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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> STARRED Hughes (Leave to Appeal, Time Limits) Zimbabwe [2001] UKIAT 00015 (22 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2001/00015.html Cite as: [2001] UKIAT 00015, [2001] UKIAT 01TH1147, [2001] UKIAT 15 |
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APPEAL No. TH/04068/00 (STARRED)
(01/TH/1147)
Date of hearing: 10/05/2001
Date Determination notified: 22/5/2001
ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER,
HARARE |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
BRENDAN COLIN HUGHES | RESPONDENT |
"An application for leave to appeal shall be made not later than ten days, or in the case of an application made from outside the United Kingdom, twenty-eight days, after the appellant has received written notice of the determination against which he wishes to appeal."
The application in this case was made by the Home Office and so, if the words of Rule 18(2) are read literally, it was clearly not made from outside the United Kingdom. The same would apply to an application made, as is commonly the position, by the representative of an appellant who is overseas.
"In accordance with Rule 18(2) of the [2000 Rules] any application for leave to appeal to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal together with all the grounds of appeal must be submitted to the following address WITHIN 28 DAYS OF RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE...
This notice is deemed to have been received by you 28 days after it was posted. Therefore you must lodge your application within 56 days of the date of this notice."
The notice cannot, of course, dictate the true construction of the Rules, but it is certainly desirable that they should, if possible, be construed so as to give effect to their purpose.
"any party to an appeal ... to an adjudicator ... if dissatisfied with his determination ."
In this paragraph, 'party' means what it says and there is no deeming provision to saddle a party with his representative's knowledge. A person must know what has been determined before he can be dissatisfied with it and decide to appeal. The Court of Appeal in R ( Asifa Saleem) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2000] 4 All ER 814 has recently adopted this reasoning in striking down the predecessor of Rule 48(2) which provided that service of a notice was to be deemed to have been effected even if it could be established that it had not in fact been received.
"An application for leave to appeal shall be made by serving upon the Tribunal the appropriate prescribed form........."
The appropriate prescribed forms are identified in the Schedule to the 2000 Rules, but Rule 3(1) provides, after referring to the forms in the Schedule, in addition:
"... and those forms, or similar forms, may be used with any variations that the circumstances may require."
The Schedule has three prescribed forms. One is for family visit appeals which fall into a special category. The other two deal with United Kingdom and overseas appeals respectively. In this case, the Home Office used a form headed "Asylum Appeal" which was signed "on behalf of the Secretary of State." It was a form which had been used under the Asylum Appeals (Procedure) Rules 1996 and which on its face referred to those rules. This was the wrong form. Not only was this not an asylum appeal nor one to which the 1996 Rules applied but it was not even signed on behalf of the correct party who was not, of course, the Secretary of State but was the Entry Clearance Officer.
"… the Tribunal before whom the defect is properly raised has the task of determining what are to be the consequences of failing to comply with the requirement in the context of all the facts and circumstances of the case in which the issue arises. In such a situation the Tribunal's task will be to seek to do what is just in all the circumstances…."
We therefore must consider whether, notwithstanding the defect, the appeal should be allowed to proceed.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS