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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 >> Hima v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWCA Civ 680 (26 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/680.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 680 |
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ON APPEAL FROM UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE BRUCE
EA/50098/2020 and [2022] UKAITUR IA4952020
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
____________________
Ilirjan Hima |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
____________________
Julie Anderson (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 14 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS :
Introduction
The legal framework
What it comes down to is that as a matter of principle a spouse establishes a prima facie case that he or she is a family member of an EEA national by providing the marriage certificate and the spouse's passport; that the legal burden is on the Secretary of State to show that any marriage thus proved is a marriage of convenience; and that that burden is not discharged merely by showing "reasonable suspicion". Of course in the usual way the evidential burden may shift to the applicant by proof of facts which justify the inference that the marriage is not genuine, and the facts giving rise to the inference may include a failure to answer a request for documentary proof of the genuineness of the marriage where grounds for suspicion have been raised. Although, as I say, the point was not argued before us, that approach seems to me to be correct – as does the UT's statement that the standard of proof must be the civil standard….
One of the most basic rules of litigation is that he who asserts must prove. It was not for Ms Sadovska to establish that the relationship was a genuine and lasting one. It was for the respondent to establish that it was indeed a marriage of convenience.
Ms Sadovska in that case was an EEA national who (so the SSHD alleged) had attempted to enter into a marriage of convenience with someone who was not lawfully in the UK. She was issued with a notice of removal on the basis that she had abused her right to reside in the UK. The FTT dismissed her appeal. It was apparent from the decision that the FTT placed the burden of proof on Ms Sadovksa to show that the proposed marriage was genuine. In the Court of Session Ms Sadovska complained that the FTT had misplaced the burden of proof. The Court of Session found that the FTT had considered all the information and reached a decision based upon it. That decision did not depend upon any onus of proof but upon weighing the various factors in the balance. Comparison was drawn with the way in which a court would assess whether an unmarried father should have contact with his child. This was the context of what the Supreme Court said at [28] of Sadovska. The task of the FTT was not to conduct an evaluative exercise of all of the factors. Rather, the FTT had to be satisfied on a balance of probabilities that the SSHD had proved that the marriage was one of convenience.
39…..the Court of Appeal in the present case was correct to treat the claimant's allegation as being that the trial had been unfair. We have not been addressed on the meaning of bias so it would be wise here only to assume, rather than to decide, that the quite narrow definition of it offered by Leggatt LJ….is correct. On that assumption it is far from clear that the observer would consider that the judge had given an appearance of bias. A painstaking reading of the full transcripts of the evidence given over 4 ½ days strongly suggests that, in so far as the judge evinced prejudice against the claimant, it was the product of his almost immediate conclusion that the claim was hopeless and that the hearing of it represented a disgraceful waste of judicial resources.
In Serafin the court was concerned with the effect of a judge interrupting both the evidence of an unrepresented claimant and the claimant's cross-examination of witnesses. However, the observations in relation to unfairness and bias were of general application.
The factual background
The FTT hearing
"I do not need to tell you that in a case where marriage of convenience is asserted it is normal for both parties to that marriage to give evidence and be subject to cross-examination in order to prove the genuineness of their relationship. That is not something you think is required in this case, is that your position?"
Mr Hussain maintained the position as set out in the skeleton argument. The judge pressed the point about Ms Ruse giving evidence describing it as "the best evidence for your client". He said that he could draw an inference that she did not give evidence because Mr Hussain was worried about what her evidence might be. After further exchanges to the same effect, the judge addressed Ms Mepstead. He put to her that her intended approach was to question both the appellant and Ms Rune about their lives together to see whether it was genuine. Ms Mepstead said that this was correct.
"I am extremely displeased, Mr Hussain, that you are seeking to admit something via examination-in-chief when we have already delayed the hearing for the best part of an hour in order for you to look at a document that you should have already seen yourself."
This was a reference to the previous FTT decision. The judge asked Ms Mepstead whether she was content to permit the document to be admitted to which she said that "it should of course have been submitted earlier".
"Yes, it is right because even if I take someone else, I don't know who are you thinking, be a friend, be a family, any person, still you are not going to believe. So, I don't know – I don't know – I don't know what to do."
Ms Mepstead asked nothing further in cross-examination. She asked no questions arising from the 2017 decision or about the appellant's previous marriage. She did not cross-examine in relation to the interview in July 2020 whether in respect of the discrepancies referred to in the decision letter or any other matters arising from the interview.
"Mr Hussain, you are not doing your client any favours with your behaviour today, I can tell you that much. The presenting officer asked why no witnesses had come. And the answer was, "Why should I?" Well, that is not a good answer, is it? So, I am clarifying that point. That is clarification, not cross-examination, Mr Hussain. You should know better than to accuse me of cross-examining. You are welcome to apologise. OK. You are not apologising. You are not doing your client any favours at all, Mr Hussain. I will carry on with my perfectly legitimate line of clarificatory questions."
The judge continued to ask about the stepson. The appellant said that he did not think that he needed to have the stepson give evidence i.e. the answer he had given in relation to witnesses in general to Ms Mepstead. The judge then concluded his questions by reiterating the proposition that they were "questions in clarification".
"JUDGE MILLS: Mr Hussain ---
MR HUSSAIN: Yes.
JUDGE MILLS: --- you have already accused me of being impartial (sic) in this case today. You have already accused me of cross-examining your client. Are you now accusing Ms Mepstead of deliberately concealing evidence from the tribunal? Is that what you are doing?
MR HUSSAIN: No, sir, that is not what I said.
JUDGE MILLS: Are you quite sure that is not what you are doing?
MR HUSSAIN: Yes, I am quite sure that that is not what I am doing.
JUDGE MILLS: I am pleased to hear it."
Mr Hussain went on to reiterate that his argument was that the SSHD had conducted investigation beyond the interviews in July 2020 and that it was incumbent on the SSHD to make the results of that investigation available to the FTT. There followed a lengthy intervention from the judge in which he referred to the fact that Ms Ruse had not given evidence and to the appellant's credibility being "without question tainted by his past history". He went to criticise Mr Hussain's approach to the evidence of visits. He concluded with: "You can say the burden is on the Secretary of State as much as you like. Do you really think as a legal professional that you have approached this case in the appropriate way Mr Hussain?"
The FTT decision
"….there were a number of matters that I was still unclear on, and so I proceeded to ask questions in clarification. Having asked 10 questions, Mr Hussain objected that I was cross-examining the appellant. I assured him that I was simply clarifying some matters that were apparent from the facts of the case, which had not been addressed in the appellant's evidence thus far."
"It is hard to avoid the conclusion that his relationship to Ms White was, as with his two earlier bogus asylum claims, nothing more than an attempt to obtain immigration status in the UK by whatever means possible. This is the context in which I must assess whether the current relationship is genuine or not."
"While I cannot give significant weight to these points given that they were not put to the appellant in the decision or in evidence at the hearing, I am satisfied that I can place some weight on them given that Mr Hussain has had sight of the interview transcripts since at least September 7th 2020 when the respondent's bundle was uploaded to MyHMCTS, and so had ample time to go through the record, to note what are clear and obvious issues, and to deal with them in the appellant's witness statement."
The decision of the UT
"My overall conclusion is that the test for apparent bias has not been made out. The fair minded observer might well conclude that the hearing was at times fractious; Judge Mills certainly expressed frustration, and there was, at one point in particular, a deviation from the norm; but being in possession of the facts as a whole, I do not think that observer would conclude there to be a real possibility that Judge Mills was bias (sic)."
She then set out the matters which she said would tend to support the appellant's claim.
Discussion
Conclusion
King LJ:
Underhill LJ: