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Was the FLR(O) application made before your wife's Tier 4 visa expired or after it expired (even if it was the day after)?zidane wrote:Initially WE applied for FLR O visa when my tier 4 and her tier 4 dependent was expiring which got refused on the 13th of July 2016.
I am fairly certain that that is not the case here. My interpretation of the OP's situation is slightly different.physicskate wrote:The period of 28 days was reduced to 14 days recently. This is applied retrospectively..
secret.simon wrote:Was this application made before your wife's Tier 4 visa expired or after it expired (even if it was the day after)? This was an in time application applied posted on the last day of visa expiry on the 11th of Aprilzidane wrote:Initially WE applied for FLR O visa when my tier 4 and her tier 4 dependent was expiring which got refused on the 13th of July 2016.
I am fairly certain that that is not the case here. My interpretation of the OP's situation is slightly different.physicskate wrote:The period of 28 days was reduced to 14 days recently. This is applied retrospectively..
As far as I am aware this has always been 28 days, the 14 days is the appeal period given but the overstay was never changed, as per my knowledge . Thanksphysicskate wrote:The period of 28 days was reduced to 14 days recently. This is applied retrospectively.
The entire case hinges on this; was this FLR(O) application intime or out of time?zidane wrote:Was this application made before your wife's Tier 4 visa expired or after it expired (even if it was the day after)? This was an in time application applied posted on the last day of visa expiry on the 11th of April
Thank you simon. I agree , I have a refusal letter on the 13th of July stating that the application made was on 11th of April IN TIME ...going further on explaining the reason for the FLR O refusal.secret.simon wrote:The entire case hinges on this; was this FLR(O) application intime or out of time?zidane wrote:Was this application made before your wife's Tier 4 visa expired or after it expired (even if it was the day after)? This was an in time application applied posted on the last day of visa expiry on the 11th of April
If the FLR(O) was intime, Section 3C would kick in and your wife would have had valid leave till 13th July (refusal of FLR(O)). She could then apply for FLR(FP) within 28 days of that leave period expiring.
If the FLR(O) was out of time (such as if you posted it so late that the postman would only collect the post the next day and would get stamped as of that date), then Section 3C would not kick in and your wife would have been an overstayer since 11th April (date of expiry of Tier 4 dependent visa), as she has not subsequently had a successful grant of leave.
Remember that submitting an application does not grant you an extension of leave unless it is intime and even then, only allows for one failed application. During the 28 days of grace, the applicant is still an overstayer, though an overstay of less than 28 days is ignored.
I suggest doing an SAR on the Home Office to find out what they have on record as the date of application of your wife's FLR(O) application. I believe that the entire case hinges on that.
I don't think 39E is applicable, as it appears you varied an application which was made before the 24-11-2016. The Home Office may seek to argue that the FLR(M) is not a variation under Section 3C5 and hence they are considering your 5th December variation as the day of the FLR(M) application, rather than the 5th December.zidane wrote:E-LTRP.2.2.
The applicant must not be in the UK:
on temporary admission or temporary release, unless the applicant has been so for a
continuous period of more than 6 months at the date of application and EX.1. applies;
or
in breach of immigration laws (disregarding any period of overstaying for a period of 28
days or less), unless paragraph EX.1. applies.
How can the application be refused and there be the 28 days grace mentioned in the E-LTRP 2.2 . do you guys rekon I use this point in the appeal process .?
Thank you dear. Any advise on how I should approach this and what is the best way to go about this . I have the appeal right , what grounds Can I raise . From your experience ,what likelyhood we have in winning the appeal.Obie wrote:I don't think 39E is applicable, as it appears you varied an application which was made before the 24-11-2016. The Home Office may seek to argue that the FLR(M) is not a variation under Section 3C5 and hence they are considering your 5th December variation as the day of the FLR(M) application, rather than the 5th December.zidane wrote:E-LTRP.2.2.
The applicant must not be in the UK:
on temporary admission or temporary release, unless the applicant has been so for a
continuous period of more than 6 months at the date of application and EX.1. applies;
or
in breach of immigration laws (disregarding any period of overstaying for a period of 28
days or less), unless paragraph EX.1. applies.
How can the application be refused and there be the 28 days grace mentioned in the E-LTRP 2.2 . do you guys rekon I use this point in the appeal process .?
Are you sure that it was the FLR(M) application that was refused rather than the FLR(FP) application? Check the refusal letter.zidane wrote: I had a very strange refusal come in just today for my wife's FLR (M) application . .
It wasn't rettrospective, the revised rule came into force on 24 November 2016physicskate wrote: The period of 28 days was reduced to 14 days recently. This is applied retrospectively.
Are you sure that it was the FLR(M) application that was refused rather than the FLR(FP) application? Check the refusal letter.manci wrote:zidane wrote: I had a very strange refusal come in just today for my wife's FLR (M) application . .
thanks obie, i was wondering that too.. I guess then later after wining hopefully, ill ask them to refund for flr fp's ihs and application too. but that's for later . I need to win this first.Obie wrote:They return NHS surcharge after refusal , but if appeal is won, you will need to repay it
Thank you simon .. I Hope so . but don't you think if the FLR M was a variation of an already out of time FLR FP they should have invalidated the FLR M there and then rather than considering it and then going on to refuse it after 7 weeks .secret.simon wrote:If you can prove that the FLR(O) application was intime (which you mentioned is acknowledged in the FLR(O) rejection letter) and the FLR(FP) application was made within 28 days of the FLR(O) rejection (you may have to check if that is mentioned on the rejection FLR(M) rejection letter), then I believe that you have very good grounds for appeal.
But also the next sentence of your quotation is "You will need to consider this when deciding if the applicant benefits from section 3C leave. "zidane wrote:"The application date remains the date of the original application and not the date of the
variation" From page 57 specified application forms and procedures gov.uk
Yes the application made on 28th day of overstaying. up to 28 days overstaying will be disgraced if the subsequent application is successful.zidane wrote:
But the applications has always been made in time and within 28 days period. arguably the period should count as legal taking into account the rules before 24th November (14 day rule)
ABC 499 thanks for the reply,Abc499 wrote:Yes the application made on 28th day of overstaying. up to 28 days overstaying will be disgraced if the subsequent application is successful.zidane wrote:
But the applications has always been made in time and within 28 days period. arguably the period should count as legal taking into account the rules before 24th November (14 day rule)
I hope I am wrong, reading the guideline my understanding is original date of the application will be considered (when vary an application) only if the applicant covered by Section 3C. Probably Obie mention something similar to this (I do not know the law, so failed to understand the meaning on section 3C5).
My understanding on the 28 days rules is when I am filling the application (vary/new) on that point I am not overstayed by more than 28 days (without any kind of additional action required). So when you vary/applied for FLR (M) on that point you are overstaying since 13th July 2016. Even if you apply within 28 days still the over-stayer clock will continue to run and will validate the period from the application date only when the application is successful but it will not help towards catching another train because the journey already conditional and need to be successful itself to validate the leave from application date.
I believe seniors will be able to clarify this, will wait to see.
The latter part of the quote is irrelevant because Section 3C leave does not apply to applications made out of time, which the FLR(FP) was.Abc499 wrote:The application date remains the date of the original application and not the date of the variation. You will need to consider this when deciding if the applicant benefits from section 3C leave.