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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Chowdhury, R (On the Application Of) v The First-tier Tribunal (Immigration And Asylum Chamber) & Anor [2024] EWCA Civ 1380 (08 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/1380.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 475, [2024] EWCA Civ 1380 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE BLUNDELL
CASE NO. JR-2023-LON-000104
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Senior President of Tribunals)
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
and
LORD JUSTICE HOLGATE
____________________
THE KING (on the application of ZAKOAN AHMED CHOWDHURY |
Respondent |
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- and – |
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(1) THE FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER) |
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(2) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Appellant |
____________________
Zane Malik KC (instructed by Chancery Solicitors) for the Respondent
The First-Tier Tribunal was not represented and did not appear.
Hearing date: 8 October 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS:
INTRODUCTION
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
The 2006 Regulations
"(2) A person satisfies the condition in this paragraph if the person is a relative of an EEA national, his spouse or his civil partner and —
(a) the person is residing in [a country other than the United Kingdom and is dependent upon the EEA national or is a member of his household;
(b) the person satisfied the condition in paragraph (a) and is accompanying the EEA national to the United Kingdom or wishes to join him there; or
(c) the person satisfied the condition in paragraph (a), has joined the EEA national in the United Kingdom and continues to be dependent upon him or to be a member of his household."
The Provisions Governing Notices of Decision
"(1) The Secretary of State may make regulations requiring a person to be given written notice where an appealable decision is taken in respect of him.
(2) The regulations may, in particular, provide that a notice under subsection (1) of an appealable decision must state —
(a) that there is a right of appeal under section 82, and
(b) how and when that right may be exercised.
(3) The regulations may make provision (which may include presumptions) about service.
(4) In this section "appealable decision" means a decision mentioned in section 82(1)."
"4. — Notice of decisions
(1) Subject to regulation 6, the decision-maker must give written notice to a person of any decision taken in respect of him which is appealable under section 82(1) of the 2002 Act or any EEA decision taken in respect of him which is appealable.
…
(3) If the notice is given to the representative of the person, it is to be taken to have been given to the person.
5. — Contents of notice
(1) A notice given under regulation 4(1) —
(a) is to include or be accompanied by a statement of the reasons for the decision to which it relates …
…..
(3) The notice given under regulation 4 shall also include, or be accompanied by, a statement which advises the person of —
(a) his right of appeal and the statutory provision on which his right of appeal is based;
(b) whether or not such an appeal may be brought while in the United Kingdom;
(c) the grounds on which such an appeal may be brought; and
(d) the facilities available for advice and assistance in connection with such an appeal.
(4) The notice given under regulation 4 shall be accompanied by information about the process for providing a notice of appeal to the Tribunal and the time limit for providing that notice."
"7. — Service of notice
(1) A notice required to be given under regulation 4 may be —
(a) given by hand;
(b) sent by fax;
(c) sent by postal service in which delivery or receipt is recorded to: –
(i) an address provided for correspondence by the person or his representative; or
(ii) where no address for correspondence has been provided by the person, the last-known or usual place of abode or place of business of the person or his representative;
…
(d) sent electronically;
(e) sent by document exchange to a document exchange number or address;
(f) sent by courier; or
(g) collected by the person who is the subject of the decision or their representative.
(2) Where —
(a) a person's whereabouts are not known; and
(b) (i) no address has been provided for correspondence and the decision-maker does not know the last-known or usual place of abode or place of business of the person; or
(ii) the address provided to the decision-maker is defective, false or no longer in use by the person; and
(c) no representative appears to be acting for the person,
the notice shall be deemed to have been given when the decision-maker enters a record of the above circumstances and places the notice on the relevant file.
(3) Where a notice has been given in accordance with paragraph (2) and then subsequently the person is located—
(a) he shall be given a copy of the notice and details of when and how it was given as soon as practicable; and
(b) the time limit for appeal under the Procedure Rules shall be calculated from the date the notice is deemed to have been given in accordance with paragraph (2).
(4) Where a notice is sent by post to a place outside the United Kingdom in accordance with paragraph (1)(c) it shall be deemed to have been received on the twenty-eighth day after it was posted, unless the contrary is proved.
(5) For the purposes of paragraph (4) the period is to be calculated —
(a) excluding the day on which the notice is posted…
(7) A notice given under regulation 4 may, in the case of a minor who does not have a representative, be given to the parent, guardian or another adult who for the time being takes responsibility for the child."
The Procedure Rules
"19. — Notice of appeal
(1) An appellant must start proceedings by providing a notice of appeal to the Tribunal.
(2) If the person is in the United Kingdom, the notice of appeal must be received not later than 14 days after they are sent the notice of the decision against which the appeal is brought.
…
(4) The notice of appeal must —
(a) identify which of the available statutory grounds of appeal are relied upon;
(b) be signed and dated by the appellant or their representative;
(c) if the notice of appeal is signed by the appellant's representative, the representative must certify in the notice of appeal that it has been completed in accordance with the appellant's instructions .
(5) The appellant must provide with the notice of appeal —
(a) the notice of decision against which the appellant is appealing or if it is not practicable to include the notice of decision, the reasons why it is not practicable;
(b) any statement of reasons for that decision;
(c) any documents in support of the appellant's case which have not been supplied to the respondent;
(d) an application for the Lord Chancellor to issue a certificate of fee satisfaction;
(e) any further information or documents required by an applicable practice direction."
"20. — Late notice of appeal
(1) Where a notice of appeal is provided outside the time limit in rule 19, including any extension of time directed under rule 4(3)(a) (power to extend time), the notice of appeal must include an application for such an extension of time and the reason why the notice of appeal was not provided in time.
(2) If, upon receipt of a notice of appeal, the notice appears to the Tribunal to have been provided outside the time limit but does not include an application for an extension of time, the Tribunal must (unless it extends time of its own initiative) notify the person in writing that it proposes to treat the notice of appeal as being out of time.
(3) Where the Tribunal gives notification under paragraph (2), the person may by written notice to the Tribunal contend that —
(a) the notice of appeal was given in time; or
(b) time for providing the notice of appeal should be extended,
and, if so, that person may provide the Tribunal with written evidence in support of that contention.
(4) The Tribunal must decide any issue under this rule as to whether a notice of appeal was given in time, or whether to extend the time for appealing, as a preliminary issue, and may do so without a hearing.
(5) Where the Tribunal makes a decision under this rule it must provide to the parties written notice of its decision, including its reasons."
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Mr Chowdhury's Immigration History
"Your application has been refused for the reasons set out in the enclosed notices.
The notices inform you of whether there is a right of appeal and, if so, how this may be exercised, and sets out any time limit for an appeal to be made. The notices also explain whether and when you are required to leave the United Kingdom."
"You do not have a right of appeal against this decision. Appeals under the EEA Regulations can only be made against an 'EEA decision'. An EEA decision does not include a refusal to issue a residence card to an extended family member. This position is in line with Upper Tribunal's judgment in Shemsi Sala v Secretary of State for the Home Department (IA/44409/2013)."
The Appeal to the First-tier Tribunal
"5. In light of the authority of Khan, I have little hesitation in concluding that the respondent's decision to refuse an EEA residence card, dated 30th November 2016, was indeed appealable, contrary to the assertion made by the respondent therein. To that extent, this is a valid appeal.
6. However, the appeal can only proceed to a substantive hearing if the Tribunal agrees to extend time, given that the appeal has been received very nearly 6 years after the decision was served upon him, and therefore a very long way past the 14-day timeframe provided for in Rule 19(3)(a) of the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Rules 2014.
7. In deciding whether I should grant an extension of time under Rule 20, I apply the process and principles set out by the Upper Tribunal in R (on the application of Onowu) v First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) (extension of time for appealing principles) IJR [2016] UKUT 00185 (IAC).
8. Firstly, I find that the delay in this case is both serious and substantial.
9. Secondly, I do not accept that the appellant has provided a good explanation for his failure to comply with the time limits set down in the procedure rules. While I accept that the first year of the delay is explained by the fact that Sala was not overturned until November 2017, there is simply no explanation at all for the failure to lodge this appeal for a further 5 years thereafter.
10. Finally, weighing all relevant factors together, I have concluded that it would be wholly unreasonable to extend time and allow this appeal to proceed. In reaching this conclusion I have attached significant weight to both the extreme length of the delay, and the lack of good explanation for that delay, and found that they firmly outweigh both the significance of the issues in the appeal, and the consequences for the appellant if time is not extended."
"The appeal is valid, having been brought against an appealable decision.
The appeal is out of time, and time is not extended.
The appeal is not permitted to proceed further."
The Claim for Judicial Review of the First-tier Tribunal Decision
"It is now accepted by the Secretary of State that the decision was an EEA decision which carried a right of appeal. But the authorities I have considered above make it quite clear that time did not start to run from the date of the appealable decision: it was only a notice of decision which had that effect. The notice of decision in this case did not comply with the Notices Regulations in several respects and could not cause time to start to run for the purpose of an appeal. The Secretary of State might have made a valid decision but she issued no valid notice which caused time to run".
"The Applicant's appeal lodged on 13 November 2022 against [the Secretary of State for the Home Department's] decision of 30 November 2016 was brought in time."
THE APPEAL AND SUBMISSIONS
The Ground of Appeal
"The Upper Tribunal erred in holding that the authority of Marepally v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2022] EWCA Civ 855, [2022] Imm AR 1341 does not address the question of when time for appealing against the decision starts to run in circumstances when a notice was defective (because not compliant with the Immigration (Notices) Regulations 2003) is served."
Submissions
DISCUSSION
The Context
"41. The importance of compliance with the notification requirements in paragraph (3) of regulation 5 is underlined by paragraphs (6) and (7) which provide for re-service of the notice containing the advice required by paragraph (3) in those cases where, initially, paragraph (3) need not be complied with. Against this statutory background, applying Lord Steyn's approach in Soneji [2006] 1 AC 340 (see para 21 above), I consider that Parliament would have intended that a failure in a notice of decision to comply with the requirement to advise an claimant that he was entitled to an in-country right of appeal would render the notice invalid.
42. The court's response to such invalidity would normally be to quash the notice, unless it was satisfied that there had been substantial compliance with the requirement: e.g. because the claimant had been made aware by other correspondence from the respondent that he did, in fact, have an in-country right of appeal, because the First-tier Tribunal had accepted an in-country appeal from the claimant, or because he had been allowed to present his appeal in the UK having been permitted to re-enter the country to do so."
Appeals
"37. Let me now draw the threads together. Whenever a new right or remedy is established in the Court of Appeal, other litigants who might have taken advantage of that right or remedy, if only they had known about it earlier, will be disappointed. However, that is not normally a good reason to go back to earlier cases and unscramble decisions made by the parties on the basis of the law as previously understood".
The Present Case
CONCLUSION
LORD JUSTICE HOLGATE
THE SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS