed to the legality of his entry to this country by his affidavit sworn on 14 March 2001, 5 days before the hearing before me.

33. The application for judicial review in this case was an ex parte application. It is the duty of a litigant and those representing him, when making an ex-parte application to bring the full relevant facts clearly to the attention of the Court. In relation to the challenge now made to the decision made in 1994 that the applicant was an illegal entrant, his application failed to do so. It did not bring sufficiently to the attention of the Court that the Claimant was seeking to set aside a decision made by the Secretary of State in 1994. It could be, and probably was, read as being in substance an application to quash the decision made in 2000 to remove the Claimant, on the grounds of his family situation, his and his wife's ill health, and the recommendation of the Special Adjudicator; i.e., matters which arose after the 1994 determination.

34. Perhaps more basically, the relief sought did not include an order to quash the decision made in 1994 or an extension of time to apply for such an order.

35. It follows that in my judgment the leave given by the single Judge did not extend to an application to quash the determination made in 1994 that the Claimant was an illegal entrant.

36. I find support for this conclusion in the fact that it is highly unlikely that the Judge would have granted leave to apply to set aside a determination made in 1994.

37. An amendment to the Form 86 would be required if an order quashing that determination were to be made. Having regard to the delay since that determination was made, and the steps that have been taken by both the Secretary of State and the Claimant since then, and the absence of any justification for the delay, I would unhesitatingly refuse permission for such an amendment.

38. It follows that the Claimant is not entitled to any relief. However, in case I am wrong, I shall consider the remaining questions set out above.

(iv) Should the Defendant be permitted to apply to set aside the grant of leave on the ground of the Claimant's delay?

39. In the normal case, I should be extremely reluctant to grant such permission at the substantive hearing of an application. Such an application should be made promptly. At the substantive hearing, if no application to set aside the leave has been made, a Claimant is normally entitled to assume that he has an unchallenged leave to apply for judicial review. My reluctance has been fortified by the judgment of the Court of Appeal in R v Lichfield District Council and another, ex p Lichfield Securities Ltd (unreported, 8 March 2001), which came to my attention after the hearing of the present case. The Court of Appeal disapproved the investigation by a Judge (in that case, Turner J) on the substantive hearing of the issue of delay which had been argued before the Judge (Keene J) on the inter partes hearing of the application for permission to apply:

The critical question in this case, however, is at what stage or stages the prescribed tests may be applied or - importantly - reapplied. Here the Rules and the Act provide most of the answer. Regardless of whether it involves repetition of arguments on promptness already considered at the leave stage, undue delay is placed by s.31(6)(b) on the agenda at the substantive hearing. On this short ground it seems to us that, notwithstanding Keene J's finding of promptness, the related question of undue delay lay within Turner J's jurisdiction at the substantive hearing. Thus far we respectfully endorse Simon Brown J's conclusion in RSPB. But it does not follow, in our judgment, that the judge at the substantive hearing should proceed as if the issue had never previously arisen in the case, at least where it has been properly argued out between the parties at the leave stage. It is necessary to place beside Simon Brown J's example of a full divisional court being told that it is bound by a single judge's view of promptness the equally undesirable - and today more likely - situation of one judge of the Administrative Court effectively acting as a court of appeal from another, or (as happened here) deciding an issue without reference to a fellow judge's earlier decision inter partes on substantially the same question and upon the same materials. While ultimately it is a matter for the judge hearing the substantive application, we consider that the appropriate course in a situation such as arose both in RSPB and before Turner J is that the respondent should be permitted to recanvass, by way of undue delay, an issue of promptness which has been decided at the leave stage in the applicant's favour only (i) if the judge hearing the initial application has expressly so indicated, (ii) if new and relevant material is introduced on the substantive hearing, (iii) if, exceptionally, the issues as they have developed at the full hearing put a different aspect on the question of promptness, or (iv) if the first judge has plainly overlooked some relevant matter or otherwise reached a decision per incuriam. This is, today, no more than practical case management under the Civil Procedure Rules, in particular CPR 3.1(2)(k), which permits the court to exclude an issue from consideration, but more generally under CPR 1.4(2)(c) and the overriding objective set out in CPR 1.1. It also gives effect to the principle of judicial comity at first instance spelt out by Robert Goff LJ in R v Greater Manchester Coroner, ex parte Tal [1985] QB 67, 81A-C. The second judge, in addition, must have in mind the need to prevent circumvention of CPR 54.13, which provides:

"Neither the defendant nor any other person served with the claim form may apply to set aside an order giving permission to proceed."

Applying these principles to the present case, we consider that Turner J ought not to have embarked upon the issue of undue delay. Nothing in the short passage in which he dealt with it indicates any recollection that the issue of promptness had previously been considered on notice by Keene J, much less that any new material was now before him. Yet he concluded, in conflict with Keene J, that because time began running early in March 1999 and LSL then stood by for three critical weeks, undue delay had been established. For reasons which we have given, it is no more to the point that Turner J expressed his finding in terms of promptness (the leave test) than it is that Keene J did not refer in his judgment to s.31(6)(a). For practical purposes, both judges were dealing with the same issue on the same materials.

40. However, the present case differs substantially and significantly from Lichfield Securities Ltd. In this case, the Judge on the application for leave had no application to extend time, no material before him to justify an extension of time, and no sufficient reference to the 1994 determination. The issue of delay had not been canvassed before the substantive hearing.

41. Furthermore, I accept Miss Laing's submission that the case as opened by Miss Adedeji differed very substantially from the case presented by the Claimant's Form 86. Whereas the claim as set out in Form 86 focussed on matters subsequent to 1994, indeed on decisions in 1999 and 2000, the case as opened by Miss Adedeji was virtually confined to the 1994 determination. In my judgment, this transformation of the claim explains the Secretary of State's previous failure to apply (doubtless bearing in mind the guidance given by the House of Lords in ex parte A) and justifies Miss Laing's late application. It, and the fact that the relevant delay was not considered by the Judge at the leave stage, also distinguish the present case from ex parte A.

42. I should therefore have granted permission to the Secretary of State to apply to set aside the leave granted by the single Judge to challenge the 1994 determination, if I had held that such leave had been granted.

43. I shall consider questions (v) and (vi) together.

(v) Should the grant of leave be set aside?

(vi) Should relief be refused in the exercise of the Court's discretion under section 31(6) of the Supreme Court Act 1981, on the basis that it would be detrimental to good administration to grant relief?

44. The Claimant's delay is relevant at two stages: on the application for leave and the substantive decision to grant or withhold relief, by reason of the combined effect of section 31(6) of the SCA 1981 and RSC O 53 r 4, which applied to these proceedings. However, whereas RSC Order 53 rule 4(1) placed the onus on the Claimant to establish "good reason for extending the period within which the application shall be made", section 31(6) places the onus on the Defendant to establish relevant hardship, prejudice or detriment to good administration.

45. As I mentioned above, Miss Adedeji submitted that the Claimant's application for judicial review related to the Secretary of State's decision on 3 February 2000 and the notice of removal dated 27 March 2000, and that therefore there had been no delay on his part. That is so in so far as the Claimant relies on matters such as his or his family's then state of health, which could have given rise to a claim that the Secretary of State had failed to consider a material fact when making those decisions. But it cannot be so in relation to the challenge to the determination made in 1994 that the Claimant was an illegal entrant. The challenge to that decision would be over 5 years late.

46. No grounds have been shown for extending the time for applying to quash the 1994 determination that the Claimant was an illegal entrant so as to permit him to apply in 2000.

47. So far as section 31(6) is concerned, Miss Adedeji submitted that the only ground for refusing leave or relief under that section was detriment to good administration, and there was no evidence of any. Miss Laing submitted that after delay as long as that in this case detriment could and should be presumed.

48. Good administration requires that decisions be made speedily, and if challenged, challenged promptly. Government and citizen must be able to rely on the validity of governmental actions that have not been challenged. Furthermore, it necessarily becomes more difficult to investigate government action as time passes. Records may be lost or destroyed; civil servants and other staff move employment; memories fade. In this case, as the chronology set out above shows, step after step was taken by the Secretary of State and, it seems to me, by the Claimant on the basis that the determination of the Claimant as an illegal entrant was valid. In addition, the British High Commission in Lagos destroys its records after 5 years. In 1994, the High Commission informed the Immigration Service in Croydon that it was unable to trace the Claimant's file without either the date of issue of his alleged visitor's visa or its vignette number. However, as at the date of his application for judicial review, the Secretary of State would have been unable to check whether there was a file for his alleged visa application at Lagos even if he decided to have every visa application in 1993 checked for the purpose.

49. Miss Adedeji referred me to the speech of Lord Bridge in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex p Khawaja [1984] AC 74, 124, in which he expressly referred, in the context of allegations of illegal entry, to the need for the Courts if necessary to investigate events occurring years before in some remote part of the Indian sub-continent. If the Secretary of State seeks to allege that someone obtained entry to this country by a deliberate misrepresentation as to events some time in the past, the Secretary of State may necessarily have to adduce evidence as to such events. However, in the present case the need to investigate what occurred over 6 years ago is due to the Claimant's failure to take proceedings during that very long period of time. I do not think that Lord Bridge had such a case in mind.

50. In my judgment it would be detrimental to good administration to give leave or to grant relief. To do so would encourage persons affected by governmental decisions to refrain from taking punctual action to challenge those decisions. To permit an application for the 1994 determination to be set aside, or to set it aside, without very good reason for the delay being established, would be inconsistent with any notion that the government or the public may rely on governmental action which has not been promptly challenged. If I were to set aside the 1994 determination, the Secretary of State could not investigate the Claimant's case now in the way that he might then have done, if only because of the destruction of records in Lagos. It is not sensible to think that matters could be fairly investigated now. I am not considering a delay marginally beyond the 3 month period stipulated by RSC Order 53 rule 4(1), but a delay many times that period. The delay in this case would lead to an action for personal injuries being time-barred, is close to the period of limitations for most other actions, and if it happened after the commencement of proceedings would certainly lead to most proceedings being dismissed for want of prosecution.

51. I therefore have no hesitation in deciding that I should not extend the time for the Claimant to apply to quash the 1994 determination; and that I should if necessary refuse him leave so to apply, and would in any event refuse to grant relief, on the ground that to do so would be detrimental to good administration.

(vii) Apart from the questions addressed above, is the 1994 determination or the 2000 decision liable to be quashed?

52. In view of my above determinations, the question strictly does not arise for consideration. However, since it was argued, and in case this matter goes further, I shall give my answer to it.

53. In this connection, Miss Adedeji submitted that court is confined to examining the evidence available to the Secretary of State in 1994. I disagree. In my judgment, in arriving at its determination whether Mr Adio is an illegal entrant, the Court is entitled to, and should, look at any relevant evidence before it that was unavailable then. It is particularly appropriate to look at the conduct of Mr Adio since 1994, since this is relevant to his credibility, and it was his credibility that was at the heart of the determination that he was an illegal entrant.

54. In considering this question, I bear in mind that the Claimant voluntarily applied for an extension to his stay or leave to remain, and the consistency of his story. However, I also consider the following to be material:-

(i) If, as the Claimant stated in interview in 1994, he had told the High Commission in Lagos that he intended to work in this country, and that he would be coming for 2 years, it is highly unlikely that he would have been issued with a (non-working) visitor's visa, and one which was valid for 6 months only. It is highly implausible that he would have been issued with a visitor's visa and told to make an application for a working holiday permit in the UK, particularly given that the Immigration Rules required someone who was to be given leave to enter for a working holiday to have the means to pay for his return journey.

(ii) His equivocation during his interview as to whether he had informed the High Commission in Lagos that he intended to work casts doubt on his credibility.

(iii) There is nothing to suggest that he was asked about, or proved, that he could pay for his return journey, as required by the then Immigration Rules. It is not clear that he could have done so, given that he claimed to have raised the cost of the journey to the UK by selling up all he had in Nigeria.

(iv) He was unable to remember the cost of the visa or what was stated on the visa.

(v) He could not remember what was on the stamp placed on his passport on entry.

(vi) It is highly unlikely that on arrival at Heathrow he would not have been questioned as to what he intended to do here, and in particular whether he intended to work, yet that is what he said had occurred on entry.

(vii) The Claimant could produce no objective evidence to support his story. The loss of his passport was explained by a contention of theft; but the fact remains that there was no such evidence.

(viii) It is difficult to reconcile his application for a working holiday visa, which implies an intention to return to Nigeria, with his economic position - he had sold all his worldly goods in Nigeria to fund his journey here.

(ix) His claims for asylum were inconsistent with an application for a working holiday permit, which as I stated implies an intention to return to Nigeria. Miss Adedeji said that he applied for asylum in 1994 in panic. There is no evidence to that effect. In any event it does not explain his resurrection of his asylum claim in 1996.

(x) At interview he did not suggest that he had informed the High Commission in Lagos of any claim to asylum or that he was in fear of persecution; nor did he mention it in interview in 1994. It is not credible that these matters would not have been mentioned if the Claimant had a genuine fear of persecution. It is not surprising that his assertions of persecution and of a fear of persecution were subsequently rejected by the Special Adjudicator as incredible. His lack of credibility affects my decision to reject his account of his entry to the UK.

55. Miss Adedeji rightly submits that the Secretary of State's determination that the Claimant was either a clandestine entrant or one who entered as a result of a deception involves two mutually inconsistent possibilities. However, in circumstances in which there is no objective evidence of the Claimant's entry, but the evidence establishes that the story he put forward cannot have been true, the Secretary of State was entitled and right to come to the conclusion that he was one or the other.

56. Having reviewed the evidence before me, and applying the civil standard of proof appropriate to an allegation of fraud, i.e., deception or dishonest subterfuge at entry, I am satisfied that the Claimant was and is an illegal entrant.

Conclusion

57. For the reasons set out above this application for judicial review must be dismissed.


© 2001 Crown Copyright


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