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mice wrote:i have been married to my husband for almost 2 years now,and live together.I applied on 28 th feb,from tier4 student to spouse of british husband.my husband work part time earns 800 per month and i work with care agency.End of october,the case worker requested more evidence of relationship and finances which i submitted on time.To my dismay,they have written to say my application is refused because i cant demonstrate enough finances in my bank statements;we have no children together to use as a family tie,and that i have no right of appeal but given 10 days to leave the country.Let me point out that we live tog with my 5 year old son which i had before i met my husband,but was not included in my application for FLR M. Is there any way I can sort this out without having to return to my home country.
I arrived in uk in 2004 and have since been a student in business admin and renewed my visa 4 times visa up to feb 2012.met my husband 2009 and given certificate of approval and got married june 2011 at registrar.lived together since then together with my son but no adoption process took place.my son 5 and half years old,has no status as both i and his dad were subject to immigration control.My husband works part time and earn 175 pounds a week and i bring roughly 160 as my student visa restricts me 20 hours a week.we have no savings .i submit my flr(M) application 3 days before my visa expired which home office sent back within a week for correct payment details.i resubmitted it next day which was 10 days after my visa expiry date. i was invited for biometrics in april and asked for more documents p60,bank statements,work contract and pay slips in october and submitted.MPH80 wrote:I'm not sure I'm qualified to help here - but I think to aid everyone else - you need to lay out some more details.
Can you provide ... a clear timeline of your key events (e.g. arrival, birth of son, courses attended, visa extensions, marriage etc)?
Can you also provide some details of your finances? How much do both of you earn together? What expenditure do you have?
Can you also clarify the immigration status of your son?
MPH80 wrote:So to summarise it in a bit of an easier to read format:
* 2004 - arrival as student
* 2007 - Son born
* 2009 - Met future husband
* 2011 - Married husband
* Feb 2012 - applied to FLR(M)
* Nov 2012 - Rejected
Your income is £335/week or roughly £1450 per month. This is below the qualifying threshold of £18,600 under the new rules - and you would require more than that due to your son.
I don't believe you qualify under a private life argument. Your son hasn't been here for 7 years (which is the break point) and you would have to prove that your husband couldn't receive the treatment in your home country.
I'm not sure of the best next steps - I suspect you need a good professional to assist.
M.
See also Invalid application due to payment problems?mice wrote:i submit my flr(M) application 3 days before my visa expired which home office sent back within a week for correct payment details.i resubmitted it next day which was 10 days after my visa expiry date.
I know you probably have lots of other things to worry about but are you absolutely sure your case was decided under the new rules and not the old ones? Does that part of the refusal indicate the actual rule applied?mice wrote:... am also wondering do they have to judge me under new rule on income threshold even though i applied in feb,way before the law existed?sorry for the longest explanation.wil appreciate your advice
I'm sorry you felt my response was harsh, but this lady needs quick guidance not something sugar-coated. What I said was also meant as a warning to others considering making applications not to make these kinds of mistakes because as we've seen the UKBA will punish you for them.samestory wrote: I just read the post above by Mice and replies she got. ID29, I also read your response to her but I think they are being too hard on her. She applied during the old rules but because of payment problems and even the money got successfully taken out later.
Samestory, I'm not sure Mice's case was considered under the 'new rules'? I know she says it was but is this just an assumption on her part, did the refusal actually state which rule was being applied?samestory wrote: a) She applied in February 2012. The new rules came on in July. 5 months inbetween. If the UKBA treats applications a lot quicker and found there was a problem, Mice would have been able to reapply as per old rules and still get the opportunity to appeal incase the decision was unfavourable. Reapplying as per old rules means she would have still qualified for the old maintenance requirement. Can someone correct me that the maintenance requirements as per old rules was £5,400, I remember seeing that somewhere and Mice's husband earns about a £9,600 per year.
The Government indicated they were considering changing the rules last year, they also announced the change in advance of them being applied. And, currently, most applicants in this category are/will be decided under the old rules.samestory wrote: b) If they argue, 'Yeah, but we told you that to process FLR(M) takes 6 months and the new rules took off in July, giving an extra month of August to process Mice's FLR(M), then they should be reminded that they did not even abide by the 6 month rule to give her a decision. She was instead contacted in October.
Mice is NOT a single mother. She is married to a British citizen.samestory wrote: c) Applying 3 days before her visa expired is not important. Her visa was still valid, even if she made her application a day before it expired, it is not supposed to be their business. Sending in an application doesn't entail just filling the forms and posting it to them. You will have to scout for the exhorbitant application fees, added to the other commitments immigrants have. Mice is a single mother even though she is married to a resident. I can imagine the hell she's been through these 5 years bringing up a child on her own in the UK and having to bother about immigration.
I'm still struggling to believe the case was considered under the new rules. We really need to get this question settled.samestory wrote: d)They did try to make a truce by asking for more documents from Mice but they should have considered her under the old rules, not the new rules. They should take blame too for responding late and this is why taking too much time to process our applications should be unacceptable.
At the end of the day, these are personal choices and not really relevant now.samestory wrote: e) Mice, I still don't know why you were studying for nearly 8 years. You probably got pregnant in 2006 and had the baby in 2007. If you were on a Masters program in 2004, you should have rounded up before the baby arrived in 2007. If you were on your first degree in 2004, then you may have been in your third year before the baby arrived and most first degrees are for 3 years. You had so much time to finish your program and apply for post study work visa instead of remaining on a student visa for too long but I know immediately the baby arrived, you would find it difficult to concentrate on any school work left. You will need to push yourself really hard to finish school with a young child, and I mean skipping meals, not sleeping, not caring about your appearance. I know this because I had a baby while doing a 2 year Masters program and still made a distinction on the course. You have some blame to carry in this mess.
Mice said he had a "lifetime condition" not a terminal illness. The two things are quite different.samestory wrote: f) Does anyone know if being on a terminal illness qualifies Mice's husband to apply for disability? Based on the new rules, I think there is no financial requirement for disabled persons' partners. Since Mice has a few days left in the UK, can her partner write the UKBA, explaining about his health status, pending when Mice can reapply. They stated there was no evidence why Mice and her husband couldn't move to another country. This is a good enough reason - his doctors are here and he is terminally ill. Any ideas who he should address the letter to?
The short answer is no.samestory wrote: g) Even though Mice's baby doesn't have status, he is still a minor and cannot be removed. Doesn't he have any rights?
And if she were, then what??samestory wrote: h)Mice, are you pregnant at the moment for your new partner?
Yes it is legal. Its a device that is used to prevent people appealing over and over again about decisions they didn't like. There are exceptions and in some cases a Judge could over-rule a decision but ONLY when the UKBA didn't apply the rules correctly. You cannot for example produce new information and claim you forgot to submit it or it wasn't available at the time and then request an appeal.samestory wrote: i) Is it legal to say an applicant can't appeal on a case? Shouldn't that be left to a judge to decide? We should find a way to stand up to these ridiculous rules.
No, YOU would have to prove the UKBA made a mistake and then CONVINCE a judge. You cannot just argue that you didn't like the outcome and hope a judge agrees.samestory wrote: j) No matter how bleak this case looks, I think Mice should remain and fight this decision. In my opinion, 'You have no right to appeal' is casework tactics to scare Mice. You can find out that the UKBA is not always right and get proved wrong sometimes by court judges.
I think we all feel sad for Mice but the free advice probably ends on these forums. A decent professional who is practised and qualified in these matters won't come cheap.samestory wrote: I am only sad because Mice would have to find and pay a lawyer. Are there any immigration lawyers that offer service free? Mice, can you contact emyfraser and ask him/her the procedure because he/she posted they have been refused a right to appeal before?
Again, just because you don't like the decision (or cannot afford the flight home) isn't grounds to have it struck out. UKBA would probably tell you to approach your own embassy for help or place you in a detention centre while they sort out a flight for you.samestory wrote: k) Asking Mice to leave in the next 10days may have reasons why this is not possible. For instance, to book a flight to an African country will cost nearly a £1,000. To Asia, more. She will have to pay for her partner and son in order to relocate, at least £3,000 in flight costs. Where is she expected to cough that kind of money from? I don't know if computers make these decisions.
I know you mean well Samestory but the last thing this lady needs is random advice from people who don't fully understand the procedures.samestory wrote: l) Please, can most posters make an effort to comment so that Mice can get as much varied advice as possible and know how to find help. She must be feeling depressed, confused and helpless at this time and a carer to both husband and son.
We know it because Mice said they'd written back to her in days. She'd also be able to check with her bank or credit card to see when the payment was made.Meche83 wrote:Hi Everbody
I ve been reading all the above post in reference of Mice refusal Decision, samestory thanks for the good point ,
I believe that the refusal decision is total unfair to unfair hearing.
She applied in the month of Feb and because the payment did not go true and the application was returned as invalid, who knows if payment was process at the beginning by payment department?
Which law? I don't know of any that limits how long UKBA have to decide an application. If anything the Sales of Goods & Services Acts might come close but I'm sure the Government is exempt. Long waits unfair? Yes. Unlawful? No, sadly they aren't.Meche83 wrote: Have we ask our self why did their take more than 6 months to make a decision on the application that has been paid for? This application is not for free, Mice paid for this service and it took them more than six months to make a decision on the application, it is conspicuous unfairness, The secretary of state failure to determine Mice application on time is UNLAWFUL .
Fair hearings apply to people charged with crimes and trials in court.Meche83 wrote: The delay in making a decision in her matter is in breach of her human
Right to fair hearing and the delay was unfair; their decision is unreasonable to her young child who is in school, this child is a minor and there have no form of
Authority to ask her to leave the country in next 10 working days, she have the right to live here with her family.
I agree. But at the moment there is no case to win unless Mice can get permission to remain, even temporarily.Meche83 wrote: My Advice to you Mice, is to be strong, don’t give up, don’t let anybody say to you that you have no chance of wining this case, don’t even say that to ur self, I can see victory at the end of it, you are not in this alone. We still have Feb Applicant here in which I am one of them and still waiting for a decision.
I think I know what you mean, but access to the European Court of Human Rights takes years and years. Mice has a week.Meche83 wrote: Get a very good solicitor to seek for permission for judicial Review at the High Court Human of Justice, The secretary of State does not like to go to court I can assure that.
Again, I'm not sure the European Human Rights Act applies now or can be used in this instance.Meche83 wrote: There decision is Unreasonable and is in breach of Article 6 of Ur Human Rights Act 1998
There is always a chance.mice wrote:so in other words,it clearly shows we dont have any chance to win this case