- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
No, in order to acquire the holy grail of PR a dependent SS veteran needs 5 years time served in UK (dating from arrival into UK).bobclancy wrote:Hi, advice please. I am a UK citizen who was working in Spain for 8 years during which time met and married my non-EEA wife. Living and working together there for 5 years. Business finished and I returned to UK with my wife, entering by car at Dover quoting Surinder Singh with relevant paperwork successfully.
I was over 60 years old at the time of return and qualified for UK pension credit, so became economically inactive. My reading of the regulations at the time led me to believe my wife could be entitled to Permanent Residence immediately, so duly applied. That was refused but a 5 year Residence Card was issued. That card expires next week.
To apply for Permanent Residence card now, form EEA4 asks for many details and proofs which we have been very remiss in obtaining (because everything is in my name), including travel details for my wife outside of UK. She has visited friends in Spain and family in Africa during these 5 years but we have not kept records. How carefully are records checked in these circumstances?
Also because both of us have Spanish Permanent Residencias, is it routine for UK to request or access any details from Spanish authorities?
Any help will be hugely appreciated, thanks.
Where did you read that wife would immediately acquire PR on your return? It's good that UKVI had the sense to process the application for a PR card as one for an RC instead, in lieu of her eligibility for a PR card, rather than flatly refusing the application.bobclancy wrote:I was over 60 years old at the time of return and qualified for UK pension credit, so became economically inactive. My reading of the regulations at the time led me to believe my wife could be entitled to Permanent Residence immediately, so duly applied. That was refused but a 5 year Residence Card was issued. That card expires next week.
The current form to apply for a permanent residence card is EEA(PR), athough EEA3/EEA4 forms are still accepted. This may be changing early next year, though.bobclancy wrote:To apply for Permanent Residence card now, form EEA4 asks for many details and proofs which we have been very remiss in obtaining (because everything is in my name), including travel details for my wife outside of UK. She has visited friends in Spain and family in Africa during these 5 years but we have not kept records. How carefully are records checked in these circumstances?
You will have lost your Spanish PR by now as you have been absent for more than 2 years.Also because both of us have Spanish Permanent Residencias, is it routine for UK to request or access any details from Spanish authorities?
1) Yes EU docs are merely confirmatory.bobclancy wrote:PR virtually immediate for non-EEA spouse of retired Brit via Surinder Singh?
1. Am I correct in thinking that a right is acquired when the Immigration Regulation conditions are met and that the issue of a RC or PR card is merely confirmation?
2. My reading of relevant regulations in 2011 and the application for PR in 2011 was based on the following extract. Part 2, Section 15(1)(c) and(d). Importantly (a) and (b) contain the 5 years continuous residence provision, (e) and (f) contain time conditions, (c) and (d) do not.
From EEA Regulations :
“Permanent right of residence
15.—(1) The following persons shall acquire the right to reside in the United Kingdom permanently—
(a) an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
(b) a family member of an EEA national who is not himself an EEA national but who has resided in the United Kingdom with the EEA national in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
(c) a worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity;
(d) the family member of a worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity;
………
(2) Once acquired, the right of permanent residence under this regulation shall be lost only through absence from the United Kingdom for a period exceeding two consecutive years.”
N.B This Section quoted is from the 2006 Regulations in force when entry to UK was granted via Surinder Singh in August 2011, and has not been changed in subsequent amendments including the latest.
“Worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity”
5.—(1) In these Regulations, “worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity” means an EEA national who satisfies the conditions in paragraph (2), (3), (4) or (5).
(2) A person satisfies the conditions in this paragraph if he—
(a)terminates his activity as a worker or self-employed person and—
(i)has reached the age at which he is entitled to a state pension on the date on which he terminates his activity; or
(ii)in the case of a worker, ceases working to take early retirement;
(b)pursued his activity as a worker or self-employed person in the United Kingdom for at least twelve months prior to the termination; and
(c)resided in the United Kingdom continuously for more than three years prior to the termination.
You are jumbling up the Regulations.bobclancy wrote:Hi, very quick response, thank you.
The very top of this topic stated my/our position......... " I am a UK citizen who was working in Spain for 8 years during which time met and married my non-EEA wife. Living and working together there for 5 years. Business finished and I returned to UK with my wife, entering by car at Dover quoting Surinder Singh with relevant paperwork successfully.
I was over 60 years old at the time of return and qualified for UK pension credit, so became economically inactive. My reading of the regulations at the time led me to believe my wife could be entitled to Permanent Residence immediately, so duly applied. That was refused but a 5 year Residence Card was issued. That card expires next week."
The whole of the Regulations are applicable to EEA nationals surely, and from that I could see no reason why 15(1)(d) should not cover me as a BC genuinely to be treated as SS