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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> AP (India) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWCA Civ 89 (13 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/89.html Cite as: [2015] WLR(D) 72, [2015] EWCA Civ 89, [2015] INLR 431 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION & ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE DAWSON
OA 07631 2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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AP (INDIA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Ms Cathryn McGahey (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 28 January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
"… The 2nd Appellant is an adult in full time education. He is continuing his studies and will continue to receive financial support. The 2nd Appellant is male and will not therefore be left in India as an unaccompanied female. There is a family home in which he can remain whilst he completes his studies and considers his options for the future. It will of course be a wrench to the Appellants to be separated as a family unit but I bear in mind that the 2nd Appellant is a young adult male who will be making his own way in the world given his age. The family can remain in contact by telephone and other forms of communication and they can also visit each other. As the 2nd Appellant grows older he would necessarily sever some ties with his family in any event given that he is currently undertaking postgraduate studies and will no doubt be considering forming his own life. In all these circumstances, whilst I have some sympathy with the circumstances of the Appellants, I find that the decision to refuse the 2nd Appellant entry clearance is a proportionate decision."
The appeal to the Upper Tribunal
"18. It is relevant that the appellant before me unsuccessfully appealed against the decision refusing him entry clearance when he was a minor. The judge would have been aware of the earlier unsuccessful decision as it is incorporated in the decision under appeal. There was no evidence before him of any significant disadvantage suffered by the appellant and his family relating to the entitlement of the sponsor to register as a full British citizen. The appellant had applied as a minor and it remains unclear why he was unsuccessful on appeal but it is not the case that he was denied the opportunity of applying to settle with his father under the less demanding Rules for minor children. Having regard to the undeveloped manner in which the point was put to the judge I am not satisfied that he was in error in not taking it and furthermore, had he done so, I am not persuaded that it would have resulted in a materially different outcome."
"It is clear the judge had in mind the impact of separation of the parties in referring to the wrench "to the appellants to be separated as a family unit". It is not the case that he did not have in mind the impact on the appellant's mother and sister."
The grounds of appeal
The BOC policy
"Each of the sponsors claim to British nationality arose from the British Nationality Act 1948 which was effective from 1 January 1950. They each, when born, became citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies by birth (CUKCs). Their rights to settle in the UK were restricted by the Commonwealth Immigration Act 1968. The Immigration Act 1971 came into force on 1 January 1973. It introduced the concept of a right of abode. On 14 December 1973 the European Commission on Human Rights decided the East African Asians case. It decided that the Commonwealth Immigration Act 1968 was racially discriminatory. The UK Government entered into a friendly settlement. A Special Quota Voucher Scheme (SQV Scheme) was introduced to benefit citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies whose rights had been restricted by the 1968 Act. ….
14 The Special Quota Voucher Scheme had been introduced from 1968 to assist both CUKCs and subsequently British Overseas Citizens (BOCs). Each of the two sponsors had qualified as BOCs under the provisions of the British Nationality Act 1981. The SQV Scheme was outside the Immigration Rules. It allowed persons latterly BOCs who had no other citizenship and were under pressure to leave their country of residence and had nowhere else to go to settle in the UK. The numbers entitled to come to the UK were limited by quota rules. From 1975, 5,000 vouchers per year were issued. Waiting lists were always long. By 1987 those applying under the quota were expected to wait more than five years (Macdonald, Immigration Law and Practice 1st edition, 1983, pg 248 and 2nd edition, 1987, pg 286).
15 Importantly the SQV Scheme was only available to heads of household and to their dependents. Such heads of household were defined for the purpose of the scheme as "men who have reached their 18th birthday; women over 18 who [are] … single, widowed, divorced [or] married to a man who is incapable of fulfilling the role of head of household for medical reasons, eg severely physically or mentally *159 handicapped. (This includes a woman whose marriage may have been not valid in English law but which exists in fact, and a woman who is living in a permanent association with a man)". The scheme was therefore applied in a manner which discriminated between men and women on the grounds of marital status. The scheme was abolished on 5 March 2002. There were approximately 500 applications per year at that stage.
16 Section 12 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 amended sections 4 and 14 of the British Nationality Act 1981 . The effect was to entitle certain British Overseas Citizens to be registered as British citizens from 30 April 2003. This applied to those who hold no other nationality and who had not renounced any other nationality. The mothers of both the appellants qualified for British citizenship for the first time as a result of this amendment. They were adversely affected by the "anomaly" referred to in the next paragraph.
17 The context of this legislative change is of importance in these cases. The then Home Secretary said in a parliamentary debate on the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Bill in the House of Commons on 5 November 2002 in relation to the changes made which subsequently enabled the mothers of the two Appellants to obtain British citizenship:
"We are talking here about righting an historical wrong, in terms of what happened back in the late 1960s and early 1980s in regard to British overseas citizens … [who] found themselves in an anomalous situation … I wish to put right that anomaly for British overseas citizens.""
"…. It needs to be remembered that what is at issue in these cases is not reuniting a family which was divided by the 1968 Act: far too much time has gone by for that to matter save in the rarest cases. Appellants – the present ones included - are typically children who, but for their parents' legal inability to settle here between 1968 and 2002, would have either been born here or have come as minors in right of their parents.
14 You can set out to compensate for a historical wrong, but you cannot reverse the passage of time. Many of these children have now grown up and embarked on lives of their own. Where this has happened, the bonds which constitute family life will no longer be there, and art. 8 will have no purchase. But what may constitute an extant family life falls well short of what constitutes dependency, and a good many adult children – including children on whom the parents themselves are now reliant – may still have a family life with parents who are now settled here not by leave or by force of circumstance but by long-delayed right. That is what gives the historical wrong a potential relevance to art. 8 claims such as these. It does not make the Convention a mechanism for turning the clock back, but it does make both the history and its admitted injustices potentially relevant to the application of art. 8(2).
15 As the individual cases to which I now turn illustrate, the effect of this is to reverse the usual balance of art. 8 issues. By the time they come to seek entry clearance, adult children may well no longer be part of the family life of British overseas citizens who have finally secured British citizenship. If so, the threshold of art. 8(1) will not have been crossed and the proportionality of excluding them will not be an issue. If, however, they come within the protection of art. 8(1), the balance of factors determining proportionality for the purposes of art. 8(2) will be influenced, perhaps decisively, by the fact (if it is a fact) that, but for the history recounted in NH (India), the family would or might have settled here long ago."
".. If a Gurkha can show that, but for the historic injustice, he would have settled in the UK at a time when his dependant (now adult) child would have been able to accompany him as a dependant child under the age of 18, that is a strong reason for holding that it is proportionate to permit the adult child to join his family now."
He noted that this principle would apply whether the historic injustice was to the Gurkhas or the British citizens from East Africa.
The argument on appeal
The historic injustice point
Conclusion
Lord Justice McCombe:
Lady Justice King