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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Abubakar v Entry Clearance Officer (Sannaa) [2012] EWCA Civ 377 (28 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/377.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 377 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(Immigration and Asylum Chamber)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
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Ms Hawa Ahmed Abubakar |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Entry Clearance Officer (SANNAA) |
Respondent |
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Miss Deok Joo Rhee (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 22 February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis:
Introduction
Facts
"I am the primary person responsible for my Mother's care .It is my duty to attend to my Mother in her old age as it was my duty to maintain her before that. In the UK my Mother would live with me for the remainder of her life and spend time with her daughter-in-law and grandchildren."
It was also explained that the sponsor was the tenant of a three bedroomed house, living there with his wife and his two young children; and there was sufficient accommodation there for the appellant.
"It is evident from the above that the Sponsor's income falls short of the Income Support Levels by £438.85. I have therefore taken into account the third party support offered by Mr Shmunye which can properly be taken into account. He gave evidence that he was prepared to give between £65.00 - £70.00 per week to assist the Appellant. Working on the basis of £70.00 x 52 divided by 12, the third party's contribution would amount to a maximum of £303.33 per month which still leaves a large shortfall. Furthermore, for the reasons set out in paragraph 12(iii) above, I find that the Sponsor's monthly income is probably less than £1,126.66."
The judgment of the Upper Tribunal
"29. I find that is to artificially create a distinction between the Sponsor and his family on the one hand and the Appellant on the other. The basis of the Appellant's application for entry clearance and the acceptance that the Appellant meets the remaining provisions of paragraph 317 is on the basis that the Appellant will be living with the Sponsor as part of the Sponsor's family. They will not be living in isolation from each other. The financial difficulties of the Sponsor will affect the Appellant. She will not be insulated from that even if the third party pays the money in cash directly to her bypassing the Sponsor and his family and even if she were to pay over the (very small) balance remaining after deduction of what would otherwise be the income support level. To suggest otherwise is in my view to negate the basis of the application under paragraph 317. What is being isolated in this case is one requirement of paragraph 317 when what is important is that the Appellant meets the requirements of the paragraph as a whole.
30. What is agreed on behalf of the Appellant is that the decision in Mahad answers some questions in relation to financial provision for applicants for entry clearance that is that they can rely on third party support but by the law of unforeseen consequences throws up further questions which now have been addressed of which this case is one example. This case is said to raise the issue of whether the words without additional recourse to public funds apply to the Appellant only (and any dependants of the Appellant which is not relevant in this case) or whether it can be said to apply to the family unit.
31. Under the pre-Mahad law the issue would not have arisen because third party support was not permissible and either the Sponsor would have adequate funds after the entry into the United Kingdom of the Appellant or he would not. The addition of a third party into the consideration of adequacy of maintenance it is contended raises a new issue: whether if a third party financially supports an Appellant directly that is sufficient.
32. In my view that is not sufficient because it unnaturally isolates the Appellant from the family in which she is residing and undermines the basis of her application under paragraph 317 which is that the Appellant has a Sponsor and that the Sponsor will sponsor the Appellant. The Sponsor cannot do that if he and his family are living below the income support level. What happens is that the mischief which was addressed by KA re-occurs. The considerations raised by the Tribunal in KA (see paragraph 19 above) go to the fundamental issue of whether maintenance is or is not adequate. The mere provision of monies to the Appellant by a third party do not remedy that. The effect will still be that the family with which the Appellant is residing will be living below the income support level. That situation will be unsustainable and would inevitably lead to a further application for public funds which would not be permitted. The Appellant's argument in this case while an ingenious one is not in accordance with the decision of the Court of Appeal in French."
The Rules
"317. The requirements to be met by a person seeking indefinite leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom as the parent, grandparent or other dependent relative of a person present and settled in the United Kingdom are that the person:
(i) is related to a person present and settled in the United Kingdom in one of the following ways:
(a) mother or grandmother who is a widow aged 65 years or over; or
(b) father or grandfather who is a widower aged 65 years or over; or
(c) parents or grandparents travelling together of whom at least one is aged 65 or over; or
(d) a parent or grandparent aged 65 years or over who has entered into a second relationship of marriage or civil partnership but cannot look to the spouse, civil partner or children of that second relationship for financial support; and where the person settled in the United Kingdom is able and willing to maintain the parent or grandparent and any spouse or civil partner or child of the second relationship who would be admissible as a dependant;
(e) a parent or grandparent under the age of 65 if living alone outside the United Kingdom in the most exceptional compassionate circumstances and mainly dependent financially on relatives settled in the United Kingdom; or
(ii) is joining or accompanying a person who is present and settled in the United Kingdom or who is on the same occasion being admitted for settlement; and
(iii) is financially wholly or mainly dependent on the relative present and settled in the United Kingdom; and
(iv) can, and will be, accommodated adequately, together with any dependants, without recourse to public funds, in accommodation which the sponsor owns a occupies exclusively; and
(iva) can, and will be, maintained adequately together with any dependants, without recourse to public funds; and
(v) has no other close relatives in his own country to whom he could turn to for financial support; and
(vi) if seeking leave to enter, holds a valid United Kingdom entry clearance for entry in this capacity."
"6A For the purpose of these Rules, a person (P) is not to be regarded as having (or potentially having) recourse to public funds merely because P is (or will be) reliant in whole or in part on public funds provided to P's sponsor unless, as a result of P's presence in the United Kingdom, the sponsor is (or would be) entitled to increased or additional public funds (save where such entitlement to increased or additional public funds is by virtue of P and the sponsor's joint entitlement to benefits under the regulation referred to in paragraph 6B)
.
6C A person (P) making an application from outside the United Kingdom will be regarded as having recourse to public funds that would be payable to P or P's sponsor as a result of P's presence in the United Kingdom, (including those benefits to which P or the sponsor would be entitled as a result of P's presence in the United Kingdom under the regulations referred to in paragraph 6B)."
Rule 6A, it is to be noted, is specified to apply generally "for the purpose of these Rules". Rule 6C applies, because the appellant was making an application from outside the United Kingdom.
The Submissions
"6. Although it may be said that there is an element of imprecision in the relevant Immigration Rules, the requirement that the maintenance be "adequate" cannot properly be ignored. To our mind the use of that word imposes an objective standard. It is not sufficient that maintenance and accommodation be available at a standard which the parties and their family are prepared to tolerate: the maintenance and accommodation must be at a level which can properly be called adequate.
7. There is a good reason for using the levels of income support as a test. The reason is that income support is the level of income provided by the United Kingdom government to those who have no other source of income. It follows from that that the Respondent could not properly argue that a family who have as much as they would have on income support is not adequately maintained.
8. It perhaps does not necessarily follow that in order to be adequately maintained one has to have resources at least equivalent to those which would be available to a family on income support. But there are very good reasons for taking that view. A family of British (or EU) citizens resident in this country will not have less than that level. It is extremely undesirable that the Rules should be interpreted in such a way as to envisage immigrant families existing (and hence being required to exist, because social security benefits are not available to them) on resources less than those which would be available through the social security system to citizen families. To do so is to encourage the view that immigrant families need less, or can be expected to live on less, and in certain areas of the country would be prone to create whole communities living at a lower standard than even the poorest of British citizens. It is for this reason that a number of Tribunal cases, including Islam (13183), Momotaz Begum (18699), Uvovo (00 TH 014500 (which alone was the subject of reference by the Immigration Judge in this case) and RB [2004] UKIAT 00142 have held that the basic task for Appellants attempting to show that their maintenance will be "adequate" is to show that they will have as much as they would have if they were able to claim income support. Similar considerations apply to the different benefit structure when there is a disabled person in the family, as Munibun Nisa v ECO Islamabad [2002] UKIAT01369 shows. There have been one or two cases which have indicated that a frugal life style can be taken into account in deciding whether maintenance would be "adequate", but in our view those cases should not be followed. In particular, we doubt whether it would ever be right to say that children could be maintained "adequately" at less than the level which would be available to the family on income support, merely because one of their parents asserts that a proper standard, appropriate to a family living in a not inexpensive western society, is available to those who seek to live here.
9. The Immigration Judge erred in law in her assertion that "the Rules do not prescribe a minimum". They do: they require adequacy."
In endorsing and approving these remarks in French Stanley Burnton LJ (with whom Longmore LJ and Laws LJ agreed) stated at paragraph 16 of his judgment that the amount payable by way of income support was an "appropriate and sensible benchmark" for assessing whether parties could indeed maintain themselves and their dependants adequately.
Determination
(1) First, this point was not raised before the Immigration Judge and so necessarily she made no findings on the point. The Designated Immigration Judge did allude to the point. But he too necessarily did not have any primary findings of fact before him: indeed he alluded to the possibility of a potential further problem as to the possible effect of the third party support of Mr Shmunye in operating to reduce any benefits payable to the sponsor.
(2) Second, and fundamentally, the fact remains even accepting that the sponsor as a British citizen would be entitled, by one means or another, to benefits or credits bringing him (with his dependants) up to income support level that the sponsor's case at the hearing was that he had two incomes which overtopped the income support level. The Immigration Judge rejected his evidence that he had a second income. She rightly focused on what his actual income was as at the relevant date. The fact was that the sponsor had not claimed income support or working family tax credit or other extra benefits. Thus his means were inadequate. And, as the Designated Immigration Judge observed, it was not for the Immigration Judge to speculate as to why he had not so claimed them. Nor, I might add, can one speculate as to whether thereafter he might make such a claim: given that his whole case was (and remained on appeal) that his earnings overtopped the income support level. In this context, moreover, it is to be remembered that rule 317(iva) requires not only that the applicant can be maintained adequately without recourse to public funds but also that the applicant will be so maintained.
Conclusion
Sir Stephen Sedley:
Lord Justice Carnwath: