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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 >> J1, R (on the application of) v Special Immigration Appeals Commission & Anor [2018] EWHC 3193 (Admin) (23 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/3193.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 760, [2018] EWHC 3193 (Admin), [2019] WLR 2594, [2019] 1 WLR 2594 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of J1 |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SPECIAL IMMIGRATION APPEALS COMMISSION |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Interested Party |
____________________
(instructed by Birnberg Peirce) for the Claimant
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Robin Tam QC and Rosemary Davidson
(instructed by Government Legal Dept.) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 3 and 30 October 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Supperstone :
Introduction
i) In an appeal against the revocation of ILR under section 76 of the 2002 Act, to what extent does s.85(4) of the 2002 Act permit SIAC to admit post-decision evidence (Ground 1).ii) Whether there are any implied limits on the power to revoke ILR under s.76 of the 2002 Act, requiring there to be some prospect of deportation being achieved in the future (Ground 2).
iii) Whether the revocation of the Claimant's ILR engaged Article 8 ECHR (Ground 3).
Factual background
"2. The Appellant is an Ethiopian national, who came to the United Kingdom with his family in 1990. In 2010, the Secretary of State came to the conclusion that the deportation of the Appellant from the United Kingdom would be conducive to the public good for reasons of national security. So on 25 September 2010, the Secretary of State notified the Appellant of her decision to make an order that he be deported to Ethiopia.
3. The Appellant appealed and on 15 April 2011 this Commission decided that the Appellant's deportation from the United Kingdom was conducive to the public good on national security grounds. In a separate determination made on 7 July 2011, this Commission decided that the Appellant's deportation would not breach his rights under Article 3 ECHR.
4. On 27 March 2013, the Court of Appeal allowed the Appellant's appeal against the decision to deport him on the ground that although there was no doubt that the Secretary of State was entitled to conclude that the Appellant's deportation was conducive to the public good on national security grounds, there was a real risk that his deportation to Ethiopia would infringe his rights under Article 3 ECHR. On that ground alone, SIAC's decision was reversed, but Jackson LJ (with whom Elias an Treacy LJJ agreed) explained at paragraph 94 that:
'I have no doubt that the Secretary of State was entitled to conclude that the appellant's deportation was conducive to the public interest on national security grounds'.
5. On 1 July 2014, after the Secretary of State made a second decision to deport the Appellant, but just before the hearing of the Appellant's appeal against the decision, the Secretary of State withdrew the notice of intention to deport the Appellant.
6. On the same day, the Secretary of State also revoked the Appellant's ILR pursuant to the powers conferred in section 76(1) of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 ('the 2002 Act'), …. The present proceedings relate to the Appellant's appeal against that decision to revoke ILR. There was a grant of restricted leave to the Appellant on 1 July 2014 which was subsequently withdrawn and a further grant of restricted leave on 4 September 2014 was subsequently quashed. In the circumstances, the Appellant's ILR has been extended until the hearing of his appeal against the revocation of his ILR by reason of the provisions of section 3 D (2) of the Immigration Act 1971, ...
7. The national security issues have been refined and the present position is that:
(a) the basis of the Secretary of State's conclusion on 1 July 2014 that it was conducive to the public good to deport the Appellant was the national security decision of SIAC dated 15 April 2011 as explained in Georgina Balmforth's witness statement of 19 June 2017;
(b) for the purposes of this litigation, but for no other purpose, the Secretary of State accepts that the Appellant poses no current threat to national security;
(c) for the purposes of this litigation, but for no other purpose, the Secretary of State is content for SIAC in determining these proceedings to proceed on the basis that there is no positive intelligence case that the Appellant posed a threat following the handing down of SIAC's national security judgment on 15 April 2011 and to which reference has been made in paragraph 3 above; and that
(d) the Secretary of State accepts that no conduct of the Appellant subsequent to 15 April 2011 is relied on by her on this appeal.
8. Orders for disclosure have been made and on 27 July 2017, the Secretary of State was ordered to file with the Commission 'exculpatory material of which she was aware' by 4pm on 3 October 2017. She failed to do so and just before the hearing in front of us, the Secretary of State sought a variation of that Order relating to the nature of the exculpatory material for which she was obliged to search for and disclose. This was the subject of discussion at the hearing on 18 October 2017 and in consequence, the Secretary of State served a revised proposed variation on 23 October 2017 which stated that
'1A. For the purposes of paragraph 1 of [the Order of 27 July 2017], the "exculpatory material" which the Secretary of State is obliged to search for and disclose is limited by the following: –
(a) The Secretary of State's case in this revocation appeal is that on 1 July 2014 it remained conducive to the public good to deport the Appellant to Ethiopia. That case is based on the Commission's determination on 15 April 2011 of the issue of national security in J1's first deportation appeal and the matters then considered by the Commission. For the purposes of that case, the Secretary of State does not rely on any conduct by J1 subsequent to the Commission's 15 April 2011 determination. Further, for the purposes of that case the Secretary of State does not assert in these proceedings that after that date J1 has posed (or currently poses) any threat to national security (as set out in the Government Legal Department's letters of 30 August 2017 and 16 October 2017).
(b) Accordingly, the "exculpatory material" is material which adversely affects the Secretary of State's case as set out above, namely material which could undermine the national security findings in the Commission's 15 April 2011 determination.
(c) A full exculpatory process having been carried out in relation to the issue of national security before the Commission's determination of 15 April 2011, the Secretary of State is not obliged to search again for, or to (re-)disclose, any material pre-dating the Commission's decision of 15 April 2011.
(d) A full exculpatory process having been carried out in relation to the issue of national security for purposes of J1's second deportation appeal which had been due to be heard in July 2014, the exculpatory material relating to that issue having been served in the disclosure process leading up to that intended hearing, and the Secretary of State having re-served that exculpatory material on 2 October 2017 in this revocation appeal, the Secretary of State is not obliged to search again for, or to (re-)disclose, any material pre-dating the decision under appeal of 1 July 2014.
1B. For the purposes of paragraph 15 of the Practice Note, the Secretary of State's "relevant disclosure obligations are modified by Paragraph 1A above.'
9. The Appellant's lawyers were asked to comment on this proposal and they duly served written submissions stating that the variation application should be stayed. The Secretary of State's counsel made further written submissions supporting their application. …"
Legislative Framework
"76 Revocation of leave to enter or remain
(1) The Secretary of State may revoke a person's indefinite leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom if the person—
(a) is liable to deportation, but
(b) cannot be deported for legal reasons.
…
(4) In this section—
'liable to deportation' has the meaning given by section 3(5) and (6) [of the Immigration Act 1971]."
"3 General provisions for regulation and control
(5) A person who is not a British citizen is liable to deportation from the United Kingdom if—
(a) the Secretary of State deems his deportation to be conducive to the public good; or
(b) another person to whose family he belongs is or has been ordered to be deported."
"Continuation of leave following revocation
(2) The person's leave is extended by virtue of this section during any period when—
(a) an appeal under section 82(1) [of the 2002 Act] could be brought, while the person is in the United Kingdom, against the … revocation …, or
(b) an appeal under that section against the … revocation, brought while the appellant is in the United Kingdom, is pending …"
"84 Grounds of appeal
(1) An appeal under section 82(1) against an immigration decision must be brought on one or more of the following grounds—
(a) that the decision is not in accordance with immigration rules; …
(c) that the decision is unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 … as being incompatible with the appellant's Convention rights;
…
(e) that the decision is otherwise not in accordance with the law;
(f) that the person taking the decision should have exercised differently a discretion conferred by immigration rules;
(g) that removal of the appellant from the United Kingdom in consequence of the immigration decision would breach the United Kingdom's obligations under the Refugee Convention or would be unlawful under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 as being incompatible with the appellant's Convention rights."
"85 Matters to be considered
(1) An appeal under section 82(1) against a decision shall be treated by [SIAC] as including an appeal against any decision in respect of which the appellant has a right of appeal under section 82(1).
(2) If an appellant under section 82(1) makes a statement under section 120, [SIAC] shall consider any matter raised in the statement which constitutes a ground of appeal of a kind listed in section 84(1) against the decision appealed against.
(3) Subsection (2) applies to a statement made under section 120 whether the statement was made before or after the appeal was commenced.
(4) On an appeal under [section 82(1) …] against a decision [SIAC] may consider evidence about any matter which [it] thinks relevant to the substance of the decision, including evidence which concerns a matter arising after the date of the decision.
(5) But sub-section (4) is subject to the exceptions in section 85A."
"85A Matters to be considered: new evidence: exceptions
…
(3) Exception 2 applies to an appeal under section 82(1) if—
(b) the immigration decision concerned an application of a kind identified in immigration rules as requiring to be considered under a 'Points Based System', and
(c) the appeal relies wholly or partly on grounds specified in section 84(1)(a), (e) or (f)."
Grounds of Challenge
i) That SIAC misdirected itself in law as to the correct interpretation of s.85(4) of the 2002 Act in deciding that it had no jurisdiction to consider evidence post-dating the Secretary of State's decision to revoke ILR, made on 1 July 2014 (Ground 1);ii) That SIAC misdirected itself in law as to the meaning of the words "liable to deportation" in s.76 of the 2002 Act in concluding that the power to revoke ILR under that section can be exercised even where there is no prospect that deportation can take place (Ground 2); and
iii) That SIAC erred in law in concluding that the revocation of the Claimant's settled status of ILR does not engage the Article 8(1) ECHR rights of the Claimant, his British wife and his five British-born children (Ground 3).
Jurisdiction: judicial review of a decision of SIAC
"5. As Lang J observed when refusing permission on the papers, it is rare for an interlocutory decision of SIAC to be susceptible to challenge in this way and the test is usually expressed to be whether there has been a 'gross and florid error of law'. That is derived from the well-known Cart case, but in Secretary of State for the Home Department v The Special Immigration Appeals Commission [2015] 1 WLR 4709, the President of the Queen's Bench Division, Sir Brian Leveson, drew a distinction between the general type of case envisaged in R (Cart) v Upper Tribunal [2010] 2 WLR 1012 and cases where there can be no effective appeal in relation to an issue of principle involved in the procedural decision.
6. In the written material put before me, the Secretary of State argues here that the 'straightforward interlocutory disclosure decision' made in this case is 'in principle capable of being the subject of an appeal at the end of the proceedings'. That may be so, but it is, to my mind, a process that may lead to a disproportionately lengthy time before this case is disposed of finally, a case that, as I've observed already, has an extremely lengthy procedural history.
7. It seems to me to be a case which, in the interests of the claimant and the Secretary of State, and thus the general public, should be resolved as quickly as possible. In the particular context of this case, it seems to me that if there is an arguable point of law that could arguably impact on the ultimate decision of the appeal, it would be wrong not to permit that issue to be resolved before the hearing of the substantive appeal. It could save a lot of costs also."
The parties' submissions and discussion
Ground 1: the correct interpretation of s.85(4) of the 2002 Act
"The issue in Ground 1 is whether, on a s.82 appeal against revocation of ILR under s.76 of the 2002 Act, s.85(4) is to be construed as limiting SIAC's consideration of the facts and evidence to matters in existence at the date of the decision (in this case 1 July 2014), as the SSHD contends and as SIAC held; or, as the claimant submits, that in such an appeal against revocation, s.85(4) permits SIAC to consider facts and evidence of matters arising after the date of the decision appealed against."
"That seems a curiously ambiguous term, which can fairly be read as referring either to the substantive effect of the decision or to the substantive reasons underlying it."
In AS Arden LJ took the latter view; Sullivan LJ (with whom Moore-Bick LJ agreed) took the opposite view. Although he considered the arguments to be finely balanced, Lord Carnwath (with whom all their Lordships agreed on this point) said (at para 44) that he preferred the approach of the majority in AS. Lord Carnwath observed, "Like Sullivan LJ I find a broad approach more consistent with the 'coherence' of this part of the Act".
"26. Both cases considered in AS involved consideration of evidence of events prior to the decision of the Secretary of State. In one case an application to the Secretary of State had been based on an intention to establish the appellant in business (r.206E) where she could have applied under the International Graduate Scheme. In the second case, the application for leave to remain was based on 10 years' residence in the United Kingdom whereas the appellant could have sought variation of her leave to remain on the basis that she was a student. Moore-Bick LJ stated, at paragraph 83, that 'the matters relied on [in the section 120 Notice] all pre-date the decision [under appeal]'.
…
27. Sullivan LJ, at paragraph 106, plainly had in mind evidence available at the time of the Secretary of State's decision in his example, at paragraph 106, of an applicant who had applied for leave to remain on the wrong basis and failed to mention their marriage to a United Kingdom citizen."
"Our approach has been as follows. Both the level of risk to national security represented by the Appellant and the degree or extent of incursion on his Article 8 rights evidently lie at the heart of this decision, and after-coming evidence on these issues affect the 'substance' of that decision. Moreover, in assessing whether exclusion is proportionate, we must balance the risk to national security against the impact on the Article 8 rights. It is hard to see how that could be done rationally by looking at the historic evidence as to national security and the up-to-date evidence on Article 8. That is particularly so here, given the effect of the decision of the CJEU."
"…the question of construction raised by the appeal is not altogether straightforward. On the one hand, there is something curious about deciding the correctness of a 2006 decision by reference to the facts known in 2015 (and not available to the decision taker in 2006). On the other hand, the common sense of the 2015 SIAC judgment is, with respect, readily apparent: the rival national security and Art.8 cases need to be weighed: how can it be right to do so with reference to the facts as known in 2015 in respect of the Art.8 case but to ignore the change in the national security case (as SIAC found there had been) between 2006 and 2015? Issues of this nature are best resolved in cases where they are necessary for the decision and the decision is not academic…"
"Section 85(2), put by the appellant at the heart of his case, concludes by referring to the availability of grounds of appeal 'against the decision appealed against'. I agree with Mr Payne that the focus is on the decision of the Secretary of State. In my judgment, the 'decision' is clearly the decision of the Secretary of State. In the present context, fresh matters may be raised but are relevant only insofar as they challenge that decision. As Sedley LJ recognised in Pankina at paragraph 39, there will be cases under the Rules which depend on the situation existing at the time of the Secretary of State's decision. In my judgment, Rule 245Z is one of those cases. The points to be accumulated must be accumulated at the time of the Secretary of State's decision. That includes, as is agreed, a requirement that the relevant degree has been awarded."
"41. … In AS the Court was not concerned with decisions made by the Respondent under the 'Points-Based' system of determining applications for leave to remain. In such cases there is a 'fixed historic time-line'. The effective operation of a points based system requires the points to have been accumulated at the date of the Secretary of State's decision."
Conclusion
Ground 3: Whether Article 8(1) ECHR is engaged
"…while an interference with private or family life must be real if it is to engage Art.8(1), the threshold of engagement ('the minimum level') is not an especially high one."
"8. … Recognising the legal barrier to deportation, the decision to revoke J1's ILR was taken on the basis that the Secretary of State has deemed that his deportation is conducive to the public good pursuant to s.3(5) of the 1971 Act and that his case warrants limited leave with conditions. This is to emphasise the temporary nature of his leave in the UK and allow the Home Office to undertake regular reviews to effect deportation at the earliest opportunity. Meanwhile, along with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Home Office would continue to work with the Ethiopian authorities to mitigate the current Article 3 ECHR risk that prevented J1's deportation."
"The effect of discontinuing the J1 case
13. … DWA remains our only means of removal… we do not consider this to be forthcoming in the foreseeable future.
14. Nevertheless, we wish to impose significant restrictions on J1. By discontinuing the DWA case, SIAC bail will fall away. We propose to revoke J1's ILR… and grant limited leave with conditions imposed under the 1971 Immigration Act. The conditions could include a residence restriction, restrictions on employment and study, and a reporting requirement. We would propose weekly reporting. Further, limited leave will reduce their stability and indicate our intention to keep their cases under regular review. …"
"9. When making this decision regard was given to the Home Office's guidance on revoking ILR, Asylum Policy Instruction: Revocation of Indefinite Leave to Remain dated 10 June 2013 (section 3.1) ('the Home Office guidance on revocation of ILR')."
"Section 3: Revoking Indefinite Leave
3.1 In Deportation Cases
Section 76(1) gives the Secretary of State the power to revoke indefinite leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom where a person is liable to deportation, but cannot be deported for legal reasons.
The circumstances in which a person is liable to deportation include:
- where the Secretary of State deems the person's deportation to be conducive to the public good;
…
For further information on what leave to grant after indefinite leave is revoked under section 76, see section 5.3 of this instruction: …"
"5.3 Leave/Status after Revocation
Where the decision maker revokes indefinite leave under section 76, they must determine if the person qualifies for leave in another category. If so, they must grant leave accordingly. This might be leave under the rules, Discretionary Leave or Restricted Leave. …"
"10. In place of ILR, J1 was granted six months' limited leave to remain with conditions. J1 appealed to the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) ('FTT') against the decision to revoke his ILR, on grounds which included an asylum claim. … The Secretary of State considered the asylum claim and withdrew the grant of limited leave to remain. On 4 September 2014, the Secretary of State refused the asylum claim because J1 is excluded from the Refugee Convention by Article 1F(c), and again granted J1 six months' limited leave to remain in accordance with her Restricted Leave policy…
11. J1 commenced an application for judicial review challenging the lawfulness of the Restricted Leave policy and the lawfulness of the specific conditions imposed on him. In parallel, on 29 October 2014 the FTT considered whether the second grant of limited leave had resulted in J1's appeal against the revocation of ILR falling to be treated as abandoned pursuant to s.104(4A) of the 2002 Act. On 7 November 2014, the FTT decided that it did and issued a notice of abandonment. On 12 May 2016 a panel of the Upper Tribunal (Collins J and Judge O'Connor) considered both the judicial review claim and an appeal against the FTT's decision. The Upper Tribunal allowed the appeal against the decision of the FTT and the claim for judicial review. … The appeal was remitted to the FTT but, on 2 November 2016, pursuant to s.97(3) of the 2002 Act, the Secretary of State certified that her decision to revoke ILR had been taken wholly or partly in reliance on information which should not be made public… Consequently, the FTT appeal lapsed and a right of appeal to SIAC arose."
"The duration and conditions of such leave will be for the Secretary of State's decision at the time of any such grant. At that time [the Claimant] would be able to bring a challenge to the Secretary of State's decision inter alia on the basis of the effects on him and his family of the duration of the leave and any conditions imposed." (Summary Grounds of Resistance, para 44).
"Article 14 does not apply unless the alleged discrimination is in connection with a Convention right and on a ground stated in article 14."
In any event if Article 8 was engaged in that case because of the significant and immediate effect that denial of citizenship has upon a person's social identity, it does not follow that the removal of ILR in itself engages Article 8 in the absence of any other steps.
"especially as the Court of Appeal in that case held that it was not the refusal of ILR which engaged Article 8, but that instead it was the grant of limited leave in those cases pursuant to the Restricted Leave Policy which engaged Article 8 as appears from paragraphs 102 and 124 of the judgment."
"… The application of the RLR policy is liable to interfere with the Article 8 rights of the persons to whom it is applied, essentially because the conditions which it contemplates being imposed and the short duration of the grants of leave have the effect of placing obstacles in the way of creation of private and family life: indeed that is part of their purpose…".
At para 124 Underhill LJ continued:
"… It was common ground before us, as noted at para 102 above, that decisions under the RLR policy did not consist simply in the refusal of ILR, and that viewed as a whole there was liable to be at least some interference with article 8 rights. …"
"58. A crucial fact is that Article 8 is a qualified right as it provides that:
'There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety, for the protection of public order… or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.'
59. That is significant because, as has been explained in paragraph 4 above, Jackson LJ giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal on J1's appeal in 2013 concluded that 'I have no doubt that the Secretary of State was entitled to conclude that the Appellant's deportation was conducive to the public interest on national security grounds'. This indicates that the removal of the Appellant's ILR does not in itself constitute a breach of the Article 8 rights of the Appellant, his wife or his children because it was 'in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety, for the protection of public order'. That would mean that the revocation of the Appellant's ILR would not be an interference with the exercise of any Article 8 rights of the Appellant, his wife or children. By similar reasoning the imposition of prison sentence on a notoriously violent offender would not interfere with any Article 8 rights of the offender, his wife or children."
"55. Duty regarding the welfare of children
(1) The Secretary of State must make arrangements for ensuring that—
(a) the functions mentioned in sub-section (2) are discharged having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children who are in the United Kingdom…
(2) The functions referred to in sub-section (1) are—
(a) any function of the Secretary of State in relation to immigration, asylum or nationality…
(3) A person exercising any of those functions must, in exercising the function, have regard to any guidance given to the person by the Secretary of State for the purpose of sub-section (1)."
"1.4 Application in Respect of Children
…
Officers must not apply the actions set out in this instruction either to children or to those with children without having due regard to s.55…"
The statutory duty to children includes the need to demonstrate "the child's interests being made a primary, although not the only consideration".
"…The interests of the children of the Appellant will have been adversely affected by the decision to revoke the Appellant's ILR because instead of having a father with ILR for the foreseeable future, the consequence of the revocation of their father's ILR meant that his right to remain in this country was very uncertain and it could be ended at the hearing of their father's appeal against the section 76 decision. …"
Conclusion
Ground 2: Whether there are implied limits on the power to revoke ILR under s.76 of the 2002 Act
"There may come a time when the prospects of the person ever being able safely to return, whether voluntarily or compulsorily, as so remote that it would be irrational to deny him the status which would enable him to make a proper contribution to the community here …".
"… It would no doubt be disproportionate for the Secretary of State to have a policy (or, since that is what it would be, a rule) that migrants who were excluded but irremovable should never be eligible for ILR, whatever the circumstances and however long they have been here …"
"The case for the existence of such a power is clear. A human rights claim may well prevent actual deportation, but the individual concerned is, by definition, a person whose presence is no longer conducive to the public good. If a deportation order cannot be made, it may make good sense to alter his status from indefinite leave to remain to limited or, more likely, conditional leave which may give scope for control of his activities in the public interest."
"Persons are liable to be deported, under any of the procedures which may apply, because their presence in the United Kingdom is judged not to be conducive to the public good… If it turns out that there is a legal obstacle to actual removal, for example because of Convention rights which cannot be infringed, that does not alter the fact he is a person whose presence is not conducive to the public good. There is no legal symmetry in indefinite leave to remain co-existing with the status of someone whose presence is not conducive to the public good. It makes perfectly good sense, whilst the legal obstacle remains, for the Secretary of State to be in a position to revisit the terms of leave to enter. Moreover the legal obstacle is not necessarily, or even usually, permanent…"
"Whether or not it may become appropriate after the passage of time to re-grant indefinite leave is a matter for [the Secretary of State]."
Conclusion
Conclusion
i) SIAC did not misdirect itself as to the extent to which s.85(4) of the 2002 Act permits it to admit post-decision evidence on the revocation of the Claimant's ILR under s.76 of the 2002 Act (Ground 1).ii) The revocation of the Claimant's ILR does not engage Article 8 ECHR (Ground 3).
iii) There are no implied limits on the power to revoke ILR under s.76 as contended for by the Claimant (Ground 2).