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If she had applied for the COA before her leave had expired, then she may win a JR due to the delay with issuing the COA. However, this may be expensive. It may be quicker and cheaper just to return and apply for a spouse visa.Section 1 - Rights of appeal wrote:Also, there is no right of appeal against refusal if the applicant does not have leave to enter or remain at the date of application. This is because it is not possible to vary leave that a person no longer has. An out of time application will never attract a right of appeal under section 82(2)(d).
1. EU immigration law doesn't apply since you applied under UK immigration laws. You cannot apply under EU immigration laws unless you are exercising a treaty right but living or working in another EU state and therefore are unable to use UK laws or the other state laws.ginoT wrote:EU rules don't apply here? I thought we signed up to the European Human Rights treaty?
I will contact an OISC person but I'm horrified that they allow people to submit applications and even with a section asking them to explain why the application is late. Surely they should warn people that if they're an overstayer they shouldn't even bother with FLR(M)?!!
So let me get this straight coz legal language ain't that user friendly. If you're an overstayer applying from OUTSIDE the UK your previous visa overstay will not count against you?? BUT if you're applying from WITHIN the UK the overstayer cannot apply, period?? Who the hell is making up this BS?
Getting the visa in Moscow costs 600quid.... and they say settlement visas can take up to 3 months! Forester got hers + only had a 6month turnaround (our cases are very similar btw).
Can you give me a flavour of what the JR is really like? how to start one? Also my chances of me getting my costs back if I win?
appreciate the help
You're surely not suggesting that the Home Office takes money out of its own coffers by telling us all the rules?ginoT wrote:EU rules don't apply here? I thought we signed up to the European Human Rights treaty?
I will contact an OISC person but I'm horrified that they allow people to submit applications and even with a section asking them to explain why the application is late. Surely they should warn people that if they're an overstayer they shouldn't even bother with FLR(M)?!!
So let me get this straight coz legal language ain't that user friendly. If you're an overstayer applying from OUTSIDE the UK your previous visa overstay will not count against you?? BUT if you're applying from WITHIN the UK the overstayer cannot apply, period?? Who the hell is making up this BS?
appreciate the help
Think the case u cite involved a child - the courts are always loathe to send a child back over a certain age or split a family with a child and maybe with this case there wasn't an appeal from the HO and on it drags....ginoT wrote:yup priniciples can be painful quality to have. But £600, a Moscow rejection, up to a 9month turnaround before an AIT hearing, and being seperated for that period of time would be exceptionally painful too.
On the JR, are you sure it's a 3 year process? Again Forester got theirs done from application refusal through to JR verdict in 6 months. Remember this is a 2008 JR so recent in terms of turnaround times. If it's a 6month wait we can handle it. 9months is max. Any more she'd go back and risk it with the embassy
Any suggestion of how to take a look at recent spouce JR experiences on this forum for a flavour of what's involved?
quick question ginoTginoT wrote:Hi, my partner (she's Russian) had her FLR(M) application rejected soley on the basis that she overstayed her previous student visa. The reason for the overstay was stated on the application (we applied late because we requested a written update/guidance from the UkBA following the Law Lords rulling on the COA scheme + the actual COA took ages to come through). We got married immediately after we received the COA. By this time the student visa had expired (by about a month). The relationship is completely genuine (3 years) and well documented in their databases following numerous other visit visa requests 'n all where I've consistently sponsored her as my partner.
The refusual letter says she has no possibility to appeal and that she should leave the UK more or less immediately.
We are furious of course for all sorts of reasons which I won't bore you with now.
Question is does she really have to go back to Russia or is there some way of appealing the decision? She's loathe to the idea if applying again (with additional fees etc) at the Moscow embassy which is a Mickey Mouse operation itself.
btw - I've had a look on the immigration rules site and for 320(7B) says that overstaying is an automatic refusal EXCEPT in applications of 320(7C) which is for applications where the applicant is applying as a spouse. So this implies that refusal (purely based on overstaying) was invalid
thanks for any advice!
Thanks for the reply gino, i know about your case as i read it carefully, and the reason i asked is because my husband would be in a slightly similar situation (his residence card being revoked after divorcing an EEA national, i have another post detailing my case), we were told we could send an FLR(M) while he is in the appeal reconsideration process, but the HO might consider him an overstayer..which is why i wanted to know how long they take in special cases like this..ginoT wrote:my case isn't standard as we applied AFTER her visa ran out (ie she wasn't here legally). In those instances the HO say they need 90 days for 90% of that group of applications. Not surprisingly we ended up waiting something like 89 days before we got our response. We had a similar experience with the COA where we waited for most of their usual maximum waiting time (think it was 45 days).
However, if your spouse is here legally then according to their waiting times you shouldn't expect to wait more than 1 month.
I can't stress enough researching the rules & their procedures on immigration control - if you don't have the time to do this (as it can take a while) go to a good immigration lawyer. PM me and I'll forward you my solicitor's details if you want (I don't think he'll charge more than £500 (probably less) to review an application + supporting letter)
best of luck