Hi guys, I need a little advice please. Me and my wife are going to apply for spousal visa from outside the UK. We meet the financial requirements through savings and will be living with her parents when/if we can return to the UK. I say return as I have lived there for 11 years, 9 with a visa and 2 whilst having visa’s pending but ultimately rejected. We want to check we are in the right position to apply for this visa and have not missed anything.
QUICK HISTORY:
- 2007 - moved to UK on student visa.
- until 2015 - renewed visa 3 times (student and Tier 4)
- Aug 2015 - applied for FLR-O
- Jan 2016 - this was rejected and I put in for JR
- Jan 2017 - this was rejected
- April 2017 - put in new application for FLR-HRO *
- July 2017 - got married to British partner and
varied the pending FLR-HRO to FLR-FP
- Nov 2017 - this was
rejected but had 7 days to put in further info. Submitted a Section 120
- Sep 2018 - they again
rejected **
- Oct 2018 - voluntarily left the country with my wife (who’s on tourist visa)
* I was rejected mid-Jan 2017 and sought advice from lawyer. I had 28 days to reply to HO, so until mid-Feb. The lawyers dragged their feet and went over the 28 days because they were ‘seeking advice from a barrister’. I chased them numerous times before the deadline and was told not to worry. I am concerned how this will now affect my new application as I didn’t then apply for FLR-HRO until 5th April which means I went almost 2 months ‘not on record’. On my subsequent refusal this overstay has not been mentioned so should I bring it up?
** i need to explain the reasons for the delay between receiving the rejection and leaving the UK.
- Sep 10th - Lawyer received letter saying visa and Section 120 was rejected.
- Sep 20th - lawyer informed us, losing 10 of the 14 days we had to contact HO to inform them of our decision (i.e. whether to apply for new visa or to leave voluntarily). Their delay was because the firm had just announced it was closing down and so they could not do any work - yet they did not inform us. 20th was Thursday. Over weekend we decided we would voluntarily leave the UK and apply for spousal visa from outside.
- Sep 24th - I had report in at immigration this Monday. This was the 14th days so technically still within the usual allowed time to update HO of decision. I walked in and they instantly took me aside. I was not interviewed and not given a chance to explain that I knew I was rejected and to tell them I was leaving asap. I was detained that afternoon.
- Sep 25 - Oct 10 - requested bail from HO; gathered documents to prove I was wanting to leave UK; bail still denied on incorrect grounds; requested bail from courts; given court date
- Oct 11th - granted bail with courts which my wife won for me. I was released the same day. Booked flights same day.
- Oct 17th - left UK.
NOTE: had i not been detained I would have left the UK about 3 weeks earlier. Also I was NEVER given deportation or removal order and have this on official HO document.
OUR CONCERNS:
Our main concerns are around reasons they could reject and 320 grounds for refusal:
- I am deemed an overstayer. HOWEVER this is not due to absconding or running - it has been whilst waiting for decision from HO on applications and JR’s and whilst being detained when I needn’t have been. we also know they cannot reject based SOLELY on being an overstayer, esp if I have a British wife. But we are concerned this will be put together with either “frustrating the rules” or my debt:
- we will be seen to be ‘frustrating the rules’ with our applications but these were genuine applications - my FLR-O was rejected, we JR’d which is allowed. This rejected and I applied new FLR which is allowed. We varied which is allowed. This rejected and so we left voluntarily which is allowed.
- debt. I had 6 accounts with DCA’s, 3 of which accepted a 10% Full & Final offer and are now paid off and closed. One of these had a CCJ. I still have 3 accounts with same DCA, 2 of which have CCJ. They did not accept my F&F offer but did offer to put my accounts on hold for 1 year due to my circumstances (I always kept them up to date with my immigration status and because the HO did not permit me to work I could not set up a payment plan with them). I have letters and emails confirming this. I also have my outstanding HO invoice for legal fees from my 2016 JR. This is being paid monthly as per their agreed payment plan.
QUESTION: will these debts & CCJs affect my application if they are outstanding, or is the fact the DCA has offered to put it on hold acceptable? These debts are not legal fees, they are credit card and overdraft debts, all because I was stopped from working so then had no funds to pay them off - I had always paid off previously when I was able to work.
QUESTION: will the HO question why their debt is only on a payment plan (about £140 / month)? Will they accept we set up the plan and have paid every month despite it being small, or will they question why we haven’t paid it off in full if we have extra savings?
QUESTION: We know we’re within the rules but how do we make this 100% clear so there is no room for rejection?
DOCUMENTS WE HAVE:
- bank statements covering 8 months
- letters detailing where the funds came from
- letter for my parents explaining we will live with them in their owned house
- title deed of that house proving they own it and it’s not on mortgage or rented
- letters from friends and family about our relationship
- copies of emails and letters from HO confirming our notice of marriage and that they accept we are genuine
- photos of me and my wife with our friends and family proving i have more than established life in UK
- letter from wife as sponsor explaining funds of money and our relationship
- confirmation letter from HO of payment plan for JR legal debt
QUESTION: do we need anything else?
QUESTION: do we need to use any particular wording within certain letters to ‘tick the boxes’ as it were? That I mean is should we quote the Acts and Rules and list out that we have ticked every box so it is clear and in their face and can’t be misread? I have read so many stories of HO caseworkers missing things and the applicant then having to reapply that I want it to be crystal clear to remove this danger.
DO WE NEED A LAWYER?
We have been quoted £1000 for a lawyer to submit the application. We are concerned this is too much for what they will be doing (i.e cover letter and completing the online form). Obviously if it is best to use lawyer then we will but if we can save this money and it is doable by ourselves we
QUESTION: what are the pros and cons of using lawyer for spousal visa application?
Thanks so much in advance everyone, really want to get this one spot on as we've had bad luck in the past so any help is very greatly appreciated.