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Article 8 Private life claims: Positive value contribution to community must be very significant for a claim to succeed

Several issues arose in Thakrar (Cart JR, Art 8, Value to Community) [2018] UKUT 336 (IAC) (19 September 2018), one of them being whether the Claimant’s UK resident family as “ clear and overwhelming net contributors to the UK economy”, should be a relevant factor to be taken into account and carry weight in the Claimant’s Article 8 claim.

 

The peculiarity relating to the core part of this case lay not in any fact that the Claimant herself had contributed in any way to the UK community but simply that the circumstances were that her British son’s business employed 40 persons with a turnover of around £950,000. The argument advanced on her behalf was that the public interest in her removal was diminished as there was no reason in principle why the contribution made by the family to society and to the economy should not be factored into the balancing exercise in terms of proportionality since it constituted a very distinct value to the community.

 

Contribution to the community may have some relevance if it forms part of the private life forged by a claimant whilst here. The contribution may throw light on the private life of a claimant, ie the value of the claimant’s various activities to the community in the UK. The main element in the public interest will normally consist of the need to maintain a firm policy of immigration control. On one side of the balance is the legitimate aim in pursuit of which removal is to be effected. On the other side of the balance, weighing against removal, is the individual’s right to respect for private life. The issue therefore, where someone is of great value to the community in the UK, is the strength of the public interest in his removal and whether the contribution is a  factor which reduces the importance of maintaining firm immigration control in his  individual case. Is the loss of such public benefit capable of being a relevant consideration when assessing the public interest side of proportionality under Article 8?

 

Taking cue from the caselaw considered by the Administrative Court in Thakrar, the following examples were noted as having been raised in relation to claimants who had sought to advance claims based on their contribution to the community:

 

 

Summary Background

 

The Claimant, a citizen of Kenya born in July 1948 and a widow, last entered the UK in July 2008 on a family visit. She had her son in the UK who she lived with every other week: he had no partner or child. She also had her daughter living in the UK, whom she spent most of the week living with. Her daughter had two children, aged 12 and 16. On the week she spent with the daughter she helped her by assisting with the children and cooking including fetching the children from school when she could. All the Claimant’s relatives were British citizens or settled in the UK.

 

Following her arrival in the UK, she overstayed her leave to remain however following other failed claims, she subsequently submitted a leave to remain application which was refused in a decision dated 5 April 2016. Upon appeal, the First Tribunal dismissed her human rights claim. Her applications for permission to appeal were refused by both tiers of the Tribunal. The Claimant then sought a judicial review of the Upper Tribunal ‘s refusal of permission to appeal.

 

The Administrative Court granted her permission to appeal and proceeded to hear her claim. The Claimant’s “Cart” judicial review involved determining whether the Upper Tribunal arguably erred in law in rejecting the grounds which accompanied the application for permission to appeal to it against the First-tier Tribunal’s decision and, if so, whether the second appeal criteria was met.

 

Other grounds upon which the challenge failed:

 

The following arguments were raised before the Administrative Court however failed to lift off the ground:

 

 

Focus on the value to the community arguments- The significance of the family’s financial means:

 

The main argument advanced on the Claimant’s behalf was that in striking the proportionality balance under Article 8(2), the First-tier Tribunal Judge should have had regard to the fact that the Claimant’s son was running a substantial business, employing 40 people, with a turnover of £950,000 a year, and was, as such, an overwhelming net contributor to the UK economy.

 

Having considered several caselaw, the Administrative Court concluded as follows:

 

 

Conclusion

 

The door is clearly open to argue on appeal the value a person makes to the community in an Article 8 private life claim, however the  judgment is littered with words of caution to Tribunal Judges to exercise judicial restraint.

 

Arguments as regards a claimant’s contributions are most relevant when arguing the exceptional circumstances aspect of a case. Effective letters of support need to be provided attesting to the claimant’s value to the community. Such letters should indicate not only the claimant’s value to the community, but also refer to how difficult it would be to replace him.

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