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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Abdi & Ors v Entry Clearance Officer [2023] EWCA Civ 1455 (07 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1455.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1455 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE NORTON-TAYLOR
UI-2022-002946 (EA-03229/2021)
UI-2022-002947 (EA-03231/2021)
UI-2022-002948 (EA-03335/2021)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
____________________
(1) DAHIR ELMI ABDI (2) UBAH ELMI ABDI (3) MAHREZ SHARIF HASSAN |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER |
Respondent |
____________________
Paul Skinner (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29 November 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL :
Introduction
EEA Family Permits
"The Applicant does not need to be dependent on the EEA national to meet all or most of their essential needs. For example, an applicant is considered dependent if they received a pension which covers half of their needs and money from their EEA national sponsor which covers the other half."
The Refusal Letters
- On your application you state that you are financially dependent on your sponsor. As evidence of this you have provided money transfer remittance receipts from your sponsor to you, however, it is noted that these transfers are dated sporadically from 2019 to 2020. Unfortunately, this limited amount of evidence in isolation does not prove that you are financially dependent on your sponsor. I would expect to see substantial evidence of this over a prolonged period.
- I would also expect to see evidence which fully details yours and your family's circumstances. Your income, expenditure and evidence of your financial position which would prove that without the financial support of your sponsor your essential living needs could not be met.
The FtT Decision
"(i) He fled to the Netherlands in 2008 where he was granted asylum and in April 2015 he became a Dutch national. In September 2015 he came to the United Kingdom and has settled status here. He works as a self-employed taxi driver mainly with Uber but also with Bolt;
(ii) He sponsored his mother to come to the United Kingdom in 2019. She obtained an EEA Family Permit and lives with the sponsor;
(iii) He has a younger brother and sister Huseen and Jasmine who have lived in the Netherlands since around 2016. They are both married with children of their own. Huseen has five children and Jasmine has three children;
(iv) Jasmine works part time as a cleaner and Huseen works part time as a postman;
(v) He and his mother live with his sister Kin and her family including five children [in the] United Kingdom. He does not pay anything towards his accommodation costs so that he can send as much money as possible to the first two Appellants;
(vi) He is the eldest son of the family and has been supporting his mother and the first and second Appellants since he went to the Netherlands in 2018;
(vii) He made an application for his mother first and then later the Appellants to this appeal because he was told by the Somali community that his applications would be more likely to succeed if they were made one at a time;
(viii) After living for a short time in Kenya in 2018 the first two Appellants returned to Mogadishu. Ubah married in July 2019 and her husband moved into the house. He supported them all because none of them were working. In late 2019 Ubah's husband [ran away] because he was threatened by Al-Shabaab, later threats were made to the first two Appellants and so they decided to apply to come to the United Kingdom;
(ix) The Appellants are currently living undocumented in Kenya. Their rent is equivalent to approximately $270 to $300 pm. They pay around $40pm for utility bills and spend about $250pm on food;
(x) Recently their visas for Kenya expired and about two weeks ago they were stopped by police on the street and asked for their papers. When they could not provide them the police required a bribe of $10."
The Appeal to the Upper Tribunal
(a) in deciding that Ashkir was not the source of the funds, the FtT Judge made adverse credibility findings against Ashkir without these being put to Ashkir and without them having been relied on by the respondent in its Refusal Letters; it was therefore unfair to rely on this reasoning;
(b) the Judge failed to make findings as to whether some of the money sent contributed to the appellants' essential living needs.
The issues in the appeal
(1) Ground 1: the Upper Tribunal erred in law by holding that there had been no or no material procedural unfairness before the FtT notwithstanding that the FtT decided the appeal against the appellants on the basis of a matter that had not been raised by the respondent and of which the FtT gave the appellants no notice.
(2) Ground 2: the FtT erred in law by failing to determine (a) whether Ashkir contributed to the remittances to the appellants even if he did not provide the whole of the amount remitted and (b) whether the appellants were dependent on that contribution. The Upper Tribunal erred in law by holding that the FtT had not been required to determine those issues.
The Respondent's Notice point
Ground 1
"5. Where no matters of credibility are raised in the letter of refusal but, from a reading of the papers the special adjudicator himself considers that there are matters of credibility arising therefrom, he should similarly point these out to the representative and ask that they be dealt with, either in examination of the appellant or in submissions."
"15. The judge, on that issue, concluded that even if that report had been obtained, "it is reasonably likely" that Immigration Judge Froom would have reached the same decision. This was not the correct test. ……..Tribunals, like courts, must set aside a determination reached by the adoption of an unfair procedure unless they are satisfied that it would be pointless to do so because the result would inevitably be the same. Both Simon Brown LJ and Dyson LJ reminded themselves, as all faced with the argument that the result would inevitably be the same must remind themselves, of Megarry J's evocation of the essence of justice in John v Rees [1970] Ch 345,402:-
"It may be that there are some who would decry the importance which the courts attach to the observance of the rules of natural justice. 'When something is obvious," they may say, 'why force everyone to go through the tiresome waste of time involved in framing charges and giving an opportunity to be heard? The result is obvious from the start.' Those who take this view do not, I think, do themselves justice. As everybody who has anything to do with the law well knows, the path of the law is strewn with examples of open and shut cases which, somehow, were not; unanswerable charges which, in the event, were completely answered; of inexplicable conduct which was fully explained; of fixed and unalterable determinations that, by discussion, suffered a change. Nor are those with any knowledge of human nature who pause to think for a moment likely to underestimate the feelings of resentment of those who find that a decision against them has been made without their being afforded any opportunity to influence the course of events."
Postscript
Lord Justice Arnold :
Lady Justice King :