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When the Home Office seek to unfairly deny a man his entitlement to British citizenship and an Immigration Judge invokes justice

It might be difficult to imagine a scenario where a person, born in the United Kingdom 53year ago, following a change of name is issued a British passport (with the passport office fully aware of the former name), but only for the home office to subsequently take deportation action against him years later, on the basis that he is not British.

 

But that is exactly what the Home Office sought to do to a man who was born in the UK  in the early   60’s to parents of Nigerian origin,  who were residing in the UK at that time.

 

Such action followed an application for a Certificate of Entitlement to the Right for Abode as a person born in the UK before 1 January 1983. What was the main reason for refusal?

 

The birth certificate that you have provided is not contemporaneous and was issued over 44years after your birth date”.

 

At some point, this man stopped being treated as a British citizen: from the home office point of view, he was only a Nigerian national who had taken on someone else’s British identity.

 

Not only did he become subject to deportation proceedings, but whilst his appeal was yet to be heard, the Home office went ahead, in this case of a man with serious physical and mental health problems, to inform the benefits agency that he was not entitled to any benefits because of his immigration status.

 

How the problem arose

 

Having been born in the UK   in the 60’s and attended school here,  C subsequently went to Nigeria in the 70’s: he occasionally visited the UK but then returned permanently here in the late 80’s but with a certificate of entitlement of right of abode endorsed in his Nigerian passport.

 

C’s British passport, issued in the UK following his return, was taken by the police upon his arrest in 2002 along with other ID documents which did not belong to him.

 

C completed serving his last prison sentence just over a decade ago in relation to another offence.   Prior to his release from prison, an immigration officer visited him.  The officer  subsequently  wrote in a Home Office Minute Note that the police had  not taken  issue with the  British passport,  which  had been  found to be genuinely issued  in  C’ s new name.  From his notes, that immigration officer clearly accepted C was British.

 

Then came along a senior officer, who made no bones regarding  his view that he was not convinced  that C was the same man  who had been  issued with a certificate of entitlement  in Nigeria. He directed that further investigations be made in Nigeria.

 

Following his release from prison in 2007, C sought to retrieve his British passport, which was still valid until 2011. Over the years C waded through several solicitors who wrote to several agencies seeking resolution of the issues. There were either denials regarding retention of the British passport or just silence. The home office simply ignored all correspondence sent to them including copies of the British passport and the change of name deed in relation to the new name. On the other hand, the passport office confirmed in a letter to C that they were aware not only of his former name but that his British passport had been issued to him previously in his new name.

 

New British passport application and application for a certificate of entitlement to a right of abode

 

The new legal aid changes of 2013 meant he found he could not readily access legal assistance. Not being able to fund his case privately, he gave up on instructing solicitors and so took matters in his own hands.

 

Two years ago C sought to re-apply for a British passport in his adopted name.

 

The passport application took many months to be processed.  Whilst that application was outstanding, in desperation, he once again applied for a certificate of entitlement to a right of abode in his former name.  He failed to understand what the holdup was with the passport application.

 

The certificate of entitlement application was refused. The main reason for refusal was a reluctance by the home office to place weight upon the birth certificate C had produced; the home office queried why C had submitted a birth certificate which had been issued 44years after his birth. He was invited to seek to obtain a recent one from the registry office.  No mention was made of the fact that C had since his return to the UK obtained at least 2 birth certificates from the registry office and submitted them with his British passport applications previously.

 

A further reason for refusal was the home office assertion that no part of their departments had ever been informed of the new name C had adopted years ago i.e. the name in which the British passport had been issued. The fact that the submitted Nigerian passport stated Britain as C‘s place of birth well over 50years ago carried no weight. Further, no mention was made of the notes that had been made by the immigration officers  just prior to his release from prison years ago. It was however evident that the Home office was aware that C had a British passport application outstanding as they referred to that application in the refusal of the certificate of entitlement. C appealed the refusal of the certificate of entitlement to the right of abode.  He did not engage any legal representation.

 

The passport office then began writing to C. At first, all that he was requested to do prior to issue of the British passport seemed minor but then suddenly each set of incoming correspondence increasingly seemed to lift the bar even higher as regards the documentation required by them.  No longer having any ID to cover his new name, C had reverted to use of both this name and his former name. The passport office decided to withdraw the British passport application on the basis that C had not provided sufficient official documentation in his new name.

 

Deportation proceedings

 

Then came correspondence just a few months later from the home office asking C to provide reasons why he should not be deported to Nigeria.  The proceedings arose out of a combination of several convictions, with the last one being that of well over a decade ago.

 

Despite some representations from the MP, the home office subsequently made a decision to deport C. C instructed me recently.  Detailed grounds of appeal were submitted running to 15pages, which engaged with the facts and the extensive evidence C had been encouraged to produce prior to lodgement of the appeal.  Those grounds of appeal subsequently stood as the “skeleton” argument.  A request was made to the Tribunal to link the two appeals.

 

It came as no surprise that the Home office bundle in relation to the certificate of entitlement appeal was deliberately   sparse- it consisted of the application form, C’s Nigerian passport copy and the refusal decision. That bundle was served upon C prior to his seeking legal advice.  Following lodgement of the detailed grounds of appeal,  no bundle at all was served upon  C or his  legal representatives in relation  to the second appeal.

 

The Immigration Judge

 

Then came the appeal proceedings. From that point, the Immigration Judge took over and the Home Office was no longer in charge:

 

The Judge therefore accepted that C was British and not liable to deportation.

 

Conclusion

 

In all this, what the Home office refused to acknowledge by commencing deportation proceedings, was that years ago, when C’s applied for his British passport, because of his change of name, he was required to attend at the passport office by way of personal visit; a further specific requirement was for him to submit the British passport application in the new name with appropriate witnessing and photograph. Only then was the passport issued in his new name.

 

 

There is a real and worrying possibility that the Judge could have refused to accept that C was British from birth and carefully cemented his reasons for saying so. The home office had unfairly allowed C’s past dishonesty offences to taint their approach to his case; the Judge could have similarly permitted this past to jaundice his view of the entire appeal to C’s detriment. He did not do so. Had the Immigration Judge decided to adopt the Home Office stance, all circumstances considered, this would have resulted in real injustice to C as a British citizen.

 

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