Kant v The Minister for Justice and Equality; S.I. (Bangladesh) v The Minister for Justice and Equality [2019] IEHC 583 (22 July 2019)


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High Court of Ireland Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Kant v The Minister for Justice and Equality; S.I. (Bangladesh) v The Minister for Justice and Equality [2019] IEHC 583 (22 July 2019)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2019/2019_IEHC_583.html
Cite as: [2019] IEHC 583

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Kant -v- The Minister for Justice and Equality; S.I. (Bangladesh) -v- The Minister for Justice and Equality


Judgment By   Humphreys J.
Court   High Court
Date Delivered   22 July 2019
Status   Approved
Neutral Citation   [2019] IEHC 583
Record Number   2018 1091 JR; 2019 14 JR
Date Uploaded   23 August 2019

JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Richard Humphreys delivered on the 22nd day of July, 2019

1. The applicants are both persons who received historic student permissions under s. 4 of the Immigration Act 2004. Both then
married E.U. nationals and were granted permissions under the European Communities (Free Movement of Persons) Regulations 2015
(S.I. No. 548 of 2015). They then applied for permissions in their own right under s. 4 of the 2004 Act which the Minister refused to
accept because they were not persons in possession of extant permissions under that Act. The main question in the proceedings is
whether the Minister was entitled to take that view.

2. The applicant in the S.I. proceedings brought a family law application in relation to his Bangladeshi divorce, so accordingly I have
redacted his name in this judgment. I have received helpful submissions from Mr. Colm O’Dwyer S.C. (with Ms. Leanora Frawley B.L.)
for the applicants in both cases and from Mr. David Conlan Smyth S.C. (with Ms. Sarah K.M. Cooney B.L. in Kant and with Mr.
Anthony Moore B.L. in S.I.).

Facts and procedural history in Kant

3. The applicant is an Indian national who arrived in the State from that country in 2013 on foot of a student permission under s. 4 of
the 2004 Act. He “married” an EU national on 12th December, 2014 and obtained a residence card on foot of EU Treaty Rights based
on this “marriage”. In August, 2016, he left the State and then came back after one month without a visa. He claims that the “wife”
left him in or around December, 2016. On 3rd July, 2018, the Minister wrote to the applicant informing him that the marriage was
suspected to be one of convenience and that the applicant had submitted false documentation in support of the application for a
residence card. On 20th July, 2018, the applicant applied under s. 4 of the 2004 Act for permission to remain in the State in his own
right, albeit that that letter was addressed to the EU Treaty Rights section of the Department. On 19th November, 2018 the Minister
refused to consider the application under s. 4 of the 2004 Act or pursuant to residual discretion because the applicant had an extant
immigration permission. That is the decision impugned in the proceedings. The statement of grounds was filed on 18th December,
2018, the primary relief sought being certiorari of the decision of 19th November, 2018.

4. Leave was granted on 14th January, 2019, and a statement of opposition was filed on 10th April, 2019. In the meantime, on 13th
March, 2019, the applicant’s residence card was revoked and the “marriage” was declared to be one of convenience. The permission
to remain by reason of EU Treaty Rights was deemed to be void ab initio. The applicant then sought a review of that decision and on
1st July, 2019 was informed that that review had been rejected. The finding that the EU national was not exercising EU Treaty Rights
and that the marriage was one of convenience, and that the application was based on information and documentation that was false
and misleading, the submission of which was fraudulent, was upheld. A proposal to deport letter was also issued. The applicant was
given an opportunity under s. 3 of the Immigration Act 1999 to set out reasons why a deportation order should not be made.

Facts and procedural history in S.I.

5. On 4th November, 2002 the applicant arrived in the State and was granted a stamp 2 student permission which expired on 31st
December, 2011. That permission was not renewed thereafter. He claims to have met a Ms. K.C., an EU national from Latvia, in 2007.
and married her on 5th July, 2010. On 29th July, 2010 he applied for a residence card under the European Communities (Free
Movement of Persons) (No. 2) Regulations 2006 (S.I. No. 656 of 2006).

6. His Irish marriage certificate stated that he was “never married”; however that was a falsehood. He was previously married in
Bangladesh. Having made the inevitable EU Treaty Rights application, clarification was sought in that regard, and he ultimately
produced a Bangladeshi divorce certificate. The Minister did not accept the validity of that certificate and refused the application on
2nd February, 2011. The Minister then issued a proposal to deport on 11th February, 2011.

7. A further application as a family member of an EU national was submitted on 23rd May, 2012, which was also refused, as was a
review application. A third application was submitted on 11th October, 2013, apparently based on a durable relationship. That was
granted on 23rd June, 2014, the Minister emphasising, as usual in such cases, in the letter notifying the applicant of the permission,
that there was an obligation to notify the Minister of any change in circumstances.

8. On 24th July, 2014 His Honour Judge Johnson made an order by consent recognising the validity of the applicant’s Bangladeshi
marriage on 29th March, 2004 and divorce dated 2nd January, 2009. The State’s position is that the Latvian wife stopped exercising
EU Treaty Rights on 15th January, 2016, made no tax returns in the State thereafter and was receiving social assistance in Latvia

page2
after that date. The applicant did nothing in relation to the wife leaving the State until 9th July, 2018 when his solicitors made an
application for permission under s. 4 of the 2004 Act. In that letter it was claimed that the wife had left the State in November, 2017.

9. On 7th December, 2018, the Minister refused the application purportedly made under s. 4 of the 2014 Act and declined to consider
an application based on executive discretion. That letter is challenged in the proceedings. On 10th December, 2018, the applicant’s
residence card under the 2015 Regulations was revoked. That finding has not been challenged. The present proceedings were filed on
11th January, 2019, the primary relief sought being certiorari of the Minister’s refusal to consider the application under s. 4 of the
2004 Act. I granted leave on 14th January, 2019. A statement of opposition was filed on 24th April, 2019. On 31st May, 2019, the
applicant issued a notice of motion seeking discovery but sensibly that has not been pursued.
Time

10. The applicant in Kant is out of time. However, I extended time at leave stage because I was told that the applicant’s solicitor had
just got married. I see no reason to revisit that, as it is both a valid and sufficient basis for an extension of time, and also involves
the sort of information I can properly receive from counsel rather than pointlessly having to have it set out on affidavit.
First ground: whether the respondent was precluded from considering the applications under s. 4 of the 2004 Act

11. Ground A in the S.I. case and the Kant case contend that the Minister erred in law and unlawfully fettered his discretion in
regarding himself precluded from considering the application under s. 4 of the 2004 Act, or alternatively under the Minister’s residual
discretion. The applicant submits that any EU Treaty Rights permission in the form of a stamp 4 permission is a permission under s. 4
of the 2004 Act. That is not the case. An application for EU Treaty Rights is not made under s. 4 of the 2004. It is made under the
Free Movement of Persons Regulations.

12. Reliance is placed on a comment by MacEochaidh J. in
Nicolas v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2014] IEHC 526 (Unreported,
High Court, 11th November, 2014) at para. 7, referred to in John Stanley, Immigration and Citizenship Law (Dublin, 2017) at para. 5 –
46, that the permission in that case was issued under s. 4 of the 2004 Act. That permission however was of a different nature. It was
an application akin to a Case C-34/09 Ruiz Zambrano situation rather than a claim of being a family member under the Free Movement
of Persons Regulations, and indeed the State in the present proceedings accepts that the permission in the Nicolas case should have
been phrased as a s. 4 permission: see para. 34 of the State’s written legal submissions in Kant. Thus insofar as Stanley in effect
asks whether any EU Treaty Rights permission could be viewed as a permission under s. 4 or an inherent executive power, the answer
is that that is not so. It is permission under the European Communities (Free Movement of Persons) Regulations 2015 or predecessor
regulations.

13. Thus neither applicant is a person who was at the time of their s. 4 applications in possession of an extant permission under s. 4
of the 2004 Act. The fact that they both had permissions issued under s. 4 years beforehand does not entitle them to apply again
under s. 4 after a long remove without such permission. There is a de minimis element in the sense that one has to bear in mind that
there can be delays in getting appointments with the Department or GNIB, or other personal emergencies, and so if a permission has
proximately expired, the Minister can treat it as extant for the purposes of s. 4 if an application is made for renewal within what the
Minister reasonably considers to be a short time. That is simply the general law of the de minimis principle in action in the specific
context of renewal of a permission that has expired for a brief period.

14. That
de minimis principle has no application if an applicant emerges with an expired permission after a period that is measured in
more than months. This situation, contrary to Mr. O’Dwyer’s submission, does not lead to any inconsistency with s. 5 of the 2004 Act.
That has been put beyond doubt by the amendment effected by s. 81(c) of the 2015 Act which deleted the requirement that a
permission for the purposes of s. 5 has to be “given under this Act”. Even if that amendment had not been made, rights under EU law
would displace the requirement for a permission under the 2004 Act anyway. It is clear from a mounting and consistent series of
authorities that the law in relation to s. 4 of the 2004 Act is that that section only applies to a person who either (a) arrives at the
frontier of the State and whose occupation is considered in that context, namely admission for the first time or (b) is seeking to
renew or vary an existing extant permission under the 2004 Act, although that must be taken to include an application that is
sufficiently proximate in time to an expired permission on a de minimis basis: see most recently Lin v. Minister for Justice and Equality
[2018] IEHC 780 (Unreported, High Court, 18th December, 2018), Sulaimon v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2012] IESC 63
(Unreported, Supreme Court, 21st December, 2012) at para. 19, Hussein v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2015] 3 IR 423, Dike.
v. Minister for Justice and Equality (Unreported, Faherty J., 23rd February, 2016), R.G. v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2016]
IEHC 733 (Unreported, O’Regan J., 24th November, 2016), Bode v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2007] IESC 62 [2008] 3 IR 663
at 695 per Denham J., as she then was, A.B. v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2016] IECA 48 (Unreported, Court of Appeal, 26th
February, 2016) per Ryan P. at para. 47, Bundhooa v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2018] IEHC 756 per Barrett J. (Unreported,
High Court, 21st December, 2018), Jooree v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2018] IEHC 757 (Unreported, High Court, 21st
December, 2018) per Barrett J. Leave to appeal on this point was refused by the Supreme Court in Y.L. v. Minister for Justice and
Equality [2019] IESCDET 158. The decisions in Bode and A.B. also dispose of the argument that the Minister is obliged to exercise his
executive discretion in a freestanding manner as opposed to requiring an applicant to make any points in the context of s. 3 of the
1999 Act.
Second ground: alleged lack of reasons in S.I.

15. Ground B in
S.I. alleges that the Minister failed to give adequate reasons for refusing to exercise his “residual discretion”. Given
the approach taken in Bode and A.B. there was no obligation on the Minister to exercise any residual executive discretion outside of
the process established by s. 3 of the Immigration Act 1999. In that context, that refusal cannot be condemned on the basis of lack
of reasons. In any event, given the wide and extensive nature of that discretion only general reasons could be given, and the
Minister’s statement that having considered all the information set out in the letter to the applicant and the applicant’s immigration
history he was not proposing to exercise that discretion is perfectly adequate in the circumstances.
Third ground: alleged failure to take into account relevant matters

16. As the applicants were not entitled to apply under s. 4 of the 2004 Act, ground C in Kant and D in S.I. do not arise.
Fourth ground: alleged acting outside of jurisdiction

17. Again, as the Minister was entitled to decline to deal with an application under s. 4 of the Act or under his residual discretion,
ground E in Kant and F in S.I. do not arise.
Fifth ground: alleged unreasonableness and irrationality

18. Ground H in Kant and ground I in S.I. complain that the Minister acted irrationally in adopting the approach that the applicants’
points could be considered within the deportation process. Having regard to the matters dealt with above, that is neither
unreasonable, irrational nor unlawful.

page3

Sixth ground: alleged capricious and arbitrary action

19. Ground K in Kant and ground L in S.I. allege capricious and arbitrary operation of the legislation or discretion by the Minister. That
certainly has not been made out. It was not particularly pressed in oral argument and indeed the discovery sought in support of that
ground was not pressed either.
Seventh ground: wrongly excluding the applicants from s. 4 of the 2004 Act

20. Ground M in Kant and ground N in S.I. are repetitious of the central point made in the first ground so they add nothing to that.
Eighth ground: failure to recognise that the applicants were entitled to apply under s. 4 of the 2004 Act

21. Ground P in the Kant case and ground Q in the S.I. case repetitively seek to restate this point in different language, rather
pointlessly. The same result arises.
Ninth ground: whether the Respondent acted ultra vires s. 3 of the ECHR Act 2003

22. Ground S Kant and ground T in S.I. contend that the Minister has acted
ultra vires s. 3 of the European Convention on Human
Rights Act 2003. That is a fundamental misconception because any rights under the ECHR, as applied by the European Convention on
Human Rights Act 2003, can and will be addressed in the context of any deportation proposal. Being applicants without an extant
permission under s. 4 of the 2004 Act, the present case involves a very different situation from that dealt with in Luximon v. Minister
for Justice and Equality [2018] IESC 24 [2018] 2 IR 542 [2018] 2 I.L.R.M. 153.
Discretion

23. In
B.S. v. Refugee Appeals Tribunal [2019] IESC 32 (Unreported, Supreme Court, 22nd May, 2019) Charleton J. concurring at para.
18 said: “Judicial review is not granted as of right but by reason of justice. Circumstances such as behaviour of an applicant, or the
absence of justice in providing a remedy, can enable a refusal even though there has been an error in administration or in the
application of legal rules.” He gave the example of misleading information being given by an applicant. That the conduct and credit of
an applicant is also relevant in judicial review was stressed by MacMenamin J. in C.R.A. v. Minister for Justice, Equality and Law
Reform [2007] 3 IR 603. This point was recently applied by Keane J. in Mavlanous v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2019] IEHC
501 (Unreported, High Court, 10th July, 2019). I made the point in M.A. (Pakistan) v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2018] IEHC 397
[2018] 5 JIC 1521 (Unreported, High Court, 15th May, 2018) at para. 17 that the court can exercise its discretion against an
applicant who abuses and misleads a particular process and then seeks to challenge the outcome of that very process itself (see also
per O’Regan J. in R.G. v. Minister for Justice and Equality [2016] IEHC 733 (Unreported, High Court, 24th November, 2016)). Thus
while these applicants fail on the merits in any event I would have, had it been necessary to do so, declined to grant relief on the
grounds of discretion. In S.I. the applicant failed to inform the Minister of the changing circumstances, even on his own account. He
also made the misleading claim never to have been married when entering into the marriage with the EU national. In Kant the
application for EU Treaty Rights, was based on what was found to be fraudulent documentation and a marriage of convenience.
Notwithstanding that it might still be potentially open to the applicant to challenge that decision, that is the current position. He also
continued to work notwithstanding a lack of permission. He left the State and returned, and given that his presence in the State was
by virtue of a marriage of convenience he should have had a visa on return. The subsequent finding means that his permission was
void ab initio so he never had a permission anyway even if counterfactually one were to consider the permission under the 2015
Regulations to be one under the 2004 Act, which it was not.
Summary and order

24. To attempt to summarise the main conclusions without taking away from the more specific terms of this judgment:
(i) An EU Fam stamp 4 permission to a qualified family member in the exercise of EU Treaty Rights is not a permission
under s. 4 of the Immigration Act 2004.
(ii) Where an applicant who had a permission under s. 4 of the 2004 Act but then moves on to a different permission not
under s. 4, or alternatively lets that permission expire without applying to renew its currency or very shortly thereafter,
and thus is not the holder of an extant permission under s. 4 of the 2004 Act, such an applicant is precluded from making
a renewal application under s. 4 of the 2004 Act or a free-standing application under that section.
(iii) In respect of persons not entitled to make applications under s. 4 of the 2004 Act, the Minister is not obliged to
consider any application made under his residual or executive discretion in a free-standing manner, whether he is
requested to do so or not, and may deal with any discretionary application in the context of submissions made under s. 3
of the Immigration Act 1999.
(iv) The applicants by their misconduct and/or lack of candour have disqualified themselves from discretionary relief.
(v) In addition, in Kant the applicant has been found to be in a marriage of convenience which means the permission he
had was void ab initio, so even if, counterfactually, it was issued under s. 4, no injustice has been done to the applicant,
albeit that he could potentially challenge that decision at some future point.

25. Accordingly, both applications are dismissed.


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