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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Am so sorry about your case.These are what i think you can do request for a full Reconsideration or Judicial Review through a very good Immigration Barrister .Although am not an immigration expert neither do i know much about the rules of 10 years route to ILR but am very touched about this decision, i will recommend one very good high profile immigration barrister to you. Since the forum is not for advertising, i will only give you his office number and you will do the rest. Believe me, whatever advice you get from him you cant get any better elsewhere . He based in the city in London just few houses away from Royal Court Of Justice and his price is very cheap. 0203 440 5822.Jon336 wrote:derlin, I assumed that since I had limited leave to remain when I left the country the was no way I could have made an out of time application outside the country. Out of time applications, I thought apply to those the have been made inside the country.
See below
Continuous residence means residence in the United Kingdom for an unbroken period, and for these purposes a period shall not be considered to have been broken where an applicant is absent from the United Kingdom for a period of 6 months or less at any one time, provided that the applicant in question has existing limited leave to enter or remain upon their departure and return.
and below;
To benefit from this, an applicant must have valid leave on the date that they departed the UK and valid leave on the date that they returned. Please note that this does not have to be the same grant of leave on departure and return (see Example 2). Nor is it necessary for the leave to be in the same category (i.e. an applicant can depart the UK with leave as a student and return with leave as a work permit holder). As long as the applicant has valid leave on both the date of departure and the date they return, they will not have broken continuous residence.
Of course section C doesn't apply here.
Are you saying that once I made an application outside the country and the denied then I broke my continous residence?
Clarify please
Nice to know that there's someone from Edinburgh I am also just around Edinburgh. Do you know any good immigration lawyer?Ged wrote:Dear Jon336,
I am really sorry that your application was refused due to some lame reason.
I know we are all making some guess work here and it is being counter-productive. Perhaps you will know more when you talk with an experienced solicitor who knows what he is talking about.
However, from what I see on your messages so far, I completely agree with your logic. Based on the information provided by the UKBA, and the examples they provided, you seem to be perfectly right to think that your 10 years legal stay trail was not broken. This to me seems like a no-brainer. The references you made are all real UKBA documentation. The people who argue against your logic appear to lack any real directly related examples or references to any relevant written policy documentation that matches to your case.
At least you still have leave to remain here and this disgrace did not threaten your job or stay here. Please be calm and talk with a professional who makes sense.
Best wishes.
See also Any good law firm recommendation?7.3 wrote:A person who is outside the United Kingdom will necessarily be free, at that time, from any restrictions under the immigration laws on the period for which s/he may remain in the United Kingdom.
Jon, based on the aforementioned scenario—ceteris paribus, you ought to have been granted ILR because you left and entered the UK with valid visas. However, the example doesn't tell us whether the individual applied for a new visa before or after 15 September 2008. Others have commented the out-of-time rule is inapplicable to applications made outside the UK based on the above scenario which only carries an implied meaning. If this is true, I wonder why the case worker used the wording "out-of-time" to describe the applications you made on 20 Sept. 2005 and 26 Sept. 2005. This is the crux of your case, and as you seek to overturn the decision, should be the crux of your defense.Jon336 wrote:What do you think about this example from the UKBA guidelines regarding ILR?
Example 1
A person has leave in the UK that expires on 15 September 2008. The person departs the UK before their leave expired on 10 September 2008. Whilst the person is abroad, they obtain fresh entry clearance and re-enter on the 30 October 2008.
Question
Has continuous lawful residence been broken?
Answer
No, the person was abroad while they had a gap in leave, so they have not broken their continuous lawful residence.
If the person had departed the UK after their leave expired, they would have spent time in the UK without lawful leave, and continuous lawful residence would be broken.
Thanks for the reference chemu. I have already booked an appointment with them this coming Thursday. And yes I will need all the luck;ThanksChemu wrote:Try drummond miller in queen street in edinburgh. I have never used a solicitor myself, but people talk good about them, with regards to immigration matters. They are free, and can take very long I hear.
Good luck