Conclusions
The FtT’s findings on (lack of) dependency
There are a number of grounds on which Mr M relies in support of his submission that the FtT’s conclusion that Ms T was not dependent on him was flawed.
I am not persuaded that, as he submits, the issue of dependence on him was not in issue in the FtT. He submits that the local authority “implicitly accepted” the fact of such dependence, but does not indicate the reason for that view. It appears that the local authority had been proceeding on the basis that Ms T could not any longer rely on dependency on her former daughter-in-law, Ms K, but at p15 Mr M himself puts forward the submission that she relied on her dependency on him, something which, as an alternative basis for the decision relying mostly on evidence to be provided by him and/or his mother, would be for him to establish. Further, I consider that the exchanges set out in the FtT’s record of proceedings (pp273-312) indicate that dependency on Mr M, along with other matters, was in issue.
Mr M submits that the FtT gave no consideration to the residence card issued by the Home Office. I disagree. The covering letter dated 26 July 2018 (p276) states that:
“You should be aware that your right of residence remains subject to the requirement that you are financially dependent on your son. Failure to adhere to the above criteria could result in your residence card being revoked.”
At paras 132-138 of the FtT’s Reasons, the FtT correctly directs itself that residence cards are declaratory, not constitutive; questions the extent of disclosure to the Home Office in view of the substantial amount of detail obtained by the FtT through oral questioning in its own proceedings; and notes that the residence document was on its face conditional on Ms T remaining dependent on Mr M, which the FtT concluded she was not.
Mr M also submits that the judge erred by failing to ask himself what the EU law test for dependency is and to apply it in the case. The EU law test is concerned with material support to meet essential needs. In C-1/05 Jia v Migrationsverket the Court of Justice observed:
“According to the case-law of the Court, the status of ‘dependent’ family member is the result of a factual situation characterised by the fact that material support for that family member is provided by the Community national who has exercised his right of free movement or by his spouse (see, in relation to Article 10 of Regulation No 1612/68 and Article 1 of Council Directive 90/364/EEC of 28 June 1990 on the right of residence (OJ 1990 L 180, p. 26), Lebon, paragraph 22, and Case C-200/02 Zhu and Chen [2004] ECR I-9925, paragraph 43, respectively).”
The FtT was entitled to make the findings of fact at paras 101-110 which concern matters of practical care and support and they were not such as to demonstrate dependency as understood in Jia.
At paras 111-120 the FtT rejected a submission based on financial dependency on the evidence it had before it and was entitled to do so..
I consider that even though the EU law authorities are not expressly referred to, this section of the FtT’s decision was consistent with them. Mr M evidently disagrees with the conclusions the FtT reached on the evidence, but that does not of itself mean there was an error of law. Errors of fact will only give rise to an error of law in circumstances such as those set out in E and R (above). I agree with Mr Cullimore that the high bar set by that decision is not reached.
With regard to the ground that the judge of the FtT ought not to have conducted his own enquiries or, if he did, ought to have put them to the parties, it appears that at pp289-290, he did put Ms T’s PIP claim to the parties. As regards Mr M’s limited company, it was raised by Mr M in his submission to the FtT (p.16) in the following terms:
“The applicant son along with being a full-time student is also operating a company registration […] being a director of a functioning limited company.”
It does appear that the judge looked independently at the Companies House records on the basis that such records are “in the public domain”, discovering that the company’s registered office had been relocated (see Reasons, paras 44, 46 and 61) and that Mr M had applied for it to be struck off the register, leading to its dissolution in March 2020 (para.64). I can find no discussion of the judge’s research in the record of proceedings. Such an absence of discussion would have been ill-advised and, if what the research had unearthed had played a material part in the decision, highly liable to constitute an error of law. However, for the reasons below I do not consider that it did play such a part.
At para 107, the judge, as part of considering how likely it was that Ms T was dependent on Mr M by reasons of care delivered, referred as one of six factors to how busy Mr M was, as in addition to numerous other activities, he was running his own company. That is no more than what Mr M himself had said in his written submission; it does not draw on any additional research the judge may have undertaken. At para 113, in the context of examining whether there may have been financial dependency, the FtT noted Mr M’s “own very substantial commitments”, reasoning that “there would have [been] costs involved in setting up and running his company.” That is not using information derived from research at Companies House; it is merely a matter of general experience of which the judge was entitled to take judicial notice. At para 117, the judge comments on the “reference to his being a company director, not mentioned anywhere other than the appeal” as part of an overall evaluation of the reliability of Mr M’s evidence. Again, that was not relying on anything the judge had found out for himself.
For these reasons I have concluded that the research it appeared the judge carried out and did not put to the parties did not materially affect the decision and therefore did not constitute an error of law.
Disputes with the FtT’s conclusions of fact will not, without more, amount to errors of law. Mr M challenges the FtT’s finding that he claimed remission of the court fees on the ground that he had “been unemployed since Dec 15, relocating back to Pakistan.” Mr M says that, as respondent in the divorce proceedings, he would not have had to pay court fees anyway. That is to miss the point. The context was a court form which asked not about court fees, but about whether he objected to paying the costs of the proceedings (not the same thing). The FtT inaccurately recorded that context by stating that it was about fees, but that mistake does not detract from the fact that that was what Mr M had said about his financial situation, in a formal context, at that time.
The findings that Ms T went to Pakistan were open to the FtT on the evidence before it (see e.g. pp 294-5). It would have been open to Mr M at the FtT hearing to have asked further questions of her to have obtained context for her answers. The finding about property in Pakistan was open to the FtT on the evidence (p.305). Grounds 5 l, m and n (p.359) are an attempt to give further or better evidence than was given in the FtT proceedings and do not give rise to an error of law, whether by reference to E and R or otherwise.
Finally, Mr M has sought to rely on the fact that the Secretary of State for the Home Department is said subsequently to have conceded in tribunal proceedings and issued Ms T with a permanent residence card (p.29). However, whether the FtT erred in law depends on what it did with the material it had and thus that fact cannot be taken into account as it was not in evidence before the FtT (not having happened).
C.G.Ward
Judge of the Upper Tribunal Authorised for issue on 28 June 2023
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