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Where? Is this not you first post?gbodunjo wrote:As I have previously posted
andSubject to paragraph (4), a residence permit issued under the 2000 Regulations shall, after 29th April 2006, be treated as if it were a registration certificate issued under these Regulations.
Where a residence permit issued under the 2000 Regulations has been endorsed under the immigration rules to show permission to remain in the United Kingdom indefinitely it shall, after 29th April 2006, be treated as if it were a document certifying permanent residence issued under these Regulations and the holder of the permit shall be treated as a person with a permanent right of residence under regulation 15.
In practical terms I would:Ex
14.
(2) A family member of a qualified person residing in the United Kingdom under paragraph (1) or of an EEA national with a permanent right of residence under regulation 15 is entitled to reside in the United Kingdom for so long as he remains the family member of the qualified person or EEA national.
EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:See schedule 4 of The Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006
For clarity - a residence permit would now be a residence certificate and a residence permit endorsed to show permission to remain in the United Kingdom indefinitely would be a document certifying permanent residence.
andSubject to paragraph (4), a residence permit issued under the 2000 Regulations shall, after 29th April 2006, be treated as if it were a registration certificate issued under these Regulations.
Where a residence permit issued under the 2000 Regulations has been endorsed under the immigration rules to show permission to remain in the United Kingdom indefinitely it shall, after 29th April 2006, be treated as if it were a document certifying permanent residence issued under these Regulations and the holder of the permit shall be treated as a person with a permanent right of residence under regulation 15.
Thanks Kitty, I shall be following your advice 100%Kitty wrote:Also refer to paragraph 14 of the 2006 regulations to show that you have been residing "in accordance with the regulations":
In practical terms I would:Ex
14.
(2) A family member of a qualified person residing in the United Kingdom under paragraph (1) or of an EEA national with a permanent right of residence under regulation 15 is entitled to reside in the United Kingdom for so long as he remains the family member of the qualified person or EEA national.
(a) protect your position by appealing in time and send with the appeal a copy of the UKBA covering letter that accompanied your passport when you requested its return
(b) write to the UKBA using the address on the refusal letter and any reference, setting out your case and confirming that you have appealed: they may turn things around for you before a hearing is required. You could also consider making a complaint about the service you have received, which sometimes also results in the correct papers being issued.
Thanks Obie.Obie wrote:The difficulty is there is no immigration or EEA decision, as there is no lawful notice of decision. A lawful notice of decision will give you a right of appeal.
Therefore it is difficult how the tribunal can accept an appeal without a lawful notice of decision.
The deputy president confirmed this in the decision below.
http://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/markup.cg ... od=boolean
I kind of think that this may be a JR case.
There is no EEA decision, and no right of appeal ( Which incidentally exist) under Regulation 26 of the EEA regulation.
Hi again Obie,Obie wrote:The difficulty is there is no immigration or EEA decision, as there is no lawful notice of decision. A lawful notice of decision will give you a right of appeal.
Therefore it is difficult how the tribunal can accept an appeal without a lawful notice of decision.
The deputy president confirmed this in the decision below.
http://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/markup.cg ... od=boolean
I kind of think that this may be a JR case.
There is no EEA decision, and no right of appeal ( Which incidentally exist) under Regulation 26 of the EEA regulation.
Just to add to Kitty's post and in paricular the complaint. You could consider complaining and reapplying.Kitty wrote:
In practical terms I would:
(a) protect your position by appealing in time and send with the appeal a copy of the UKBA covering letter that accompanied your passport when you requested its return
(b) write to the UKBA using the address on the refusal letter and any reference, setting out your case and confirming that you have appealed: they may turn things around for you before a hearing is required. You could also consider making a complaint about the service you have received, which sometimes also results in the correct papers being issued.
Yes you can appeal; reapply and complain at the same time. See post with link as to how to ask for priority above.IyaCiara wrote:Just thought of a couple of more questions if anyone can help :)
My husband would like to submit another application at the same time as appealing. Is it possible to re-apply and appeal at the same time?
If we can re-apply, would we need to submit all documents previously submitted?
Finally, I know that the Immigration Tribunal asked that only photocopied documents be sent to them. However, will we be expected to produce original documents on the day of the hearing? Just asking because if we submit a new EEA4 application for my husband, then we will need to send the original documents with it.
Thanks.
I do not see that anyone has disputed the authenticity of any of the documents. So it is unlikely that the issue will come up at the appeal.IyaCiara wrote:Finally, I know that the Immigration Tribunal asked that only photocopied documents be sent to them. However, will we be expected to produce original documents on the day of the hearing? Just asking because if we submit a new EEA4 application for my husband, then we will need to send the original documents with it.
EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Yes you can appeal; reapply and complain at the same time. See post with link as to how to ask for priority above.IyaCiara wrote:Just thought of a couple of more questions if anyone can help
My husband would like to submit another application at the same time as appealing. Is it possible to re-apply and appeal at the same time?
If we can re-apply, would we need to submit all documents previously submitted?
Finally, I know that the Immigration Tribunal asked that only photocopied documents be sent to them. However, will we be expected to produce original documents on the day of the hearing? Just asking because if we submit a new EEA4 application for my husband, then we will need to send the original documents with it.
Thanks.
It will be expected that you provide evidence that your husband qualifies.