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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> NM (leading an independent life) Zimbabwe [2007] UKAIT 00051 (24 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2007/00051.html Cite as: [2007] UKAIT 00051, [2007] UKAIT 51 |
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NM ("leading an independent life") Zimbabwe [2007] UKAIT 00051
Date of hearing: 13 March 2007
Date Determination notified: 24 May 2007
NM |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
Where a child (who may be over 18) is seeking limited leave to remain as the child of a parent with limited leave, in order to establish that he is not "leading an independent life" he must not have formed through choice a separate (and therefore independent) social unit from his parents' family unit whether alone or with others. A child who, for example, chooses to live away from home may be "leading an independent life" despite some continuing financial and/or emotional dependence upon his parents.
The facts
The immigration judge's decision
"[she] is unmarried and is not a civil partner, has not formed an independent family unit and is not leading an independent life;…"
"22. There is no question that the Appellant is part of a close family. However, this is different from the question of whether she is living an independent life. I concluded that the Appellant was living an independent life. I regarded it as perfectly possible to do so while still staying with her family. I will return to this particular point later. The Appellant has worked in the United Kingdom for a number of years. She presently works for her father but it is clear from her witness statement that she has worked for other people from as long ago as 2002. She has worked with Lloyds TSB, Barclays Bank, Comet, London Scottish and R and R Lettings. It may suit the Appellant to be working for her father but she has demonstrated in the past that she is not dependent on her father for employment. The Appellant is an adult. She comes over as extremely intelligent and in my view totally able to look after herself.
23. With regard to the question of where the Appellant lives she did live with her brother outwith the family home for a period from September 2005 to April 2006. This was a decision she made herself. She made the decision firstly to help the financial affairs of her brother and secondly to give herself some more space. She has now returned to the family home. There has to be a question as to whether or not this was inevitable. The family now have a larger house where she has a bedroom of her own. However, I had to be concerned as to whether or not the Appellant would have moved back into the family house if she had not discovered that her application for further leave to remain was in difficulty because of the fact that she was living with her brother. She says that the plan was that she would not live with her brother indefinitely. However, be that as it may, she made a decision to move out the family house of her own volition and while she may be living with the family now she is capable of living out with the family house and has done so.
24. In all these circumstances, notwithstanding the fact that the Appellant lives with her parents and works for her father at the present time, there is no doubt that as an intelligent adult her actions have shown her totally capable of living her own life independently. I did not regard the circumstances of this case as amounting to the Appellant leading a life which was dependent on her family. Given her past actions, she was living an independent life notwithstanding her current place of abode."
Leading an independent life
Application to the appeal
Decision
A GRUBB
SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE
Date: