E v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] QB 1044
Facts: The case was brought by foreign nationals seeking asylum. Their claims were rejected and they appealed to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal on the basis of factual errors made by the decision maker. The Tribunal decided it could not hear their claims in relation to mistakes of fact. This was probably correct under the law governing the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, but the Court of Appeal was asked to consider whether or not the mistake of fact that the appellants wished to challenge could be raised as a free- standing claim, entirely separate from the statutory requirements which would preclude it. The Court of Appeal answered [...].
Answer
in the affirmative and indicated this would also apply to mainstream judicial review cases
Tags
#cases #illegality #judicial-review #public
Question
E v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] QB 1044
Facts: The case was brought by foreign nationals seeking asylum. Their claims were rejected and they appealed to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal on the basis of factual errors made by the decision maker. The Tribunal decided it could not hear their claims in relation to mistakes of fact. This was probably correct under the law governing the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, but the Court of Appeal was asked to consider whether or not the mistake of fact that the appellants wished to challenge could be raised as a free- standing claim, entirely separate from the statutory requirements which would preclude it. The Court of Appeal answered [...].
Answer
?
Tags
#cases #illegality #judicial-review #public
Question
E v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] QB 1044
Facts: The case was brought by foreign nationals seeking asylum. Their claims were rejected and they appealed to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal on the basis of factual errors made by the decision maker. The Tribunal decided it could not hear their claims in relation to mistakes of fact. This was probably correct under the law governing the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, but the Court of Appeal was asked to consider whether or not the mistake of fact that the appellants wished to challenge could be raised as a free- standing claim, entirely separate from the statutory requirements which would preclude it. The Court of Appeal answered [...].
Answer
in the affirmative and indicated this would also apply to mainstream judicial review cases
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Parent (intermediate) annotation
Open it as asked to consider whether or not the mistake of fact that the appellants wished to challenge could be raised as a free- standing claim, entirely separate from the statutory requirements which would preclude it. The Court of Appeal answered <span>in the affirmative and indicated this would also apply to mainstream judicial review cases.<span><body><html>
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