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Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) >> FA and AA (PBS effect of Pankina) Nigeria [2010] UKUT 304 (IAC) (25 August 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/IAC/2010/00304_ukut_iac_2010_fa_nigeria.html Cite as: [2010] UKUT 304 (IAC), [2011] Imm AR 119 |
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Upper Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
FA and AA (PBS: effect of Pankina) Nigeria [2010] UKUT 00304 (IAC)
THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Determination Promulgated |
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Before
MR JUSTICE BLAKE, PRESIDENT
MR C M G OCKELTON, VICE-PRESIDENT
SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE ALLEN
Between
AA
Appellants
and
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT
Respondent
Representation:
For the Appellants: Mr M Olatejau of Henshaw Solicitors
For the Respondent: Mr C Avery, Home Office Presenting Officer
The effect of the decision of the Court of Appeal in Pankina is not limited to the ‘three-month rule’ in relation to evidence of funds. Policy Guidance does not have the status of Immigration Rules for the purposes of immigration appeals.
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
(i) The last date on the bank statement was 24 September 2009 whilst the date of the application was either 3 October as the appellant asserted or 8 October as the respondent asserted and therefore the last entry did not cover the date of the application.
(ii) The bank statement was in the sole name of the second appellant, the first appellant’s husband. According to the Guidance issued by UKBA a student may in certain circumstances use the bank statements of his/her parents. But the Guidance does not permit a student to use the bank statement of his/her spouse to establish his/her case.
“The fact of the matter is the Immigration Rules and the Guidance require the funds to be available to the appellant. Despite the fact that the appellant’s husband may have provided written confirmation that the funds are available to her, that consent may be withdrawn at anytime and so it does not assist the appellant in this appeal. I find that funds in the bank account of the appellant’s spouse are not available for the appellant”.
Issue 1: date of the bank statement
Issue 2: use of the bank statement
“Ten points will only be awarded if the funds shown in the table below are available to the applicant and the applicant provides the specified documents to show this”
“23. Counsel, to whom we are indebted for having together presented an economical and orderly set of documents and arguments, have agreed that the questions for the court are these:
(1) Can the immigration rules lawfully incorporate provisions set out in another document which
(a) has not itself been laid before Parliament
(b) is not itself a rule of law but a departmental policy
(c) is able to be altered after the rule has been laid before Parliament?
(2) If the answer is yes
(a) are the facts to be tested as at the date of the decision or of the appeal?
(b) at whatever point the facts are to be tested, is the policy to be applied as a policy or as a rule?
(c) in applying it, does ECHR art.8 have any application?
(d) If not, does art.8 have any independent application?”
Later in the judgment it addressed them as follows:
“28. The reason lies in questions (1)(b) and (c). A policy is precisely not a rule: it is required by law to be applied without rigidity, and to be used and adapted in the interests of fairness and good sense. To take the present case, the policy guidance standing alone would not only permit but require a decision-maker to consider whether, say, a week's dip below the £800 balance during the three-month period mattered. This would in turn require attention to be given to the object of the policy, which is to gauge, by what is accepted on all sides to be a very imprecise rule of thumb, whether the applicant will be able to support him- or herself without recourse to public funds. If that object was sensibly met, the law might well require the policy to be applied with sufficient flexibility to admit the applicant, or would at least require consideration to be given to doing so. But if the requirement is a rule – and it is the Home Secretary's case that by incorporation it becomes a rule – then there is no discretion and no judgment to be exercised.
29. This in itself would in my opinion require the three-month criterion to form part of the rules laid before Parliament if it was to be effective. But the objection goes deeper. Albeit the first version of the policy guidance was brought into being within the 40 days allowed by s.3(2) for the Parliamentary procedure, it has been open to change at any time. It is this, rather than the fact that it has in the event been changed, which, in answer to question (1)(c), is in my view critical. It means that a discrete element of the rules is placed beyond Parliament's scrutiny and left to the unfettered judgment of the rule-maker.
30. It may be objected that this is pettifogging: all that the three-month provision in the policy guidance is doing is firming up a requirement in the rules. But Ms Giovannetti, with her customary candour, has taken no such point. Instead she has recognised that, if her argument is sound, it means that the Home Secretary may lawfully lay before Parliament a rule which says simply that graduates may be given leave to remain in accordance with such policy as the Home Secretary may from time to time adopt, and that so long as Parliament passes no negative resolution the relevant policies will become rules and, on appeal, law. Indeed it can only be in order to insist on such a principle that the Home Secretary did not long ago take the simple step of amending Appendix C to include the three-month test.
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33. … the operation of the rules qua rules is one thing; what they contain as a matter of law is another. In my judgment the statutory recognition of rules which are to have the character and, on appeal, the force of law requires such rules to be certain. That does not shut out extraneous forms of evidence of compliance, so long as these are themselves specified, but it does in my judgment shut out criteria affecting individuals' status and entitlements which – coming back now to the questions in paragraph 23 above - (a) have not themselves been tendered for parliamentary scrutiny, and (c) even if ascertainable at that point of time, may be changed without fresh scrutiny. As to (b), while the fact that the criterion absorbed into the rules comes from a policy document makes nonsense of the notion of policy, this is not critical: the vice would be the same if the reference in the rules were to a categorical criterion in some external but impermanent or undetermined source.”
Material error of law
Decision on the appeal
Signed
C M G Ockelton
Vice-President of the Upper Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
Date