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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 >> Dharmeshkumar Bhupendrabhai Patel & Anor, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 229 (15 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/229.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 229 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (ADMINISTRATIVE COURT))
THE HON MRS JUSTICE McGOWAN
Ref CO/5027/2016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF (1) DHARMESHKUMAR BHUPENDRABHAI PATEL (2) VISHAJHABEN DHARMESHKUMAR PATEL |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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The Respondent was neither represented nor appeared.
Hearing date: 15 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hickinbottom:
"5.111 You can withdraw a CAS that you have assigned to a student if they have not yet used it to support an application for a visa or an extension of stay. You must withdraw the CAS using the SMS and inform the student.
5.112 If a CAS is cancelled or withdrawn we will not refund your fee. Once a CAS has been cancelled or withdrawn, we will automatically refuse any application supported by that CAS."
"SMS" is a reference to the Sponsorship Management System used by the Secretary of State to manage application under the PBS.
"But [in cases such as Patel], that requirement [to give the applicant an opportunity to find a substitute college] was found to arise where there had been a change of position of which the Secretary of State was unaware, and indeed which she herself had brought about, in circumstances in which the students were not themselves at fault in any way, but had been caught out by action taken by the Secretary of State in relation to which they had no opportunity to protect themselves. In the present case, by contrast, the Secretary had no means of knowing why the Appellant's CAS letter had been withdrawn and was not responsible for its withdrawal, and the fair balance between the public interest in the due operation of the PBS regime and the individual interest of the appellant was in favour of simple operation of the regime without further ado." (emphasis added).
And Briggs LJ, at [56], said:
" [T]he question whether the Secretary of State breached her common law duty to act fairly depends critically upon what her officials might be supposed to have known or considered likely at the time when, probably shortly before making a decision, the withdrawal of the CAS letter became apparent." (emphasis again added).
"33. I do not consider that an approach by the Secretary of State which involves a simple check whether an applicant has in place a valid CAS letter at the time the decision is made on their application, rather than seeking to inquire further into the background if it appears that a CAS letter has been withdrawn, involves any unfairness to an applicant for which the Secretary of State bears responsibility. The PBS places the onus of ensuring that an application is supported by evidence to meet the relevant test for grant of leave to enter or remain upon the applicant, and the Immigration Rules give applicants fair notice of this. The essence of the CAS element within the PBS is that the Secretary of State relies on a check on certification by approved colleges, and does not have to investigate further. It is inherent in the scheme that an applicant takes the risk of administrative error on the part of a college.
34. Standing back to make a general observation about the context, it can be said that an applicant deals directly with their college in relation to sorting out acceptance onto a course and the certification of that fact, and so has an opportunity to check the contract made with the college so far as concerns the risk of withdrawal of a CAS letter. If a college withdraws a CAS letter, the applicant may have a contractual right of recourse against the college. The fact that there is scope for applicants to seek protection against administrative errors by choosing a college with a good reputation and checking the contractual position before enrolling is of some relevance to the fair balance to be struck between the public interest in the due operation of the PBS regime and the interest of an individual who is detrimentally affected by it.
35. In my view, the circumstances in which the PBS applies are not such that it would be fair, as between the Secretary of State (representing, for these purposes, the general public interest) and the applicant, to expect the Secretary of State to have to distort the ordinary operation of the PBS regime to protect an applicant against the speculative possibility that a college has made an administrative error in withdrawing a CAS letter, rather than withdrawing it for reasons which do indeed indicate that no leave to enter or remain ought to be granted. The interests of applicants such as the Appellant are not so pressing and of such weight that a duty of delay and inquiry as contended for by the Appellant can be spelled out of the obligation to act fairly.
36. In that regard, the present context is to be contrasted with that in Doody. In that case, what was at stake was the liberty of the subject, since the decision of the Secretary of State regarding the tariff to be set for life prisoners would determine the time within which no application for release on parole could be made. It was by reason of that major significance for a prisoner of the decision to be made affecting him that the House of Lords found that the duty of fairness required the prisoner to be given notice of relevant information and an opportunity to deal with it by way of representations before a decision was made. In the present context, however, the PBS regime is intended to minimise the need for making sensitive and difficult evaluative judgments of the kind that fell to be made by the Secretary of State in Doody and the interests of applicants which are at stake are of far less weight."
Lord Justice Moylan :