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Yes EEA appeals cost money too.sum1 wrote:Thanks but do EEA appeals cost money too?
I have made the same suggestion to the applicant but the complication in this case is, I think, that the EEA spouse is also British which may carry additional risks. A possible variant of that approach is that the couple present themselves to UK immigration at the border in hope that UKBA border staff there hold a different view (and obtain a Code 1A stamp which would be benefical to that case).
'You can't enjoy from the transitional arrangements if you didn't live in the UK in July.'Jambo wrote:I don't think you have a valid argument here. You can't enjoy from the transitional arrangements if you didn't live in the UK in July.
To me it sounds like - I have the right to win the lottery even without buying a ticket.
What that really all the refusal letter said? Copies of the passports should have been fine."You have applied for an EEA permit as the family member of an EEA national. In view of your failure to provide satisfactory evidence that you are married as claimed, nor any sufficient evidence to satisfy me that your spouse is an EEA national as indicated, I am not satisfied that you are the family member of an EEA national in accordance with Regulation 7 of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006"
You are confusing the matter. This is not relevant to this OP. Either they are Irish in which case they can move to the UK on that basis. Or they are British and have been working in Ireland and can move to the UK on the basis of the Singh ruling.el patron wrote:Useful to read the Explanatory Memorandum to the Ammended EEA regs,
it refers to 'already placed reasonable reliance on the pre McCarthy position'. I would have thought something as simple as putting a deposit down on a flat or handing in notice to an employer could be reasonable reliance? Nothing here to confirm that residence must already be established on 16th July 2012.
From the Memorandum -
7.7 Paragraph 1(d) of Schedule 1 gives effect to the ECJ judgment in McCarthy. This
determined that a person who holds the nationality of the host Member State and has
never exercised their right of free movement and residence does not benefit from the
terms of the Free Movement Directive. Transitional provisions have also been made
by way of paragraph 2 of schedule 3 of the amending Regulations to provide
continuation of rights for those who have already placed reasonable reliance on the
pre-McCarthy position which enabled British citizens to fall within the definition of
EEA national for the purposes of the Regulations where they held another EEA
nationality.
Obviously there was not more information in the letter.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:What that really all the refusal letter said? Copies of the passports should have been fine."You have applied for an EEA permit as the family member of an EEA national. In view of your failure to provide satisfactory evidence that you are married as claimed, nor any sufficient evidence to satisfy me that your spouse is an EEA national as indicated, I am not satisfied that you are the family member of an EEA national in accordance with Regulation 7 of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006"
I do not know.Why did they submit 2 EU passports?
Obviously? OK. I will take your word for it.sum1 wrote:Obviously there was not more information in the letter
Hard to tell what UKBA will do. The law says http://eumovement.wordpress.com/2012/07 ... y-british/sum1 wrote:Well, I believe I have answered this question already. It is still yes. But I think that's irrelevant to my question: Would the UKBA insist on treating the EEA citizen as a UK citizen for whatever reason or would they also accept the Irish citizenship?