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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 >> Aissaoui v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2008] EWCA Civ 37 (07 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/37.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 37 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM: ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
IMMIGRATION JUDGE BLAIR-GOULD
IA/09588/2006
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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Belkacem Aissaoui |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
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Miss Eleanor Grey (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14 January 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper:
(ii) having regard to the public interest there are no reasons why it would be undesirable for him to be given indefinite leave to remain on the ground of long residence, taking into account his:
(a) age; and
(b) strength of connections in the United Kingdom; and
(c) personal history, including character, conduct, associations and employment record; and
(d) domestic circumstances; and
(e) previous criminal record and the nature of any offence of which the person has been convicted; and
(f) compassionate circumstances; and
(g) any representations received on the person's behalf; ...
When considering an application, where a person has 10 years or more continuous lawful residence, or 14 years continuous residence of any legality, indefinite leave to remain should normally be granted in the absence of any strong countervailing factors, such as:
an extant criminal record, apart from minor non-custodial offences; or
deliberate and blatant attempts to evade or circumvent the control, for example by using forged documents, absconding, contracting a marriage of convenience etc.
Criminal offences which are spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act and behaviour which happened 5 years or more ago should not normally be sufficient to outweigh positive ties with the United Kingdom. Where the continuous residence is in excess of 14 years unless the countervailing factors are exceptionally serious indefinite leave should normally be granted.
Indefinite leave should normally be granted to a person who has completed a continuous period of residence of 14 years or more, regardless of its legality. Leave should only be refused if there are serious countervailing factors.
Where a person has completed between 10 and 14 years continuous residence, but where it is not all lawful the quality and length of the residence should be the guiding factors. The length of the period of continuous residence and the proportion of it which is lawful and the strength of the ties to the United Kingdom (particularly family ties) should all be taken into account. The factors in each case must be considered on the individual merits. (Underlining added)
19. The Appellant did not notify the Secretary of State of any change of address to which any documentation should be served. He did not notify the Secretary of State of his change of college. Accordingly, therefore, the Secretary of State was perfectly entitled to use the address of the appellant at 287 Oxford Street, London, namely the Hotel and Travel Training College as the place for service of the RON67 Notice.
20. The issue is therefore whether that Notice was properly served on the appellant. The Notice itself did not give the appellant's address. I am not satisfied the address was required on that Notice as it was attached to a letter to the Hotel and Travel Training College at 287 Oxford Street, London, the address given by the appellant in his Notice of Appeal. As the college was named as the appellant's authorised representative there appears to be no reason why service of the letter dated 22 January 1993 with the copy RON67 attached thereto should not be treated as effective service. The fact that the appellant may have changed address or left the college at that time and did not know that this had been served is of no consequence, that is the appellant's fault. The appellant should have notified the authorities directly of any change of address, that is his obligation in order to prosecute any appeal. The net effect of the appellant's appeal to the Adjudicator being refused is that he appears to have gone to ground and he assumed a false identify, in other words he has sought to evade the consequences of the refusal of his appeal.
In the event that I had been of the opinion that the appellant had not been served with an appropriate Notice, I would then have to have considered the implications of paragraph 276B(ii) of the Immigration Rules. The appellant is a divorced man. There is no evidence that he has formed any relationship in the United Kingdom apart from friendships. He is 39 years of age, is generally fit and well. He suffers from asthma and is having investigations on a liver condition carried out. There is nothing to suggest that these are in any way serious or life threatening or that he would be at any risk on return to Algeria from those conditions. He has formed friendships in the United Kingdom as evidenced by the documentation provided. His strengths of connection to the United Kingdom comprise simply his friendships and his employment in the United Kingdom. He has studied here but the first 22 years of his life were spent in Algeria where he has his parents, two brothers and four sisters. He has been employed in the United Kingdom but this has been carried out illegally. The appellant's conduct from the refusal of his leave to remain as a student has been to take whatever steps are necessary to avoid being removed from the United Kingdom. This included him assuming a false identity and National Insurance number in order that he could obtain employment. The appellant stated that his was so he could survive. I am satisfied that it was so that he could avoid detection.
Whilst the Appellant has produced good character references and has evidenced employment and self-employment for periods of the 14 years, his whole personal history and conduct in the United Kingdom has been based on a life of deliberate deceit. As his Representative noted in the letter of 11 August 2003 the Appellant "has committed a most serious offence". I agree with that comment.
12. Ms Fielden sought to argue that this assessment was an unreasonable one for three main reasons. It failed to differentiate between persons who had gone to ground and persons (like the appellant) who had not hidden their whereabouts. It also failed to give the appellant any credit for the fact that the only reason why he had used a false identity (alongside his own) was so that he could work and avoid claiming public funds. Thirdly, it failed to take account of the fact that the appellant had only been able to "clock up" a lengthy residence because of the failure of the Secretary of State to pursue criminal charges or take enforcement action against him earlier.
13. We do not see that the immigration judge was required by the provisions of paragraph 276B to make the differentiations urged by Ms Fielden. She herself accepted that the appellant's use of a false identity was a serious matter and indeed, accepted that it could be viewed as within the category of a particularly serious crime. The fact that such conduct may have been less serious than other types of conduct does not make it wrong for an immigration judge to regard it as a weighty factor counting against the appellant under this rule. In any event it is clear that when weighing up the appellant's circumstances the immigration judge took fully into account that the appellant had worked. We also find no merit in Ms Fielden's submission that the immigration judge failed to take into account that the appellant's situation was a consequence of Home Office inaction. This was not a case of someone simply continuing to stay in the United Kingdom living and working illegally or without authority. This was a case of a man who had taken active steps to use deception by employing a false identity when it suited him. He did this within a very short time of arriving. As correctly noted by the immigration judge:
"he used that false identity to deceive his employers (who might not have otherwise employed him as an illegal immigrant), the Department of Health and Social Security, the Inland Revenue, Hackney Borough Council, at least one credit card company…, Barclays Bank and no doubt many others".
14. Ms Fielden's argument amounts to a plea that the appellant be able to benefit from his own wrongdoing, notwithstanding the length of time over which it was carried out and its serious nature. Even if, to use her words, the appellant's offence of using a false identity was not "causative" of the Home Office inaction, it was properly treated by the immigration judge as a weighty factor telling against the appellant when deciding whether for public interest reasons it was undesirable or not for the appellant to be given indefinite leave.
Rimer LJ: I agree
Sedley LJ: I also agree