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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Capital Care Services UK Ltd, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 1151 (24 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1151.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1151 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JAMES DINGEMANS QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
--and--
SIR ROBIN JACOB
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF CAPITAL CARE SERVICES UK LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"Your licence will be valid for 4 years, unless it is withdrawn by the Agency or surrendered before then. The licence will take effect from the day the licence is issued or the date on which it became possible to issue certificates of sponsorship under the tier, category or sub-category to which the licence relates, whichever is the later. You must notify the UK Border Agency if there are any changes in your circumstances."
Then in the next paragraph:
"You are reminded of the need, throughout the period of your licence, to fulfil the duties of a sponsor as set out in the guidance on the UK Border Agency website."
"1.1 The supplier shall be entirely responsible for the employment and conditions of service of his staff employed or engaged in the provision of the Services."
Then paragraph 1.3 of Schedule 2:
"In relation to the provision of the Services, the Supplier will employ or engage only such persons as are careful, skilled and experienced in the duties required of them and will ensure that every such person is properly and sufficiently trained and instructed (at the Supplier's expense) in accordance with clause 1.4 below and carries out the provision of the Services..."
And then various particulars are set out.
"3.1. Unless otherwise agreed in advance in writing with the Authority, a supplier shall ensure that all Agency Workers supplied in the provision of the Services, during the Contract Period, shall comply with the qualifications, registration requirements, experience and other standards as set out:
3.1.1. in the Supply Contract; and
3.1.2 by relevant Professional and Regulatory Body's standards of competence, training and proficiency; and
3.1.3 by the relevant Job Profiles as referred to in Annex no.1A (Job Profiles) and any other Job Profiles as required by the Authority;
3.2 The job profiles referred to in Annex No 1A (Job Profiles) are not exhaustive and new requirements may be introduced by the Authority, NHS Employers or UCLH during the Contract Period provided they are reasonable;
3.3 New requirements shall be communicated in writing by the Authority or UCLH to the supplier and unless the circumstances are such as to necessitate notice of an immediate effect, the Authority shall give the Supplier at least one month's notice of any variation or addition to the job profiles."
And then at paragraph 5.1 of the same contract:
"The Supplier shall use reasonable endeavours to ensure that all agency workers supplied in the provision of the services are aware that at all times whilst during and assignment with an authority they:
5.1.1 must work as directed by the Authority and follow all reasonable requests, instructions, policies, procedures and rules of the Authority..."
"284. An agency can apply for a licence as a sponsor only if it will employ migrants who are not settled in the United Kingdom within its own organisation. We will not issue a licence if the agency only supplies staff to other employers.
286. We will only allow the sponsor to issue a certificate of sponsorship if it is clear that the sponsor has full responsibility for determining the duties, functions and outcomes or outputs of the post."
Paragraphs 280 and 284 of the 11/08 guidance:
"280. An employment agency or employment business can apply for a licence as a sponsor only if it will employ non-settled workers within its own organisation.
284. We will only allow the sponsor to assign a certificate of sponsorship if it is clear that they have full responsibility for deciding the duties, functions and outcomes or outputs of the job."
Paragraphs 380 to 382 of the 12/10 guidance:
"380. Where a migrant is working on a contract basis and has been supplied to the sponsor by another organisation, the sponsor must be the organisation which has full responsibility for determining the duties, functions and outcomes or outputs of the job the migrant is doing."
381. An example of this would be where Company A has a contract with Company Z to deliver a piece of work. A migrant who is sponsored by Company A, may be said to work for the duration of the contract with Company Z, but they remain employed by Company A throughout the period of the contract and Company A is fully responsible for deciding the migrant's duties, functions, outputs or outcomes. In this example, Company A remains the migrant's sponsor.
382. We only allow the sponsor to assign a certificate of sponsorship if it is clear that they have full responsibility for deciding the duties, functions and outcomes or inputs of the job. Where the sponsored migrant is carrying out work for a third party on behalf of the sponsor, the migrant must be contracted by the sponsor to provide a time-bound service or deliver a time-bound project on behalf of the sponsor. They may not be contracted as agency workers or to undertake a routine role for the third party which is not related to the delivery of a time-bound service by the sponsor."
The 4/11 guidance is to the same effect.
"For my part I cannot accept that the mere fact that a clear and unequivocal statement such as that made in the Teed letter was made is enough to establish a legitimate expectation in accordance with that statement such that the expectation cannot be allowed to be defeated. All the circumstances must be considered. Where the court is satisfied that a mistake was made by the minister or other person making the statement, the court should be slow to fix the public authority permanently with the consequences of that mistake. That is not to say that a promise made by mistake will never have legal consequences. It may be that a mistaken statement will, even if subsequently sought to be corrected, give rise to a legitimate expectation, whether in the person to whom the statement is made or in others who learnt of it, for example where there has been detrimental reliance on the statement before it was corrected. The court must be alive to the possibility of such unfairness to the individual by the public authority in its conduct as to amount to an abuse of power. But that is not this case."
I said:
"83. The present case does not lie in the macro-political field. It concerns a relatively small, certainly identifiable, number of persons. If there has been an abuse of power, I would grant appropriate relief unless an overriding public interest is shown, and none to my mind has been demonstrated. But the real question in the case is whether there has been an abuse of power at all. The government's policy was misrepresented through incompetence. It is not in truth a case of change of policy at all. Mrs Begbie, who has conducted herself throughout with dignity, restraint, and a clarity of mind which contrasts with the letter to her from the Secretary of State of 11 March, did not alter her or her daughter's position in reliance on the misrepresentation. The mistake was corrected five weeks or so after the 'Teed' letter. The issue is whether the correction amounted to an abuse of power; or whether the Secretary of State should be compelled to allocate public resources to the grant of assisted places inconsistently with his perfectly lawful policy.
84. If there had been reliance and detriment in consequence, I would have been prepared to hold that it would be abusive for the Secretary of State not to make the earlier representations good. But there has not..."
Lord Justice Toulson:
Sir Robin Jacob:
Order: Appeal dismissed