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United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Immigration and Asylum (AIT/IAC) Unreported Judgments >> IA516912013 [2014] UKAITUR IA516912013 (31 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKAITUR/2014/IA516912013.html Cite as: [2014] UKAITUR IA516912013 |
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Upper Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Appeal Number: IA/51691/2013
THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Heard at Field House | Determination |
On 7 July 2014 | Promulgated |
| On 31 July 2014 |
Before
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE JORDAN
Between
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT
Appellant
and
michael anyanor
Respondent
Representation:
For the Appellant: Mr L Tarlow, Senior Home Office Presenting Officer
For the Respondent: Mr N Garrod, Counsel, instructed by Justice and Law Solicitors
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
1. This is the Secretary of State’s appeal. I shall, however, refer to Mr Anyanor as the appellant as he was before the First-tier Tribunal. The appellant is a citizen of Ghana who was born on 4 March 1979. He made an application for an EEA residence card on 28 February 2013, whereby he sought confirmation that he was residing in the United Kingdom as a family member of an EEA national exercising Treaty rights in the United Kingdom. It was on the basis that he had gone through a proxy marriage which was in accordance with Ghanaian law with Saloi Hamdouai, a French national and as such he was entitled to recognition of the fact that he was the spouse of a Union citizen and thereby entitled to a right to remain in the United Kingdom.
2. The difficulty faced by the appellant emerges in the case of Kareem (proxy marriages – EU law) [2014] UKUT 24 (IAC). This was a decision that was made by the Tribunal in January 2014 and it therefore predates the decision of Judge Aziz which decision was promulgated after a hearing which took place at Richmond (Hatton Cross) on 8 April 2014.
3. The position of European citizens is dealt with particularly in the summary provided in the italic words in these terms:
“(e) In such an appeal the starting point will be to decide whether a marriage was contracted between the appellant and the qualified person according to the national law of the EEA country of the qualified person’s nationality.
(g) It should be assumed that without independent and reliable evidence about the recognition of the marriage under the laws of the EEA country and/or the country where the marriage took place, the Tribunal is likely to be unable to find that sufficient evidence has been provided to discharge the burden of proof. Mere production of legal materials from the EEA country or country where the marriage took place will be insufficient evidence because they will rarely show how such law is understood or applied in those countries. Mere assertions as to the effect of such laws will, for similar reasons, carry no weight.”
4. The consideration that was provided by the Tribunal in the case of Kareem was concerned with spouses’ rights of free movement and residence derived from a marriage having been contracted and depending upon it. In light of the connection between the rights of free movement and residence and the nationality laws of the member state the Tribunal concluded that in a situation where the marital relationship was disputed the question of whether there was a marital relationship had to be examined in accordance with the laws of the member state, in this case Belgium, and from which therefore that citizen derived his free movement rights. In paragraph 18 of the decision the Tribunal said:
“The same conclusion may readily be reached by a different route. Within EU law it is essential that Member States facilitate the free movement and residence rights of Union citizens and their spouses. This would not be achieved if it were left to a host Member State to decide whether a Union citizen has contracted a marriage. Different Member States would be able to reach different conclusions about the Union citizen’s marital status. This would leave Union citizens unclear as to whether their spouses could move freely with them; and might even mean that the Union citizen could move with greater freedom to one Member State (where the marriage would be recognised) than to another (where it might not be). Such difficulties would be contrary to fundament EU law principles. Therefore, we perceive EU law as requiring the identification of the legal system in which a marriage is said to have been contracted in such a way as to ensure that the Union citizen’s marital status is not at risk of being differently determined by different Member States. Given the intrinsic link between nationality of a Member State and free movement rights, we conclude that the legal system of the nationality of the Union citizen must itself govern whether a marriage has been contracted.”
5. The contention made on behalf of the appellant in this appeal is that there is a two-stage process and where it has been accepted that the marriage has been validly performed in accordance with the law of the country where the marriage was celebrated, it is not then necessary to look to the second stage, namely, whether the marriage is recognised in the Member state from which the spouse comes. It is only where there remains a doubt as to the validity of the marriage in the country of its celebration that a decision-maker needs to go on to consider whether it would be recognised in the country from which the spouse derives Union citizenship. In my judgment that is a misinterpretation of what is said in Kareem where it is clear that what is required is a pan-European recognition system of marriages which are validly conducted in another state outside the European Union so that there is a European-wide recognition of that marriage in order to enable the free movement rights of spouses to be properly put into effect.
6. That requirement arises in all cases where an issue of recognition arises. It would make no sense in my judgment if there were to be such a partial scheme as is suggested by the appellant in this appeal. Of course, the formal validity of the marriage in the country of celebration is important: if the marriage was not validly performed, there would be no marriage. If there had been no valid marriage, it would be irrelevant whether (had there been a valid marriage) such a marriage would have been recognised. In other words, recognition has no part to play if there is no marriage to be recognised. That does not mean, however, that where there is a valid marriage, recognition has no part to play save in the narrow context of whether it is recognised domestically.
7. The judge clearly erred in law in failing to consider the case of Kareem which was directly in point and had been decided some months before.
8. There was no proper consideration of whether this marriage is recognised under French law. There was no evidence that it was so recognised and there is none before me. The appeal was bound to fail. In those circumstances I apply Kareem and conclude that the application for a residence card had to be dismissed. In those circumstances I allow the Secretary of State’s appeal against the decision of First-tier Tribunal Judge Aziz who allowed the appeal under the EEA Regulations.
DECISION
The Judge made an error on a point of law and I substitute a determination allowing the Secretary of State’s against the determination of the First-tier Tribunal Judge. I substitute a decision dismissing the appeal of Mr Anyanor on all the grounds advanced.
ANDREW JORDAN
JUDGE OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
29 July 2014