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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> CW (Deportation, Huang, proportionality) Jamaica [2005] UKIAT 00110 (07 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00110.html Cite as: [2005] UKAIT 00110, [2005] Imm AR 441, [2005] UKIAT 110, [2006] INLR 10, [2005] UKIAT 00110 |
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CW (Deportation – Huang – proportionality) Jamaica [2005] UKIAT 00110
Date of hearing: 9 March 2005
Date Determination notified: 07 June 2005
CW |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"I acknowledge the Appellant has established family life in this country, both with regard to his children whom he has regular contact with and his new relationship with ["S"]. I have also reached the conclusion that there would be an interference to the Appellant's family life if he were to be returned to Jamaica. However, bearing in mind all the information before me and in particular the Appellant's convictions and sentences for two serious matters, one involving sexual violence and the other involving a Class A drug, I have reached the conclusion that it is proportionate to the legitimate aims of the effective Immigration Control to return the Appellant to Jamaica. While recognising that there are family ties between the Appellant and his children and the Appellant and ["S"], weighing up this matter against the Appellant's criminal activity, bearing in mind the length of his sentences and the recommendation of the Sheriff in his drug offence case, the interference with the above relationships by the Appellant's return to Jamaica would be proportionate to the legitimate aims of Immigration Control. I have therefore reached the conclusion, based on the facts in this case as found above; the Appellant's rights under Article 8 are not breached. In the weighing up exercise that I am required to make, the Appellant's offences are simply too great with regard to that exercise when put alongside the evidence before me."
"(a) that it is for the Tribunal as an appellate body, empowered under the Nationality Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 to consider appeals on a point of law, to reach its own view as to whether – on the facts found by the adjudicator – the removal of the petitioner would as a matter of law be incompatible with his Convention rights, in particular under Article 8, and
(b) that in any event the decision of the adjudicator in relation to the question of proportionality was unreasonable, having regard in particular to the petitioner's relationship with his children. I am further satisfied that it cannot be said these arguments have no real prospect of success on appeal."
"48. The Court has only to a limited extent decided cases where the main obstacle to expulsion is the difficulties for the spouses to stay together and in particular for a spouse and/or children to live in the other's country of origin. It is therefore called upon to establish guiding principles in order to examine whether the measure was necessary in a democratic society.
In assessing the relevant criteria in such a case, the Court will consider the nature and seriousness of the offence committed by the applicant; the length of the applicant's stay in the country from which he is going to be expelled; the time elapsed since the offence was committed as well as the applicant's conduct in that period; the nationalities of the various persons concerned; the applicant's family situation, such as the length of the marriage; and other factors expressing the effectiveness of a couple's family life; whether the spouse knew about the offence at the time when he or she entered into a family relationship; and whether there are children in the marriage, and if so, their age. Not least, the Court will also consider the seriousness of the difficulties which the spouse is likely to encounter in the country of origin, though the mere fact that a person might face certain difficulties in accompanying her or his spouse cannot in itself exclude an expulsion."
"59. … The true position in our judgment is that the HRA and s.65(1) require the adjudicator to allow an appeal against removal or deportation brought on Article 8 grounds if, but only if, he concludes that the case is so exceptional on its particular facts that the imperative of proportionality demands an outcome in the appellant's favour notwithstanding that he cannot succeed under the Rules.
60. In such a case the adjudicator is not ignoring or overriding the Rules. On the contrary it is a signal feature of his task that he is bound to respect the balance between public interest and private right struck by the Rules with Parliament's approval. That is why he is only entitled on Article 8 grounds to favour an appellant outside the Rules where the case is truly exceptional. This, not Wednesbury or any revision of Wednesbury, represents the real restriction which the law imposes on the scope of judgment allowed to the adjudicator. It is not a question of his deferring to the Secretary of State's judgment of proportionality in the individual case. The adjudicator's decision of the question whether the case is truly exceptional is entirely his own. He does defer to the Rules; for this approach recognises that the balance struck by the Rules will generally dispose of proportionality issues arising under Article 8; but they are not exhaustive of all cases. There will be a residue of truly exceptional instances. In our respectful view such an approach is also reflected in Lord Bingham's words in Razgar??, which we have already cited:
'Decisions taken pursuant to the lawful operation of immigration control will be proportionate in all save a small minority for exceptional cases, identifiable on a case by case basis.'
61. We have considered whether in view we have taken of the adjudicator's task in these cases is in conflict with the reasoning of Dyson LJ in Samaroo v Secretary of State??. In that case there were two appellants whom the Secretary of State had decided to deport on the ground that their continued presence in the United Kingdom was not "conducive to the public good"?6. The first appellant, Samaroo sought on Article 8 grounds to challenge the Secretary of State's refusal to grant exceptional leave to remain, a deportation order having earlier been made against the appellant. His application for judicial review as dismissed, as was his appeal. In the course of giving judgment Dyson LJ said??:
'The Secretary of State must show that he has struck a fair balance between the individual's right to respect for family life and the prevention of crime and disorder. How much weight he gives to each factor will be the subject of careful scrutiny by the court. The court will interfere with the weight accorded by the decision maker if, despite an allowance for the appropriate margin of discretion, it concludes that the weight accorded was unfair and unreasonable. In this respect, the level of scrutiny is undoubtedly more intense than it is when a decision is subject to review on traditional Wednesbury grounds ….'
Samaroo did not involve the statutory jurisdiction of the adjudicator or the IAT. As we have said the proceedings were by way of judicial review to challenge the refusal of exceptional leave to remain. An application for judicial review is categorically inapt as an arena for a full-blown merits appeal. But Samaroo was in any event in truth a policy case. There were no applicable Immigration Rules. The Secretary of State's position was that the gravity of the appellant's crime outweighed the compassionate circumstances. The case was therefore one in which there was an open question as to the respective weight to be given to private right and public interest. The court was in particular asked to make an assessment, in the context of the case's facts, of the importance attached by the Secretary of State to the desirability of the appellant's deportation in light of his criminal past. In those circumstances the principle of respect for the democratic powers was plainly engaged. Our conclusions in these present appeals march with the reasoning in Samaroo.
62. In summary, where in a human rights challenge the court is called upon in any respect to judge the weight or the merits of government policy, it will in deciding the outcome allow a margin of discretion to the policy maker. So much is required by the democratic principle: the principle of respect for the democratic powers of the State. In such a case, consistently with its obligations under the HRA, the court's decision is more intrusive than Wednesbury, being subject to the disciplines described by Lord Steyn in Daly. But there are cases, exemplified by these appeals, in which the court or adjudicator is not at all called upon to judge policy. In that case no question of respect for the democratic powers of the State arises: save in the sense, again exemplified here by the Immigration Rules, that prior decisions of the executive or legislature may have fixed, and narrowed, the territory across which the adjudicator's autonomous judgment may operate."
Conclusion
"34. Although in any particular case it is unlikely that the result will be very different applying the provisions of paragraph 364 HC 395 and Article 8 ECHR, it is worth pointing out that there are differences. First, the task of the decision-maker on appeal from the Secretary of State under paragraph 364 is to decide whether the balance struck by the Secretary of State is correct in the circumstances. This is the balance between the public interest and other relevant circumstances.
35. Second, compassionate circumstances may form part of the considerations which arise under Article 8, but they do not do so as such but only where they are part of the arguments about family or private life. They are by contrast a necessary part of the consideration of paragraph 364.
36. Third, it is noteworthy that paragraph 364 with its reference to compassionate circumstances, domestic circumstances and all relevant factors brings in the effect of deportation on other family members who are not being deported with the Appellant; thus under the paragraph the effect on the son is relevant. Under Article 8, the effect on the son would be limited to its consequential effect on the father as the son is not being removed with the father. This means that the appeal available under the Rules is wider than the appeal available to the Appellant under the applicable Act which confines consideration of the human rights to those of the Appellant.
37. The decision-maker comes to his own decision on the merits, giving weight to any Secretary of State policies on who should be deported or the gravity with which any sort of offence is perceived and to his decision, but the appeal decision is for the appellate body. This contrasted with the pre Razgar [2004] UKHL 27 , pre Huang [2005] EWCA Civ 105, review approach to proportionality under Article 8. The Huang decision applies to the consideration of Article 8 issues.
38. Fourth, in applying Huang to deportation cases, as there are Immigration Rules which apply to deportation, the position under the Rules should be considered first. If the case under the Rules fails, it is very difficult to see what factors under Article 8 are not subsumed already in paragraph 364. Article 8 should then be considered with Huang in mind, but it is difficult to see how a case which fails under the Rules here could be disproportionate under Article 8. However, the Article focuses on family and private life and respect for those interests is a right which requires to be outweighed by other legitimate interests: immigration control and the prevention of crime."
"29. What we draw from Huang about the approach of Adjudicators to proportionality is as follows. The Immigration Rules are the starting point for the assessment. If an individual has no substantive claim within the Rules, it will be a truly exceptional case on its particular facts, in which an Adjudicator could lawfully conclude that removal was disproportionate. If an individual falls outside the Rules only for procedural reasons, the same applies save that as in Shala, it is more difficult to insist on procedural requirements where the need for compliance has arisen because of procedural failings by the Secretary of State. An example of exceptional circumstances may be where the procedural requirements could not be complied with for want of accessible relevant diplomatic facilities in the country of return.
30. In holding that the Immigration Rules are to be regarded as the proportionate response of the executive, approved by Parliament, to the many and varied circumstances which individual immigration cases present, the Court of Appeal must also have had regard to the way in which those Rules are also supplemented by policies or extra-statutory concessions. Where an individual may fall within such policies but they have not been considered by the Secretary of State, the decision may be unlawful, because a relevant consideration has been ignored, though it is not for the Adjudicator directly to apply the policy. Such a policy offers a further guide as to what is the proportionate response of the executive: if provision has been made through policy or concession for a further class of cases, it will be yet the more difficult for an Adjudicator to hold a decision disproportionate which falls outside the scope of the Rules and any policy concession.
32. Where a Rule or extra-statutory provision covers the sort of circumstance upon which an individual relies eg entry for marriage, study, medical treatment or delayed decision-making, but the individual falls outside the specific requirements or limits of the otherwise applicable Rules or policy, that is a very clear indication that removal is proportionate. It is not for the judicial decision-maker, except in the clear and truly exceptional case to set aside the limitations set by the executive, accountable to Parliament, and, in the case of the Immigration Rules, approved by Parliament.
33. Where Rules or extra-statutory provisions do not make provision at all for circumstances which an individual may rely on for the purposes of overcoming to the qualification to an ECHR right which is provided by the legitimate interests of immigration control, his case cannot rationally be considered more favourably than one whose circumstances are covered in principle by some provision of the Rules or of an extra-statutory policy but whose circumstances do not meet the detailed requirements of the Rules or policy.
34. The starting point for the consideration of proportionality is the Rules and then the effect of extra-statutory policies. It will be necessary in each case where an exception is made in respect of an individual who has no basis to enter or remain in the United Kingdom to state clearly why those approved and qualified provisions in the Rules or policies should not be regarded as the conclusive negative answer to that claim.
35. Compassionate circumstances are often invoked in Article 8 cases, though they may involve in reality no significant aspect of family or private life. A removal decision may be harsh. There are Rules and policies which deal with a variety of compassionate circumstances for entry or remaining in the United Kingdom. If a particular case does not fall within them, the normal conclusion of an assessment of proportionality should be that those circumstances mean that the legitimate interests of immigration control favour removal. A truly exceptional case would have to be made out. Article 8 is not a general provision justifying the overriding of immigration control on general compassionate grounds or where there may be harshness and misfortune from removal. It is a provision which creates rights on specific grounds and only applies where those rights exist; it only precludes the effectiveness of immigration control, as embodied in the Rules and extra-statutory policies or concessions, where the individual circumstances are so powerful and exceptional that those considered provisions should not be allowed the effect which would normally be accorded to them.
36. Shala and Edore [2003] INLR 361 [2003] EWCA Civ 716 continue on their facts to exemplify what can constitute a truly exceptional case. By contrast, the actual facts of Huang and Kashmin exemplify what cannot be such a case, and Abu-Qulbain illustrates what possibly might be such a case. Huang and Kashmin also illustrate Adjudicator decisions in which seemingly the Adjudicators simply thought that the proportionality issue involved a question of harshness or unfairness, which is a misguided view of Article 8. Those factors may assist a claim but cannot be its sole content.
37. Although Huang has held that, following Razgar in the House of Lords, the M* (Croatia) reasonableness approach is wrong in law, it would be a complete misinterpretation of Huang to read it as containing an approach significantly different in its likely effect on the result in individual cases. Read with Razgar in the House of Lords, it clearly envisages successful disproportionality cases under Article 8, for those who fall outside the Rules or policies, as rare or truly exceptional. We do not see the difference in legal approach as likely to lead to a different answer in practice, and it is far from clear that any difference which might exist would favour the claimant."