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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> RN (rule 23(5): respondent’s duty) Zimbabwe [2008] UKAIT 00001 (04 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2008/00001.html Cite as: [2008] UKAIT 1, [2008] UKAIT 00001 |
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RN (rule 23(5): respondent's duty) Zimbabwe [2008] UKAIT 00001
Date of hearing: 11 October 2007
Date Determination notified: 4 January 2008
RN |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
The respondent complies with rule 23(5)(a)(i) if, in cases other than personal service, she sends or delivers the determination not later than the date on which the section 103A application is made. It is not necessary for the determination to have been served on the appellant for the purposes of rule 55(5) by that date. Where the appellant adduces evidence that suggests the respondent has not complied with rule 23(5)(a)(i), it is for the respondent to show otherwise.
"(5) The respondent must –
(a) serve the determination on the appellant –
(i) if the respondent makes a section 103A application or applies for permission to appeal under section 103B or 103E of the 2002 Act, by sending, delivering or personally serving the determination not later than the date on which it makes that application; and
(ii) otherwise, not later than 28 days after receiving the determination from the Tribunal; and
(b) as soon as practicable after serving the determination, notify the Tribunal on what date and by what means it was served".
"6. If r 23 applies to this appeal, the Home Office failed in its duty to send the determination to the appellant on the day the application for reconsideration was made. In those circumstances the question arises whether the application can be considered to be validly made. This is not easy to answer; but two things are clear. The first is that the terms of r 23 are intended to give the respondent an advantage not normally available to a party to litigation. The second is that r23(5)(i) is intended to ameliorate the appellant's position in a case where the respondent seeks to challenge a decision in favour of the appellant, before the appellant even knows it has been made. Strictly speaking, the appellant is unlikely to be prejudiced by knowing about the reconsideration application only later, because the next possible act by him for which a time is fixed would be the service of a 'reply' under r 30, which does not have to be done until a week before the hearing of the reconsideration. Nevertheless, the possibility that the respondent will challenge a determination in favour of the appellant without notifying the appellant of the determination or the challenge is not clearly envisaged by the Rules and could only add to the apparent unfairness of r 23. In these circumstances we incline to the view that the requirements of r 23(5)(a)(i) are mandatory, and compliance with them is a pre-condition of a valid application for reconsideration of the instance of the respondent. Mr Walker [the Presenting Officer] did not dissent from that view. We should emphasise that we do not mean to indicate any similar view in respect of sub-paragraph (a)(ii) or sub-paragraph (b) of r 23(5), where the unfairness is significantly less apparent.
7. It follows from the foregoing that if r 23 applies to this appeal, our view is that the respondent's application for reconsideration was not validly made."
"My understanding at this point was that the allowed appeal determination had already been served on the appellant and her representative either by the Tribunal when the determination was promulgated, and/or by ADMU. On 04 July 2007 I received a telephone call from the appellant's legal representative at the Refugee Legal Centre, stating that she wanted a copy of the appeal determination. In the best of faith, I therefore faxed my copy to her on 04 July 2007, assuming that either the representative's copy had not arrived or had been misplaced."
"(5) Subject to paragraph (6), any document that is served on a person in accordance with this rule shall, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be served –
(a) where the document is sent by post or document exchange from and to a place within the United Kingdom, on the second day after it was sent;
(b) where the document is sent by post or document exchange from or to a place outside the United Kingdom, on the twenty-eighth day after it was sent; and
(c) in any other case, on the day on which the document was sent or delivered to, or left with, that person."
Signed Date
Senior Immigration Judge P R Lane