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United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments >> UI2023003456 [2023] UKAITUR UI2023003456 (2 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKAITUR/2023/UI2023003456.html Cite as: [2023] UKAITUR UI2023003456 |
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IN THE UPPER TRIBUNAL IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER |
Case No: UI-2023-003456 |
|
First-tier Tribunal No: HU/52410/2022 |
THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Decision & Reasons Issued:
2 nd November 2023
Before
DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE SKINNER
Between
MS TARA GHALE
(NO ANONYMITY ORDER MADE)
Appellant
and
ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER
Respondent
Representation :
For the Appellant: Ms E. Atas, counsel, instructed by Bond Adams LLP
For the Respondent: Ms S. McKenzie, Senior Home Office Presenting Officer
Heard at Field House on 16 October 2023
DECISION AND REASONS
Introduction
1. The Appellant is a citizen of Nepal who seeks to be reunited with her father, a former member of the Brigade of Gurkhas, in the UK on the grounds that they enjoy family life together, within the meaning of Article 8 ECHR. By a decision dated 15 November 2021, the Respondent refused her application and, by a decision promulgated on 28 March 2023 ("the Decision"), First-tier Tribunal Judge Mailer ("the Judge") dismissed her appeal. By permission granted by the First-tier Tribunal ("the FTT") on 18 August 2023, she now appeals the Decision to this Tribunal.
2. No anonymity order was sought in this appeal and, in light of the importance of open justice, there does not appear to me to be any good reason for one to be imposed.
The Decision of the FTT
3. The operative part of the FTT's Decision start at para. 50. The Judge reminded himself of the well-known authorities of Razgar [2004] UKHL 27 and the approach set out therein to determining an Article 8 appeal. In particular, in para. 54, the Judge noted that there is no presumption of family life between adults and their parents. He noted para.24 of Kugathas [2003] EWCA Civ 311, noting that family life is not established in those circumstances unless something more exists than normal emotional ties, such as if an appellant is dependent on the family or vice versa. The Judge at para. 55 noted that this involves identifying the near relatives of the appellant, the nature of the links between them and the appellant, the age of the appellant, where and with whom she had resided in the past, and the forms of contact maintained with the other members of the family with whom she claims to have a family life. At para.56, the Judge cited Sedley LJ at para.17 of Kugathas, who noted that the irreducible minimum of what family life implies is real, committed or effective personal support.
4. At para.57 the Judge considered Singh [2015] EWCA Civ 630, noting that there was no requirement for exceptionality, but that the love and affection between an adult and her parents will not of itself justify a finding of family life; there has to be something more.
5. The Judge's findings start at para.60. They are, in summary, as follows:
Appeal to the Upper Tribunal
6. The Appellant sought permission to appeal on the following three grounds:
7. Permission to appeal on all grounds was granted by First-tier Tribunal Judge Buchanan on 18 August 2023, who considered that all three grounds were arguable.
8. There was no rule 24 response from the Respondent.
Material error of law
Ground 1: Mr Gurung's witness statement
9. Ms McKenzie on behalf of the Respondent candidly accepted that there was a witness statement from Mr Gurung in the bundle before the FTT and that the Judge had made an error of law in failing to appreciate its existence and therefore take it into account. Her position however was that when one looks at that witness statement, this error is immaterial.
10. Ms Atas' submission was that the perceived lack of a witness statement fed into the Judge's consideration of the Appellant's father's credibility and that it was therefore material.
11. The witness statement of Mr Gurung in this case is sufficiently short that it merits setting out in full. It stated as follows:
"1. I am an Ex Gurkha soldier. I know [the Appellant's father] as a fellow Ex Gurkha soldier.
2. Mr Ghale gave me £385.00 on Feb 2013 to be given to his daughter Miss Tara Ghale. I took that money from him in GBP cash. I gave instructions to my relatives in Nepal to take RS 50,000 in cash and hand deliver it to Tara.
3. I did that for Mr Ghale two times between 2012 and 2013. The last time I did that was on Nov 2014.
4. Should you require more information, please do not hesitate to contact me.
5. I confirm that the contents of this statement are true."
12. The test for immateriality is a high one. I must be satisfied that the FTT would inevitably have reached the same conclusion had it appreciated that there was a witness statement from Mr Gurung and taken it into account: Detamu v SSHD [2006] EWCA Civ 604 at [14] and [18].
13. In many cases it is not possible to say with sufficient certainty how a Judge would have been affected by evidence which they omitted to take into account, had they done so. In this case however I am satisfied that the taking into account of this witness statement could not have made any difference to the outcome of the appeal. This is because in my judgment it is inevitable that the FTT would have placed no weight on it, or, at best, such little weigh that it could not possibly have made any difference. This is because:
14. I accordingly reject Ground 1.
Grounds 2-3: The test for family life
15. Grounds 2 and 3 are essentially different facets of the same argument, that the FTT applied the wrong legal test for determining whether Article 8 ECHR was engaged. It is therefore convenient to address them together.
16. It is important when considering grounds of this sort to have well in mind that it is probable that in understanding and applying the law in their specialised field, specialist tribunals will probably have got it right and that their decisions should accordingly be respected unless it is quite clear that they have misdirected themselves in law: AH (Sudan) v SSHD [2007] UKHL 49; [2008] 1 AC 678 at [30].
17. It is well established that the test for Article 8 family life in the Kugathas sense is one of effective, real or committed support and that there is no requirement to prove exceptional dependency: see Uddin v SSHD [2020] EWCA Civ 338; [2020] 1 WLR 1562 at [40(i)]. The FTT referred to these principles expressly in paras. 56 and 57. The question then is whether, notwithstanding this correct self-direction, that test has been applied.
18. Dealing first with Ground 3, name the Appellant's submission that the FTT misapplied the test in not asking whether family life was established before the Appellant's father came to the UK and has endured since, I do not consider that this has any merit. The Appellant relies on para. 39 of Rai v ECO [2017] EWCA Civ 320 that "But that [i.e. the way the UT had reasoned the case] was not to confront the real issue under article 8(1) in this case, which was whether, as a matter of fact, the appellant had demonstrated that he had a family life with his parents, which had existed at the time of their departure to settle in the United Kingdom and had endured beyond it, notwithstanding their having left Nepal when they did." I do not consider that Lindblom LJ in that passage was intending to lay down any sort of additional test of general application. Rather, he was responding to the UT's reasoning in that case, which had been to rely heavily on the fact that the appellant's parents in that case had voluntarily left the appellant in Nepal. The point he was making was that the fact that they had voluntarily left their daughter in Nepal did not mean that there was no family life between them. As all the cases make clear, whether there is family life is a question of fact to be assessed as at the date of the hearing before the FTT and, plainly, considering whether an appellant had a family life and whether it has endured, may be a helpful way of establishing that fact, but it is not necessary to do so and it is not an error of law if a decision-maker does not approach the question of family life in that way.
19. Turning to Ground 2, the Appellant's submission is that the fact that the Appellant could find work in Nepal was taken as material to the finding that there was no family life, but there is no requirement to show financial dependency to establish that Article 8 is engaged. However, while it is correct that it is not necessary to show financial dependency to establish family life within the meaning of Article 8, the degree to which an adult child lead is living independently on his or her parent may well be a relevant factor: see Singh v SSHD [2015] EWCA Civ 630; [2016] Imm AR 1 at [24] (final sentence). The FTT did not, in my judgment, elevate the extent of the Appellant's independence into a dispositive reason why there could not be family life within the meaning of Article 8. Rather, it considered this, as it was entitled to do, as a factor in deciding whether there was, as a matter of fact, real, effective and/or committed support.
20. As Lord Dyson MR emphasised when giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal in R (Gurung) v SSHD [2013] EWCA Civ 8; [2013] 1 WLR 2546, whether an individual enjoys family life is one of fact and depends on a careful consideration of all the relevant facts of the particular case. In my judgment the FTT undertook the requisite careful consideration of the facts and came to a conclusion which was open to it without committing any error of law. I therefore reject Grounds 2 and 3.
21. The appeal is dismissed.
Notice of Decision
The decision of the First-tier Tribunal did not involve the making of an error of law and shall stand.
Paul Skinner
Deputy Judge of the Upper Tribunal
Immigration and Asylum Chamber
21 October 2023