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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 >> Mousasaoui v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2016] EWCA Civ 50 (13 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/50.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 50 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(CLARE MOULDER)
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
LORD JUSTICE SALES
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MOUSASAOUI | Appellant | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss J Anderson (instructed by GLD) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"has now been fully reviewed by CRD and the outcome is that you have no basis of stay in the United Kingdom. You should make arrangements to leave the United Kingdom without delay... UKBA records confirm that you have no outstanding further representations/applications that require consideration. You became appeal rights exhausted in December 2002 and have failed to maintain contact with UKBA or provided any new evidence that you wish to be considered as a fresh claim after this date. Your case has been fully determined and you have no legal basis to stay in the United Kingdom."
"Where further submissions have been made and the decision maker has established whether or not they amount to a fresh claim under paragraph 353 of these Rules, or in cases with no outstanding further submissions whose appeal rights have been exhausted and which are subject to a review, the decision maker will also have regard to the migrant's:
(i) character, conduct and associations including any criminal record and the nature of any offence of which the migrant concerned has been convicted;
(ii) compliance with any conditions attached to any previous grant of leave to enter or remain and compliance with any conditions of temporary admission or immigration bail where applicable;
(iii) length of time spent in the United Kingdom spent for reasons beyond the migrant's control after the human rights or asylum claim has been submitted or refused; in deciding whether there are exceptional circumstances which mean that removal from the United Kingdom is no longer appropriate."
"Character, conduct and associations:
Regard has been given to the strength of your connections in the United Kingdom. It is noted that you have no known criminal convictions however your lack of a criminal record is not considered a significant reason to allow you to remain. Therefore, for the reasons given it is not considered that your character, conduct and associations are a significantly compelling reason for you to remain in the United Kingdom.
Compliance
It is noted that you claimed asylum on 14/09/1998, this was refused on 13/11/2001 and your appeal rights became exhausted on 10/12/2002. This meant that you were then expected to make arrangements to leave the UK but you failed to do so. You have never been given valid leave to remain in the United Kingdom. You became ARE on 10/12/2002. You have not adhered to reporting restrictions. You were served with an IS96 on 03/01/2001 with instructions on when and where to report too, however you failed to comply with these instructions. Reporting is a mandatory requirement of temporary admission to enable the United Kingdom authorities maintain immigration control. After your appeal rights became exhausted, you failed to maintain contact with the UKBA and you absconded. You only came to light again in 2010 when your legal representatives made contact on your behalf. Therefore your compliance is not considered a significantly compelling reason for you to remain in the United Kingdom.
Length of residence spent for reasons outside the control of the migrant:
Regard has been given to your length of residence in the United Kingdom. It is noted that have resided here for a period of 14 years, however approximately 8 years of this was while you had no right to be in the country after your appeal rights became exhausted in December 2003 and you should have left the UK. You did not. Instead you chose to abscond and wait until 2010 to make contact with the UKBA via your legal representatives. Your length of residence has been acknowledged but it is considered that this is outweighed by the illegal residence you have accrued following his failure to leave the UK as instructed. Your length of residence is not a sufficiently compelling reason to justify allowing him to remain in the United Kingdom."
"For the avoidance of doubt, it is confirmed that there was no substantive legacy decision by the CRD in 2011. The contemporaneous records do not show a decision on the database. There was no minute of decision on file. No decision letter was written and the case was passed to CAAU as an undecided case."
The grounds of challenge in the court below
"Turning then to the grounds of challenge following amendment. There are 3 grounds which need to be considered:
i) the claimant contends that he has suffered a "fundamental historic injustice" based upon an illegality arising from the defendant originally communicating to him and thereafter maintaining that a decision had been taken. Relying on the line of authority following R(Rashid) v SSHD [2005] EWCA Civ 744 the claimant submits that the defendant should have considered the historic injustice caused as a result of the illegality in having communicated a decision when none applied and thus in taking the decision of 2 February 2013 should have applied the more favourable 395C and its guidance to the claimant rather than the "far more stringent" paragraph 353B of the immigration rules. That failure to do so renders the fresh decision unlawful;
ii) alternatively, the claimant contends that the decision of 2 February 2013 is flawed through a material error of fact, namely an erroneous understanding and application of the claimant's compliance with reporting requirements;
iii) in addition, the decision of 2 February 2013 fails to take account of the claimant's Article 8 rights and in that context, there is no consideration as to whether the further submissions and evidence amount to a fresh claim in respect of the claimant's Article 8 rights in accordance with paragraph 353 of the immigration rules."
The judgment
"The defendant's description of the extent of compliance by the claimant is clearly inaccurate. The letter states that the claimant failed to mention contact and absconded from the point at which he became appeal rights exhausted in 2002 (2003, according to the letter) until 2010 a period of some 8 (7) years. In fact, the claimant was reporting for 5 of those years. At first sight therefore, it would suggest that this error could have affected the decision of the Secretary of State and the fact of absconding is also referred to in considering the length of residence. However, following the decision of the Court of Appeal in Qongwane it is clear that the discretion under 353B is intended to be exercised only in exceptional circumstances. Further, following the approach of Underhill LJ, even if the claimant had been compliant throughout the period this does not entitle him to remain and accordingly even if the letter had correctly reflected the longer periods when the claimant was reporting, in my view it cannot be said that the mistakes as to the extent of reporting and absconding had any material impact on the outcome of the decision of the defendant not to exercise her discretion and grant leave under Chapter 53 EIG. Accordingly the claimant has failed to bring himself within the test in E & R set out above and the claim on this ground fails."
The issues arising in the appeal
The legal framework
"53. Introduction
It is the policy of the Home Office to remove illegal migrants from the UK unless it would be a breach of the Refugee Convention or ECHR, or there are exceptional circumstances for not doing so in an individual case. Separate guidance exists on how to consider an asylum claim or an application for leave to remain on the basis of family or private life. This guidance concerns further exceptional circumstances claiming that removal would be inappropriate."
The first issue
"a real prospect of success on the question of whether there was maladministration amounting to illegality in relation to the communications concerning whether or not a decision had been made."
"The court's proper sphere is illegality, not maladministration. If the earlier decisions were unlawful, it matters little whether that was the result of bad faith, bad luck, or sheer muddle. It is the unlawfulness, not the cause of it, which justifies the court's intervention and provides the basis for the remedy. Conversely, if the 2004 decisions were otherwise unimpeachable in law, I find it hard to see how even flagrant incompetence at an early stage should provide grounds for the court's, as opposed to the Ombudsman's, intervention."
"What is clear from all these authorities, in my judgment, however, is that (1) the historic injustice must be based upon some prior illegality. In all these cases there was either a legally flawed prior decision. In some instances, such as in Rashid, by reason of a decision made in disregard of a relevant policy or at least a legally flawed failure to carry out a duty, as in KA, which impacted upon the ability of the Applicant to make out an asylum claim and there must be sufficient causal connection between that illegality and the alleged historic injustice caused thereby and the alleged prejudice caused to the Claimant by the decision under challenge to justify the intervention of the court. Considerations of conspicuous unfairness are not in themselves a relevant test to trigger the intervention of the court, although the degree of prejudice may be a relevant factor when it comes to the question of remedy."
Although this was said in the context of applying Rashid, the reasoning remains valid despite the overruling of that decision.
The second issue