I just point out the law as it stands and is not my personal "frame of mind". If you do not like it,...
This was not a dig at you, JA131. This seems to be the general reasoning I see on the site.
Let me see... I remember when I studied law (I am a lawyer, though I've never worked as one) one of the main things when talking about civil law cases we learnt was "pertinence", that is, that one cannot just go to court and ask for anything. If restaurant-owner damages your car I can't go to a solicitor and say, "Hey, a restaurant-owner has damaged JA's car! Do something!" When you go to court you can ask only for the damage done to your car and anything that happens as a consequence. You can't ask for an indemnity because the food isn't to your liking.
Surinder Singh went to court with a specific complaint and the ruling addresses this specific complaint. This was his case and the court ruled to suit his case. Jurisprudence starts from the case and deduces general priniciples which can be applied generally. If this were not so, we could reverse and say the ruling is only valid for People who go to Germany to exercise treaty rights.
Another thing I learnt at university is that a good judge gives what has been asked for: Maybe less, but never in any case more. The court could not give more to Surinder Singh than he asked for and the court could not even dream of mentioning self-sufficiency or a student status because no one even mentioned it.
My point seems to be the same as that of the advocate-general of the ECJ, who, in his opinion concerning the Eind case, says that the principles derived from Surinder Singh are much wider than what is said in the decision. The Eind case concerns a family member of a Dutch national who returned to his home country and did not exercise treaty rights.
What I do is read the Directive. From reading this Directive I can tell you several points of the EEA regulations are in contradiction with it. Just like this one:
But if that is the reason, then should not the HO accept Residence Cards of other EEA countries in lieu of the visa requirement,
You hit the nail!!! This is just what the directive says: family members' residence cards issued by any member state are valid en lieu of short-stay visas and this is just where I'm challenging the UK. This is what I mention in my petition, this is what I'll mention to the European Commission. if you feel this is my interpretation, I can guarantee you I have received a letter from the Vice-Presidency of the European Commission saying just that and that I'm not the first person to make this complaint. At this very moment, the UK is being questioned about this violation of the Directive.
The legal reasoning behind case law can be applied to other situations. Much as I would like to think the home office is trying to be generous, I tend to thing they have legal advice and realize that this is not a fight they can win (and one that would look bad).
And they will lose any case that's brought before the ECJ, because you cannot pick and choose which treaty rights can be exercised. Either on your return you're EEA or you're not EEA. We don't yet have the half-EEA category. You can't be EEA if you come to found Macrohard and not EEA if you come to visit your sainted aunt.