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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Operation Holdings Ltd (t/a Goldcare Homes), R (On the Application Of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWHC 3884 (Admin) (03 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3884.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3884 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
R(oao) OPERATION HOLDINGS LTD (trading as GOLDCARE HOMES) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Jack Holborn (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20th June 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Miss Alison Foster QC sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court:
BACKGROUND
"General sponsor duties 1
2. You assigned a Certificate of Sponsorship (COS) to Aditya Tiwari (C2G8O46039B) in the role of Business Analyst under Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) Code 2423 Management Consultants and Business Analysts. You stated that the duties of the role would be:
- Assess the functions, objectives and requirements of the organisation or financial projection;
- Development of underlying and ad-hoc fees pricing policy for public / private clients;
- Determines the appropriate method of data collection and research methodology, analyses and interprets information gained and formulates and implements recommendations and solutions;
- Attending seminars and workshops to identify process improvements and development process efficiency;
- Providing detailed analytics on key metrics and understanding how these impact cash-flow and management accounts;
- Integrating the finance module in the MIS and assisting senior management providing financial performance reports.
3. However, during our visit our officer asked you about this role and you stated the duties as:
- Accounting for daily cash flow;
- Providing analyse [sic] of money in and out to the Financial Director;
- Accounting for care provide [sic] based on pay versus hours worked;
4. You provided our officer with emails as evidence of Mr Tiwari's work, which included a balance summary, cash flow analysis and list of PAYE payment record. These documents contained data only and did not show evidence of detailed analytics or consideration within the scope of a larger financial performance report, as per the duties stated on Mr Tiwari's COS. In addition, they did not provide any evidence that Mr Tiwari had been involved in developing pricing policy or had attended seminars of similar development events in line with the duties stated on his COS. Given these issues, we are not satisfied that the rolof [sic] Business Analyst represents a genuine vacancy in line with Mr Tiwari's assigned COS."
"General Sponsor Duties 2
9. You confirmed that Mr Tiwari's role was positioned between the roles of Financial Assistant and Financial Manager in terms of level and provided an organisational hierarchy which confirmed you also employ Vivek Hamukhbhai Goradia (C2G4Y45615L) as a Senior Business Analyst within the same department. Given this, and the job description you provided, we believe that Mr Tiwari's role is actually that of a Finance Officer as covered under SOC Code 4121 Finance Officers. Duties under this SOC code are considered lower-skilled and so are below the level required for sponsorship under Tier 2 (General). In addition, by allowing him to perform a role which does not need the Tier 2 skills criteria, you are permitting Mr Tiwari to work in breach of his Visa conditions.
"General Sponsor Duties 3
16. As you have failed to demonstrate that the role of Business Analyst, for which you employ Mr Tiwari, represents a genuine vacancy at the required skill level, we believe you provided false information when assigning a COS to him for this role."
"9. In your representations you state that Mr Tiwari's answers were brief and synoptic as he was interviewed spontaneously for approximately ten minutes, therefore the interview was brief and did not involve a hands-on scrutinising exercise, as in the case of Mr Vivek Goradia, whereby substantial time was spent interviewing him.
10. You submit that Mr Tiwari is a genuine Business Analyst in a genuine vacancy. As evidence of the work undertaken by Mr Tiwari, you have provided [the materials in the accompanying appendices].
11. You state that the actual and forecast cash flow spreadsheet is monitored, updated and analysed by Mr Tiwari, however the spreadsheet cannot be attributed to Mr Tiwari and no evidence of him monitoring, updating or analysing the spreadsheet has been provided.
12. You stated that there are approximately 125 new clients every month and 100 discharges that Mr Tiwari must contend with. You also stated that the Regional Operations Team collects the relevant data that is then given to Mr Tiwari to examine and dissect with the appropriate methodology and analysis. No evidence has been provided to support this claim.
13. You state Mr Tiwari then translates this analysis into forecast cash flow for the current month and months going forward to the end of the financial year. You state following his analysis he will meet with the directors who will then invariably implement his recommendations. No evidence has been provided to support this claim.
14. You state that Mr Tiwari works closely with the Billing Team and helps them to identify pricing policy for public and private clients; however, no evidence has been provided of this.
15. You state that Mr Tiwari analyses the direct expenses and assists the Payroll Manager to interpret information gained from payroll and time checking software, however no evidence has been provided of this.
16. The email dated 26th October 2017 only confirms that Mr Tiwari requested certain employees to attend a workshop / training course that had been organised for them. It does not confirm Mr Tiwari conducted the workshop or training course.
17. The email dated 28th November 2017 merely confirms Mr Tiwari's attendance at an administrative day, it does not confirm what work he undertook as part of this day.
18. You state that following detailed analysis of key metrics data from various suppliers, Mr Tiwari develops efficiencies in the procurement process. No evidence has been provided to support this claim.
19. The email exchange confirms that Sumit Arora requested Mr Tiwari looks at the attached revised office depot pricing and advises. Mr Tiwari simply returns the spreadsheet with the potential savings worked out in the final column. No advice was offered and there is no evidence of any further action was taken [sic] as a result of this analysis. There is also no evidence that Mr Tiwari developed any process.
20. There is no evidence that Mr Tiwari was responsible for the creation of the following documents: [and there are listed the appendices materials containing documents said to be analysis of target private funder etc. and fees for various institutions submitted to the SSHD in September 2018].
21. These documents contain data only and did not show evidence of detailed analytics or consideration within the scope of the larger Financial Performance Report, as per the duties stated on Mr Tiwari's COS.
22. You have failed to provide any evidence that Mr Tiwari has undertaken the following roles as stated on his COS:
- Assesses the functions, objectives and requirements of the organisational financial projection;
- Development of underlying and ad hoc fees pricing policy for public / private clients;
- Determines the appropriate method of data collection and research methodology, analyses and interprets information gained and formulates and implements recommendations and solutions;
- Attending seminars and workshops to identify process improvements and develop process efficiency;
- Providing detailed analytics on key metrics and understanding how these impact cash flow and management accounts;
- Integrating the finance module in the MIS and assisting senior management providing Financial Performance Reports.
23. Considering Mr Tiwari has worked for your client's organisation for over 12 months, we would expect your client to have an abundance of evidence at their disposal to demonstrate the duties and responsibilities undertaken by him as described on his COS.
24. Having taken into consideration the representations and evidence provided above, we believe that the role undertaken by Mr Tiwari does not match the job as described on his COS or as is stated in Appendix J of the Immigration Rules.
25. We therefore assert that a genuine vacancy at the correct skill level does not exist and the post has been created in order to facilitate Mr Tiwari's continued Leave to Remain in the UK. This matter is not addressed.
26. Annex 5(ee) of the Tier 2 and 5 Sponsor Guidance states:
'We will revoke your licence if '
[The relevant parts of Annex 5 are cited - as to which see further below.]
"32. In your representations, you state that your client's business does indeed require two Business Analysts and the presence of Mr Goradia does not undermine the need for a second Business Analyst.
33. You also confirm that Mr Tiwari's role is below that of Mr Goradia in the analytic chain and that Mr Goradia's work is more complex in nature and this reflects his seniority in the role.
34. Having taken into consideration the representations you have made and the evidence provided, we do not believe that the role that Mr Tiwari is currently undertaking meets the Tier 2 General Skills criteria and we believe the work Mr Tiwari undertakes is more akin to that of a Finance Officer, as covered under SOC Code 4124 Finance Officers. This matter is not addressed."
"42. In your representations, you state that your client issued a COS for a genuine vacancy and has not been dishonest in any way.
43. You have failed to provide evidence which demonstrates Mr Tiwari has carried out the duties as stated on his COS or at the appropriate level for Sponsorship. You have also failed to demonstrate that the role Mr Tiwari undertakes matches the job description as stated in Appendix J of the Immigration Rules.
44. This compounds our belief that your client has failed to meet their obligations as a licenced sponsor, by providing false information when assigning Mr Tiwari his COS. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we conclude that your client has provided false information in order for them to meet the requirements for Sponsorship under Tier of the Points Based System. This matter is not addressed.
'Decision'
46. We have considered the possibility of downgrading your client's licence and issuing them with an Action Plan. However, we will only downgrade a licence and issue an Action Plan where there is scope to rectify shortcomings or omissions in systems or retained documents.
47. As already stated, your client has acted in contravention of Annex 5(k), 5(r), 5(t), 5(ee) and 5(gg) and Annex 6(j) of the Tier 2 and 5 Sponsor Guidance. Downgrading your client's licence is not appropriate due to the seriousness of their non-compliance with their sponsor duties.
48. We believe the issues described above constitute a failure by your client to comply with their sponsor duties.
49. As a result, your client's Sponsor Licence has been revoked. There is no right of appeal against this."
Tier 2 SPONSORSHIP SCHEME
(i) Those who benefit most directly from migration, that is to say employers, education providers or other bodies who bring in migrants, must play their part in ensuring that the system is not abused; and
(ii) The Home Office needs to be sure that those applying to come to the UK to undertake work or to study are indeed eligible to do so and if a reputable employer or education provider genuinely wishes to take them on.
"25. When you assign a Certificate of Sponsorship (COS) you must choose the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) code which contains the job description that best matches the role you want to recruit for. The 'Codes of Practice' contain information about each SOC code and sample job titles and duties that fit within each code. You should be able to find the correct SOC code by searching the Codes of Practice for job titles or key words.
25.1 You may find that if you search for job titles, the SOC code containing that job title does not match the duties that the migrant will perform. This is because different employers use the same job title to describe different jobs or use generic job titles that cover several different jobs. If this happens, you should search further, for example using key words for a job description that matches the migrant's duties."
GUIDANCE
"1. Tiers 2 and 5 of the points-based system of the primary immigration routes for non-European Economic Area (EEA) migrants who wish to work in the UK. These migrants must be sponsored by an organisation or company that holds a Tier 2 and / or Tier 5 Licence. A licence is a permission given to an organisation to sponsor workers in its business. The organisation is known as a sponsor. Individual persons are not recognised as sponsors.
1.1 A sponsorship is based on two principles:
- Those who benefit most directly from migration;
- Employers, education providers or other bodies who are bringing in migrants, should play their part in ensuring the system is not abused;
- We need to make sure that those applying to come to the UK for work or to study are eligible and that a reputable employer or education provider genuinely wishes to take them on.
1.4 When a sponsor is granted a Tier 2 or Tier 5 licence, significant trust is placed on them. With this trust comes a responsibility to act in accordance with the Immigration Rules and all parts of the Tiers 2 and 5: Guidance for Sponsors. We have a duty to ensure that all sponsors discharge these responsibilities, and will take compliance action when it is considered that a sponsor has failed to do so, or otherwise poses a risk to immigration control. The 'Sponsor Duties' section has more information on the duties sponsors must fulfil.
2.9 You have a duty to act honestly in any dealings with us, such as not making false statements and ensuring all essential information is disclosed when applying for a sponsor licence or assigning or applying for a COS, or while you are a sponsor.
2.10 If we believe you have knowingly provided false statements or false information, or not provided information that you held when required to, or pose a threat to immigration control, we will take action against you. The 'What will happen if I don't comply with my sponsor duties' section has more information.
15.1 You must give us, when asked, any documents relating to your sponsored migrants or the running of your organisation that we consider relevant to assessing your compliance with your duties as a sponsor. If you fail to provide the documents when asked or within a specified time frame we will take action against you.
15.12 To make sure you are complying with our immigration laws, you must:
- Not assign a COS where there is no genuine vacancy or role which meets the Tier 2 or 5 criteria if you assign a COS and we do not consider that it is for a genuine vacancy, we reserve the right to suspend your licence, pending further investigation which may result in your licence being revoked.
- Only allow the migrant to undertake the specific role set out in their COS
- Only assign a COS to migrants who you believe will meet the requirements of the tier or category and are likely to comply with the Conditions (Rules) of Leave.
- Only assign a COS to a migrant if you are satisfied that they intend and are able to fill the role.
- Where applicable, only assign a COS for a role which is at or above the minimum skill level, as set out in this Guidance.
15.13 A genuine vacancy is one which:
- requires the job holder to perform the specific duties and responsibilities for the job and meets all of the requirements of the tier and category if you have already assigned a COS, the vacancy must be for the period of employment stated on the COS;
- does not include dissimilar and / or lower-skilled duties;
Examples of vacancies that are not considered to be genuine include but are not limited to:
- one which contains an exaggerated or incorrect job description to deliberately make it appear to meet the requirements of the tier and category when it does not;
- for a job or role that does not exist in order to enable a migrant to come to, or stay in, the UK;
- advertisements with requirements that are inappropriate for the job on offer, and have been tailored to exclude resident workers from being recruited.
19.3 If any circumstances in Annex 5 of this Guidance arise, we will revoke your licence and may do so immediately. We will write to you to tell you that your licence has been revoked. There is no right of appeal and you will not be allowed to apply again for a Sponsor Licence until the end of the appropriate cooling off period from the date your licence is revoked. If we do not revoke your licence immediately, we will suspend your licence pending further investigation.
19.4 For information on the circumstances in which we may revoke your Sponsor Licence, see Annex 6 of this Guidance.
19.7 If any circumstances in Annex 4 of this Guidance arise and we do not believe it is necessary to suspend your licence, we may downgrade it to a B-rating."
"(k) You have knowingly provided a false statement or false information, or not provided information that you held when required to, to us, the former Immigration and Nationality Directorate etc.
(r) You employ a migrant in a job that does not meet the skill level requirements as set out in this Guidance.
(t) You use a Tier 2 COS to fill a vacancy other than the one specified on the COS you assigned for that role.
(ee) You assign a COS for a vacancy that was not genuine. For example, where:
- it contains an exaggerated or incorrect job description to deliberately make it appear to meet the requirements of the tier and category you assigned to it under when it does not [sic]
- it is for a job or role that does not exist in order to enable a migrant to come to or stay in the UK.
(gg) The role undertaken by a migrant you have sponsored does not match one or both of the following:
- the job description in Appendix J of the Immigration Rules containing the SOC Code stated on the COS you assigned to them;
- the job description on the COS that you assigned to them."
"(f) you failed to comply with any of your sponsor duties."
APPLICABLE PRINCIPLES
"(1) The essence of the system is that the Secretary of State imposes a higher degree of trust in sponsors in implementing and policing immigration policy in respect of migrants to whom it grants a Certificate of Sponsorship.
(2) The authority to grant a Certificate is a privilege which carries great responsibility: the Sponsor is expected to carry out its responsibilities with the same rigour and vigilance as the Immigration Control Authorities.
(3) The Sponsor must maintain its own records with assiduity.
(4) The Points Based System has created a system of immigration control in which the emphasis is on certainty in place of discretion, on detail rather than broad guidance.
(5) The Certificate (COS or CAS) is very significant: the possession by a migrant of a requisite Certificate provides strong, but not conclusive, evidence of some of the matters which are relevant upon the migrant's application for Leave to Enter or Remain.
(6) There is no need for UKBA to wait until there has been a breach of immigration control caused by the acts or omission of a Sponsor before suspending or revoking the sponsorship, but it can, and indeed should, take such steps if it has reasonable grounds for suspecting that a breach of immigration control might occur.
(7) The primary judgement about the appropriate response to breaches by Licence Holders is that of the Secretary of State. The role of the Court is simply supervisory. The Secretary of State is entitled to maintain a fairly high index of suspicion and a 'light trigger' in deciding when and with what level of firmness he should act.
(8) The Courts should respect the experience and expertise of UKBA when reaching conclusions as to a Sponsor's compliance with Guidance, which is vitally necessary to ensure that there is effective immigration."
"It has to be remembered that the primary judgement about the response to breaches of a College's duty is the Defendants, and the Court's role is simply supervisory. It also has to be remembered that the underlying principle behind this scheme is that the UKBA entrusts to Colleges the power to grant Visa letters on the understanding and with their agreement that they were acting in a manner that maintains proper immigration control.
The capacity for damage to the national interest in the maintenance of proper immigration control is substantial if Colleges are not assiduous in meeting their responsibilities".
In those circumstances, it seems to me that the Defendants are entitled to maintain a fairly high index of suspicion as they go about overseeing Colleges and a like trigger in deciding when and with what level of firmness they should act."
"The mere fact that the decision making in this area may have serious commercial consequences for licenced sponsors is not of itself a reason to impose heightened scrutiny. The circumstance that the SSHD has special expertise in and experience of decision-making in this field, and that the Court possesses no particular institutional competence and can claim no special constitutional legitimacy, militates against that submission see per Lightman J in R (Cellcom) v DJ of Telecoms [1999] ECC 314 at paragraph 26, and per Laws LJ in R (Law Society) v London Criminal Court Solicitors' Association [2015] EWHC 295 (Admin) at paragraphs 32 and 33. It is also clear that the exercise in which the SSHD is engaged involves no fundamental right of the Appellant, but on the contrary a right contingent upon adherence to the Rules: (cf. per Lord Sumption R (New London College Limited v Secretary of State for the Home Department).
"There are substantial advantages for sponsors in participating [in the Tier 4 Scheme] but they are not obliged to do so. The Rules contained in the Tier 4 Guidance for determining whether applicants are suitable to be sponsoring institutions, are in reality conditions of participation, and sponsors seeking the advantages of a licence cannot complain if they are required to adhere to them."
"61. In Keyu, Lord Neuberger, Lord Mance and Lord Hughes held it would not be appropriate for a five judge panel of the Supreme Court to accept or reject the Claimant's argument that a traditional rationality basis for challenging executive decisions should be replaced by a more structured and principled challenge based on proportionality, which potentially has implications which are profound in constitutional terms and very wide in applicable scope, because it would involve the Court considering the merits of the decision at issue and would require the Court to consider the balance which the decision-maker had struck between the competing interests and the weight according to each interest. In those circumstances, it is not open to me determine the question of whether proportionality has replaced rationality at common law."
"The questions in issue were not ones of precedent fact. The test is not set down by Parliament as a statutory test, but rather in Guidance; there is no issue of liberty or equivalent impact; there is a high degree of judgement for the decision-maker, i.e. the Secretary of State, in deciding whether an individual is an 'agency worker' or the Claimant a 'recruitment agency'. There is no one factual answer as there would be to whether a person was or was not a child."
"94. In my judgement, Wyn Williams J was plainly correct to find that a Sponsor Licence is not itself a possession within A1P1. The analysis of Kenneth Parker J in Nicholds [R (Nicholds)v Security Industry Authority [2007] 1 WLR 2067, paras. 70 to 76], which met with a strong measure of approval [by the Court of Appeal] in Malik [R (Malik) v Waltham Forest NHS Primary Care Trust [2007] 1 WLR 2092] and [by the House of Lords] in Countryside Alliance [2008] 1 AC 719] strongly supports that conclusion. A Sponsor Licence is not marketable or even transferrable, nor is it obtained at a market price. I reject Mr Gill's contention that on the sale of a business, having the benefit of a licence there would in substance be a transfer of the licence. The new owner would have to satisfy UKBA that the conditions for grant of a licence were met under the new ownership.
95. The principal factor leading Wyn Williams J to find that the suspension and withdrawal of a Sponsor Licence nevertheless engaged A1P1 was the apparent parallel with the withdrawal of the liquor licence in Tre Traktӧrer. There is obvious attraction in that line of reasoning, given the undoubted effect on the business in each case. The Judge did not grapple, however, with the question whether the adverse effect in the present case amounts to an effect on goodwill, in the sense used in the authorities, or only to a loss of future income (albeit a loss with serious economic consequences for the business). I agree with [Counsel] that he needed to do so. The distinction is far from clear, but one has to decide which side of the line the case falls, since the relevant possession is the goodwill of the business, and the suspension or withdrawal of a licence will not amount to an interference with the right to peaceful enjoyment of possessions within A1P1 unless it has an adverse effect on that goodwill.
96. Kenneth Parker J in Nicholds was of the view that 'goodwill' in this context means the capitalised value of the business as a going concern. Mr Gill did not seek to challenge the correctness of that view. While there is evidence in this case of the economic disruption caused by the suspension of the College's licence, and liable to be caused by the withdrawal of the licence, the evidence does not deal with the goodwill of the business in the sense identified in Nicholds. Thus, there is no concrete evidential basis on which to found a conclusion that the goodwill of the business has been or would be adversely affected by suspension or withdrawal of the licence. Nor, as it seems to me, can such an effect be inferred from the information available to us."
"I am, therefore, bound to have regard to the approach taken by Nicol J in Birdshill Nursing Home v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] EWHC 2241 (Admin) which was a judicial review of the revocation of a sponsorship licence brought by the nursing home for elderly residents. Nicol J considered whether the ability of frail elderly residents to live in the nursing home would engage Article 8. Although he found on the evidence that the revocation of the licence could not mean the home would close, he considered the case further on the basis there was in fact an interference with Article 8. He dealt with proportionality in these terms:
'43. In my judgement the answer is plain. Any such interference would be proportionate and would be justified in a democratic society.
44. The SSHD has lawfully concluded that employees of the First Claimant, to whom it had issued COS, were not working in accordance with the job descriptions which the First Claimant had assigned to them. That was a serious default on the part of the First Claimant. It had taken place in relation, not just to one, but to three employees. The Points Based System places considerable trust in the hands of licenced sponsors. This has been said previously in connection with the issue of Confirmations of Acceptance for Studies by colleges who sponsor students as part of Tier 4 [cases].'"
SUBMISSIONS
(i) The decision was unreasonable or otherwise unlawful because it was based on the flawed perception that Goldcare Homes had acted fraudulently, and with deception.
(ii) There was procedural unfairness on the part of the SSHD and general unfairness in how he approached his decision.
(iii) It was unlawful and irrational to find no genuine vacancy on the basis of failure to produce evidence that the Claimant was not in fact required to produce or couldn't reasonably be expected to possess.
(iv) Article 1 Protocol 1 to the ECHR is engaged, and potentially, Article 8. At the very least this meant the Court had to consider with particularity and anxiously the elements of decision-making by the SSHD.
Ground 1 Dishonesty as precedent fact, and, in any event, dishonesty tainting the SSHD's conclusions
"Where the exercise of executive power depends upon the precedent establishment of an objective fact, the Courts will decide whether the requirement has been satisfied. The Claimant asserted in the present case that the Secretary of State was obliged to prove to the Court that dishonesty had been involved in the Claimant's behaviour."
Ground 2 Procedural (and general) unfairness
Ground 3 -Dishonesty - the finding of 'No Genuine Vacancy' requires it, and the in any event such an inference cannot be made
Ground 4 - Article 1, Protocol 1 ECHR
The Defendant's Response
(a) Annex 5(k): Deception in the form of false statements. This was "General Sponsor Duties 3" in the Revocation Letter.
(b) Annex 5(ee) and (gg): Mr Tiwari's role was not a "genuine vacancy". This was "General Sponsor Duties 1" in the Revocation Letter.
(c) Annex 5(r) and (t): The fact that Mr Tiwari's work was at a lower skill level than was stated in the COS. This was "General Sponsor Duties 2" in the Decision Letter.
Consideration
"43You have failed to provide evidence which demonstrates Mr Tiwari has carried out the duties as stated on his COS or at the appropriate level for Sponsorship. You have also failed to demonstrate that the role Mr Tiwari undertakes matches the job description as stated in Appendix J of the Immigration Rules.
44. This compounds our belief that your client has failed to meet their obligations as a licenced sponsor, by providing false information when assigning Mr Tiwari his COS. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we conclude that your client has provided false information in order for them to meet the requirements for Sponsorship under Tier of the Points Based System."