Generate a structured brief — facts, issues, held, reasoning, and significance — for this case in seconds. Or browse the verbatim judgment via the source links below.
The appellant, born October 8, 1950, is a citizen of Nigeria. The appellant entered the United Kingdom as a visitor on January 17, 2012 for six months. On June 11, 2012 she made an application to vary her leave to enter or remain on the basis of her relationship with her daughter but the respondent refused this application and took a decision to remove under section 47 of the Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006.
The appellant appealed to the First-tier Tribunal under Section 82(1) of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 and on April 7, 2014 and July 16, 2014 Judge of the First Tier Tribunal Easterman (hereinafter referred to as the �FtTJ�) heard her appeal and in determination promulgated on August 22, 2014 he refused her claim for asylum, humanitarian protection and under the Human Rights Convention.
The appellant lodged grounds of appeal on September 2, 2014 and on October 3, 2014 Judge of the First-tier Tribunal Osborne gave permission to appeal on the basis the FtTJ may have erred firstly by hearing the appellant�s asylum appeal when a decision had not been taken by respondent and secondly, by not giving proper consideration to the issue of relocation.
Mr Bandegani indicated that he would be arguing the FtTJ had erred because his approach to the issue of internal relocation was flawed.
Mr Bandegani adopted the grounds of appeal in so far as they were still relevant and submitted:
Auto-extracted from BAILII. Full structured brief in progress — the source links below give you the verbatim judgment in the meantime.
Multiple official and mirror sources — pick whichever loads cleanly on your network.
Common Room
0 comments · About the Common Room →
No comments yet — start the discussion.
Voted-best comments help future students and feed Caselaw's AI study tools.