Thanks, John.
Basically the way I see it is that even though the Baiai judgment made a point about the fee being prejudiced (under ECHR) against those with lesser financial means, the Baroness Hale made a more general statement in that the fee served as a deterrent against those wishing to enter into a legitimate marriage in the UK.
Everyone subject to immigration control who does not fall within those two exceptions cannot marry without the written permission of the Secretary of State to marry in the United Kingdom (s. 19(3)(b)). Application must be made in writing accompanied by the fee prescribed in the 2005 Regulations, which is now £295. If both parties require permission, therefore, they must pay £590 to apply for it. There is no power in the regulations to waive or reduce the fee no matter how meritorious the case. This is on top of the much more modest fees for the actual marriage, of £30 for each notice to marry, £40 for the ceremony, and £3.50 for the marriage certificate, making a total of £103.50. It must be a positive disincentive to couples whose desire to marry is deep and sincere and has nothing to do with their immigration status or where they intend to live once married.
Lord Bingham said this:
It is plain that a fee fixed at a level which a needy applicant cannot afford may impair the essence of the right to marry which is in issue. A fee of £295 (£590 for a couple both subject to immigration control) could be expected to have that effect.
Which is obviously where the Home Office drew its new "criteria".
Personally, and I don't know if this has legal standing, I think the argument is much more
general in that:
the CoA was illegal at the time of application, therefore all CoA applications made before the rules changed should be deemed invalid and all fees returned.In summary, I can see where they've interpreted the ruling on the fee in the narrowest
possible manner. However, they've totally failed to follow the spirit of the ruling in that the very fact that we had to apply for the CoA the way did & paying that level of fee, is the part the House of Lords took issue with. I don't think their criteria in the slightest complies with the ruling, since actually we shouldn't receive a refund on the fact that the
FEE was unfair (barely addressed in the ruling), but that the whole CoA
PROCESS at the time was unfair/illegal.
I hope this makes sense. Not sure how I'd put it in a letter/application yet. My thoughts would be there is little point in trying to dig up documents for a 'financial hardship' case if I'm not going to apply under that route, eh? Also application is going to wait until I can get a provisional driving license as there's no way in the world I'm giving up my passport to the Home Office for the duration of this battle!!