Case No. UKUT-00155-(IAC)
Upper Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber

Case No. UKUT-00155-(IAC)

Fecha: 08-Mar-2022

DECISION AND REASONS

1. The appellant is a national of Pakistan. She appealed to the First-tier Tribunal against the respondent’s decision of 4 February 2020 refusing her leave to enter the United Kingdom on the basis of family life with her husband, Muzaffar Hussain, who is a UK citizen.2. The judge allowed the appeal, but subsequently the Secretary of State sought and was granted permission to appeal the decision and following a hearing on 14 January 2022 Upper Tribunal Judge Allen found an error of law in the judge’s failure to address a point of law which arose in the course of the hearing.3. Specifically, this point arises in connection with the judge’s conclusion at paragraph 44 of his decision that it was not for him to decide if Mr Hussain, the sponsor’s employers were in breach of UK employment legislation and income tax laws.4. The detail of the judge’s decision is set out in the earlier error of law decision. In summary, he found it to be credible that Mr Hussain had worked for a company called Chicago Pizza from 2017 to 2020, at which time, on 6 March, he was put on furlough due to the pandemic. In essence, it appeared that unknown to Mr Hussain, prior to the original application for entry clearance being submitted his employer had apparently removed him from the payroll for the purposes of paying national insurance contributions and income tax in March 2019, without his notice. The respondent had alleged that the employment had been contrived and produced a Document Verification Report deeming that the payslips provided were false.5. As we have noted above, however, the judge accepted the credibility of Mr Hussain, accepting that on the evidence taken as a whole he had shown that his bank statements and wage slips attracted sufficient evidential weight to satisfy the judge that on the balance of probabilities they were genuine.6. In the grounds of appeal the Secretary of State drew attention to paragraph 1(d) of Appendix FM-SE, which requires that all income and savings must be lawfully derived.7. Mr Avery observed that this was the issue for determination before the Tribunal today. He argued that clearly although the judge had found the sponsor to be credible with regard to his income it was apparent that there was no record of his employment after a certain date and tax and national insurance had not been paid to the Revenue. It was argued that that meant it could not be said his income was lawfully derived as it was not in accordance with the United Kingdom employment laws. The normal English meaning should be applied and it was difficult to see how it could be interpreted in any other way. It was hard to see how the income could be said to be lawfully derived. There were good reasons for this as the requirements of the Rules were quite prescriptive and designed to make decision-making consistent.8. With regard to the argument that the sponsor, who had been found to be credible, was in effect on the basis of this argument being tainted by his employers’ “fraud”, Mr Avery argued that it made the assessment of the evidence much more straightforward. The Tribunal had the judge’s positive findings but it was a question of the operation of the overall system, so when one assessed the evidence one had a consistent picture of what was happening and if there were inconsistencies between what the appellant’s evidence was and the position for the HMRC it was much more complicated and less reliable. It was not desirable for the Secretary of State to be seen to endorse a process where employment was not lawful. It was the case that there were positive credibility findings but the Tribunal was left with the interpretation of what the Rule actually said and it was clear.9. In his submissions Mr Hussain argued that the fact that the tax and national insurance were not paid over to the Revenue was not his responsibility. He had been given payslips. He would have not been making payments to his family member of £300 a week if he had not been working in that employment. The deductions for tax and national insurance were written on the payslips and it was a question whether they were written there or not. The payslips showed that tax and national insurance were deducted. His issue was the fact of having done the work there.10. We reserved our decision.