Upper Tribunal (Immigration and asylum chamber), 2023-03-21, EA/13940/2021

Appeal NumberEA/13940/2021
Hearing Date10 January 2023
Published date05 April 2023
Date21 March 2023
StatusUnreported
CourtUpper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber)

Appeal Number: UI-2022-002199

EA/13940/2021


Upper Tribunal

(Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Appeal Number: UI-2022-002199

EA/13940/2021



THE IMMIGRATION ACTS



Heard at Field House

Decision & Reasons Promulgated

On 10 January 2023

On 21 March 2023




Before


UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE O’CALLAGHAN



Between


THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

Appellant/Respondent

and


NAZMI TAHIRAJ

(ANONYMITY DIRECTION NOT MADE)

Respondent/Appellant



Representation:

For the Appellant: Ms. S Lecointe, Senior Presenting Officer

For the Respondent: Mr. J Collins, Counsel, instructed by Sentinel Solicitors



DECISION AND REASONS

Introduction

  1. For the purpose of this decision, the parties are as above, but I refer to the Secretary of State for the Home Department as the respondent and to Mr. Tahiraj as the appellant, reflecting their positions before the First-tier Tribunal.

  2. The respondent appeals against a decision of Judge of the First-tier Tribunal Raymond (‘the Judge’) sent to the parties on 15 March 2022 by which the appellant’s appeal against a decision refusing to issue him with status under the European Union Settlement Scheme (‘EUSS’) was allowed on an identified, limited basis.

Background

  1. The appellant is a national of Albania and is presently aged 27. He entered the United Kingdom unlawfully. His wife, Mrs. Dimyana Ivanova, is a national of Bulgaria. In November 2020 she secured limited leave to remain in this country under the EUSS. The appellant states that he met Mrs. Ivanova via social media in May 2020, and they then met in person in June 2020. They entered a relationship by renting a room together in Walthamstow in September 2020.

  2. By means of an application dated 4 June 2021 the appellant applied for status under the EUSS as the durable partner of an EEA citizen. The application was made after the United Kingdom left the European Union at 23.00 on 31 December 2020.

  3. The appellant details in his witness statement, dated 9 February 2022, that the couple decided to get married in November 2020 and tried to call the local registry office in Waltham Forest but were unable to get through. When they finally got through to talk to someone, they were informed that no wedding bookings were being taken because of lockdown restrictions. On 19 April 2021, they booked an appointment to give notice and subsequently they were given an appointment date. They were married at Haringey Registry Office on 29 June 2021. The marriage took place after the appellant’s EUSS application.

  4. The respondent refused the application by a decision dated 15 September 2021, observing that the appellant had not provided sufficient evidence to confirm that he was a family member of a relevant EEA citizen prior to the time the United Kingdom left the European Union. Consideration was also given to whether the appellant satisfied the requirements of an ‘other family member’, consequent to being in a durable relationship with a relevant EEA citizen. However, it was noted that the appellant had not been issued with a family permit or residence card under the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016. Consequently, the appellant did not meet the requirements for either settled or pre-settled status under the EUSS.

First-tier Tribunal Decision

  1. The appellant appealed to the First-tier Tribunal and the hearing before the Judge was conducted as a hybrid hearing at Hatton Cross on 22 February 2022. The appellant and his wife did not give evidence. They relied upon their witness statements, and submissions made by counsel, Mr. Collins. The core of the appellant’s case before the Judge was that but for the restrictions imposed by the Covid-19 pandemic, he would have married his wife before the United Kingdom left the European Union.

  2. Mr. Collins addressed me in respect of the appellant’s concern that elements of the Judge’s decision were factual findings, or simply observations. Having carefully considered the decision I am satisfied that reference to a lack of evidence of independent communication between the couple and their families and friends, at [28]-[29], is observation, as are references made in respect of a council tax bill and a utility bill, at [10]. The latter observations were made prior to the section of the Judge’s reasoning entitled ‘findings’. I further accept Mr. Collins point that the reference to the couple commencing their relationship with unseemly haste, at [38], is an observation made without any adequate reasoning.

  3. In his decision, the Judge noted, at [3] and [20], that bank statements evidenced the appellant trying to make money from a serious, problematic gambling habit. Further concerns were raised by the significant sums of money going in and out of the wife’s account, with evidence of her enjoying only modest salary payments, at [17]-[22]. The Judge was satisfied that the use of the account by two other people established that third parties had a stake in the bank account, at [35]. The Judge considered that the identifiable use of the wife’s bank account established that both she and the appellant had alternative financial resources, separate from a shared married life, which they had chosen not to reveal to the First-tier Tribunal. He noted evidence of payment in the wife’s name for a different tenancy through Keats Lettings, establishing that Ms. Ivanova was not living with the appellant, at [14]-[15]. The Judge concluded that the bank account was being used principally to establish a fictitious connection between husband and wife, seeking to establish that they reside together, at [36].

  4. I am satisfied that the Judge made clear, adverse findings as to the genuineness of the relationship. Mr. Collins appropriately accepted that the Judge gave adequate reasons for his conclusion. Though observing that Ms. Ivanova is now pregnant, he accepted that the present state of affairs was not relevant to the lawfulness of the Judge’s conclusions on the evidence placed before him in February 2022.

  5. The Judge proceeded to allow the appeal on a narrow basis, at [41]-[42]:

41. The preceding features which are deeply damaging to the credibility of the appellant and Ms. Ivanova, are issues for the respondent to consider, as I only allow the appeal on the limited basis that the application was made with a valid marriage certificate within the grace period, before the required date of 1 July 2021 [sic], in a context where Article 18 requires under the Withdrawal Agreement that a proportionate approach is taken to the issue of documents.

42. The refusal was not therefore in accordance with the Withdrawal Agreement and Appendix EU, as explained within the policy of the respondent, and the appeal succeeds on that limited basis only.’

Grounds of Appeal

  1. The core of the respondent’s grounds of appeal are that the Judge erred in law by failing to properly consider the provisions of Appendix EU of the Immigration Rules and the terms of the Withdrawal Agreement. In particular, the marriage took place after the specified date (31 December 2020), and so the application was considered under the durable partner route where it was bound to fail because the relevant rule required a ‘relevant document’, as defined. The appellant does not possess a relevant document. The Judge erred in concluding that the ‘grace period’ extended the time limit in which the appellant could become lawfully resident under the 2016 Regulations to a time after the United Kingdom left the European Union. Consequently, the Judge made several material errors of law.

  2. Following the grant of permission to appeal by Judge of the First-tier Tribunal Handler on 29 April 2022, Upper Tribunal Judge Jackson issued directions that were sent to the parties on 14 September 2022, observing the decision of the Presidential panel in Celik (EU exit; marriage; human rights) [2022] UKUT 00220 (IAC). Judge Jackson expressed her preliminary view that consequent to the decision in Celik the Judge’s decision was affected by material error of law, having failed to apply the correct legal framework to applications under the EUSS where the marriage took place after 31 December 2020 and, additionally, the appellant’s entry and residence had not been facilitated as a durable partner before the same date.

  3. ...

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