IntegratedMigrant wrote:Jellybean105 wrote:IntegratedMigrant -Thank for your reply! Thats good news for me. I did think it was none of their business as long as he leaves the UK but needed some clarification.
About the call, the spouse visa application was refused by them and it states no appeal basically because they believe I can live in his home country and they expect me to drop everything and leave my over £18,600 before tax profit business in the UK.

Sorry but the whole spouse process has got me really riled up.
Hopefully going to Ireland and coming back will be a lot less stressful, easier and a bit more fun!
(I think you are the person I directed here from the Expat forums?)
The hardest part will be travelling without a passport. The Home Office know this... The major problems we (my wife) had in obtaining an Irish Visa was that she didn't have a current passport. We got a new passport, but the Irish embassy wanted her old (expired) passport.
At the border you can confirm your ID by other means... I would assume the fact that the Home Office state that they hold his passport is sufficient. Simply give them 14 days notice that you intend to travel to Ireland. (Dont ASK) - TELL THEM to either send your passport to you, or meet you at the XXX port where you will be travelling from.
UN conventions prohibit a country from refusal to let you leave ANY country.
EU Law gives your spouse the option to go to Ireland.
Ireland and the UK have a special arrangement to control the borders... (much like the shengen area)... They don't intend to make Singh too easy because of this... (this is prob why France is the next best choice)...
Did your spouse have Leave to Remain at the time of application... If not...
Also, Article 8 and Zambrano means that the UKBA CANNOT USE THE REASONING " Because they can leave the EEA" - so you still have JR open on the basis that the Decision Maker didnt excersise the discretion within law that they have been instructed to do so....
Article 8 and Zambrano Immigration Directorate Instructions:
See annex A of my FOI request response...
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... 027354.pdf
(a) Cases where the primary carer is being removed or deported to a country outside the EEA, but a Zambrano right is refused on the basis that the British citizen will be able to continue to live in the EEA with another parent
In some circumstances the case worker will refuse to recognise that the adult migrant has a right to residence here on the basis of Zambrano because the child or disabled adult could remain in the UK with another parent or carer and would not therefore be compelled to leave the EEA. Where a refusal is made on this basis, and the case worker is then considering the Article 8 rights of the primary carer, they cannot conclude that there will be no interference with family life because the family can live together as a family unit in a country outside the EEA. To do so would directly conflict with the basis upon which recognition of the Zambrano right had been refused.
Such instructions must be afforded equally to all... If it can apply to a disabled man/woman applying, then the same principle not being applied to a non-disabled person would clearly be reverse discrimination...