BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> MM (Art 8, Shala, Delay) Serbia and Montenegro [2004] UKIAT 00016 (06 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00016.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 16, [2004] UKIAT 00016 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
MM (Art 8- Shala - Delay) Serbia and Montenegro [2004] UKIAT 00016
IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: October 2003
Date Determination notified: 06 February 2004
Before
MR G WARR
Between
MM | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
"By the time the SEF letter was sent out he had moved from his notified address and his solicitors though aware of his move had not notified the Respondent. He had, however, in fact received the SEF letter almost immediately and taken it to his solicitors. They produced, he says, a letter purporting to come from the Respondent, and purporting to grant him asylum. The letter is an obvious forgery. The Appellant then states that the solicitor discarded the SEF and proceeded to apply for a travel document on the Appellant`s behalf on the strength of the letter. An acknowledgement is said to have been received from the Respondent for that application form. There is a letter dated 13 June 2001 in which the solicitors make the claim. Those solicitors have subsequently ceased to do immigration work (the Appellant says they have closed down). Their letter to the Appellant so informing him is dated 10 July 2001 and also refers to the grant of refugee status. Despite his belief that he had been granted refugee status he seems to have decided nonetheless to instruct other solicitors immediately and has been represented by Raja & Co since 26 July 2001. The latter seem not have made direct enquires of the Respondent until March 2002 but were eventually informed that the grant letter was a forgery and that the Appellant`s asylum claim had in fact been refused".)
"I do not consider that the limited exception created by Shala can arguably be claimed to extend to the wholly different situation where the claimed effect of delay is simply that had the decision-making process been carried out more speedily a different result might arguably have resulted. The Refugee Convention contains clear provision for cesser of refugee status when the conditions which brought it about no longer exist, and whatever the Secretary of State`s practice in granting greater status than applies under the Refugee Convention may be, it does not seem to me that it can arguably be right to claim that this should impose a requirement to consider refugee status on a retrospective basis simply because the constraints of handling a numerically large number of applications mean that each application cannot be dealt with as quickly as the applicant might wish. "
For the above reasons I do not consider that the grounds of appeal raise any arguable issues having a real prospect of success. Nevertheless, in light of Shala, it is requisite that the Tribunal should have the opportunity of giving guidance to adjudicators as to the limits to be placed upon its ambit and for that reason only I grant permission to appeal limited to the issued raised at ground 2 of the grounds of appeal".
" I accept that even if family life would not be interfered with by removal, his private life would be interfered with. The remaining factor on which the Appellant relies heavily is the effect of removal on his children. The youngest was only just one year old when he was brought from Serbia to the UK (quite possibly one of the factors underlying the decision to leave in the first place) and the eldest is now aged almost ten. It will undoubtedly be a wrench for them to be torn away from their English friends and schools and have to readapt, in Sead`s case, to life in Serbia from which he has been away since he was about six, but they are a Serbian family with no legal right to be here and are at an age when adaptation is recognised to be relatively easy. I have a great deal of sympathy for the children's position, especially Sead, but on a careful balancing of the whole circumstances the Respondent has satisfied the burden placed on him by Art 8.2 to show that on balance removal would not be disproportionate to the legitimate needs of the UK. I am satisfied that removal in this case is within the range of reasonable responses and would not be unlawful. The human rights appeal is therefore dismissed".
(1) the adjudicator must conduct that balancing exercise for himself; and
(2) that it is an error for him to treat his review as confined to an assessment of whether the case is "within the range of reasonable responses". The judgment in Djali is particularly in point since in that case (as here) the Secretary of State had never taken a decision on the proportionality of the appellant`s removal. As Simon Brown, LJ put it:
"It was not until the appeal to the Adjudicator that the appellant sought to rely on Art 8. Even, therefore, were I to accept Ms Giovannetti`s submission that the essential facts here were not in dispute – and that submission too has its difficulties given the contrast between paragraph 14 of the Secretary of State's decision letter and what Mr de Mello suggests was the objective evidence before the IAT as to the availability of psychotherapy in Kosovo – I would not regard this case as falling within the Edore principle. Although no doubt the Secretary of State at some point in the course of the appeal proceedings must be taken to have decided the question of proportionality against the appellant, the appeal process itself is necessarily directed to his earlier decision".
The issue of delay and the Shala point
"What is striking about both the decision of the Tribunal and that of the Secretary of State is that in each the position of the appellant has been equated with that of any normal applicant who wishes to obtain leave to enter on marriage grounds…But as Mr Blake QC has rightly pointed out, the appellant`s case has an exceptional feature, namely that had his asylum application been dealt with reasonably efficiently, he would have been likely to have obtained at least exceptional leave to remain as a Kosovo refugee, thereby giving him the ability to apply from within the UK for a variation of leave on the grounds of his marriage. The Tribunal does not appear to have considered that submission, which was clearly put before it…In other words, but for the remarkable delay on the part of the Home Office in dealing with his asylum claim, the appellant would not have fallen into the category where the applicable policy requires an application for leave to enter to be made from outside this country.
15. The facts of this case bear a marked similarity with those of Genti Xhacka [2002] UKIAT 03352 (unreported) 31 July 2002 where the Tribunal was presided over by Collins, J. There the appellant was also an ethnic Albanian from Kosovo whose claim for asylum was not dealt with for some 2 [and a half] years. During that time, he met and married a British woman, though the adjudicator found that there were no insurmountable obstacles to the family living together in Kosovo. The Tribunal took the view that the claim under Art 8 should have been allowed, Collins J saying at para [3]:
"In the circumstances of this case, the fact is that the appellant did have a legitimate claim to enter, namely that he was at that time a refugee, and that coupled with the delay in dealing with his claim as an unaccompanied minor until the situation changed, is capable of amounting to exceptional circumstances and does in the circumstances of this case justify a decision that he is entitled to remain here because to remove him would be a breach of Art 8 of the ECHR".
…
The significance is that, both in Genti Xhacka and in the present case, the appellant did have a legitimate claim to enter at a time when, on any reasonable basis, his claim should have been determined. Put another way, the fact that the delay by the Home Office has deprived him of that advantage should be seen as an exceptional circumstance which takes the appellant`s case out of the normal run of cases where a person with no leave to enter seeks such leave on the basis of marriage; see Mahmood…"
a) the fact that the appellant had a legitimate claim to enter at the time when, on any reasonable basis, his claim should have been determined; and
b) the fact that, had his asylum application been dealt with reasonably efficiently, he would have been likely to have obtained at least exceptional leave to remain [as a Kosovo refugee];and
c) the fact that the appellant`s private of family life had only become significantly established as a result of the time spent in the UK when he met someone here. Accordingly possession of ELR, if it had been granted when it should have been, would thereby have given him the ability to apply from within the UK for a variation of leave on the grounds of his marriage.
Summary of conclusions on the Shala "delay" point
(i) In conducting the balancing exercise under Art 8 the existence of any unreasonable period of delay is ordinarily a relevant factor, although given the margin of discretion accorded to the interest of the Secretary of State in the maintenance of effective immigration control, this will rarely be a decisive factor unless accompanied by other special circumstances which disclose particular prejudice to a claimant.
(ii) The Shala point can be extended to apply to close family relationships other than marriage relationships.
(iii) The Shala point only covers delay underpinned by special or exceptional circumstances and which is predicated on three things:
(a) the fact that the appellant had a legitimate claim to enter at the time when, on any reasonable basis, his claim should have been determined;
(b) the fact that, had his asylum application been dealt with reasonably efficiently, he would have been likely to have obtained at least exceptional leave to remain;
(c) the fact that his private or family life had only become significantly established as a result of the time spent by him in the UK where he formed a relationship. Accordingly possession of ELR, if it had been granted when it should have been, would thereby have given him the ability to apply from within the UK for a variation of leave on the grounds of his relationship.
Thus the Shala point depends on the existence of all three preconditions and has little or no application in other contexts.
DR H H STOREY
VICE-PRESIDENT