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Hi , thanks for answer ,is this because of Mr. Lounes case ? or anything else ? when you said `still awaiting changes to the regulation` did you mean that the Law need to be changed in her favour ?
hi thank you for answer. His case is just about direvative right to stay in Country (Am I right?) but what about Permanent Residence Card ? Do my wife are eligible or not ? I always been working in UK , so exercising treaty rights and she lived with me for 5 consecutive years (since 26 December 2012) , so she must apply for a Permanent residence card or there is something I don`t know which could stop her from doing that ?AdInfernos wrote: ↑Mon Nov 27, 2017 11:12 amIn my opinion, and I should say I'm not an expert, she should submit her application in December and include a cover letter explaining how the decision in Lounes would apparently cover her situation.
Otherwise, if she gets a refusal, the case should have to be taken to the courts for them to decide is the law in the Lounes case is applicable to your wife.
The key points are:In view of all the foregoing, the answer to the question is that Directive 2004/38 must be interpreted as meaning that, in a situation in which a Union citizen (i) has exercised his freedom of movement by moving to and residing in a Member State other than that of which he is a national, under Article 7(1) or Article 16(1) of that directive, (ii) has then acquired the nationality of that Member State, while also retaining his nationality of origin, and (iii) several years later, has married a third-country national with whom he continues to reside in that Member State, that third-country national does not have a derived right of residence in the Member State in question on the basis of Directive 2004/38. The third-country national is however eligible for a derived right of residence under Article 21(1) TFEU, on conditions which must not be stricter than those provided for by Directive 2004/38 for the grant of such a right to a third-country national who is a family member of a Union citizen who has exercised his right of freedom of movement by settling in a Member State other than the Member State of which he is a national.
Your're welcome. Yes, I think the law was changed so that EU nationals who become British citizens cannot acquire rights under EU law. But the decision of the ECJ says that whereas the EU national cannot in fact rely in EU law for their own benefit, family members can. That seems to be your case.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2017 11:37 pmThanks `AdInfernos` ! This is exactly what I want to know ! if it is as you saying and my non EU wife will receive PR on the basis of that case then it would be great , but apart from that : do somebody know if she is ok to apply for PR in the normal way ? (I mean she`s lived 5 years in here with me start from 26 of December 2012 until 26.12.2017) .
I read somewhere on here that Home Office modified the Law for Dual Citizens in 2012 so do this mean she is not eligible for Permanent residence anymore now ? If somebody able to answer me exactly please ? Do this mean she can`t stay in Uk anymore after her Visa finishes in April ? Somebody could give any advice us please ? We dont know what to do now ...
Firstly I must Thank you again for spending your time to explain these things about the Court decision from the Mr Looney`s case to me (and many Dual UK Citizens who are in the same situation), that is a Great Help from your side and may help many many people when they read this !AdInfernos wrote: ↑Thu Nov 30, 2017 12:06 amYour're welcome. Yes, I think the law was changed so that EU nationals who become British citizens cannot acquire rights under EU law. But the decision of the ECJ says that whereas the EU national cannot in fact rely in EU law for their own benefit, family members can. That seems to be your case.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2017 11:37 pmThanks `AdInfernos` ! This is exactly what I want to know ! if it is as you saying and my non EU wife will receive PR on the basis of that case then it would be great , but apart from that : do somebody know if she is ok to apply for PR in the normal way ? (I mean she`s lived 5 years in here with me start from 26 of December 2012 until 26.12.2017) .
I read somewhere on here that Home Office modified the Law for Dual Citizens in 2012 so do this mean she is not eligible for Permanent residence anymore now ? If somebody able to answer me exactly please ? Do this mean she can`t stay in Uk anymore after her Visa finishes in April ? Somebody could give any advice us please ? We dont know what to do now ...
There is a practical problem here, until the UK changes the relevant secondary legislation, the Home Office may decide to apply the law as they have been doing so far.
Your options are waiting until the UK legislation is changed to reflect the decision of the ECJ, something that may not even happen if we take into account that the UK is exiting the EU, OR, apply now and include a cover letter explaining the decision (and possibly a copy of it that you can print from http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/ ... 65&from=EN ). If refused, then appeal on the grounds set by the Court decision on 14 November 2017.
I am just a law graduate, not a solicitor, but my opinion is that you have a case here. If you apply and are refused, you should discuss the appeal with a solicitor or at least seek assistance in the appeal from a charity specialised in immigration. A couple of them come to my mind, but I don't think I'm authorised to give details here.
The McCarthy case was not about an EU citizen who became a British citizen. It was about British citizens who happened to have another EU citizenship, from birth in this case. It could very reasonably be extended to people who had been living in the UK as British citizens and then acquired another EU citizenship, as is possible with Irish citizenship for many people in the UK. A common trick at the time was for British citizens who were entitled to Irish citizenship to take up Irish citizenship, and then bring a foreign spouse in under the EEA rules.AdInfernos wrote: ↑Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:37 pmI 2012 the UK implemented into its domestic legislation the ECJ decision in McCarthy C-434/09. This was basically that EU citizens who become British citizens cannot rely anymore on EU law, including the right to bring family members to the UK. That is how the law stands currently in the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016.
Firstly THANK YOU VERY MUCH for your explanation and your time you spend to write all that ! I greatly appreciate and respect your attainment and know that your answer will be useful for many many Dual citizens who are EU citizens as well as British and browsing through internet to find any info regarding their non EU Spouses (like in my case) .AdInfernos wrote: ↑Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:37 pmI think that your question has already been answered, but here we go in a different way:
I 2012 the UK implemented into its domestic legislation the ECJ decision in McCarthy C-434/09. This was basically that EU citizens who become British citizens cannot rely anymore on EU law, including the right to bring family members to the UK. That is how the law stands currently in the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016.
However, the ECJ decision on Lounes C-165/16 changes that. Now family members of an EU citizen who becomes British keep their rights under EU law. The decision is clear in that aspect and is binding for UK courts and tribunals. Even before the government changes the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016, you can rely on it because decisions of the ECJ are binding law for the UK.
The problem here is that the caseworker of the Home Office is not a lawyer, and unless some guidance has been made to the effect that this latest ECJ decision is implemented, normally a caseworker will apply UK law, that is, the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2016, and then refuse the application.
Will a cover letter explaining the law change the above? I don't know. Probably not as it is likely that unless specific guidance is issued, the caseworker will apply the existing UK secondary legislation.
So, what can you do? Well, if you apply and the application is refused, you have a right of appeal. And here is where the tribunal will be bound to apply Lounes C-165/16 and overturn the Home Office decision.
Why have the ECJ decided differently in Lounes C-165/16? Because in Lounes, the British citizen is also an EU citizen who has already exercised treaty rights by moving to another EU country (the UK) and keeps her original EU citizenship as well as the new British. In McCarthy, a UK citizen applied for an Irish passport and also become a dual citizen. However, he had never exercised treaty rights in another EU country as a British citizen, hence the court thought that he could not rely on EU law as he had never exercised rights under EU law.
Hopefully you will understand it this way .
my Dual citizenship . my questions are not about timings but about ECJ decision, which gave right to Dual citizens non EU Spouses to use EU route for applying for Permanent residence documentation.
I think it makes no difference if she apply now or in 3 or 4 month.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Thu Jan 11, 2018 12:25 ammy Dual citizenship . my questions are not about timings but about ECJ decision, which gave right to Dual citizens non EU Spouses to use EU route for applying for Permanent residence documentation.
Thanks for Advice , any advice are useful now , She wanted to wait and apply as late as possible in a hope that `Lounes case will be implemented in the UK law so the Home office worker will be aware about all that changes and not just reject my wifes PR application simply because she/he will open the wrong page in the Law book and see the old/current interpretation of 2012 `restrictions policy` for Dual citizens .mgb wrote: ↑Thu Jan 11, 2018 12:37 pmI think it makes no difference if she apply now or in 3 or 4 month.chaoscontrol wrote: ↑Thu Jan 11, 2018 12:25 ammy Dual citizenship . my questions are not about timings but about ECJ decision, which gave right to Dual citizens non EU Spouses to use EU route for applying for Permanent residence documentation.
If a caseworker want to refuse the application he simply will do it.
Enclose a printout of the Lounes judgement and refer to it in the cover letter.