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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 >> Jasarevic v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] EWCA Civ 1784 (06 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1784.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1784 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
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ISMET JASAREVIC | Claimant/Appellant | |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
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MISS KRISTINA STERN (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"The appellant has been in the United Kingdom since November 1986, ie, for almost 17 years. He has previously, although he may not now have, a relationship with a British citizen. He has a sibling resident in the United Kingdom and he has undergone medical treatment in the United Kingdom. I find that the appellant has a private life sufficient to engage Article 8 and that his removal would be an interference in his right to respect for that private life."
The adjudicator went on to hold that, by contrast, Mr Jasarevic had no claim to a family life under Article 8 in this country: principally, but not exclusively, because the blood family to which he appealed consisted of adult siblings, a situation which does not normally attract Article 8. As to his relationship with Miss Brady, the evidence before the adjudicator was far from sufficient to establish the certainty of that relationship. Granted that the adjudicator found that a private life existed in Article 8 terms in the United Kingdom, that was sufficient to engage that Article.
"31 The factors I have taken into account include (in summary):
• Although the appellant has previously established a business that employed an unspecified number of people, he is not currently employed and does not appear, on the basis of the evidence before me, to have been for at least a year. Although his brother said that he intended establishing a business with the appellant next year there was no evidence other than oral evidence to this effect, no business plan and no indication to what extent the appellant would, in the light of the medical evidence be able to work in any event.
• The length of residence of the appellant in the United Kingdom at the time of his application for asylum (13 years), that a further 13 months elapsed prior to the respondent interviewing him in connection with his asylum application, that a decision on the application was not made for a further 7 months (September 2001) by which time the appellant had been in the United Kingdom for almost 15 years, that a supplementary reasons for refusal letter was served almost a year after that which did not address the '14 year concession' application and that by the time of the hearing the appellant has been in the United Kingdom for almost 17 years.
• That the appellant applied for asylum when arrested.
• That the appellant speaks fluent English.
• The appellant has been convicted of four offences, two of which (in 1993 and 1999) resulted in custodial sentences, although he was not recommended for deportation. One of the serious offences was for passport offences and the other for supply of a Class A drug.
• The '14 year concession'. Although I am unable to adjudicate on Home Office policies, the principles set out in the policy can be considered as elements to be considered in assessing the balance to be drawn between maintaining effective immigration control and the effect on individuals. This concession was introduced to enable the respondent to comply with the European Convention on Establishment, which was ratified by the United Kingdom in 1969. Criminal offences which are spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (the conditional discharge in 1991 would fall into this category) and behaviour which happened over 5 years previously have not normally been considered sufficient to outweigh positive ties with the United Kingdom. My understanding of the operation of the policy was that where the continuous residence was in excess of 14 years, unless the countervailing factors were exceptionally serious indefinite leave to remain would usually be granted.
• I have doubts whether there is in fact a subsisting relationship between the appellant and Ms Brady. If there is and she is 'much better' and if the relationship has subsisted for the length of time claimed I can see no reason why at the very least a letter could not have been written by her or her parents or others who have seen them together to confirm this.
• He is suffering from depression.
• His mother and another brother are in Serbia although his contact with them is limited and he is not close to them.
• There have been significant changes in Serbia since he left there, some of which mean that he would no longer be at risk of harassment although others mean that he would, if returned, be returning to a very different country to the one he left in 1986."
"I am very mindful of the serious drug offence of which the appellant was convicted, albeit in 1993 and that he was further convicted in 1999 of possession of a class A drug albeit what must have been a small amount. I am also very mindful that it appears from his conviction on passport offences that he attempted to circumvent immigration control by producing a false passport in 1999. Set against that is the length of his residence (13 years at the time of the application for asylum in 1999 which would not have been completely unrealistic at that time and now almost 17 years, the delay being through no fault of his) and that he has spent an extremely large part of his life here in the United Kingdom. Although the case of Boultif sets out the criteria in relation to family life, these criteria are relevant in assessing the issue of proportionality in relation to private life. Taking all the relevant matters into account and weighing the facts of the appellant's case in the light of the requirement of the respondent to maintain a firm and fair system of immigration control I find that removal is not proportionate to the legitimate aims of the United Kingdom to maintain immigration control."
The adjudicator then said that in the light of what she had set out, she found that the decision of the Secretary of State appealed against would cause this country to be in breach of its obligations under the 1950 Convention. She therefore allowed the appeal on those human rights grounds.
"1 The adjudicator has erred in law in allowing this appeal. In allowing Article 8 private life, at paragraph 28 & 35 the adjudicator has relied on the length of time the appellant has been in the United Kingdom. The adjudicator has found the appellant has a private life sufficient to engage Article 8 because he has a sibling in the United Kingdom and has undergone medical treatment in the United Kingdom, this in itself cannot sustain. At paragraph 29 the adjudicator has found that family life has not been established but in order to assess the issue of proportionality in regards to private life has relied on the case of Boultif v Switzerland (2000) 33 EHRR 50, which fundamentally sets out the criteria in relation to family life. At paragraph 31 she has cited the length of time the appellant has been in the United Kingdom and has implied that this was elongated by the length of time that was taken to decide the appellant's asylum appeal. The length of time taken to decide the appellant's application is not a reason to add weight to allowing an appeal. The appellant was initially granted leave to enter as a visitor in November 1986 until December 1987 and since December 1987 has remained in the United Kingdom unlawfully. Therefore it would be proportionate to remove the appellant on the basis that the majority of his time here has been unlawful and the appellant only claimed asylum in 1999. On the facts of this case the adjudicator has erred in allowing this case on the basis of the appellant's presence in the United Kingdom as IAT Secretary of State and Isen Vucaj [2002] UKIAT 04006 paragraphs 3 & 4 state, the adjudicator found positively that the removal of the claimant from the United Kingdom in the circumstances in which the Secretary of State proposes to do it would not interfere with his family life. The adjudicator also found, however, that such a removal would constitute an interference with the claimant's private life, 'in this case, I consider that the appellant has established a private life by his presence in the United Kingdom.' The adjudicator appears to take the view that if a person is present in a country then his removal from that country, whatever the circumstances of his presence, would be an interference with his private life under Article 8 (1). It was found at paragraph 4 that the adjudicator should not have found, on the evidence before him, that the claimant's removal would be an interference with private or family life under Article 8.
2 The tribunal is respectfully asked to allow the appeal."
"This court has however also stressed that it would be reluctant to see a case fail purely on an issue of jurisdiction and in the absence, as here, of any claim that anyone has been in the slightest degree misled if it is possible, on a fair reading, to extract a point of law from the grounds."
I do not read that observation as saying anything different from what is said in the earlier cases. The earlier cases were all at pains to stress that the court will not look pedantically at the grounds but will read them in a fair and reasonable fashion, but still with the necessary objective of discerning whether there is a point of law to be found within them.
"We find, in the light of the decision in Razgar, that such matters based on the findings of fact made by Miss Coker,"
I interpose, as already set out in this judgment,
"that Article 8 (1) rights were not engaged and it therefore follows that one did not need to address proportionality nor if there was any reason or obstacle why he could not maintain a private life in his home country."
I have difficulty with that conclusion stated as it is in such terms. The teaching of Razgar, and, more particularly, the speech of Lord Bingham of Cornhill in that case, gives a broad and generous understanding of the implications of a private life, it being remembered in this case that the adjudicator was careful to distinguish that from family life. When one has a case such as here, where a person has been living in this country for the length of time this gentleman has, albeit for part of the time in prison, and when he has clearly a range of connections in this country, whether or not his relationship with Miss Brady is currently flourishing, and when he has apparently worked and earned his living here, it is difficult to say that as a matter of course (which is what the Immigration Appeal Tribunal seems to say) that it is impossible for him to assert rights under Article 8 (1).
"11 However if we were wrong and those factors were sufficient to engage with Article 8 (1) rights then we find that such matters as the length of time; the mental health; the physical health of the respondent; his relationships in the United Kingdom are all material factors but in the light of the decision in Razgar and Ullah and Do in the House of Lords it is clear that there will be very few and only exceptional cases where Article 8 rights are established to the extent that they override the general position in relation to the proper maintenance of immigration control. Mr O'Callaghan helpfully relies upon two decisions both of the tribunal, which address in one case and to a degree in another the somewhat dilatory state in which the appellant has addressed the passage of time in relation to claimants and or failed to have regard to its policies.
12 It seems to us that those cases turn largely on their own facts and it would be wrong to take the position that if fourteen years have passed in the United Kingdom a right to remain will be given. The matter remains for the discretion of the Secretary of State. We find in relation to this respondent there is nothing to indicate that in the circumstances now advanced anything at odds with the known circumstances, when they came before the adjudicator. The facts and matters helpfully set out by the adjudicator, do not show as a matter of law that removal is disproportionate. In those circumstances this is not one of those few exceptional cases."
Order: Appeal dismissed with the parties to agree costs, any points of disagreement on same to be submitted on paper to Lord Justice Buxton for summary assessment.