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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 >> The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions v Gubeladze [2017] EWCA Civ 1751 (07 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1751.html Cite as: [2018] 1 WLR 3324, [2018] 2 All ER 228, [2017] WLR(D) 798, [2017] EWCA Civ 1751, [2018] WLR 3324 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber)
CPC10262014
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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Tamara Gubeladze |
Respondent |
____________________
Helen Mountfield QC & Tom Royston (instructed by Howells Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Wednesday 18th & Thursday 19th October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rupert Jackson :
Part 1 Introduction |
Paragraphs 2 4 |
Part 2 The relevant legislation |
Paragraphs 5 15 |
Part 3 The facts |
Paragraphs 16 22 |
Part 4 The appeal to the Court of Appeal |
Paragraphs 23 30 |
Part 5 The meaning of "resided" in Article 17(1)(a) of the Citizens Directive |
Paragraphs 31 51 |
Part 6 Was the extension of the Worker Registration Scheme lawful? |
Paragraphs 52 81 |
Part 7 Conclusion |
Paragraphs 82 83 |
"Article 16
General Rule for Union citizens and their family members
1. Union citizens who have resided legally for a continuous period of five years in the host Member State shall have the right of permanent residence there. This right shall not be subject to the conditions provided for in Chapter III.
2. Paragraph 1 shall apply also to family members who are not nationals of a Member State and have legally resided with the Union citizen in the host Member State for a continuous period of five years.
3. Continuity of residence shall not be affected by temporary absences not exceeding a total of six months a year, or by absences of a longer duration for compulsory military service, or by one absence of a maximum of twelve consecutive months for important reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third country.
4. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through absence from the host Member State for a period exceeding two consecutive years.
Article 17
Exemptions for persons no longer working in the host Member State and their family members
1. By way of derogation from Article 16, the right of permanent residence in the host Member State shall be enjoyed before completion of a continuous period of five years of residence by:
(a) workers or self-employed persons who, at the time they stop working, have reached the age laid down by the law of that Member State for entitlement to an old age pension or workers who cease paid employment to take early retirement, provided that they have been working in the Member State for at least the preceding twelve months have resided there continuously for more than three years."
"5 "Worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity"
(1) In these Regulations, "worker of self-employed person who has ceased activity" means an EEA national who satisfies the conditions in paragraph (2), (3), (4) or (5).
(2) A person satisfies the conditions of this paragraph if he
(a) terminates his activity as a worker or self-employed person and
(i) has reached the age at which he is entitled to a state pension on the date on which he terminates his activity; or
(ii) in the case of a worker, ceases working to take early retirement;
(b) pursued his activity as a worker or self-employed person in the United Kingdom for at least twelve months prior to the termination; or
(c) resided in the United Kingdom continuously for more than three years prior to the termination."
"15 Permanent right of residence
(1) The following persons shall acquire the right to reside in the United Kingdom permanently
(c) a worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity."
"1. Article 39 and the first paragraph of Article 49 of the EC Treaty shall fully apply only, in relation to the freedom of movement of workers and the freedom to provide services involving temporary movement of workers as defined in Article 1 of Directive 96/71/EC between Latvia on the one hand, and Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Greece, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Hungary, the Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia, Finland, Sweden and the United Kingdom on the other hand, subject to the transitional provisions laid down in paragraphs 2 to 14.
2. By way of derogation from Articles 1 to 6 of Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 and until the end of the two year period following the date of accession, the present Member States will apply national measures, or those resulting from bilateral agreements, regulating access to their labour markets by Latvian nationals. The present Member States may continue to apply such measures until the end of the five year period following the date of accession.
5. A Member State maintaining national measures or measures resulting from bilateral agreements at the end of the five year period indicated in paragraph 2 may, in case of serious disturbances of its labour market or threat thereof and after notifying the Commission, continue to apply these measures until the end of the seven year period following the date of accession. In the absence of such notification, Articles 1 to 6, of Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 shall apply."
i) The phrase "resided there continuously for more than three years" in Article 17(1)(a) of the Citizens Directive and the corresponding phrase in regulation 5(2)(c) of the IEEA Regulations referred to actual residence. It did not mean residing legally. Therefore the fact that the respondent was not registered under the WRS before 20th August 2010 did not prevent the respondent from being treated as someone who had resided in the UK for the three year period December 2009 - December 2012.
ii) Alternatively, the Extension Regulations were unlawful because they were disproportionate and incompatible with EU law. Therefore the respondent was not under any obligation to register under the WRS during the three year period December 2009 - December 2012.
i) The Upper Tribunal erred in its construction of "resided" in Article 17(1)(a) of the Citizens Directive.
ii) The Upper Tribunal erred in holding that the extension of the WRS was unlawful.
" In relation to continuation of the right of residence of the family members of a worker who has died during his working life, the first indent at Art.3(2) of Regulation 1251/70 envisages that the worker must, on the date of his decease, have resided continuously in the territory of the host Member State for at least two years. That condition is intended to establish a significant connection between, on the one hand, that Member State, and on the other hand, that worker and his family, and to ensure a certain level of their integration in the society of that State."
"68. In the scheme of the Directive 2004/38, arts 16(1) and 17(1)(a) are closely connected. They are both in the chapter which provides for a right of permanent residence, in the section in which the substantive conditions for the acquisition of that right are set out. Furthermore, the introductory wording of art 17 of the directive 'By way of derogation from art 16, the right of permanent residence in the host Member State shall be enjoyed before completion of a continuous period of five years of residence by' makes clear that there is also a close substantive connection between arts 16 and 17 of the directive.
69. Against the background of a close connection between those two provisions it must in principle be assumed that the two factual elements whose working is almost identical 'a continuous period of five years of residence in the host Member State' in art 16(1) of the directive and 'resided continuously in the host Member State for more than two years' in art 17(1)(b) of the directive are to be interpreted in the same way. Therefore, a period of residence which ended before 30 April 2006 would also have to be taken into account in the context of art 16(1) of the directive."
"The fact that the rights conferred by article 17 are in derogation of the social integration objective of the Directive (because they allow the conferring of permanent rights of residence without the necessary period for social integration to take place), and that, accordingly, article 17 is required to be strictly interpreted (see para 23 of the judgment in Commission of the European Communities v Italian Republic (Case C-40/93) [1995] ECR 1-1319), does not lead to any different conclusion."
"33. Proportionality as a general principle of EU law involves a consideration of two questions: first, whether the measure in question is suitable or appropriate to achieve the objective pursued; and secondly, whether the measure is necessary to achieve that objective, or whether it could be attained by a less onerous method. There is some debate as to whether there is a third question, sometimes referred to as proportionality stricto sensu: namely, whether the burden imposed by the measure is disproportionate to the benefits secured. In practice, the court usually omits this question from its formulation of the proportionality principle. Where the question has been argued, however, the court has often included it in its formulation and addressed it separately, as in R v Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Ex p Fedesa (Case C-331/88) [1990] ECR I-4023.
34. Apart from the questions which need to be addressed, the other critical aspect of the principle of proportionality is the intensity with which it is applied. In that regard, the court has been influenced by a wide range of factors, and the intensity with which the principle has been applied has varied accordingly. It is possible to distinguish certain broad categories of case. It is however important to avoid an excessively schematic approach, since the jurisprudence indicates that the principle of proportionality is flexible in its application. The court's case law applying the principle in one context cannot necessarily be treated as a reliable guide to how the principle will be applied in another context: it is necessary to examine how in practice the court has applied the principle in the particular context in question.
35. Subject to that caveat, however, it may be helpful to describe the court's general approach in relation to three types of case: the review of EU measures, the review of national measures relying on derogations from general EU rights, and the review of national measures implementing EU law.
50. It is necessary to turn next to measures adopted by the member states within the sphere of application of EU law. In that context, issues of proportionality have arisen most often in relation to national measures taken in reliance on provisions in the Treaties or other EU legislation recognising permissible limitations to the "fundamental freedoms": the free movement of goods, the free movement of workers, freedom of establishment, freedom to provide services, and the free movement of capital. Compliance with the principle of proportionality is also a requirement of the justification of other national measures falling within the scope of EU law, including those which derogate from other rights protected by the Treaties, such as the right to equal treatment or non-discrimination, or fundamental rights such as the right to family life.
52. The court's general approach in this context was explained in the Gebhard case, concerned with the provision of legal services:
"national measures liable to hinder of make less attractive the exercise of fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Treaty must fulfil four conditions: they must be applied in a non-discriminatory manner; they must be justified by imperative requirements in the general interest; they must be suitable for securing the attainment of the objective which they pursue; and they must not go beyond what is necessary in order to attain it." (para 37)
53. The last two of these requirements correspond to the two limbs of the proportionality principle. In some more recent cases, the court has also emphasised other general principles of EU law, by requiring that procedures under the national measure should be compatible with principles of sound administration, such as being completed within a reasonable time and without undue cost, and also compatible with legal certainty, including the right to judicial protection.
56. The justification for the restriction tends to be examined in detail, although much may depend on the nature of the justification, and the extent to which it requires evidence to support it. For example, justifications based on moral or political considerations may not be capable of being established by evidence. The same may be true of justifications based on intuitive common sense. An economic or social justification, on the other hand, may well be expected to be supported by evidence. The point is illustrated by Commission of the European Communities v Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (Case C-319/06) [2009] All ER (EC) 1049, concerned with legislation which imposed on providers of services in Luxembourg, who were based in other member states, the mandatory requirements of Luxembourg's employment law. In addressing an argument that the measure ensured good labour relations in Luxembourg, the court stated:
"51. It has to be remembered that the reasons which may be invoked by a member state in order to justify a derogation from the principle of freedom to provide services must be accompanied by appropriate evidence or by an analysis of the expediency and proportionality of the restrictive measure adopted by that state, and precise evidence enabling its arguments to be substantiated
"52. Therefore, in order to enable the court to determine whether the measures at issue are necessary and proportionate to the objective of safeguarding public policy, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg should have submitted evidence to establish whether and to what extent the [contested measure] is capable of contributing to the achievement of that objective."
73. Member states must also comply with the requirement of proportionality, and with other aspects of EU law, when applying EU measures such as Directives. As when assessing the proportionality of EU measures, to the extent that the Directive requires the national authority to exercise a discretion involving political, economic or social choices, especially where a complex assessment is required, the court will in general be slow to interfere with that evaluation. In applying the proportionality test in circumstances of that nature, the court has applied a "manifestly disproportionate" test: see, for example, R v Minister of Agriculture, 731Fisheries and Food, Ex p National Federation of Fishermen's Organisations (Case C-44/94) [1995] ECR I-3115, para 58. The court may nevertheless examine the underlying facts and reasoning: see, for example, Upjohn Ltd v Licensing Authority Established under Medicines Act 1968 (Case C-120/97) [1999] 1 WLR 927, paras 3435.
74. Where, on the other hand, the member state relies on a reservation or derogation in a Directive in order to introduce a measure which is restrictive of one of the fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Treaties, the measure is likely to be scrutinised in the same way as other national measures which are restrictive of those freedoms. Commission of the European Communities v Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, cited earlier, concerned a national measure of that kind."
(1) Review of EU measures.
(2) Review of national measures relying on derogations from general EU rights.
(3) Review of national measures implementing EU law.
The principal judgment in Lumsdon gives guidance as to the intensity of review appropriate to each of those three categories. For cases in the third category, the court will normally apply the "manifestly disproportionate" test: see [73]. For cases in the second category the normal proportionality test will apply: see [74].
" I do not view the present matter as one involving political choice to a significant degree (this is reflected in the Secretary of State's reliance on technical advice from an outside body and also in the lack of Parliamentary scrutiny) but it does involve "economic or social choices", albeit, those choices are, as shown above, limited in range."
"The basis upon which the Member States agreed to Latvia (and other Accession States) joining the European Union was a matter of political choice of the highest order, the precise terms of which involved a considerable amount of economic, social and political judgment."
"5.16 In conclusion, it is very unlikely that removing the WRS would result in any substantial change in A8 immigration inflows. However, it is possible that some factors, including the £90 registration fee, could have a small effect at the margin. The effect of maintaining the WRS will be to slightly reduce flows relative to what would otherwise be observed. We argue in this report that this slight dampening effect on flows is a positive phenomenon in the current economic circumstances, which is why we have not given detailed consideration to the option of relaxing the WRS by keeping the scheme but abolishing the £90 fee."
"5.35 The evidence reviewed indicates that the abolition of the WRS would not result in substantial labour market impacts. This is because the absence of the £90 fee would probably have only a marginal effect on immigration decisions and behaviour changes resulting from abolition of the scheme would be small. Nevertheless, it is plausible to argue that abolition of the WRS could potentially result in a small positive impact on immigration inflows."
"6.6 We emphasise that any impacts resulting from removal of the WRS would be small in comparison to the overall negative labour market consequences of the economic downturn. Nonetheless, we believe that it would be sensible to retain the WRS for two more years due to the possibility of small but adverse labour market impacts from abolishing it."
"111. It is difficult to imagine a report favouring retention of the WRS couched in weaker or more heavily qualified terms. Evidence of the "small" behaviour changes resulting from abolition was not such as to establish them "to any significant degree". The abolition of the £90 fee would have an effect that was "probably only marginal". Any positive (i.e. increased) impact on inflows from abolition was (a) "small"; (b) only a "potential[..] result" and (c) only something that could be "plausibl[y] argued".
112. "Sensible" it may have been, even if the effects were a matter of conjecture and small or marginal, on the basis that if they did come to pass, when seen from the perspective of the government it could only help. But was it proportionate? The MAC's conclusion depends in very large measure on the deterrent effect of the £90 fee, but is maintaining that fee a measure that is "appropriate and necessary"? This was a scheme which if complied with did not otherwise restrict the access of A8 nationals to the labour market: see MAC report, para 2.36; also the evidence cited by Baroness Hale in Zalewska at para 53. The United Kingdom originally had a wider power to put national measures in place and, albeit by a bare majority, the House of Lords held that Zalewska that the action then was proportionate. But by 2009 it was a question of whether it was a proportionate step to take in the context of there being a serious disturbance to the UK labour market (or threat thereof) and whether maintaining the scheme would help address that disturbance. Because of the passage of time, the appellant's argument cannot in my view properly be characterised, as does Ms Smyth, as a "challenge to Zalewska itself". Data collection was more relevant in 2005 than it had come in 2009, because the provisions of Annex VIII and similar annexes for reviews and extensions of the national measures which required data to be gathered as evidence had, with time, fallen away. Any residual value in data derived from the WRS was limited in that it was largely replaceable from elsewhere and was otherwise speculative ("could possibly prove to be "). Other than that, the WRS had no demonstrable material impact on inflows or behaviour, and so on the labour market, at all. What we are left with as impacting on the labour market is the fee, set to defray the costs of an administrative scheme which does not itself materially help to address the disturbance. I do not regard it as an "appropriate" tool for proportionality purposes for addressing the serious disturbance of the UK labour market in that it relies effectively on payment of a sum of money by A8 nationals, while not otherwise affecting their access to it.
113. Given the prominence given in the MAC's reasoning to the fee, this conclusion would itself be enough to invalidate the proportionality of a decision taken relying upon that reasoning. However, if I am wrong in that conclusion, I would in any event consider that the disadvantages caused are disproportionate to the aims pursued.
114. There is a burden on employers, even if little research had been done to examine its scale. Regulation 9 of the Registration Regulations created a criminal offence if an employer employed A8 nationals who were required to be registered under the WRS but were not, subject to various defences of due diligence. Even if there is no known instance of anyone ever having been prosecuted, the procedures must have created additional burdens for any conscientious employer: certainly that (or something akin to it) seems to have been the view of the Confederation of British Industry, British Chambers of Commerce, Association of Labour Providers, the Scottish Executive, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation, the Gangmasters Licensing Authority and the National Farmers' Union (MAC report, para 5.31).
115. The precise effect of the Registration Regulations has been and remains to this day (though they have been repealed) the subject of legal uncertainty and so difficulties for those affected by it. In addition to Zalewska, reference should made to SSWP v ZA [2009] UKUT 294 AAC and Szpak v SSWP [2013] EWCA Civ 46 which illustrate the inadequacies of the drafting in relation to whether a WRS certificate was when issued retrospective to the start of the employment. Cases on other aspects continue to go through the legal system. On an orthodox view, the effect on the Registration Regulations is that a person who ought to comply with them but does not is excluded from benefits no matter how unforeseeable the circumstances which have caused them to be in need of them. Such a person is also prevented from relying on that time for the purposes of the 5 years required to establish permanent residence in the UK under Article 16 of the Directive, notwithstanding that he or she may have been working, paying taxes and generally participating actively in UK society. There is, in short, a very real downside for those who do not comply for whatever reason, once regarded by Baroness Hale at para 57 of Zalewska as "severe". Factors such as language difficulties and the frequent participation of A8 nationals in short-term work obtained through agencies may make it more likely that there is non-registration. The MAC was uncertain (para 5.21) whether such confusion as there may have been on the part of A8 immigrants was as to the WRS or as to employment rights more generally; but even if it was the latter, the WRS can only have served to make an already difficult situation worse. The MAC report cites at para 57, albeit not in wholly unambiguous terms, a study in which (at very least) some 33% of A8 nationals failed to register when they needed to potentially needed to do so. For those who did comply, there was the need to pay a sum equivalent to around 1 per cent of annual gross pay for someone making at the national minimum wage for a 35 hour week for 48 weeks (MAC report, para 5.9)."
" the outright denial of future benefits to a person who has worked here for 12 months is simply not a suitable means of achieving the primary aim of the scheme."
Lord Justice Lindblom :
Lord Justice Peter Jackson :
Summary of the WRS and of relevant parts of the Registration Regulations (as amended)
"A national of a relevant accession State who is seeking employment and an accession state worker requiring registration shall only be entitled to reside in the United Kingdom in accordance with the 2006 Regulations as modified by regulation 5."
2. Regs 5(1) and 5(4) of the 2004 Regulations provided:
"(1) the 2006 Regulations shall apply in relation to a national of a relevant accession State subject to the modifications set out in this regulation.
(2) A national of a relevant accession State who is seeking employment in the United Kingdom shall not be treated as a jobseeker for the purpose of the definition of "qualified person" in regulation 6(1) of the 2006 Regulations and an accession State worker requiring registration shall be treated as a worker for the purpose of that definition only during a period in which he is working in the United Kingdom for an authorised employer.
(3) Subject to paragraph (4), regulation 6(2) of the 2006 Regulations shall not apply to an accession State worker requiring registration who ceases to work.
(4) Where an accession State worker requiring registration ceases working for an authorised employer in the circumstances mentioned in regulation 6(2) of the 2006 Regulations during the one month period beginning on the date on which the work begins, that regulation shall apply to that worker during the remainder of that one month period."
3. Regs 7(1), 7(2) and 7(3) of the 2004 Regulations provided:
"(1) By way of derogation from article 39 of the Treaty establishing the European Community and articles 1 to 6 of the Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community, an accession state worker requiring registration shall only be authorised to work in the United Kingdom for an authorised employer.
(2) An employer is an authorised employer in relation to a worker if
(a) the worker was legally working for that employer on 30 April 2004 and has not ceased working for that employer after that date;
(b) the worker -
(i) during the one month period beginning on the date on which he begins working for the employer, applies for a registration certificate authorising him to work for that employer in accordance with regulation 8; and
(ii) has not received a valid registration certificate or notice of refusal under regulation 8 in relation to that application or ceased working for that employer since the application was made;
(c) the worker has received a valid registration certificate authorising him to work for that employer and that certificate has not expired under paragraph (5); or
(d) the employer is an authorised employer in relation to that worker under paragraph (3) or (4).
(3) Where a worker begins working for an employer on or after 1 May 2004 that employer is an authorised employer in relation to that worker during the one month period beginning on which the work begins."
Reg 7(5)(b) provided that a registration certificate expired on the date on which the worker ceased working for that employer.