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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kaur, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Home Department [2013] EWHC 1538 (Admin) (14 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/1538.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1538 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF BALJEET KAUR | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Katherine Olley (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
THE DEPUTY JUDGE:
"(a) Where Part 6A or Appendices A to C, or E of these Rules state that specified documents must be provided, that means documents specified by the Secretary of State in either the Points Based System Policy Guidance, or for applications for settlement the application form and accompanying guidance, as being specified documents for the route under which the applicant is applying. If the specified documents are not provided, the applicant will not meet the requirement for which the specified documents are required as evidence.
(b) If the Entry Clearance Officer or Secretary of State has reasonable cause to doubt the genuineness of any document submitted by an applicant which is, or which purports to be, a specified document under Part 6A or Appendices A to C, or E of these Rules and having taken reasonable steps to verify the document, is unable to verify that it is genuine, the document will be discounted for the purposes of this application."
"Hits risk profile - student UK to study [postgraduate diploma] in Business Management, switching to T1 General.
Seems a bit young to do a Bachelors degree (under 18 years at start of course).
Degree certificate look more than 3 years old.
Earnings are extremely high and are for IT/business related services - a field in which the applicant has no qualification and is not old enough to have relevant experience."
I have mentioned the claimant's year of birth. She was a couple of months under 23 years old at the date the report was compiled and had left India 9 months earlier, in December 2010.
"You have claimed 30 points for Qualifications under Appendix A of the Immigration Rules and have provided a degree certificate then and associated documents in support of your application. Following enquiries with Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University, Kanpur, we have been unable to establish if the degree certificate is genuine. The Secretary of State is therefore not satisfied that you have provided the specified documents required under Appendix A of the Immigration Rules and it has therefore been decided that you have not met the requirements to be awarded points for Qualifications under appendix A of the Immigration Rules."
"...provided accounts and an accountant letter, reference letter, tax documents and bank documents in support of your application. Following enquiries with your client ... and your accountant ... we have been unable to establish if the accounts, accountant letter and reference letters are genuine. The Secretary of State is therefore not satisfied that you have provided the specified documents required under Appendix A of the Immigration Rules...."
"It is arguable that in failing to inform the applicant about her official's failure to verify the documents submitted by the claimant, and to afford her an opportunity to make representations, the defendant failed to comply with paragraph 245AA of the Immigration Rules and that her decision was procedurally unfair."
It is those two grounds that Mr Malik advances today. The judge went on to say that he did not consider the second ground (departure from policy not considered) to be arguable, and Mr Malik has not pursued it. The judge subsequently clarified that his first observation, referring to paragraph 245AA of the Rules, was a reference to the provision about taking reasonable steps to verify documentation. For my part, I would have found that obvious anyway.
"9. If the SSHD has reasonable cause to doubt the genuineness of any document submitted by an applicant which is, or which purports to be, a specified document, common law obligation to act fairly requires her to put her doubts to the applicant and invite submissions before refusing the application. Further, Paragraph 245AA permits the SSHD to discount a document if (and only if) 'having taken reasonable steps to verify the document, is unable to verify that it is genuine'. The very first reasonable step in such circumstances would be to inform the applicant in question. It is simply not open to the SSHD to refuse the application in this manner."
"13. Although the requirements of fairness always depend upon the context and the specific facts of the case, it is clear from Thakur and the authorities there cited that people making applications for an extension of stay are entitled to be treated fairly by the Secretary of State in determination of those applications.
14. We also note the discussion of procedural fairness in De Smith's Judicial Review (Sixth Edition 2007) at paragraphs 7-003 to 7-009. We accept the author's proposition that the law has advanced from imposing a public law requirement of fairness in particular situations, to the general proposition that wherever a public function is being performed there is an inference that the function is required to be performed fairly, in the absence of an express indication to the contrary."
"19. The salient facts in the present case are as follows:
1) The appellant was lawfully present in the United Kingdom with leave to remain as a student and was a bona fide student.
2) He made a bona fide application for an extension of stay as a student at a college which was an approved sponsor at the time of the application;
3) Unbeknown to the appellant the college was removed from the list of approved sponsors by the Home Office during the time it was considering the application;
4) Removal of the college from the list of sponsors was taken at about the same time as the decision to refuse the application, there was therefore no opportunity for the appellant to be informed of the consequences of his application of the respondent's action."
Against that ground, their conclusion was as follows:
"22. Where the applicant is both innocent of any practice that led to loss of the sponsorship status and ignorant of the fact of such loss of status, it seems to us that common law fairness and the principle of treating applicants equally mean that each should have an equal opportunity to vary their application by affording them a reasonable time with which to find a substitute college on which to base their application for an extension of stay to obtain the relevant qualification. In the curtailment cases, express Home Office policy is to afford sixty days for such application to be made.
23. Although we accept that there is no such policy for refusal cases, fairness requires that such cases be treated in broadly the same way. The applicant must be given an equal opportunity before refusal of application to amend it in the way we have described. This was clearly not done in this case. The Home Office knew that it had suspended the college in January 2010 but no one else did. The applicant could not have known that subsequently the college's status as an approved sponsor was revoked before his application for an extension of stay was decided.
24. It is obviously unfair for the Secretary of State to revoke the college's status after the application has been made when it was an approved sponsor and not to inform the applicant of such revocation and not afford him an opportunity to vary the application."
"(5) Fairness will very often require that a person who may be adversely affected by the decision will have an opportunity to make representations on his own behalf either before the decision is taken with a view to producing a favourable result; or after it is taken, with a view to procuring its modification; or both. (6) Since the person affected usually cannot make worthwhile representations without knowing what factors may weigh against his interests, fairness will very often require that he is informed of the gist of the case which he has to answer."
"... check when the information and supporting documentation ... supplied ...from a bank or utility company is correct ..."
and confirmed that she understood that:
"... if the UK Border Agency has reasonable cause to believe that any document or documents ... submitted with this application are forged, fraudulent or not genuine, and the UK Border Agency has sought to verify the documents using processes specified by it but has not been able to verify them, no points will be awarded for these documents even if the UK Border Agency cannot prove that they are not genuine."
As to that, I agree with Mr Malik that the Secretary of State cannot cut down the requirement of common law fairness or the requirements of Immigration Rule 245AA by inserting particular wording into application forms. I come back to the question of the reach or extent of her duties at common law and/or under paragraph 245AA and, specifically, as to whether they extend to the duty contended for: namely, to put the results of the verification check and/or the Secretary of State's doubts to an applicant. Miss Olley's submission, in her skeleton argument, had been that the Secretary of State was under no duty to give what she described as a "second bite of the cherry", describing this as a cumbersome task.