The Secretary Of State Will Not Appeal Against The Judgment Made In Independent Monitoring Authority v Secretary Of State For The UK Home Department

Law FirmWithers LLP
Subject MatterLitigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Trials & Appeals & Compensation
AuthorElla Taylor-Fagan and Amy Sarraff
Published date28 February 2023

The UK Government will not appeal against the High Court decision which found the Home Office's interpretation of the Withdrawal Agreement (making EU citizens reapply to stay in the UK) as unlawful.

Current Home Office rules state that EU nationals (and their family members) with pre-settled status must apply for settled status (indefinite leave to remain in the UK), once their pre-settled status expires. This however may not be possible for those who fail to meet the settled status criteria (e.g. they have excess absences from the UK during their period of residence). In such circumstances, pre-settled status cannot be extended and the applicant may not eligible for apply for settled status. This leaves EU Nationals (and their family members) in a situation where they lose their right to reside and work in the UK.

What was said in the case Independent Monitoring Authority v Secretary of State for the UK Home Department?

In Independent Monitoring Authority v Secretary of State for the UK Home Department, it was found that the Home Office's interpretation of this part of the Withdrawal Agreement was unlawful. The judge ruled that:

  • people with pre-settled status must not lose residence rights just because they do not make a second application to the EU Settlement Scheme before the expiry of their pre-settled status and
  • people with pre-settled status should not be denied permanent residence rights once they have reached the necessary period of 5 years' lawful residence just because they do not make a second application under the scheme.

Instead, right of residence can only be lost in the precise circumstances defined in the Withdrawal Agreement under section 15(3).

It is understood that the UK government will not seek to appeal the judgment and must now ensure that its policies conform.

What does this mean for you?

This is likely to mean:

  1. Those with pre-settled status could be automatically upgraded to settled status once they reach five years of residence, with no requirement to make a...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT