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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Miah, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWHC 2925 (Admin) (17 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/2925.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2925 (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 :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of MD SANU MIAH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Tom Poole (instructed by Government Legal Dept.) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Ms Alexandra Marks CBE :
INTRODUCTION
(i) BACKGROUND
"You are specifically considered a person who has entered the UK without leave. This is because it has been established to a high degree of probability that you do not qualify for the Right of Abode in the UK. You have been interviewed concerning your immigration status, and have presented documents purporting to show that your father was a British Citizen when you were born. However, these documents have been shown to be unreliable, and in the case of your parents' marriage certificate, altered. You have also presented no evidence that dates from prior to 2000 that you are entitled to the Right of Abode as claimed. As you previously obtained a Certificate of Entitlement to the Right of Abode using similar documentation, and travelled to the UK using that Certificate, you are therefore considered to have entered the UK without leave."
THE POLICY AND LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
"2(1) A person born outside the United Kingdom…after commencement shall be a British citizen if at the time of the birth his father or mother –
(a) is a British citizen otherwise than by descent:..."
"5(1) …a person born after the commencement of this Act shall be a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies by descent if his father is a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies at the time of his birth…"
"2(1) A person is under this Act to have the right of abode in the United Kingdom if –
(a) he is a British citizen;…"
"3(8) …when any question arises under this Act whether or not a person is [a British citizen]…it shall lie on the person asserting it to prove that he is."
"3(9) A person seeking to enter the United Kingdom and claiming to have the right of abode there shall prove it by means of:
...
(e) a certificate of entitlement…"
"6. A certificate of entitlement will only be issued where the appropriate authority is satisfied that the applicant –
(a) has a right of abode in the United Kingdom under section 2(1) [IA 1971]…"
"…introduced due to concern that the lack of regulation made the process of obtaining certificates of entitlement vulnerable to fraud." (paragraph 4.2)
and that the:
"…Government was reacting to concern on the part of the officials tasked with considering applications and policing entry to the United Kingdom that the lack of regulation made the process and its outcome uniquely vulnerable to fraud." (paragraph 7.1)
"…the right of abode is a statutory right which a person either has or does not have, depending on whether the conditions in section 2 [IA 1971] are satisfied…No action by or on behalf of a Minister (including the issue of a passport or certificate of entitlement) can operate so as to confer the right of abode on any person who does not have it already by virtue of [IA 1971]…"
"4.7.1 Any person who is refused a certificate of entitlement has the right to appeal against the refusal, regardless of why the application is refused.
4.7.2 The appeal will normally be to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal under section 82 [NIA 2002]…
4.7.3 There is no right of appeal against the revocation of a certificate of entitlement."
"9 Where an illegal entrant is not given leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom, an immigration officer may give…[removal] directions in respect of him …"
…
"10(2) Where the Secretary of State may give directions for a person's removal… he may instead give directions for his removal in accordance with arrangements to be made by the Secretary of State to any country or territory to which he could be removed…"
PRELIMINARY SUBMISSION – OUT-OF-COUNTRY APPEAL IS AN ADEQUATE ALTERNATIVE REMEDY
EVIDENCE AT TRIAL
i) In Mr Miah's parents' marriage certificate, two dates had been "scratched out" and replaced with different dates. Mrs Archibald described the document as having been "doctored" and that one change of date - of the marriage solemnization (from 1977 to 1946) - would "make the difference of the subject being related to the father as claimed as the subject was born in 1965";ii) Both certified copies of his birth certificate (one provided with his application, and the other which he had brought to the interview) contained a spelling mistake: the second "E" in "People's Republic" in the heading was missing;
iii) The Naturalisation Certificate Mr Miah had provided in respect of his father showed the latter's date of birth to be "02-11-1910" whereas the "exact same copy of the same page" produced from storage showed the date of birth as "02-10-1910".
OTHER MATERIAL PRESENTED AT TRIAL
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Approach to submissions
Alternative Remedy and Precedent Fact
"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."
"…was precisely the kind of issue for which the legislation had for better or worse, prescribed an out-of-country appeal..." (at paragraph 27)
and that
"…were it otherwise, the courts would be emptying Parliament's prescribed procedure of content..." (at paragraph 25).
"it would only be in cases with 'special or exceptional factors' that the High Court would exercise a discretion in favour of judicial review and against the ordinary process of appeal from abroad that was laid down in the 2002 Act."
"… the existence of disputes of fact are rarely likely to constitute "special or exceptional factors"… Accordingly, the default position for disputes as to whether there has been a breach of the conditions of leave or deception has been used in connection with an application for leave will, absent such special or exceptional factors, be an out-of-country appeal."
"34 It is plain in this case that the immigration decisions made against the applicants was one under section 10(1)(a) of the 1999 Act. That is what was stated in the form IS151A that was served on each of the applicants. There is no issue concerning their non–British citizenship. It is also clear, as a matter of fact, that the reason for the removal from the UK in accordance with directions given by an immigration officer is that they both obtained limited leave to enter and remain in the UK and that this leave was subject to conditions. They have broken those conditions in the manner I have already described. Those facts falls all squarely within section 10(1)(a) of the 1999 Act." (emphasis added)
i) Mr Miah was not an illegal entrant to the United Kingdom in 2002;ii) as the legislative framework makes clear, as does SSHD's policy at the time (see paragraph 27 above), right of abode is not a matter for Ministerial decision but a statutory right;
iii) Mr Miah is a British citizen by descent in accordance with s. 2(1) and s.5(1) BNA 1948;
iv) the removal provisions of Schedule 2 IA 1971 therefore do not apply to Mr Miah, irrespective of the unreliability of documents he has since produced in a different context for a different purpose.