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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ozoemene & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Identity and Passport Service) [2013] EWHC 2167 (Admin) (22 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/2167.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2167 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IKECHUKWU OZOEMENE (1) EZE OZOEMENE (2) NKECHI OZOEMENE (3) IFEOMA OZOEMENE (4) |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (IDENTITY AND PASSPORT SERVICE) |
Defendant |
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Estelle Dehon (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 3 July 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT:
Introduction
The approach in law
"A decision by the Secretary of State whether to issue a British passport is one made under the Royal Prerogative. A decision refusing to issue a passport may be challenged in judicial review proceedings on public law grounds. Parliament has chosen not to accord to someone in the Claimant's position a right of appeal to any court or tribunal. Before issuing a British passport to an individual the Secretary of State must be satisfied that the person concerned is entitled to it. It is common ground that it is for an applicant for a British passport to satisfy the Secretary of State of his entitlement. That is consistent with section 3(8) of the Immigration Act 1971 … which provides that in connection with any question which arises under that Act whether or not a person is a British citizen, it is for him to prove it. However, a British passport is not issued pursuant to any power contained in the 1971 Act. It does not raise a question under that Act. Section 3(8) is not directly in play. In this case, the only basis upon which the Claimant asserts a right to a British passport is by descent from [the person he claimed was his father]. The question for the Secretary of State was whether, on the information available to her at the time of her decisions in 2009 and 2011, she was satisfied that the Claimant was the son of [the person he claimed was his father] and thus entitled to a British passport. The question for this court is whether it was open to the Secretary of State to conclude that he was not."
"The task of the court is the familiar one of evaluating whether the decision was one open to the Secretary of State on the information available to her, or otherwise considering conventional public law grounds of challenge. That is not to say that the fact that an individual has previously been issued with a British passport is not important in evaluating whether the decision reached was a rational one, in public law terms. It is unhelpful in this context to speak in terms of burdens of proof. The reality is that, having once been satisfied that an individual was entitled to a passport, the Secretary of State would need to advance cogent reasons that stood up to scrutiny why, on a later application, she was taking a different view. The refusal to renew the passport of someone who has enjoyed the benefits of a British passport for a decade is a serious step with serious consequences. No less would be required to satisfy a rationality test."
The factual background
"9. On 10th September 2009 her mother Mrs Rose Ozoemene Ifeoma attended, resident at 155 Bolton Avenue, Ilford, Essex. She produced her Nigerian passport showing that she was born on 3rd October 1954, her passport number being A00066742, issued on 20th October 2007. She stated that she was the biological mother of the Appellant, that her child had been born on 18th June 1979 at 9:10 in the morning, she recalled she weighed three point seven five kilograms. She had registered her birth. Her husband was the child's father. She produced documents relating not only to her identity but her husband's identity and the marriage certificate.
10. In relation to the Appellant's father, Mrs Ozoemene's husband, she stated that he had come here in 1963, he then became a UK citizen. She had married him when he had returned to Nigeria. She then produced a series of photographs. These were of different sizes and clearly of varying ages they went back showing a photograph of her daughter aged 3 months, pictures of her as a child, pictures of her in the youth corps, work, pictures of her wedding in 2007 with various members of the family, pictures of her own marriage with the Appellant's father, it was very clearly a quite old picture of her and her sister when young girls. I was given a copy of the Appellant's late father's Nigerian passport, issued in London on 16th January 1975, showing the previous passport indeed had been issued in 1963. The 1975 passport contained an indefinite leave to remain stamp dated 27th August 1976. I was shown the original marriage certificate between her parents."
"11. At the conclusion of the mother's evidence I found that she had given her evidence simply and clearly, there was a variety of documents as one would expect from such a source, establishing indeed that the Appellant was her daughter and that she was lawfully married to the Appellant's father having British nationality. Although I find clearly there has to be grave doubts as to the Appellant's evidence given her previous visa applications I am satisfied having regard to the documents and the evidence of her mother and tangentially that of her brother that she is the person who she states she is, that she is the [daughter] of a person with UK nationality and is therefore entitled to a certificate of entitlement of right of abode. The first appeal is therefore allowed."
"5. The essential difficulty evidentially relating to this applicant's claim was firstly the fact that her original records of birth were not available and secondly as stated in the reasons for refusal concern by the Respondent as to the general authenticity, given her application to enter the United Kingdom on a visit visa made in Pretoria. The actual application in detail was not available to me. The Respondent however had from the database lodged the main details of the application. The application was refused for a number of reasons. The first being relating to concern as to the Sponsor's bank accounts, that application being refused in Abuja on 22nd October 2007.
6. There was then a second application made in Pretoria giving indeed her father's and mother's name that was refused as there was a false declaration insofar as it certified this was the first passport she had had but biometrics' fingerprints showed she had applied for and refused a visit visa in Abuja in October 2007. The entire credibility of her application was therefore in doubt and the application was refused. The veracity therefore of the Appellant's evidence has to be treated very carefully."
The role of the British Deputy High Commission in Lagos
"We come across the same issue from time to time as you have regarding the status of fathers remarrying: we have also seen marriage certificates declaring the father is a 'bachelor' when in fact he had previously been married. Our approach is to ask the applicant to get a letter from the registrar who performed the marriage to explain exactly what the father's status was at the time of the wedding. As you say, this can have a major influence on whether the applicant qualifies for citizenship.
But before you do this, I'd suggest that we should refer the Nsukka marriage certificate for checks. I'm suspicious of it for several reasons, apart from the incoherent detail about the father's marital status at the time. Enugu is a long way from Lagos, so we won't be able to go directly to the registry – but there is a helpful registrar in Lagos who should be able to give some more general advice.
It's impossible to be certain without doing checks with the issuing authorities, but I'm happier with the decree absolute and the birth certificate – these look closer to the proper format for the time they purport to have been issued."
The decision under challenge
"Throughout the relevant period, the Defendant's officers attempted to verify the Claimants' entitlements through investigating the validity of the documentation they produced and through the conducting of interviews. This was the proper course of action for officers to take and cannot be impugned as unreasonable. The results of their inquiries have not been conclusive – legitimate concerns have been raised about the validity of certain documents; the information provided by the Claimants' half-brother in interview gave rise to legitimate concerns and the Claimants' father's first wife had refused to assist. Accordingly, both the validity of Iwegbune Ozoemene's divorce from his first wife, Iruka Comfort Ozoemene, and the validity of his marriage to the Claimants' mother, Rose Ozoemene, are in doubt. In the circumstances, it is reasonable for the Defendant not to be satisfied that the Claimants are entitled to British passports."
"We have now received communication from the British High Commission in Lagos who has advised that the authentication of your client's documents has not been possible as they do not have the facilities to cover the region from which these documents were derived. As we are unable to authenticate these documents we are therefore unable to establish your client's eligibility to hold a British passport, and for that reason we can not grant passport facilities. Passports for Eze, Ikechukwu and Nkechi have been impounded for the same reason."
Official documents in Nigeria
"31.02 The British-Danish 2008 Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) Report, dated October 2008, stated:
'The FFM delegation interviewed the Deputy Director for West Africa, UK Visas, British Deputy High Commission, Lagos, about documentation and forgery issues. He stated that corruption is endemic in Nigeria and the use of forged documents is widespread. Any printed official document can be forged. Genuine official documents such as birth, marriage, divorce, and death certificates, ID cards, driving licences and passports can be obtained from officials by bribery. Furthermore, information contained in genuine official documents is often false, inaccurate or cannot be relied upon. Documents that are submitted in support of UK visa applications have to be rigorously examined and checked.
'An Entry Clearance Officer (ECO), based at the British Deputy High Commission in Lagos, was also interviewed about documentation and forgery issues. (ECOs are officials who have the authority to issue visas). He reiterated the fact that corruption is endemic in Nigeria and that any kind of printed official document can be forged. He also stated that documents submitted in support of visa applications, as noted above, have to be rigorously examined and checked.'"
"However, the forgeries and the suspicion they create may also affect bona fide applicants who are then also unjustly suspected of submitting incorrect documentation."
The relevance of the decision of the Immigration Judge and the previous decisions to issue passports
Conclusion