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1. I do not understand that if you do appeal (somwhow) how r u going to win it.pradhaa wrote:Hi Memners,
I have applied ILR, that is refused on 7th-April-11 because I was away from UK for more than 3 months in 1 go. In the refusal letter , it is mentioned that I can not appeal because my current visa(Tier 1) is still valid until 3rd-July-11 . Is there any way to appeal against the ILR refusal decision, please ?
Thanks ,
Pradha
Thanks sushdmehta for the reply. What would be approximate cost for the judicial review. I want to appeal because , I am UK based employee since last 5 years , but way from UK for 4 months for company work .sushdmehta wrote:You cannot appeal when not given the right to.
A judicial review may be the only legal (and very expensive) option available to you.
Found the following on the net:pradhaa wrote:What would be approximate cost for the judicial review. I want to appeal because
An old document (2007) but guess it is good enough to give you an idea!The cost of bringing a judicial review claim is considerable: in the region of £10,000 to £20,000 for a straightforward case, higher for a more complex matter. If the claimant is unsuccessful, they are likely to be liable for the defendant’s costs as well as their own. They are therefore looking at a legal bill of upwards of £30,000 if they lose, and they must be prepared for this eventuality, bearing in mind the unpredictability of judicial review proceedings and costs orders.
What evidence did you provide to prove this "company work" outside the UK? Were you being paid in the UK during this time? If not, then why not - if you were employed by a UK based company and the absence was due to a "fixed term overseas assignment"?pradhaa wrote:I am UK based employee since last 5 years , but way from UK for 4 months for company work.
1. So the letter made no mention of the fact that you were absent from the UK for work related overseas assignment? If it did not, then how how would the caseworker have known that your absence was amongst the ones that "could" be disregarded provided supporting evidence was available.pradhaa wrote:I provided my company letter as proof saying I was permanent UK employee from last 5 years and my 5 years P-60. I was getting salary in Indian currency for the 4 months. This is our company policy, where ever we are located, we will get salary with that country currency.
sushdmehta wrote:1. So the letter made no mention of the fact that you were absent from the UK for work related overseas assignment? If it did not, then how how would the caseworker have known that your absence was amongst the ones that "could" be disregarded provided supporting evidence was available.pradhaa wrote:I provided my company letter as proof saying I was permanent UK employee from last 5 years and my 5 years P-60. I was getting salary in Indian currency for the 4 months. This is our company policy, where ever we are located, we will get salary with that country currency.
2. You were absent from UK for more than 90 days in single instance, working abroad, not paid in the UK (therefore no economic ties with UK for the period in question) and claim that the company policy is to pay salary to employees in foreign currency even when they are sent overseas on temporary short-term overseas assignment(!!) - I don't think the caseworker made an error in not applying discretion in your favor.
I provided my company letter as proof saying I was permanent UK employee from last 5 years and my 5 years P-60. I was getting salary in Indian currency for the 4 months. This is our company policy, where ever we are located, we will get salary with that country currency.pradhaa wrote:What evidence did you provide to prove this "company work" outside the UK? Were you being paid in the UK during this time? If not, then why not - if you were employed by a UK based company and the absence was due to a "fixed term overseas assignment"?