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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> AA (Spent convictions) Pakistan [2008] UKAIT 00027 (25 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2008/00027.html Cite as: [2008] UKAIT 00027, [2008] UKAIT 27 |
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AA (Spent convictions) Pakistan [2008] UKAIT 00027
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 22 January 2008
Date Determination notified: 25 March 2008
Before
Between
AA | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
Convictions that are 'spent' for the purposes of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 should not normally be the subject of reference in appeals before the Tribunal. The exception is in s 7(3) of the Act, which allows spent convictions to be proved if the interests of justice require it: it is for the Respondent to prove that they do.
History
09.10.1989 | appellant given leave to enter as student |
17.05.1991 | leave to remain as working holiday-maker till 27.06.1993 |
10.05.1993 | last enters this country: leave to remain continued under s. 3(3)(b) of the Immigration Act 1971 |
09.06.1993 | applies for leave to remain as student |
28.06.1993 | leave to remain refused |
03.11.1993 | applies for leave to remain as husband of British citizen |
03.11.1994 | leave to remain refused |
05.02.1997 | sentenced to 3 months' imprisonment for attempting to leave this country on false Belgian passport |
10.02.1997 | appeal against refusal of leave to remain as husband dismissed |
13.03.1997 | police notify Home Office of conviction and sentence |
22.04.2002 | applies for indefinite leave to remain as long resident |
16.05.2002 | indefinite leave to remain refused |
12.11.2003 | makes further application for indefinite leave to remain |
24.08.2007 | further application refused, with notice of liability to removal |
Qualifying residence
"… any period spent in the United Kingdom following service of notice of liability to removal or notice of a decision to remove by way of directions under paragraphs 8 to 10A, or 12 to 14, of Schedule 2 to the Immigration Act 1971 or section 10 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 Act, or of a notice of intention to deport him from the United Kingdom."
In this case no deportation notice, nor notice of any decision to remove, was ever served; and no notice of liability to removal was given till the date of the decision under appeal. Despite the making of two appealable, and one unappealable immigration decisions between the appellant's last arrival and that date, Mr Avery conceded that no notice of liability to removal was given during that time either. It follows that the appellant is qualified for indefinite leave to remain as a long resident, unless there are public interest reasons why that would be undesirable, in terms of paragraph 276B (ii).
Public interest reasons
"(1) Subject to sections 7 and 8 below, a person who has become a rehabilitated person for the purposes of this Act in respect of a conviction shall be treated for all purposes in law as a person who has not committed or been charged with or prosecuted for or convicted of or sentenced for the offence or offences which were the subject of that conviction; and, notwithstanding the provisions of any other enactment or rule of law to the contrary, but subject as aforesaid—
(a) no evidence shall be admissible in any proceedings before a judicial authority exercising its jurisdiction or functions in Great Britain to prove that any such person has committed or been charged with or prosecuted for or convicted of or sentenced for any offence which was the subject of a spent conviction …"
"For the purposes of this section and section 7 below "proceedings before a judicial authority" includes, in addition to proceedings before any of the ordinary courts of law, proceedings before any tribunal, body or person having power—
(a) by virtue of any enactment, law, custom or practice …
to determine any question affecting the rights, privileges, obligations or liabilities of any person, or to receive evidence affecting the determination of any such question."
Following table A under s. 5 of the 1974 Act, the rehabilitation period for someone over 18 on conviction, and sentenced to imprisonment for no more than six months, is one of seven years. It follows that this appellant's sentence of three months' imprisonment in 1997 was spent well before the date of the decision under appeal in 2007, and, subject to any of the exceptions provided by s. 4, he was entitled to be treated as someone who had never committed the offence with the Belgian passport in the first place. Subject again to those exceptions, that is the answer to Mr Avery's proposed reliance on the facts underlying the conviction.
Exceptions
a) pardons, and quashing or commutation of convictions or sentences;
b) enforcement of fines or other payments;
c) breach of conditions or requirements of the sentence;
d) disqualifications, disabilities, prohibitions or other penalties lasting beyond the rehabilitation period.
None of (a), (b) or (c) applies to this case, which involves a decision leading to notice of liability to removal. The full text of what exception (d) applies to follows:
"the operation of any enactment by virtue of which, in consequence of any conviction, a person is subject, otherwise than by way of sentence, to any disqualification, disability, prohibition or other penalty the period of which extends beyond the rehabilitation period applicable in accordance with section 6 above to the conviction."
That does not in terms apply in this case either; but it may be helpful if we give our view, even though not necessary to the decision in this case, as to the effect of that exception in deportation cases. Provisionally we think a recommendation for deportation by the sentencing judge, which is treated, at least for appeal purposes, as part of the sentence, would fall outside the exception for that reason. As for a decision to deport on "conducive" grounds by the Secretary of State, that is something to which the person concerned is liable (it being discretionary), rather than subject to under the immigration legislation. It follows that we do not think exception (d) would apply in deportation cases either.
Interests of justice
If at any stage in any proceedings before a judicial authority in Great Britain … the authority is satisfied, in the light of any considerations which appear to it to be relevant (including any evidence which has been or may thereafter be put before it), that justice cannot be done in the case except by admitting or requiring evidence relating to a person's spent convictions or to circumstances ancillary thereto, that authority may admit or, as the case may be, require the evidence in question notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1) of section 4 above, and may determine any issue to which the evidence relates in disregard, so far as necessary, of those provisions.
The original Tribunal made a material error of law and we substitute a determination allowing the appeal.
Senior Immigration Judge Freeman
Date: