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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 >> Visa Joy Ltd & Anor v Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner [2017] EWCA Civ 1473 (05 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1473.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 636, [2018] WLR 2273, [2017] EWCA Civ 1473, [2018] 1 WLR 2273 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS
CHAMBER)
Upper Tribunal Judge Knowles QC
GIS/101/2015, [2015] UKUT 679 (AAC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LAD Y JUSTICE SHARP
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Visa Joy Limited & Anr |
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v |
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Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner |
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Alistair Richardson (instructed by the Legal Department of the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13th July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Background
"50. [relating to the FTT decision] of 24 November 2014 striking out Visa Joy's appeal against the refusal of continued registration. The tribunal summarised its conclusions in the ImmEmp decision, namely that Mr Ali
(a) had been the subject of complaints of inaccurate advice;
(b) had routinely operated in breach of OISC's client account rule;
(c) had failed despite warnings to keep proper file records or send appropriate customer care letters.
It repeated its findings that Mr Ali had fabricated a letter falsely dated 10 August 2012; had compiled what appeared to be current attendance notes long after the event; and had deliberately made access to his files difficult when OISC asked to inspect them.
51. The tribunal dismissed the argument that Visa Joy was completely separate from ImmEmp. It held that the Visa Joy grounds of appeal were no more than a blanket denial of all allegations which did not sit at all well with Mr Ali's own evidence in the ImmEmp proceedings.
52. The tribunal found that the failings in the ImmEmp case were bad enough but the OISC case against Visa Joy was even stronger. First, Ms Sajid [an immigration adviser] had been employed by Mr Ali as an adviser when she was not registered. It is a criminal offence to give advice if unregistered. This issue would require detailed consideration if the Visa Joy proceedings were to continue. Second, pending the outcome of the ImmEmp appeal, Mr Ali had accepted but had then failed to observe the conditions imposed by OISC with respect to the operation of a client account. Finally, Mr Ali had prevaricated when asked to confirm if he had been the subject of other legal proceedings and it had eventually come to light that he had been the subject of bankruptcy proceedings brought by HMRC in respect of PAYE deductions.
53. The tribunal concluded that the case advanced by OISC was unanswerable as the range and seriousness of the allegations taken together with the strength and weight of the evidence supporting them meant that Visa Joy's appeal had no reasonable prospect of success. "
a) matters that had been known to the OISC at the time of the registration decision, but had not been the subject of a specific decision on a complaint or expressly taken into account in determining registration; and
b) matters that had become known after the registration decision had been taken by the OISC and/or had been established during oral evidence at the tribunal hearing.
The jurisdiction of the FTT to take account of either of these categories of material was at the centre of the case before UTJ Knowles and is the point of appeal before this court.
The Legal Context
'(a) to refuse an application for registration made under paragraph 1 of Schedule 6;
(b) …
(c) under paragraph 2(2) of that Schedule to register with limited effect;
(d) to refuse an application for continued registration made under paragraph 3 of that Schedule;
(e) to vary a registration on an application under paragraph 3 of that Schedule;
(ea) to vary a registration under paragraph 3A of that Schedule.'
'(1) This section applies if the First-tier Tribunal allows an appeal under section 87.
(2) If the First-tier Tribunal considers it appropriate, it may direct the Commissioner—
(a) to register the applicant or to co ntinue the applicant's registration;
(b) to make or vary the applicant's registration so as to have limited effect in any of the ways mentioned in paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 6;
(c) to restore an exemption granted under section 84(4)(a); or
(d) to quash a decision recorded under paragraph 9(1)(a) of Schedule 5 and the record of that decision.'
'9(1) O n determining a complaint under the complaints scheme, the Commissioner may—
(a) if the person to whom the complaint relates is a registered person or is acting on behalf of a registered person, record the complaint and the decision on it for consideration when that registered person next applies for his registration to be continued;
(b) if the person to whom the complaint relates is a registered person or is acting on behalf of a registered person and the Commissioner considers the matter sufficiently serious to require immediate action, require that registered person to apply for continued registration without delay;
(c) refer the complaint and his decision on it to a relevant regulatory body;
(d) if the person to whom the complaint relates is certified by the Commissioner as exempt under section 84(4)(a) or is employed by, or working under the supervision of, such a person, consider whether to withdraw that person's exemption;
(e) lay before the First-tier Tribunal a disciplinary charge against a relevant person.'
Conflicting Upper Tribunal Authority
a) Whether or not the FTT should form its own opinion on whether the applicant is competent and fit to provide immigration advice and services; and
b) The extent to which, if at all, the FTT may re-open and re-determine factual findings made by the OISC on any individual complaints upon which the OISC overall assessment of competence and fitness was based.
'In my judgment [s 87(2)] means that the appeal is to be a full appeal, and not simply some sort of review of the exercise by the [OISC] of her decision- making power. The FTT is required to determine for itself whether the decision appealed against was right – i.e. in this case whether the Appellant was "no longer competent or otherwise fit to provide immigration advice and immigration services". … The Tribunal would … in my judgment be bound to determine whether in its opinion the appellant was not competent or otherwise unfit, and not simply whether the [OISC's] decision was one reasonably open to her.'
'[It] is undoubtedly the case … that the registered person cannot appeal against the determination of the complaint. The jurisdiction of the FTT does not arise until there is an appeal against an appealable decision, or the [OISC] lays a disciplinary charge before the FTT. However, it must in my judgment be the case that if the findings in the determination of a complaint are relied upon by the [OISC] in the course of making an appealable decision, the FTT can and (if the grounds of appeal challenge those findings and the Tribunal regards those matters as material to its decision of the appeal) must decide for itself whether those findings are correct. It cannot simply take the approach that it is bound to accept the conclusions of the [OISC] in the course of determining the complaint. If that were the correct approach, it could result in a registered person being left without an effective right of appeal in a case where the findings in a complaint determination from the substantial basis of a decision to refuse continued registration.'
"36. It is important to note that in the course of the hearing the Tribunal ruled, as it has consistently in past Appeals, that it is not, cannot be, and should not be a function of the Tribunal to seek to re-examine the merits of complaints against advisers – to seek to 'go behind' the determinations, because each complaint against an adviser is the subject of a full and final investigative process. This ruling was accepted by both the Appellant and the Respondent in this Appeal.
37. The Tribunal has regard simply and solely to the determination of a complaint, and to the substance of that determination.
38. In the Closing Submission of the Appellant, he has sought to discuss, and make assertions about the merits of the complaints and their determinations. Whilst the Tribunal fully understands why he should wish to do this, nevertheless the Tribunal has had regard solely to the facts established by the determinations, in terms of those breaches of the Commissioners Code and Rules which the Respondent found had been committed by the Appellant in the course of his conduct relating to each of the complaints."
i) The OISC considers and determines complaints within a statutory scheme established under Schedule 5 of the Act;
ii) Under the statutory scheme, inter alia Schedule 5, paragraph 9(1)(a), the OISC 'may record the complaint and the decision on it for consideration when the registered person next applies for his registration to be continued';
iii) The importance and significance of findings and conclusions on a complaint would be undermined if they could simply be challenged on appeal to the FTT, to the extent that the original complaint decision, of itself, would not have any real effect;
iv) The language of Schedule 5 (particularly paragraph 9(1)(a)) which provides that the 'record' and 'the decision' on a complaint may be relied upon when considering future registration, does not imply that the underlying evidence or analysis behind the 'record' or 'decision' may be revisited either by the OISC when considering future registration or by the FTT on appeal;
v) Where a complaint has been escalated into a disciplinary charge but that charge is subsequently found not to be proved by the FTT, it is not open to the OISC to continue to rely upon its original finding to continue to uphold the complaint;
vi) Where a disciplinary chaise is upheld by the FTT it may, by s89(2)(a), direct the Commissioner to 'record the charge and the FTTs decision for consideration in connection with the registered person's next application for continued registration' (emphasis added). The language used in s 89(2)(a) mirrors that in Schedule 5, Paragraph 9(1)(a) requiring the OISC to 'record the complaint and the decision on it for consideration when that registered person next applies for his registration to be continued' (emphasis added). The word 'consideration' should have the same meaning on both contexts. As the OISC does not have jurisdiction to go behind or to re-open an FTT decision on a charge, in like manner the decision on a complaint by the OISC does not foil to be reconsidered during the process of it being given 'consideration';
vii) If the FTT did have the power to reopen a complaint it would follow that it was open to it to reach a conclusion that the substance of the complaint was not substantiated for the purposes of determining an appeal against a decision made with respect to continued registration. However, the FTT does not appear to have been given any power, under the Act, to direct removal of any complaint or decision made upon it from the record or to direct a Commissioner to so remove it.' [paragraph 69].
'that the FTT does not, in fact, have power to reopen complaints and decisions on them made by the Commissioner when dealing with an appeal concerning a decision made upon an application for registration or continued registration.'
The judgment of UTJ Knowles QC in the present case
a) Whether the tribunal was entitled to consider anything other than the matters taken into account by the OISC when reaching the decision on continued registration; and
b) Whether the tribunal could revisit the findings previously made by the OISC in the complaints that are under scrutiny in an appeal.
'71. I find that the jurisdiction of the First-tier Tribunal is not confined to matters as they stood at the time of OISC's decision. Were that the case, there would be little rationale for the application of Rule 15(2)(a)(ii) of Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (General Regulatory Chamber) Rules 2008 in immigration advice/services appeals before the tribunal. Rule 15(2)(a)(ii) expressly states that the tribunal may consider evidence which was not before the original decision maker. It would be curious if the tribunal had to ignore evidence from the Appellant relevant to a matter determined by OISC merely because that evidence was not known to OISC.
72. In this case crucial evidence had come to light for example, that Mr Ali had previously had a company placed into liquidation because he had failed to pay national insurance and PAYE contributions to HMRC. This evidence had never formed the substance of a complaint or been investigated by OISC as Mr Ali had failed to inform OISC about this matter. Additionally in his oral evidence Mr Ali had admitted creating a letter and attendance notes long after the event. Both these matters were relevant to the question of whether Mr Ali was fit to provide immigration service and advice in the guise of either ImmEmp or Visa Joy. I find that the tribunal was right to take account of such evidence which came to light following OISC's decision.'
AE, UTJ Knowles supported her contrary conclusion on the following basis:
'81. It is unfortunate, in my view, that Judge Hemingway does not appear to have been directed to ss 87 and 88 of the Act when reaching his decision.
82. Section 87(2) provides that any person aggrieved by a relevant decision of OISC may appeal to the tribunal against that decision. The meaning of the phrase 'relevant decision' is set out in section 87(3) and includes decisions by OISC to refuse applications for registration and continuing registration and the cancellation by OISC of registration under paragraph 4A(e) of Schedule 6.
83. Section 88 of the Act lists the tribunal's powers when it upholds an appeal under section 87. If it considers it appropriate, the tribunal may direct OISC pursuant to s 88(2)(d) 'to quash a decision recorded under paragraph 9(1)(a) of Schedule 5 and the record of that decision'.
84. Paragraph 9(1)(a) states that:
"On determining a complaint under the complaints scheme, the Commissioner may
(a) if the person to whom the complaint relates was at the time to which the complaint relates
(i) a registered person, or
(ii) a person acting on behalf of a registered person
record the complaint and the decision on it to be considered in connection with the next relevant application."
OISC's decision to record a complaint and let it lie on file as it were until the next application by an adviser for example, for continuing registration is subject to the "duty of [the] Commissioner to cancel the registration of a person who is no longer competent or is otherwise unfit" [paragraph 9(1B) of Schedule 5]. Thus, if a complaint relates to an adviser's competence or fitness, OISC has a duty to cancel the adviser's registration if he decides during the course of investigating a complaint that the adviser is neither competent no r fit. Thus, by this route, the determination of a complaint becomes the sole reason for cancellation of an adviser's registration.
85. Sections 87 and 88, when read together with paragraph 9 of Schedule 5, give the tribunal jurisdiction to hear an appeal against OISC's cancellation of registration based on the outcome of a complaint. In those circumstances the tribunal would need to examine not merely the fact of a complaint but its substance when determining an appeal. Otherwise an appeal against cancellation of registration would be limited to a mere review of OICS's decision along the lines of the decision in AE. That cannot be correct given the powers of the tribunal on appeal. Additionally the wording of s 88 does not limit the powers given to a tribunal to quash a decision on a complaint just to appeal against the cancellation of registration. All of the 'relevant' decisions listed in s 87(3) are included. Where those decisions include reliance by OISC on a previously determined complaint, I find that the tribunal is entitled to consider the substance of a complaint if this is relevant to the decision under appeal.
86. My reading of the above provisions is on all fours with Judge Turnbull's analysis of the extent of a tribunal's powers in these cases set out in paragraph 8 of KMI. It is consistent with the tribunal's inquisitorial function and has, moreover, practical merit in immigration services cases where it will often not be clear to an adviser applying for registration or continuing registration what significance, if any, OISC may attach to a complaint which has been determined and recorded in accordance with paragraph 9(1)(a) of Schedule 5. The absence of a mechanism for advisers to challenge the determination of complaints by OISC save when those complaints form part of a relevant decision underscores my analysis that the tribunal has the jurisdiction to do so where this is relevant on appeal.
87. It is clear that I disagree with Judge Hemingway's decision in AE for the reasons I have set out.'
The Appeal
Discussion
'83 The Commissioner.
(1) There is to be an Immigration Services Commissioner (referred to in this Part as "the Commissioner").
(2) The Commissioner is to be appointed by the Secretary of State after consulting the Lord Chancellor, the Department of Justice in Northern Ireland and the Scottish Ministers.
(3) It is to be the general duty of the Commissioner to promote good practice by those who provide immigration advice or immigration services.
(4) In addition to any other functions conferred on him by this Part, the Commissioner is to have the regulatory functions set out in Part I of Schedule 5.
(5) The Commissioner must exercise his functions so as to secure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that those who provide immigration advice or immigration services—
(a) are fit and competent to do so;
(b) act in the best interests of their clients;
(c) do not knowingly mislead any court, tribunal or adjudicator in the United Kingdom;
(d) do not seek to abuse any procedure operating in the United Kingdom in connection with immigration or asylum (including any appellate or other judicial procedure);
(e) do not advise any person to do something which would amount to such an abuse.'
'2(1) If the Commissioner considers that an applicant for registration is competent and otherwise fit to provide immigration advice and immigration services, he must register the applicant.'
The question for the FTT on appeal is whether the appellant is considered to be competent and otherwise fit to provide immigration advice and immigration services. The powers of the FTT under s 87(2) [see paragraph 13 above] in the event of a successful appeal are to direct the Commissioner either to register the successful appellant or make other alterations to the register or record in his favour.
Lady Justice Sharp: