Tag Archives: rights of appeal for extended family members
The next time that the Upper Tribunal fixates on disturbing settled EEA law, perhaps they should consider taking a very long pause so as to avoid reaching decisions which potentially result in injustice.
A Judicial Awakening:Extended Family Members Should Never Have Been Allowed to Have Appeal Rights
Very recently, having regard to the case of Sala (EFMs: Right of Appeal) [2016] UKUT 00411 (IAC), the Upper Tribunal has apparently suddenly awakened to the conclusion that there is no statutory right of appeal against a decision of the Secretary of State not to grant a residence card to a person claiming to be an Extended Family Member. The Upper Tribunal’s judgment runs to 88 paragraphs but makes no easy nor enjoyable reading. It would have been hoped that for a decision very most likely to be read by potential applicants, most without legal knowledge nor familiarity with complex terminology, the Upper Tribunal could have sought to produce a much more simplified and non- meandering judgement. For meander they did, in order to justify their conclusions.
For a party that strongly sided with the Appellant on the issue of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction during proceedings in Sala, the Home Office have wasted no time in swiftly publishing amended guidance to reflect that judgement. The policy guidance, Extended family members of European Economic Area (EEA) nationals – v3.0 was published on 22 September 2016 to state that for relatives and durable partners, an application from an extended family member for residency documentation such as a residence card, upon refusal does not attract a right of appeal, as it is not an “EEA decision’ as defined in regulation 2 of the 2006 EEA regulations.