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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 >> MS (Uganda) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWCA Civ 50 (16 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/50.html Cite as: [2014] Imm AR 745, [2014] WLR 2766, [2014] EWCA Civ 50, [2014] 1 WLR 2766, [2015] INLR 11 |
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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 LEWISON
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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MS (UGANDA) | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Respondent |
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Mr Matthew Gullick (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) Appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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"refusal to vary a person's leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom if the result of the refusal is that the person has no leave to enter or remain."
Upper Tribunal Judge Clive Lane accepted the submission from the Secretary of State, raised for the first time on appeal, that the condition was not satisfied since the appellant did indeed have the right to remain notwithstanding the refusal to vary his limited leave.
"Appeal: asylum claim
(1) This section applies where a person has made an asylum claim and —
(a) his claim has been rejected by the Secretary of State, but
(b) he has been granted leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom for a period exceeding one year (or for periods exceeding one year in aggregate).
(2) The person may appeal to the Tribunal against the rejection of his asylum claim."
"7. I reject Mr Waheed's submission. On a proper construction of Section 83, I find that the circumstances of this appellant are excluded. I say that for the following reasons. I hold that Section 83(1) sets out a sequence of events which must occur in a particular order before a right of appeal against the rejection of an asylum claim can arise. I say that because of the inclusion of the conjunctive 'and' at the end of the first line of section 83(1) and the conjunctive 'but' between Section 83(1)(a) and (b). The grant of leave must be made at the same time as or after the refusal of the claim for asylum and as a consequence of the applicant having claimed asylum; if that is not the case, then the use of those conjunctives is superfluous. The Section applies to applicants whose claims for asylum have been rejected by the Secretary of State, but who have been granted a limited period of leave to remain, rather than refugee status. That outcome may occur in a number of different circumstances but the most common is, perhaps, where an applicant who is under the age of 18 years seeks asylum and, although his asylum claim itself is rejected on its merits, the Secretary of State grants leave to remain until the applicant is aged 18 years old. The purpose of Section 83 is that such an applicant should not be deprived of the right to challenge the refusal of his asylum claim where that refusal is not accompanied by a decision to remove him.
8. The sequence of events anticipated by Section 83 has not occurred in the case of the present appellant. His asylum claim (and its rejection) postdate the grant of leave which was made to the appellant at a time when the Secretary of State had no idea that he would seek to claim asylum or wish to remain in the United Kingdom beyond the period of his student visa. I hold that Section 83 of the 2002 Act does not apply in the circumstances of this appellant. I further hold that there has been no immigration decision (as defined by Section 82) in this appeal such that the appellant had any right of appeal to the First-tier Tribunal. Consequently, the determination of the First-tier Tribunal is a nullity; the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The decision by the Secretary of State in the present appeal not to curtail the appellant's existing leave to remain has left him without a right of appeal but, should he not return voluntarily to Uganda and a decision is taken to remove him, he may, if he wishes, then appeal to the First-tier Tribunal on asylum grounds."
The grounds of appeal
" This decision is consistent with the fact that the FTT is a creation of statute whose jurisdiction in this case is limited by the terms of s.82 of the 2002 Act. The same goes for the UT. Statutory jurisdiction cannot be conferred by waiver or agreement; or by the failure of the parties or the tribunal to be alive to the point. Although, as Longmore LJ pointed out, decisions taken without jurisdiction may in due course become irreversible, that point has not been reached in this case. It was, in my judgment, open to either the FTT or the UT to take the point about jurisdiction notwithstanding the failure of the Secretary of State to raise it herself."
The context
"(1) This section applies where—
(a) a person has made an asylum claim
(b) he was granted limited leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom as a refugee within the meaning of the Refugee Convention
(c) a decision is made that he is not a refugee, and
(d) following the decision specified in paragraph (c) he has limited leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom otherwise than as a refugee."
"... presumably to ensure that cases which the Secretary of State is, in any event, going to reconsider in the near future do not have a right to appeal which may be on-going at the same time as the Secretary of State is reconsidering the position."
Pill LJ made an observation to similar effect: see paragraph 30.
The authorities
"... entirely illogical that a person who had made an unfounded asylum claim should have an in country right of appeal arising solely from ... the 'irrelevant happenstance' of whether he had had an unrelated grant of leave in the past" (paragraph 19).
The judge considered that this conclusion was also supported by the fact that there was no rational basis for conferring the right of appeal simply because the applicant had been granted leave in the past. In addition, this analysis made sense of the exclusion of section 83 from section 78. There is no need to prevent removal pending appeal because the applicant has a right to remain in the UK in any event. He then summarised his conclusion at paragraph 21 as follows:
"My conclusion is that the right of appeal under s.83 arises only in circumstances where the appellant has made an asylum claim which has been refused, and has been granted periods of leave exceeding one year in aggregate since the decision to refuse asylum. The claimant has no right of appeal under s.83, because his period of leave long pre-dates his asylum claim."
"All three cases, however, have a number of common features. The first is that an application for asylum was rejected and, at the same time, either no leave to remain or less than a year's leave to remain was granted. Secondly, at a later stage further representations were submitted and it was asserted that a fresh asylum claim arose. Thirdly, after the submission of the further representations, the Secretary of State granted indefinite leave to the claimants to remain outside the Rules, but made no decision on the applications asserting the fresh asylum claim and stated that unless told otherwise within 14 days would treat them as withdrawn."
Discussion
"The purpose of this provision is to provide a specific single-issue asylum appeal."
This is consistent with the purpose being to avoid the proliferation of appeals. But this, I accept, is something of a makeweight argument.