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So, if I was an Immigration Officer who encountered this man, say, at his place of work, under what Paragraph of the 1971 Act (as amended) would I be able to arrest and serve papers on him? Is he an illegal entrant? Not unless I could prove that he never intended to stay with his first wife, and the onus of proof is on me. Is he an overstayer? Nah, he's got current leave.VictoriaS wrote:Unfotunately, once the decree absolute was issued, he should have left the UK.
Victoria
There is a requirement to notify the home office of any changes in circumstances that may affect the visa status.Mr Rusty wrote:There is no breach of the law. Arguably he has contravened the spirit of the law by remaining, and this may well, in fact should, focus attention on the bona fides of a second application, but it doesn't stop him applying - for FLR, not ILR
I'd be grateful to see where it actually says thatpaulp wrote:There is a requirement to notify the home office of any changes in circumstances that may affect the visa status.Mr Rusty wrote:There is no breach of the law. Arguably he has contravened the spirit of the law by remaining, and this may well, in fact should, focus attention on the bona fides of a second application, but it doesn't stop him applying - for FLR, not ILR
It's one of those things that we've read at one point or another from home office correspondence but is difficult to find afterwards.Mr Rusty wrote:I'd be grateful to see where it actually says that
Mr Rusty, have you read the quote from the home office website? I'm not sure I would equate the phrase "you should write to the home office as soon as possible" with "they'd like you to tell them", nor "you may be committing an offence" with "there's no actual offence committed".Mr Rusty wrote:Thanks for that.
So, they'd like you to tell them if your conditions change, but there's no actual offence committed if you don't. Someone whose marriage fails and doesn't leave the UK is no more "in breach of immigration law" than a student who stops attending their course, which the courts have said is not an offence.
See also ZHOU and Detention and Removals - Chapters 46-60 > Chapter 50 - Persons liable to administrative removal under section 10 (The Zhou Judgement).VictoriaS wrote:Where have the courts said that someone on a student visa who stops attending their course but remains in the UK on their student visa is not acting in breach of their visa?
Victoria
Hi Sakura,sakura wrote:tooley, John has already explained to you what you need to do.
However - one thing is not clear - when did they divorce? How long ago was this? When did you marry? If there is a significant gap between these dates, you might find it hard to apply for FLR/spouse visa for him in-country.
He certainly cannot apply for ILR, anyway.
Under section 82(2)(e) of the 2002 Act, the decision by the BIA to curtail leave constitutes an immigration decision, and generates a right of appeal. Furthermore, section 92(2) makes it clear that this right of appeal can be exercised in-country. Consequently, in relation to students who are not attending classes, it is quite likely that the BIA are reluctant to curtail leave when the ensuing appeal process could well effectively give the individual longer in the U.K. than was allowed by the curtailed leave.VictoriaS wrote:So they may not be liable for administrative removal but they are certainly likely to get their leave curtailed and will have difficulties returning. So, as good as a breach and removal then?