Upper Tribunal
(Immigration and Asylum
Chamber)
JO and others (foreign marriage
recognition) Nigeria [2010] UKUT 478 (IAC)
THE IMMIGRATION ACTS
Heard at Field House
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Determination Promulgated
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On 11 November 2010
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Before
MR JUSTICE KENNETH PARKER
SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE
WAUMSLEY
Between
JO
PO
BO
BO
Appellants
and
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME
DEPARTMENT
Respondent
Representation:
For the
Appellants: No Representative
For the
Respondent: Mr N Bramble, Home Office
Presenting Officer
An
Immigration Judge should not go behind evidence of a certificate of
naturalisation as an Italian citizen on the basis of concerns about the bona
fides of the marriage that resulted in the naturalisation. It would be contrary
to public policy for the Immigration Judge to dispute Italian nationality or
the legal validity of the marriage resulting from it.
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
- This
is an appeal by JO (aged 20), PO (aged 6), BO (aged 11) and her twin BO
(aged 11) against the dismissal dated 24 August 2010 by the First-tier
Tribunal of their appeal against the decision of the Secretary of State
for the Home Department refusing their application for a residence card as
confirmation of a right of residence in the United Kingdom as the
daughters of an EEA national exercising Treaty rights, namely their father
MO.
- On
6 November 2009 the Secretary of State had written to the Appellants
requesting that their birth certificates be submitted as evidence of their
relationship as family members. No response was received to that request
and the application was therefore refused. The sponsor in this case holds
both Nigerian and Italian nationality. He stated that he had married an
Italian national in 1993. That marriage had enabled him, under Italian
law, as he represented it to us, to acquire Italian citizenship in
addition to his Nigerian citizenship. He had never lived in Italy but made one visit in 1997. He divorced his Italian wife in 2001 but it appears that
he retained his Italian nationality. Before the Secretary of State and
before the First-tier Tribunal he produced an original passport to
substantiate his claim to Italian citizenship and at the hearing before us
he produced a passport that had been recently issued in November 2010 that
he said was to replace an earlier one-year passport that, in turn, had
replaced an earlier ten year passport issued in 1999. We need to stress that
the Secretary of State has not taken issue with the sponsors Italian
nationality either in the decision or in the appeal proceedings.
- On
appeal to the First-tier Tribunal the judge concluded that his so-called
marriage to the Italian national was, to put the matter bluntly, a sham.
Accordingly, the sponsor had simply deceived the Italian authorities into
believing that there was a genuine and subsisting marriage and it was on
that false footing that the Italian authorities had accepted his application
for Italian citizenship. The judge was, understandably, concerned that
the sponsor was, in effect, seeking to rely upon fraudulent arrangements
in order to obtain benefits under European Union law and that public
authorities in the United Kingdom, which would include both the Secretary
of State and the courts, should not allow such fraudulent arrangements to
found a valid claim under European Union law.
- The
First-tier Tribunal also found that limited weight could be given to the
birth certificates which had been obtained very long after the birth of
these children (see paragraph 12 of the Determination). Furthermore,
insofar as the sponsor relied upon a DNA profiling report from LGC there
was no satisfactory evidence as to when the samples required for DNA
profiling were taken from the Appellants and nothing to show that the
right samples were taken from the right people.
- Permission
to appeal to this Tribunal was given on 3 September 2010. This appeal,
therefore, raises two short points: First, was the First-tier Tribunal
entitled to enquire into the genuineness of the marriage to the Italian
citizen in order to conclude that the Italian nationality had been
obtained by fraudulent arrangements? Second, can the conclusion of the
First-tier Tribunal as to the relationship between the Appellants and
their sponsor lawfully stand?
- On
the first issue it seems, with respect to the First-tier Tribunal, that it
would be inappropriate for the public authorities in the United Kingdom to
seek to investigate the circumstances of a marriage that has been
recognised by the authorities in another Member State of the European
Union, namely Italy, and that has been recognised as a genuine marriage
under Italian law. It was on that basis, as we have been led to believe,
that the Italian citizenship was acquired. Again it appears to us to be
inappropriate for the public authorities in the United Kingdom to question
whether the grant of Italian citizenship was valid, having regard to the
alleged circumstances in which it was granted. It appears to us that as a
matter of comity such issues would need to be explored in Italy and their final resolution could only properly be decided by public authorities in Italy.
- We,
therefore, conclude that the First-tier Tribunal erred in law by embarking
upon the exercise that it did. Indeed at the hearing the representative
of the Secretary of State accepted that the United Kingdom was bound by
the recognition by the public authorities in Italy both of the validity of
the marriage and of the grant of Italian citizenship. In other words, the
Secretary of State does not maintain either that the sponsor is not an
Italian citizen or that he cannot rely upon such rights as European Union
law accords to him as a citizen of another Member State.
- That
leaves, therefore, only the second question. We agree entirely with the
conclusion reached by the First-tier Tribunal that little weight could be
attached to the birth certificates that were submitted. However, having
given the matter careful consideration, we do not believe that the finding
in relation to the DNA profiling report can properly stand. Although we
fully recognise the concerns of the First- tier Tribunal about the
robustness of that material, we have come to the conclusion that it is
sufficiently reliable. We note that it is nowhere a requirement of the
relevant regulations that only a birth certificate can be relied upon for
the relevant purpose and the DNA report was properly admissible in
relation to that question. Although it might theoretically be possible
that the sponsor arranged for four other individuals to attend to be DNA
profiled, those individuals in turn would have to have had a very close
relationship with the sponsor, and the alternative scenario that such arrangements
had been made with four people other than these Appellants in order to
deceive the Secretary of State, appear so unlikely that it can be
dismissed. We are prepared to accept that that evidence was, and is,
sufficient to show the claimed relationship between the sponsor and the
Appellants.
- We
therefore resolve both of the relevant issues in favour of the Appellants
and accordingly allow this appeal. The Appellants have, on the material
before us, satisfied the criteria for the issue to them of residence cards
as confirmation of their rights of residence in the United Kingdom as the daughters of an EEA national exercising Treaty rights under reg 7(1) of the
Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006.
Signed
Date
Mr Justice Kenneth Parker