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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Saleh, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWHC 3196 (Admin) (01 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/3196.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 3196 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF MALIK MEHARALI SALEH | Claimant | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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Mr Denis Edwards (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"57(v) does not intend to engage in business or to take employment, except part-time or vacation work undertaken with the consent of the Secretary of State for Employment."
This provision of the Rules is further qualified by guidance which is provided to those taking these decisions in what is known as the Immigration Directorate Instructions. Those provide as follows:
"Students should not work for more than 20 hours a week during term time ... They may work full time during their vacation period and during the additional period of 2 or 4 months following completion of their studies whilst, for example, waiting for their examination results..."
"21. The claimant submits that the Secretary of State's decision to remove him in the circumstances of this case amounts to an infringement of his rights under Article 8 of the ECHR."
"10(1) A person who is not a British citizen may be removed from the United Kingdom, in accordance with directions given by an immigration officer, if—
(a) having only a limited leave to enter or remain, he does not observe a condition attached to the leave or remains beyond the time limited by the leave;
...
(8) When a person is notified that a decision has been made to remove him in accordance with this section, the notification invalidates any leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom previously given to him.
"82(1) Where an immigration decision is made in respect of a person he may appeal to the Tribunal.
(2) In this Part 'immigration decision' means—
...
(e) variation of a person's leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom if when the variation takes effect the person has no leave to enter or remain,
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(g) a decision that a person is to be removed from the United Kingdom by way of directions under section 10(1)(a), (b), (ba) or (c) of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999."
"92(1) A person may not appeal under section 82(1) while he is in the United Kingdom unless his appeal is of a kind to which this section applies.
(2) This section applies to an appeal against an immigration decision of the kind specified in section 82(2)(c), (d), (e), (f), (ha) and (j).
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(4) This section also applies to an appeal against an immigration decision if the appellant—
(a) has made an asylum claim, or a human rights claim, while in the United Kingdom..."
"22. If a person has never had any leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom, or has no such leave at the date of the immigration decision in question, there is plainly a policy justification for limiting that person's right of appeal, in the way provided in section 92 of the 2002 Act. If, however, a person does have such leave, the position would seem to be otherwise, else the variation of a person's leave to enter or remain, so that leave is curtailed, would not sensibly sit within section 92(2). Where, on the very same facts as could give rise to a decision to curtail, the respondent instead decides to invoke section 10 of the 1999 Act, with precisely the same effect in practice, so far as the person in question is concerned, in that his current leave is brought to an end by operation of section 10(8), it is very hard to see how Parliament could have intended that person to be deprived of an in-country right of appeal. The fact that such a person might, in the absence of an in-country right of appeal, be able to apply for judicial review against the decision of the respondent to remove him from the United Kingdom is in no sense an answer. The fact that section 10(8) of the 1999 Act uses the word 'invalidates', in relation to any extant leave, does not preclude the immigration decision from falling within section 82(2)(e), as well as section 82(2)(g). If the position is equivocal, then as the Tribunal has said in GO (Right of appeal: ss 89 and 92) Nigeria [2008] UKAIT 00025, any ambiguity in provisions dealing with rights of appeal should be resolved by a construction that would preserve rather than remove those rights."
"19. It is plain, in my judgment, that there are some material facts upon which the application of s.10 depends and which it cannot be for an immigration officer, subject only to an out-of-country appeal, to decide. The section permits removal only of 'a person who is not a British citizen'. If the person whom it proposed to remove claims to be a British citizen, there can be no doubt that he or she has an immediate right of recourse to the High Court to prevent removal. I am entirely unable to accept the Home Secretary's contention that an individual whose claim to be a British citizen is disbelieved by an immigration officer must accept removal to a country where he may have neither work nor family nor accommodation and conduct an appeal from there in which, by virtue of s.3(8) of the Immigration Act 1971, the onus lies on him to prove citizenship. The same, in my opinion, must be the case where identity is in issue: if the person whom it is proposed to remove denies being the person it is intended to remove, the High Court must have an unfettered power to decide the question. Both classes of issue, in my judgment, rank as precedent fact.
20. Is the non-observance of a condition of leave to remain in the same class? It differs from citizenship and identity in that it is expressed in s.10 as a condition, rather than a precondition, of removal. But I do not think that this can count for a great deal: the drafter might just as easily have put the conditions the other way round, predicating the provision for removal on a breach of condition but requiring in addition the absence of British citizenship. A greater difficulty is that if Mr de Mello is right, every element of s.10 is a matter of precedent fact – not only identity and nationality but non-observance of a condition, overstaying, deception, revocation of indefinite leave and family membership. Even so, one has to ask: why not? Many of these issues are, or may involve questions which are, entirely apt for determination in a court of law: whether a revocation of leave was lawful, for example, or whether what was done amounted to deception, or whether a person 'belongs' to the family of someone who is to be removed.
21. This said, some s.10 issues, among them whether a foreign catering worker was working in the wrong restaurant, will be pure questions of fact. If Mr de Mello is to succeed on his fundamental argument, therefore, he has to establish that everything which s.10 lays down as making removal permissible is justiciable without regard to the s.84 appeal mechanism. I do not think that it is possible to do this without disregarding the manifest purpose of s.82 of the 2002 Act, since the effect would be that the right of appeal had effect only where the individual concerned chose not to raise his or her challenge by way of judicial review.
22. The only coherent solution, it seems to me, is to continue to regard every question arising under s.10 as in principle both appealable and reviewable (see Swati, above, at 485G), but to calibrate the use of judicial review, through the exercise of judicial discretion, to the nature of the issue or issues. In this way – and, so far as I can see, in no other way – the High Court can remain loyal to what was decided in Khawaja by consistently retaining jurisdiction to determine the existence of preconditions of liability to removal, as well as other questions of law apt for the High Court's determination, but can also respect the policy of s.82 by declining to entertain challenges on issues more apt for the appeal mechanism, whatever its hardships.
...
27. It seems to me inescapable that the judge was influenced – as anyone of common sense and humanity would be – by the colossal overreaction to what, even if proved, was a venial breach of condition. By at least keeping the issue in-country he was doing something to mitigate it. But, while I am in entire sympathy with his motive, I cannot find anything in his reasons sufficient to support his conclusion. This was precisely the kind of issue for which the legislation, for better or for worse, prescribed an out-of-country appeal."
That latter paragraph reflects the fact that the judge at first instance had regarded the circumstances of the breach as being exceptional so as to allow the court in the exercise of its discretion to admit the case to judicial review. It is clear from what Sedley LJ observed that, whatever the hardship, the proper approach was to look to the framework prescribed by the legislation.