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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Central College of London Ltd, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Rev 2) [2012] EWHC 1273 (Admin) (03 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/1273.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1273 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN LEEDS
1 Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF | ||
CENTRAL COLLEGE OF LONDON LIMITED | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Richard O'Brien (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM:
"When we consider that you have not been complying with your duties, have been dishonest in your dealings with us or otherwise pose a threat to immigration control, we will take action against you. The action we take can result in your licence being revoked, suspended or downgraded to an A-rating or a B-rating and/or a reduction in the number of [CASs] you are allowed to assign. If we decide to take action against you, we will give you an opportunity to explain your case to us."
Paragraph 354 was expressed in similar terms.
"412. We cannot define precisely in which exceptional circumstances we may not revoke your sponsor licence, when one of the above circumstances applies. However, we regard this seriously and would look for evidence that you are either not responsible for what happened or, if you were, you took prompt and effective action to remedy the situation when it came to light. For example, if one of your employees was wholly responsible for the dishonesty and that person was dismissed when it came to light.
413. If any of the circumstances in paragraph 411 arise and we believe that the evidence we have shows that you are breaching your duties and/or pose a threat to immigration control, we will suspend your licence ....
414. If any of the circumstances in paragraph 411 arise and we do not believe it is necessary to suspend your licence, we are likely to downgrade you to a B-rating ...."
"This system allows you [the sponsor college] to carry out your day-to-day activities and report to us changes to your organisation, for example a change of address. It also allows you to assign CASs and to fulfil your reporting duties in respect of your sponsored students."
"We call a person who has access to the SMS a 'user'. The SMS allows users two different levels of access - level 1 user and level 2 user. The level determines the type of access (permissions) the user has to the system, and the functions the user can perform."
"During the visit, it was discovered that you have shared your SMS password with unauthorised users. Your marketing and recruitment manager, Ms Kasi Khan, confirmed that although she had been set up on SMS as a level 2 user, she had been instructed never to use her own login details but to use those belonging to you. Ms Khan further confirmed that she had issued approximately 300 CASs using your password ...".
"The college has clearly failed in this regard as this student has held no valid leave from 31 July 2010, the leave she did have at the time did not confer the right for her to study at the Central College of London, and therefore she was enrolled without the right to study there. She was subsequently refused leave to remain on 19 August 2010 and failed to submit an appeal against that decision. She should have left the UK at that point."
(i) The Tier 4 sponsor guidance created a legitimate expectation that UKBA would respond to breaches of sponsor duties in a proportionate manner, the revocation of the Claimant's licence being disproportionality and in breach of that legitimate expectation.
(ii) The revocation of the Claimant's licence was so draconian as to be irrational.
(iii) In making the decision to revoke the licence, UKBA wrongly applied the September 2011 guidance, rather than the April 2011 guidance; and consequently failed to take into account a material consideration, namely the option of downgrading the Claimant's licence to B-rating (which was available under the April 2011 guidance, but not the later guidance).
(iv) If the September 2011 guidance applied, the Secretary of State erred in law by (a) delaying a decision until after that guidance had become effective, and (b) making a decision under that guidance without giving the Claimant an opportunity to make representations under it, as opposed to representations under the April 2011 guidance.
I deal with those grounds in turn.
"[The scheme] effectively imposes an obligation on a sponsoring college to ensure that it has processes and procedures in place to enable the Secretary of State to satisfy herself (through UKBA) that the college is complying with its substantive duties."
As a result, where there has been a breach of obligation in respect of (e.g.) documentation recording leave to remain expiry dates, a licence may be revoked even where there is no evidence of particular adverse consequences in the form of (e.g.) students actually going missing; because the scheme requires processes and procedures in place that ensure compliance, and reduce the potential for misuse and abuse of the immigration powers effectively delegated by the Secretary of State to the sponsor colleges.
"420. ... We will first consider downgrading your licence...
421. If we suspend your licence the process will then continue in one of the two following ways ..."
Those two ways of proceeding ways include, of course, consideration of temporary downgrading to B-rating with an action plan. Mr Banner submitted that "will" indicated an imperative; and the passage quoted was a clear indication that, once a suspension had been made under the April 2011 guidance, it was locked into the procedures of that guidance, including consideration of downgrading as an option.
"If you already have highly-trusted sponsor status and apply to renew it before 5 September 2011, we will decide it against the guidance in place before that date."
That is a clear provision in relation to a circumstance in which the earlier guidance would continue to apply. There is a notable absence of any such provision in relation to circumstances in which a suspension had taken effect but no downrating to B-rating had been made before 5 September 2011.