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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 >> Akinsanya & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWHC 469 (Admin) (11 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/469.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 469 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING on the application of (1) OLORUNFUNMILAYO OLUWASEUN AKINSANYA (2) NAOMI ANING-ADJEI |
Claimants |
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- and |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Benjamin Hawkin (instructed by TNA Solicitors) for the 2nd Claimant
David Blundell KC, Julia Smyth, and Natasha Jackson (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13th and 14th December 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eyre:
Introduction.
The Parties' Contentions in Summary.
The Issues.
The Development of the Rules.
"The EU Settlement Scheme contained in Appendix EU to the Immigration Rules provides the basis for resident EU citizens and their family members, and the family members of certain British Citizens, to apply for UK immigration status, which they will require in order to remain here permanently after the UK's withdrawal from the European Union."
"The scheme will also be open to others lawfully resident in the UK by virtue of a 'derivative right' to reside, based on wider EU law. These are 'Chen carers' (the primary carer of a self-sufficient EEA citizen child) and 'Ibrahim and Teixeira' cases (a child of a former EEA citizen worker who is in education in the UK and their primary carer), which are protected by the draft Withdrawal Agreement with the EU in terms of their current rights, and 'Zambrano carers' (the primary carer of a British citizen child or dependent adult). The Government has decided that, in light of the particular circumstances of these cases, it is appropriate that their long term status in the UK should be protected by bringing them within the scope of the EU Settlement Scheme;"
"Annex 1 to Appendix EU (which applies by virtue of paragraph EU7 (1)) contains various definitions. The definition of "person with a Zambrano right to reside" is elaborate to the point of impenetrability, but the relevant parts for our purposes read:
"a person who has satisfied the Secretary of State that . . . they are . . . (a) resident for a continuous qualifying period in the UK with a derivative right to reside by virtue of regulation 16 (1) of the EEA Regulations, by satisfying: (i) the criterion in paragraph (1)(a) of that regulation; and (ii) the criteria in: (aa) paragraph (5) of regulation 16 of the EEA Regulations; or (bb) . . . ; and (b) without leave to enter or remain in the UK, unless this was granted under this Appendix."
"(1) A person has a derivative right to reside during any period in which the person
(a) is not an exempt person; and
(b) satisfies each of the criteria in one or more of paragraphs (2) to (6)
(5) The criteria in this paragraph are that
(a) the person is the primary carer of a British citizen ("BC");
(b) BC is residing in the United Kingdom; and
(c) BC would be unable to reside in the United Kingdom or in another EEA State if the person left the United Kingdom for an indefinite period
(6) The criteria in this paragraph are that
(a) the person is under the age of 18;
(b) the person does not have leave to enter, or remain in, the United Kingdom under the 1971 Act [ (but see paragraph (7A))]
(c) the person's primary carer is entitled to a derivative right to reside in the United Kingdom under paragraph (2), (4) or (5); and
(d) the primary carer would be prevented from residing in the United Kingdom if the person left the United Kingdom for an indefinite period.
(7) In this regulation -
(c) an "exempt person" is a person
(i) who has a right to reside under another provision of these Regulations.
(ii) who has the right of abode under section 2 of the 1971 Act
(iii) to whom section 8 of the 1971 Act 3, or an order made under subsection (2) of that section 4 , applies; or
(iv) who has indefinite leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom [ (but see paragraph (7A))]
(7A) Leave to enter, or remain in, the United Kingdom under the 1971 Act which has been granted by virtue of Appendix EU to the immigration rules is not to be treated as leave for the purposes of paragraph (6)(b) or (7)(c)(iv)."
"Option 1: Allow any applicant who met the Zambrano requirements of the EEA Regulations, as interpreted by the Court of Appeal, at the end of the transition period to qualify for EUSS status.
Option 2: Do not allow an applicant with, at the end of the transition period, limited leave under another route or a realistic prospect of obtaining it to qualify for EUSS status as a Zambrano primary carer.
Option 3: Continue to exclude from EUSS eligibility under the Zambrano category those with, at the end of the transition period, limited leave under another route, but include those with, at that point, a realistic prospect of obtaining such leave."
"It is not considered that these proposals have a disproportionate impact on any category of the applicant. Under the recommended approach, applicants will either be able to obtain limited leave under an alternative route such as Appendix FM or, where they have reasonable grounds for missing the 30 June 2021 deadline, be able to make a late application under the EUSS Zambrano provision, protecting the rights of the applicant and any children affected. In both scenarios, the person will be able to work in the UK and continue their family life here. In cases of destitution, holders of limited leave under Appendix FM can apply for the "no recourse to public funds" condition to be lifted; limited leave holders under the EUSS Zambrano provisions cannot access welfare benefits in line with pre-exit restrictions on those with a Zambrano right to ride. Both types of limited leave provide a route to settlement, which provides access to welfare benefits on the same basis as a British citizen"
"We consider that any disadvantage (as described above) arising from options 2 and 3 is justified in that they are a proportionate means of achieving the legitimate aim of ensuring access to the EUSS to those with a relevant EU law right to reside in the UK by the end of the transition period."
"With respect to proportionality, the fact that an affected person may be on a 10-year route to settlement under Appendix FM is not considered to be a material disadvantage as they would not be required to leave the UK and could continue their family life here. Also, a person with limited leave on an alternative basis, such as Appendix FM, was never intended to benefit from a right to reside by virtue of regulation 16 of the EEA Regulations. The drafting was intended to reflect EU law under which this cohort would not have had a right to reside. Further, consistent with EU law, the EEA Regulations did not provide for the acquisition of the right to reside permanently for those relying on regulation 16, so a longer, 10-year route to settlement under the Immigration Rules has always been their sole route to permanent residence in the UK."
"Where an applicant for limited leave under Appendix FM cannot afford the application fee or IHS, it is open to them to apply for a waiver. However, there is no such waiver available for indefinite leave applications under Appendix FM, so a person may continue on limited leave under Appendix FM for a significant period if they cannot afford the fee and IHS for an application for indefinite leave under Appendix FM."
"The proposals reflect the scope of the Zambrano right to reside under EU law, as per the Court of Appeal judgment in Akinsanya, and as per the original published policy intention behind the inclusion of this non-Withdrawal Agreement category in the EUSS from 1 May 2019.
Those with a Zambrano right to reside under EU law had no right to acquire the right of permanent residence in the UK, so, before the EUSS, the 10-year parent route to settlement under Appendix FM was their sole route to settlement in the UK.
In line with pre-EU exit restrictions on those with a Zambrano right to reside under EU law, pre-settled status under the EUSS granted to this cohort does not allow them to access non-contributory/income-related welfare benefits. Whereas the 10-year parent route under Appendix FM permits recourse to public funds in accordance with the published NRPF policy, so switching into that route from an EU law basis of stay has always been the means by which they can access such welfare benefits.
The scope of the EUSS where those with a Zambrano right to reside under EU law are concerned is simply a reflection of that status quo position. The representations are, however, germane to the consideration Ministers have asked us to undertake of possible changes to the 10-year parent route to settlement, and the impact lifting the NRPF condition may have on the right to settle under Appendix FM. Family Policy colleagues will look at them further in that context. We suggest that adjusting the scope of our definition of an EU law concept (which will become defunct in the UK) is not the place to deal with concerns about the mainstream route for the foreign national parents of British citizen children."
"The Court of Appeal judgment in Akinsanya held that the Home Office had erred in its understanding of regulation 16(7) of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016 in defining 'a person with a Zambrano right to reside' in the Immigration Rules for the EUSS in Appendix EU. However, the Court of Appeal found that, as a matter of EU law, a Zambrano right to reside does not arise where a person holds leave to remain.
The Home Secretary has carefully considered the Court of Appeal judgment and has decided that she no longer wishes that definition in Appendix EU to reflect the scope of the 2016 Regulations (which have now been revoked) but wishes it to reflect the scope of those who, by the end of the transition period, had an EU law right to reside in the UK as a Zambrano primary carer, in line with the originally stated policy intention. She therefore intends to maintain the requirement in sub paragraph (b) of the definition that the applicant did not, by the end of the transition period and during the relevant period relied upon, have leave to enter or remain in the UK (unless this was under the EUSS)."
"In principle, an applicant is not prevented from qualifying under the scheme as a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' where they had a realistic prospect of obtaining alternative leave to remain (such as under Appendix FM), had they applied for it. In these circumstances, a fact-based enquiry is required looking at whether, in practice, the British citizen would be (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period in which the applicant relies on having been a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' the British citizen would have been) unable to remain in the UK, or an EEA Member State or Switzerland, if the applicant (or, as the case may be, both primary carers) were (or, as the case may be, had been) in fact required to leave the UK for an indefinite period."
"Following Akinsanya, the SSHD reconsidered her policy in this area and decided to maintain sub-paragraph (b) of the definition of a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' in Annex 1 to Appendix EU. This provides that an applicant cannot meet that definition if they have for the relevant period had (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they had) leave to enter or remain in the UK, unless this was granted under Appendix EU.
An applicant cannot therefore meet that definition if they have (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period had) leave to enter or remain granted under another part of the Immigration Rules (such as Appendix FM) or on a discretionary basis outside the Rules".
"Where the applicant both:
- is not and for the relevant period has not been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period in which they rely on having been a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' they were not) an 'exempt person'
- does not have and for the relevant period has not had (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period in which they rely on having been a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' they did not have) leave to enter or remain in the UK, other than leave granted under Appendix EU
there are 4 stages you must consider when assessing whether, by the specified date, the applicant is and for the relevant period has been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they were) resident with a derivative right to reside by virtue of regulation 16(1) of the EEA Regulations by satisfying the criteria in regulation 16(5).
These are:
- stage 1: assessing British citizenship: assessing whether the person for whom the applicant claims to be and for the relevant period to have been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period to have been) the primary carer of is (or, as the case may be, was) a British citizen
- stage 2: direct relatives or legal guardians: assessing whether the applicant is and for the relevant period has been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they were) the direct relative or legal guardian of the British citizen
- stage 3: primary carer: assessing whether the applicant is and for the relevant period has been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they were) the primary carer of the British citizen
- stage 4: British citizen unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland: assessing whether, in practice, the British citizen would be and for the relevant period would have been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they would have been) unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland if the applicant was (or, as the case may be, had been) required to leave the UK for an indefinite period"
"You must consider whether the relevant British citizen could go and for the relevant period could have gone (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they could have gone) to live in an EEA Member State or Switzerland.
If the applicant is and for the relevant period was (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they were) an EEA citizen, or has (or had) a right to reside in an EEA Member State or Switzerland (either as the family member of an EEA citizen or under the domestic immigration system of that country), you must consider whether the British citizen would be and for the relevant period would have been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they would have been) able to reside in that country with the applicant. Where this is (or was) so, the applicant will not be a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside'.
In particular, there was scope, before the specified date, for an EEA citizen and a British citizen family member to reside elsewhere in the EEA or in Switzerland under EU free movement law. The British citizen's right to begin doing so ended at the specified date. This does not alter the fact that the applicant must meet the criteria as a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' by the specified date. An EEA citizen applicant is unlikely to do so, given that before the specified date they were able to reside with a British citizen family member elsewhere in the EEA or in Switzerland.
Alternative care arrangements
To assess whether, in practice, the relevant British citizen would be and for the relevant period would have been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they would have been) unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland if the applicant were (or had been) required to leave the UK for an indefinite period, you must consider whether there are (or were) alternative care arrangements which could be (or could have been) made for the British citizen in those circumstances.
If there are (or were) such alternative care arrangements, you must then consider whether such arrangements are (or were) appropriate, including, in particular, in light of the best interests of the child (where the British citizen is a child) or of any other child of the applicant affected by the decision. For further guidance see: Alternative care arrangements.
If there are (or were) appropriate alternative care arrangements for the British citizen, the applicant will not be a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside'.
Conclusion on stage 4
Where you are satisfied that, in practice, the British citizen would be and for the relevant period would have been (or, as the case may be, for the relevant period they would have been) unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland if the applicant were (or, as the case may be, had been) required to leave the UK for an indefinite period, you must move on to the overall conclusion below.
Where you are not satisfied of this, you must not move on to that stage, but must instead consider the applicant's eligibility for leave on another basis under rule EU11 and, where relevant, EU12) and EU14 of Appendix EU: see EU Settlement Scheme: EU, other EEA and Swiss citizens and their family members.
If the applicant does not meet any of these other requirements, you must refuse the application under rule EU6 of Appendix EU."
"to uncouple from reliance on the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016, and to reflect the Court of Appeal judgments in Akinsanya and Velaj in, the EUSS definitions for certain derivative rights cases under EU law: Zambrano (the primary carer of a British citizen), Chen (the primary carer of a self-sufficient EU citizen child) and Ibrahim & Teixeira (a child in education in the UK of an EU citizen former worker in the UK and the child's primary carer)."
"a person who has satisfied the Secretary of State by evidence provided that they are (and for the relevant period have been) or (as the case may be) for the relevant period they were:
(a) resident for a continuous qualifying period in the UK which began before the specified date and throughout which the following criteria are met:
(i) they are not an exempt person; and
(ii) they are the primary carer of a British citizen who resides in the UK; and
(iii) the British citizen would in practice be unable to reside in the UK, the European Economic Area or Switzerland if the person in fact left the UK for an indefinite period; and
(iv) they do not have leave to enter or remain in the UK,
unless this:
(aa) was granted under this Appendix; or
(bb) is in effect by virtue of section 3C of the Immigration Act 1971; or
(cc) is leave to enter granted by virtue of having arrived in the UK with an entry clearance in the form of an EU Settlement Scheme Family Permit granted under Appendix EU (Family Permit) to these Rules on the basis they met sub-paragraph (a)(ii) of the definition of 'specified EEA family permit case' in Annex 1 to that Appendix; and
(v) they are not subject to a decision made under regulation 23(6)(b), 24(1), 25(1), 26(3) or 31(1) of the EEA Regulations, unless that decision has been set aside or otherwise no longer has effect;"
"Where the applicant relies on being a Zambrano primary carer and meets the initial eligibility requirements in section 2 of this guidance, you must then consider the following 3 additional stages.
These are:
stage 1: British citizen resides in the UK: assessing whether the person for whom the applicant claims to be the primary carer is a British citizen who resides in the UK
stage 2: primary carer: assessing whether the applicant is the primary carer of the British citizen
stage 3: British citizen unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland: assessing whether, in practice, the British citizen would be unable to reside in the UK, the EEA or Switzerland if the applicant was in fact required to leave the UK for an indefinite period
The applicant must meet these 3 stages for the whole continuous qualifying period in the UK, which began before the specified date, in which they rely on having been a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside' in order to be eligible for leave under the scheme as such a person."
"As held by the Court of Appeal in Velaj v SSHD [2022] EWCA Civ 767, this assessment requires a fact-based enquiry looking at whether, in practice, the British citizen would be unable to remain in the UK, an EEA Member State or Switzerland, if the applicant were in fact required to leave the UK for an indefinite period."
"If the applicant did not have non-Appendix EU leave during the continuous qualifying period on which they rely on being a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside', but they have since been granted leave under Appendix FM (regardless of which application was made first), you must consider whether, on the balance of probabilities, it is likely they would have been granted that Appendix FM leave earlier if they had applied for it earlier, before they applied to the EU Settlement Scheme and/or before the specified date"
"The applicant has never applied under Appendix FM or Article 8 ECHR.
If the applicant has never made an application under Appendix FM or a claim that their removal from the UK would breach their right to respect for private or family life as protected by Article 8 ECHR, you must consider whether, on the balance of probabilities, an applicant is likely to qualify for Appendix FM leave such that the applicant has failed to show that they would in fact leave the UK for an indefinite period: see Considering the prospects of making a successful Appendix FM, private life or long residence application.
Considering the prospects of making a successful Appendix FM, private life or long residence application
This is not an exercise to assess whether the applicant qualifies for leave to remain under Appendix FM or based on their private life or long residence, as this can only be done by the relevant caseworker following the making of a valid application under that route, but to consider whether there is a realistic prospect that they would do so (or would have done so), such that they cannot satisfy you that they would (or would have) in fact left the UK for an indefinite period.
If the applicant cannot satisfy you of this on the balance of probabilities, then the British citizen would be able to continue to live in the UK. As a result, the applicant will not meet the requirements to be a 'person with a Zambrano right to reside'.
If the applicant submits any information or evidence about whether or not they meet the relevant requirements, this must be taken into account when you make the decision.
You must not argue that an applicant could have obtained leave under a route before that route existed. Therefore, please note:
Appendix FM came into force on 9 July 2012. Before that, parent and partner routes were in Part 8 of the Immigration Rules
Appendix Private Life came into force on 20 June 2022 for applications made on or after that date, replacing paragraphs 276ADE to 276DH in Part 7 of the Immigration Rules
You must base your assessment on the applicant's individual circumstances and consider any relevant information or evidence provided. Some guidance is set out below on some of the scenarios you may see:
the applicant claims to be the parent (including adoptive parent) or legal guardian of a British citizen child
the applicant claims to be the primary carer of their British citizen spouse or civil partner
the applicant claims to be the primary carer of a British citizen direct relative who is not their spouse, civil partner, or minor child
the applicant claims long residence in the UK"
"Indirect discrimination: Having to apply under Appendix FM rather than qualifying under Appendix EU may put some people at a disadvantage (as described above) on the basis of the protected characteristic of age. For example, a young primary carer of a British citizen may have had less earning potential than an older primary carer and so may have more difficulty paying the fee and IHS for an Appendix FM application.
Although this may amount to indirect discrimination, this is considered to be justified because it is proportionate to the legitimate aim of ensuring that those who had a Zambrano right to reside under EU law at the end of the transition period have access to the EUSS but that those who did not, do not. It also maintains the integrity of the UK's domestic family Immigration Rules in Appendix FM: if some people without an EU law Zambrano right to reside at the end of the transition period were given EUSS status and others were not, it risks challenges on grounds of fairness from the latter (particularly other parents of British citizen children) who would prefer access to the EUSS access instead of meeting the requirements of Appendix FM. Such challenges which would be harder to defend on fairness grounds if one out-of- scope group has already been brought in scope.
In addition, the Secretary of State operates a fee waiver policy for limited leave applications under Appendix FM, which mitigates this disadvantage to an extent, as does the Secretary of State's policy for lifting the 'no recourse to public funds' condition on limited leave granted under Appendix FM. By comparison, limited leave granted under the EUSS to Zambrano primary carers does not provide access to benefits, in line with pre-EU exit restrictions on that group."
The Circumstances of the First Claimant.
"...The only additional point that it is necessary to record is that the reason why the claimant chose to apply for leave to remain, rather than continuing to rely on her derivative residence right as a Zambrano carer, was that as a result of illness she was unable to work and needed to claim benefits. As a person with a derivative residence right she had only a limited entitlement to social assistance (see para 50 below), whereas once she had leave to remain she became entitled to claim mainstream benefits (the Secretary of State not having imposed a "no recourse to public funds condition)."
The Circumstances of the Second Claimant.
The Contrasting Leave to Remain Provisions.
The Correct Understanding of the Zambrano right to reside.
"In those circumstances, Article 20 TFEU precludes national measures which have the effect of depriving citizens of the Union of the genuine enjoyment of the substance of the rights conferred by virtue of their status as citizens of the Union (see, to that effect, Rottman, paragraph 42)
A refusal to grant a right of residence to a third country national with dependent minor children in the Member State where those children are nationals and reside, and also a refusal to grant such a person a work permit, has such an effect.
It must be assumed that such a refusal would lead to a situation where those children, citizens of the Union, would have to leave the territory of the Union in order to accompany their parents. Similarly, if a work permit were not granted to such a person, he would risk not having sufficient resources to provide for himself and his family, which would also result in the children, citizens of the Union, having to leave the territory of the Union. In those circumstances, those citizens of the Union would, as a result, be unable to exercise the substance of the rights conferred on them by virtue of their status as citizens of the Union..."
"that the Zambrano carer has no right to reside until prohibited national measures are imminent. He submits that the right to reside of a Zambrano carer arises only at the point of removal or threatened removal. Prior to that date, the carer is physically here but has no right to reside. In the immigration context, it is possible for a person to be resident here without having the right to reside required to qualify him for social assistance purposes (Abdirahman v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2007] EWCA Civ 657). On his submission, it is at the point of removal or imminent removal that EU law intervenes to prevent removal. The Zambrano right is, on his submission, negative rather than positive in nature. It is an immunity from national measures which destroy the substance the citizenship right of the EU citizen child."
"As to (1), the choice is between the date ("the Last Date") when prohibited national measures are taken (or are imminent) and the time when the carer ceases to be liable to be removed, i.e. the first date ("the First Date"), from which the Zambrano carer ceases to be liable to prohibited national measures. This may be on the birth of the child or a later date, for example, the date on which any leave which the carer had to be within the jurisdiction expires."
"In my judgment, for the reasons given below, the effective citizenship principle means that EU law confers a right to reside on a Zambrano carer from the First Date. As Elias LJ expressed the position in argument, the Zambrano carer has under EU law a positive right to work and reside in the member state in which the EU citizen child is resident, and a negative right not to have prohibited measures taken against him. I agree, though this may not be an exhaustive statement of the Zambrano carer's EU law rights."
"The wider principle, in my judgment, informs the answer to the Main Issues. In my judgment, it is clear that the principle is concerned with creating rights to reside where that is necessary to make a person's EU citizenship status meaningful and effective.
That right to reside stems from Article 20 TFEU and so it is also a right to work. We are told that the Home Office issues those who apply as Zambrano carers on request with a certificate of application which will entitle them to live and work here. That practice is entirely consistent with the EU law position as I see it to be.
Given that the Zambrano carer's right is to reside so as to support the status of the EU citizen child, it makes no sense that the right should arise only from the Last Date. The fact that presence in the UK without a right to reside would also put the Zambrano carer in breach of the criminal law, even if it were to be an abuse for a prosecution to be brought, confirms this conclusion."
"This appeal raises questions about the full implications of the Zambrano decision as a matter of EU law. The Secretary of State submits that they are extremely limited. Indeed, on his analysis there is no right to reside as such until the point where removal of the carer is imminent; at that moment, but not before, the carer can claim the benefit of a right - more accurately described as an immunity - which provides the carer with a defence to any attempt to remove her from the country. The argument is that until steps to remove her are taken, the carer's presence in the country is de facto tolerated and therefore her charge, the EU citizen from whose right to reside the carer's right is derived, is not in jeopardy of being removed. The child is not at risk of being deprived of "the genuine enjoyment of the substance of the right" conferred by virtue of the child's status as an EU citizen, to use the language in paragraph [42] of Zambrano. Accordingly, if no steps are taken against the carer (and assuming there is no issue of the carer being forced to leave for financial reasons) no Zambrano status ever arises and therefore there can be no question of any benefits being acquired by virtue of that status. Any benefits to which the carer is entitled must be derived from some other legal source."
"167. I wholly reject this analysis of the nature of the Zambrano right. In my view, it is barely coherent. The logic appears to be that although the State at all times has the right to take action to remove the TCN [Third Country National] in practical terms it is necessarily and always meaningless. At the very same moment as the State takes steps to exercise it, a countervailing right magically springs into being which enables the carer to claim to be immune from the process. Presumably on this analysis if the State then agrees not to take removal action, the need to invoke the Zambrano principle disappears and the carer returns to the status of someone whose presence is simply tolerated but who has no right as such to remain in the country.
168. I cannot accept that this would be a proper implementation of the EU right. The right lawfully to remain and work in the UK can only sensibly mean that no action can be taken by the State to defeat those rights. Of course, the right to remain need only be asserted when the State seeks to interfere with it; that is so with all rights which confer freedom from State interference. It does not follow that the right arises only at the point when it is being asserted. At all times whilst the Zambrano conditions are met, the carer has the right not to have action taken to remove her from the country if the effect would be to deprive the child of his or her right, as a citizen of the EU, to remain within the EU.
169. The Secretary of State's submission is made all the more bizarre given that someone not lawfully present in the UK is under a duty to leave, and indeed is committing a criminal offence by remaining: see section 24 of the Immigration Act 1971. As I understand the response to this point of Mr Coppel QC, counsel for the Secretary of State, it is that in practice no proceedings are ever instituted against those illegally present, and if they were there would be an immunity from the criminal process. But to be effective the immunity must have the effect that at no time when the carer has been performing her role as a Zambrano carer has she been acting illegally by remaining in the country. The carer's presence in the circumstances must be lawful, not merely tolerated, and that can only be on the premise that there is at all times a right to stay."
"The right of residence is a derivative right, that is, one derived from the dependent Union citizen. A key to this derivative right is the deprivation of the benefits of the Union citizenship as a result of the Union citizen being compelled, by the TCN's [Third Country National's] departure, to leave Union territory. This case is about the nature or intensity of that compulsion."
"What lies at the heart of the Zambrano jurisprudence is the requirement that the Union citizen would be compelled to leave Union territory if the TCN, with whom the Union citizen has a relationship of dependency, is removed. As the CJEU held in O v Maahanmuuttovirasto (Joined Cases C-356/11 and C-357/11) [2013] Fam 203, it is the role of the national court to determine whether the removal of the TCN carer would actually cause the Union citizen to leave the Union..."
And at [30]:
"The overarching question is whether the son would be compelled to leave by reason of his relationship of dependency with his father. In answering that question, the court is required to take account, "in the best interests of the child concerned, of all the specific circumstances, including the age of the child, the child's physical and emotional development, the extent of his emotional ties both to the Union citizen parent and to the third-country national parent, and the risks which separation from the latter might entail for that child's equilibrium" (Chavez Vilchez [2018] QB 103, para 71). The test of compulsion is thus a practical test to be applied to the actual facts and not to a theoretical set of facts..."
" in advance of the hearing below the Secretary of State accepted that her intention in framing the Annex 1 definition was that it should accurately state the actual right to reside enjoyed by Zambrano carers in the UK. It followed that if the claimant in fact enjoyed such a right notwithstanding the grant of leave to remain the Secretary of State had in framing limb (b) proceeded under a misunderstanding, and she accepted that it would be unlawful for her to make her decision on that basis.
Accordingly, as Mr Blundell put it at para 28 of his skeleton argument before us, the only issue before Mostyn J was whether the Secretary of State had, in formulating the Annex 1 definition, "erred . . . in her understanding of (a) the Zambrano jurisprudence and (b) regulation 16 of the 2016 Regulations" - that is, by proceeding on the basis that the Zambrano right did not arise in circumstances where the carer in question had any form of leave to enter or remain. If she had, it was agreed that her decision would have to be quashed, and that she would be required to reconsider the terms of the definition..."
"It will be seen that the essence of that reasoning, as it applied in the actual case, is that unless the father enjoyed the right to live in Belgium, and the right to work, he would have to leave the EU, and the children would in practice have to go with him, and that that would deprive them of the substance of their rights as EU citizens under articles 20 and 21..."
"The significance of that can only, he submitted, be that the court did not regard the Zambrano jurisprudence as being engaged in circumstances where the carer already enjoyed residence rights and where accordingly there was no current risk of them, or therefore their EU citizen dependants, having to leave the EU. Even if the domestic right in question might in principle lapse or be removed, leading to the potential "obstruction" of the dependants' article 21 rights, that did not engage Zambrano so long as that possibility was purely hypothetical..."
"...It is clear from Iida and NA that the court does not regard Zambrano rights as arising as long as domestic law accords to Zambrano carers the necessary right to reside (or to work or to receive social assistance). To put it another way, where those rights are accorded what I have called the "Zambrano circumstances" do not obtain.
That analysis is perfectly sustainable at the theoretical level. As the court recognises (see para 72 of the judgment in Iida) the right of third country nationals to reside in a member state is normally a matter for that state. Zambrano rights are for that reason exceptional. They are not typical Treaty rights, since they arise only indirectly and contingently in order to prevent a situation where EU citizen dependants are compelled to leave the EU. That being so, it makes sense to treat them as arising only in circumstances where the carer has no domestic (or other EU) right to reside (or to work, or to receive necessary social assistance)."
"...Notwithstanding the analysis above, the fact remains that if at any time a Zambrano carer loses their right to reside as a matter of domestic law, the Zambrano right will arise (assuming, that is, that the effect of the carer leaving will be that the EU citizen child also has to do so): Zambrano is always waiting in the wings, and so long as the Zambrano circumstances obtain the carer can never be put in a position where their residence is unlawful..."
"The issue which arises on this appeal is whether a person deciding whether the requirements of Regulation 16(5)(c) are fulfilled must consider whether the British Citizen dependant would be unable to reside in the UK on the assumption that the primary carer (or both primary carers, as the case may be) will leave the UK for an indefinite period (irrespective of whether the assumption is correct); or whether the decision-maker must consider what the impact on the British Citizen would be if in fact the primary carer (or both primary carers) would leave the UK for an indefinite period."
"It was common ground that Mr Velaj would not qualify for a Zambrano right under the European jurisprudence because as a matter of fact, his son would not be compelled to leave the EU if Mr Velaj were denied a derivative right of residence. He would be able to stay in the UK with his British Citizen mother, who shared primary caring responsibilities with his father and who would not leave the UK if he were returned to Kosovo."
"...must mean that the decision maker is required to look at matters on a factual basis, i.e. from the perspective of what would happen to the child if in fact, in the circumstances of that specific case, both primary carers would leave the UK..."
The Consequence of the Correct Understanding for the Provisions of App EU and for the Positions of the Claimants.
"With respect to proportionality, the fact that an affected person may be on a 10-year route to settlement under Appendix FM is not considered to be a material disadvantage as they would not be required to leave the UK and could continue their family life here."
"Both the 2016 Regulations and the 2006 Regulations (and the Amendment Regulations) were, in the relevant respects, made under section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972. Since the rights recognised by them derive from EU law they do not form part of the scheme under the Immigration Act 1971: see para 20 above. Specifically, a derivative right to reside does not constitute a form of leave to remain. One consequence of that is that it does not provide a "route to settlement"."
Note 1 I will use the term EU law to describe the rights and obligations deriving from the various European treaties and from the decisions of the Court of Justice of the European Union and its predecessors. [Back] Note 2 I will endeavour to refer to the continuing corporation sole of the Defendant by the gender of the postholder at the time in question. [Back]