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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 >> LB, CB (a child) and JB (a child), Re [2014] EWCA Civ 1693 (21 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1693.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 1693 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
(UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE GLEESON)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
LORD JUSTICE VOS
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In the matter of LB, CB (a child) and JB (a child) |
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Thomas Roe QC (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"[AB] and the appellant regarded themselves as raising all of their children as siblings in a family unit. [AB's] children were said to regard the appellant as a second mother, and [AB] stated that she treated the appellant's children as though they were her own. [AB] provided the appellant with money (presumably after January 2012 when the family friend ceased doing so) and with constant support. The cousins enjoyed living as a family unit and regarded themselves as siblings."
"I next considered whether the extended family lifestyle being pursued was such that removal of the appellant and her children is disproportionate. The evidence in the social work report, while it reflects the family relationships, is not objective as to the relative merits of living in the United Kingdom or Morocco, since the social worker has no knowledge of that. The report is emotive and lacking in objectivity overall and is of less assistance than I had hoped in assessing the best interests of the children involved."
"The transition between, modern, settled, liberal and secure British life to a completely different environment would be huge. The children currently have no understanding or experience of Moroccan life, and it is likely that there would be little to any family support. There would be considerable cultural changes that the children would have to try and reconcile and without doubt these would be incredibly unsettling, this cannot and should not be minimised. It is therefore my opinion that the children will have a much better quality of life should they remain in the UK, and as such to remain in the UK would be in their best interests."
"41. I accept that the appellant visits and helps her sister [T] and that she is helpful to both sisters in coping with school matters and general support. They have developed a significant degree of private life. I have considered carefully whether the levels of mutual dependence between the three sisters are such that 'family life' in Kugathas terms, has been established. I am not satisfied that it has. The extended family grouping amounts simply to this: that two of the sisters live together and share the care of their children, and one or both of them help out the third sister. That is private life, but the sisters are all adults and the level of dependency established between them is not sufficient to amount to family life.
42. The appellant's daughters are very young and their periods of residence in the United Kingdom are relatively brief. They are only just of school and nursery age and are still at the stage when the appellant as their parent is their primary focus. Having been born when their mother was in the United Kingdom without leave is not sufficient to give them a right to a British education rather than a Moroccan education, although there may well be differences in the education available, there is no evidence before me to suggest that the girls will not be educated in Morocco if they return there with their mother. Return to Morocco with their mother is in their best interests, and even if educationally that may not be the case, the right to education is a qualified right, and not an absolute right to British education whatever the merits of the appeal overall.
43. I have considered the best interests of the other children; [AB's] children have been living with the appellant and her children for about three years and undoubtedly they enjoy interacting with their cousins. [T's] children also enjoy contact with their young cousins. All of them were tearful at the prospect of separation from their aunt and cousins. However, they are all still at an age where their primary relationships are with their own mothers and I do not consider that the sisterly feelings between these young children and the appellant's children, and indeed the appellant herself, are sufficient to outweigh the United Kingdom's right to control immigration.
44. This appellant has never had leave to remain in the United Kingdom. The situation regarding the absence of her children's father from their lives is unclear and the appellant has been regarded by the First-tier Tribunal as overstating the degree of separation. They are not yet divorced. The appellant has two sisters and a brother in the United Kingdom and three married sisters and a brother and her father as well perhaps as her husband in Morocco. There is no question of her losing custody of the children at their present young age unless she divorces her husband and seeks to remarry and her case is based on her not wishing to remarry.
45. Even having regard to the s55 interests of all the children involved, the appellant's case under Article 8 ECHR is not strong enough to outweigh the right of the United Kingdom to control immigration and this appeal must therefore fail. As stated in T~(Jamaica), where an appeal fails under Article 8 ECHR, it will be only rarely that it then succeeds under s55 and the present appeal is not such a case."
"...a child is not to be held responsible for the moral failures of either of his parents."
Of course not; but that is not to say, as sometimes it is perhaps taken to say, that in a child case the importance of immigration control is in any way lessened. It is simply a question of what goes in the scale against it. It seems to me that the reasoning of this court in EV (Philippines) & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2014] EWCA (Civ) 874, to which Miss Jegarajah very properly referred us, with respect repays attention not least at paragraphs 49 to 56.
"The proper approach to the obligation to treat as a primary consideration the best interests of any child affected by the removal of an adult is still not free from difficulty. In this case it is arguable that when assessing the best interests of the children the tribunal wrongly proceeded on the assumption that the appellant would be returned to Morocco and that their best interests would then be served if they were removed with her. It is arguable the tribunal should have started by asking itself whether and to what extent their interests would be better served by remaining with the appellant in this country before deciding whether the removal of the appellant, together with the children, was a proportionate response to the need to implement immigration policy."
This is how it is put in Miss Jegarajah's skeleton. At paragraph 31 it is said:
"It is unlawful for the UTJ [Upper Tribunal] to approach the discrete question of the best interests assessment of the children as if it was predicated on the removal of the parent."
"What sense is to be given to the adjective 'primary'? We know it does not mean 'paramount' – other considerations may ultimately prevail. And the child's interests are not 'the' but only 'a' primary consideration – indicating there may be other such considerations which, presumably, may count for as much. Thus the term 'primary' seems problematic. In the course of argument Mr Auburn accepted that 'a primary consideration' should be taken to mean a consideration of substantial importance. I think that is right."
"because the Secretary of State assumed that the parents would be in Sri Lanka and it would be in the child's best interests to joy them, but when determining the child's best interests the Secretary of State arguably has to consider whether the parents should stay in the UK because it is in the child's interest to do so so the Secretary of State erred in conflating the two questions".