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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> JL (A8 worker, lawful employment) Poland [2009] UKAIT 00030 (02 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2009/00030.html Cite as: [2009] UKAIT 30, [2009] UKAIT 00030 |
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JL (A8 worker – lawful employment) Poland [2009] UKAIT 00030
Date of hearing: 15 May 2009
Date Determination notified: 02 July 2009
JL |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
For the purpose of determining an A8 state worker's period of lawful employment in the UK, a Worker Registration Certificate issued under the Accession (Immigration and Worker Registration) Regulations 2004 authorising employment with a particular employer takes effect from its date of issue by virtue of reg 7(2)(c) of the 2004 Regulations.
"8. (1) An application for a registration certificate authorising an accession State worker requiring registration to work for an employer may only be made by an applicant who is working for that employer at the date of the application.
(2) The application shall be in writing and shall be made to the Secretary of State.
(3) The application shall state -
(a) the name, address, and date of birth of the applicant;
(b) the name and address of the head or main office of the employer;
(c) the date on which the applicant began working for that employer;
(d) where the applicant has been issued with a registration card, the reference number of that card.
(4) Unless the applicant has been issued with a registration card under paragraph (5), the application shall be accompanied by -
(a) a registration fee of £50;
(b) two passport size photographs of the applicant;
(c) the applicant's national identity card or passport issued by the applicant's State;
(d) a letter from the employer concerned confirming that the applicant began working for the employer on the date specified in the application.
(5) In the case of an application by an applicant who has not been issued with a registration card under this paragraph, the Secretary of State shall, where he is satisfied that the application is made in accordance with this regulation and that the applicant -
(a) is an accession State worker requiring registration; and
(b) began working for the employer on the date specified in the application,
send the applicant a registration card and a registration certificate authorising the worker to work for the employer specified in the application, and shall return the applicant's national identity card or passport.
(6) In the case of any other application, the Secretary of State shall, if he is satisfied as mentioned in paragraph (5), send the applicant a registration certificate authorising the worker to work for the employer specified in the application.
(7) A registration card issued under paragraph (5) shall contain -
(a) the name, nationality and date of birth of the applicant;
(b) a photograph of the applicant;
(c) a reference number.
(8) A registration certificate issued under paragraph (5) or (6) shall contain -
(a) the name of the applicant;
(b) the reference number of the applicant's registration card;
(c) the name and address of the head or main office of the employer, as specified in the application;
(d) the date on which the applicant began working for the employer, as specified in the application; and
(e) the date on which the certificate is issued. ...."
"a national of a relevant accession State who legally works in the United Kingdom without interruption for a period of 12 months falling partly or wholly after 30 April 2004 shall cease to be an accession State worker requiring registration at the end of that period of 12 months."
"… a person shall be treated as having worked in the United Kingdom without interruption for a period of 12 months if he was legally working in the United Kingdom at the beginning and end of that period and any intervening periods in which he was not legally working in the United Kingdom do not, in total, exceed 30 days".
"a person working in the United Kingdom on or after 1 May 2004 is legally working during any period in which he is working in the United Kingdom for an authorised employer".
"7(2) An employer is an authorised employer in relation to a worker if -
(a) ….
(b) the worker -
(i) during the one month period beginning on the date on which he begins working for the employer, applies for a registration certificate authorising him to work for that employer in accordance with regulation 8; and
(ii) has not received a valid registration certificate or notice of refusal under regulation 8 in relation to that application or ceased working for that employer since the application was made;
(c) the worker has received a valid registration certificate authorising him to work for that employer and that certificate has not expired under paragraph (5); or
(d) the employer is an authorised employer in relation to that worker under paragraph (3) or (4).
(3) Where a worker begins working for an employer on or after 1st May 2004 that employer is an authorised employer in relation to that worker during the one month period beginning on the date on which the work begins.
(4) ….
(5) A registration certificate -
(a) is invalid if the worker is no longer working for the employer specified in the certificate on the date on which it is issued;
(b) expires on the date on which the worker ceases working for that employer….."
"The appellant is Polish. She came to this country on 1 July 2004, two months after the accession of Poland to the European Union. She started work on 9 July 2004 picking mushrooms for Monaghan Mushrooms Ltd of Dungannon. She applied to the Home Office for a registration certificate. We are not told when she applied but the certificate was issued on 5 November 2004. This meant that her employers were and had always been an "authorised employer": see the 2004 Regulations, reg 7(2)(c). They would in any event have been an authorised employer for the first month after she started work: see reg 7(2)(d) and (3). And even if no certificate had been issued, they would have been an authorised employer provided that she had applied for a certificate within the first month after she started work and not been refused one: see reg 7(2)(b)." (emphasis added)
"… either Smirnoff or the agency were an authorised employer for the first month after she started work for them: see reg 7(2)(d) and (3). She stayed with Smirnoff for three weeks and then moved, at the end of January, to work for Linwoods in Armagh, baking and packing bread. If Linwoods were her employers they were an authorised employer for the first month after she started work with them: see reg 7(2)(d) and (3). This takes us up to the end of February 2005, almost eight months after she started work. Once again, she did not apply for a registration certificate for her job with Linwoods. But had she done so at any time and had the certificate been issued before she left, Linwoods would have been an authorised employer: see reg 7(2)(c)." (emphasis added)
"Monaghan Mushrooms was an authorised employer in relation to her for the first month of her employment starting on 9 July: reg 7(3). There was a gap until 5 November 2004. This appears to have been due to a delay in the issuing of her registration certificate by the Home Office. Thereafter Monaghan Mushrooms was an authorised employer in relation to her because she had received a valid registration certificate which had not expired as she was still working for that employer: reg 7(2)(c)."
"We do not know exactly when the appellant applied for her certificate, but it is likely to have been before 9 August 2004, within the first month of her starting work with Monaghan Mushrooms, yet the certificate was not issued until 4 November.
SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE GRUBB