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Suggest start here with HO guidance - it will help you get in the mind of a caseworker assessing the case:tebee wrote:We are thinking of using Surinder Singh to return to the UK soon, when my stepson finishes university. Both he and my wife current have 5 year article 10 RCs from France and I've lived here for over 10 years so center of life should not be a problem.
I'm wondering what evidence we will need to show to prove my stepson as a dependant relative? He's 24 now, but for the last 6 years has been at university, though I've only been married to his mother for 4 of those years.
...
He will probably start working in UK before going into further training so after we get there will no longer be a dependant - or would he be better getting a non-paying intern job until his rc is sorted out?
9 wrote:(4) Where these Regulations apply to the family member of P, P is to be treated as holding a valid passport issued by an EEA State for the purpose of the application of regulation 13 to that family member.
23.However, this case is concerned not with a right under national law but with the rights of movement and establishment granted to a Community national by Articles 48 and 52 of the Treaty. These rights cannot be fully effective if such a person may be deterred from exercising them by obstacles raised in his or her country of origin to the entry and residence of his or her spouse. Accordingly, when a Community national who has availed himself or herself of those rights returns to his or her country of origin, his or her spouse must enjoy at least the same rights of entry and residence as would be granted to him or her under Community law if his or her spouse chose to enter and reside in another Member State. Nevertheless, Articles 48 and 52 of the Treaty do not prevent Member States from applying to foreign spouses of their own nationals rules on entry and residence more favourable than those provided for by Community law.
No, my understanding is that UK-issued RCs are not Article 10 cards.tebee wrote:We are planning on returning to the UK using Surinder Singh - My family already have Article 10 cards.
Am I right in thinking the UK RCs they get will also be Article 10 ones - rather than UK immigration's own cards even though I am British?
Is significant to us as we have French property we intend to retain.
But Section 9 of the EEA Regulations 2006 states;The right of residence of family members of a Union citizen who are not nationals of a Member State shall be evidenced by the issuing of a document called "Residence card of a family member of a Union citizen" no later than six months from the date on which they submit the application.
That suggests that a British citizen returning under Surinder Singh is treated fully as a non-British EEA citizen for the purposes of the application of the Residence Cards for his family members and therefore they should be issued Article 10 Residence Cards.9.—(1) If the conditions in paragraph (2) are satisfied, these Regulations apply to a person who is the family member of a British citizen as if the British citizen (“P”) were an EEA national.
(2) The conditions are that–
(a) P is residing in an EEA State as a worker or self-employed person or was so residing before returning to the United Kingdom;
(b) if the family member of P is P’s spouse or civil partner, the parties are living together in the EEA State or had entered into the marriage or civil partnership and were living together in the EEA State before the British citizen returned to the United Kingdom; and
(c) the centre of P’s life has transferred to the EEA State where P resided as a worker or self-employed person.
(3) Factors relevant to whether the centre of P’s life has transferred to another EEA State include–
(a) the period of residence in the EEA State as a worker or self-employed person;
(b) the location of P’s principal residence;
(c) the degree of integration of P in the EEA State.
(4) Where these Regulations apply to the family member of P, P is to be treated as holding a valid passport issued by an EEA State for the purposes of the application of regulation 13 to that family member
I was going by an understanding based on this:noajthan wrote:...No, my understanding is that UK-issued RCs are not Article 10 cards.
Very happy to be corrected - in the usual ImmigrationBoards way.
https://blogs.kent.ac.uk/eu-rights-clin ... pril-2015/However, note that residence permits issued under national immigration law to the family members of EU citizens living in their country of nationality will not benefit from this exemption. Such family members will still be required to obtain a visa to travel to the UK even when accompanying or joining their EU relative in the UK.
(my emphasis on 'should')That suggests that a British citizen returning under Surinder Singh is treated fully as a non-British EEA citizen for the purposes of the application of the Residence Cards for his family members and therefore they should be issued Article 10 Residence Cards.
Non-EEA national family members of British citizens (Surinder Singh cases) wrote:...
If the conditions above are met, the family member of the British citizen will be treated as the family member of an EEA national for the purposes of the regulations.