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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Jaku & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWHC 605 (Admin) (11 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/605.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 605 (Admin) |
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CO/367/2013 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF (1) SAJMIR JAKU (2) MARK PRENGA (3) TAYEB KHALED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Raza Husain QC and Miss Ripon Akther (instructed by Malik and Malik) for the Second Named Claimant
Ms Nicola Braganza (instructed by Latitude Law) for the Third Named Claimant
Ms Kate Olley (instructed by Treasury Solicitors ) for the First Defendant
Ms Julie Anderson (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Second and Third Defendants
Hearing dates: 4th and 5th February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY :
Legacy Programme Authorities
"In broad terms, those cases confirm that the legacy programme did not confer substantive rights or set out substantive criteria for determining whether or not to grant leave to remain. Rather it was an operational programme for dealing with the backlog of cases and cases would be dealt with in accordance with the law and policy applicable at the material time. There was no policy, or legitimate expectation, that all those who were not to be removed would be granted indefinite leave to remain nor was a refusal of indefinite leave to remain inconsistent with the rationale of the legacy programme (see Geraldo)."
"38. It follows from my rejection of Mr Turner's submissions that there was a change in policy or practice, that the policy applicable to cases in the Legacy Programme to be applied by CRD (and later CAAU) remained at all material times, the general law and policy as it stood at the time of consideration of an applicant's case, in the same way as elsewhere in the UKBA. The replacement of paragraph 395C by paragraph 353B therefore had effect for Legacy Programme applicants just as it did for those elsewhere across the UKBA. Grants of indefinite leave to remain were made by CRD only where there was a positive outcome of the application of the factors in paragraph 395C (or 353B) and chapter 53 EIG, not because the case fell within the Legacy Programme, but because the general guidance applicable across UKBA produced that result. The Legacy Programme created no new rights.
39. Inevitably, given that the Legacy Programme was expected to take some time to resolve, law and policy were likely to develop or change over time and consistency required that current law and current policy (applicable throughout UKBA) should be applied to each case considered at the time of its consideration. Where the policy and guidance changed to provide for a more favourable approach, for example, in respect of shorter periods of residence considered significant as part of the assessment of all factors relevant to the grant leave, cases considered after such a change would have the benefit of the more favourable policy and guidance. However, the reverse was also the case, and where the factors became more restrictive, these applied with equal force to legacy cases (as to other cases across UKBA) considered under the policy and guidance applicable at the time of the decision.
40. It follows from this that I reject as unsustainable, Mr Turner's submission that consistency required all cases in the Legacy Programme to be treated alike or have the same substantive outcome. The fact of being in the Legacy Programme did not mean that the cases were alike or should be so treated. They were not alike – there was a wide range of factual circumstances differentiating each case from the next. Any different approach would be inconsistent with two important principles that underpin the immigration system: firstly, that cases should be decided on their individual merits and secondly that they should, wherever possible, be decided on the basis of the law and policy in place at the date of decision. Mr Turner identified no special quality (once it is accepted that the Legacy Programme created no new rights and was an operational programme only) that can be said to be true of all legacy cases which merits treating them as a discrete or defined group separate from cases outside the Legacy Programme and to which different policies or practices should apply."
"Since inclusion of a case within the legacy programme gave rise to no new rights or additional expectation of the grant of leave, the only expectation an individual could have is to have his or her case considered in accordance with current law and practice, and if leave was not granted removal could therefore be expected. Accordingly, it is difficult to see why once a person has received a decision refusing the grant of leave and is therefore to be removed, but has not actually been removed, that person's case under the legacy programme should not be regarded as concluded by such a decision."
Tayeb Khaled
"Before a decision to remove under section 10 is given, regard will be had to all the relevant factors known to the Secretary of State including:
(i) age;
(ii) length of residence in the United Kingdom;
(iii) strength of connections with the United Kingdom;
(iv) personal history, including character conduct and employment record;
(v) domestic circumstances;
(vi) previous criminal record and the nature of any offence of which the person has been convicted;
(vii) compassionate circumstances;
(viii) any representations received on the person's behalf."
"Your case has been reviewed but is one of a very small number of cases on which we have not yet been able to come to a final decision. We aim to notify you of the decision on your case by the end of August, where possible. If for any reason this is not possible we will explain to you why and set out the next steps in your case." The CAAU would be dealing with it. "Cases will be resolved in accordance with the existing law and policy".
"CRD was established to resolve all incomplete older asylum cases where the initial asylum claim was made prior to 5 March 2007 and which had not been concluded. As has been made clear on our website, CRD was not an amnesty and cases are considered in accordance with existing rules/policies. Consideration of a case by CRD does not involve any application (and is not an application in itself) nor result in an immigration decision being made unless such applications were already outstanding, nor does it create additional criteria of entitlement to remain in the UK."
"Whilst it is accepted that you have been in the country for approximately 11 years it is noted that you have failed to demonstrate that you have had 11 years residence in the UK as required by Rule 276ADE (iii). Therefore your further submission claim has been fully considered by an officer of UKBA and has not been accepted due to your non-compliance."
"However, it is noted that you have not adhered to the Terms of your Temporary Admission as you have claimed and have only reported from 20/8/2010 to the present day, this only equates to 2 years and 2 months of compliance. You have evaded immigration control and have failed to cooperate with the UKBA's reporting requirement over a total of seven years, of the eleven years you have been in the UK. Therefore it is not accepted that all things are equal as you have claimed and it is not accepted that you should qualify for leave under the legacy programme. "
"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."
"It is noted that you have not adhered to the Terms of your Temporary Admission and have only reported from 20/8/2010 to present day, this only equates to 2 years and 2 months reporting. You have evaded immigration controls and have failed to cooperate with the UKBA's reporting requirement over a total of seven years, of the eleven years and thee months you have been in the UK. This is because you failed to report between 03/09/03 and 20/08/10. Your length of temporary residence therefore mitigates against any concession on these grounds."
The policy documents relied on
"The weight placed on periods of absconsion should be proportionate to the length of compliant residence in the UK. For example, additional weight should be placed on lengthy periods of asbsconsion which form a significant proportion of the individual's residence."
"Any other case where delay by UKBA has contributed to a significant period of residence, Following an individual assessment of the prospect of enforcing removal, and where other relevant factors apply, 4-6 years may be considered significant, but a more usual example would be a period of residence of 6-8 years."
"Any other case where the length of delay by UKBA in deciding the application, or where there were factors preventing departure, the case worker following an individual assessment of the prospect of enforcing removal and where the factors outlined in "Character" and "Compliance" do not weight [sic] against the individual, concludes that the person will have been in the UK for more than 6 years."
"Here are the lines to take under the 395c criteria
Stuart
2. CAAU have analysed the data and feel the most appropriate way to deal with these cases is to apply the following criteria under paragraph 395c. This has been discussed and agreed with Emma Churchill, Hugh Ind and Jo Liddy:
- Use the lowest limit of 4 years residency for single applicants.
- Use the lower limit of 3 years residence for families.
- Accept any reporting activity in the last 12 months as sufficient evidence of compliance.
- Grant 3 years DL to applicants who's [sic] further leave application has been outstanding for more than 3 years or where an initial asylum claim has been outstanding for 2 years.
- Agree a number of files may need to be decided without the Home Office file."
"I know that some of you may have heard that there have been changes to the interpretation of Para 395c. I can now confirm that from today caseworkers are now following a new consideration proforma which is attached to this e-mail and they have received the following lines when applying Para 395c;…
I have been advised that these lines have been approved and that this is the approach that caseworkers are now to take."
(The lines referred to are those in the previous email.)
The submissions
Conclusions
"The truth of the matter is that the claimant cannot legitimately have derived any expectation from this letter at all save, perhaps, that he would shortly receive another letter explaining that the first had been a mistake. In any event, given what the claimant knew about his own case, any decision expected as a result of this letter would necessarily have been a decision after rather than as part of, the 'legacy programme' consideration of his case."
Sajmir Jaku
Mark Prenga
Conclusions