Spain: National Court. Chamber of Contentious-Administrative Proceedings, 15 December 2017, Appeal No. 656/2016

Spain: National Court. Chamber of Contentious-Administrative Proceedings, 15 December 2017, Appeal No. 656/2016
Country of Decision: Spain
Country of applicant: Syria
Court name: National High Court
Date of decision: 15-12-2017
Citation: Chamber of Contentious Administrative Proceedings Case 5372/2017, of 15 December 2017.

Keywords:

Keywords
Subsidiary Protection
Family unity (right to)
Dependant (Dependent person)
Family reunification

Headnote:

The applicants appealed the decision to deny family reunification and family extension in relation to the refugee status of their daughter. The Administration denied this claim based on the fact that the applicants have a different nationality than their daughter, which would contravene the requirement established in article 40.a) of Law 12/2009. Article 41 of said Act, however, addresses this specific situation; However, the requirement of developing this provision by regulation had not been complied by Spain. The Court assesses whether this article should be applicable in the current case, despite not presenting the requirement of regulation, and concludes that the similarity of the wording of articles 40 and 41 is enough as to deem the latter applicable.

Facts:

The applicant, from Palestine, acts in representation of her Syrian parents. She was granted refugee status and is now submitting an application for family reunification and extension of her status to her parents The situation in Syria, as recognised by UNHCR, calls for a flexible interpretation regarding the criteria to assess family reunification in order to provide secure access to protection to those fleeing the conflict.  

Both applicants reside in Syria. Their daughter presented proof of joint residency back in 2013, as well as health issues of both parents and continuous money transfers that she made to help them financially. They claim family reunification and family extension regarding the asylum granted to her daughter and the health dependency of both parents.

The Administration argued that the dependency of the applicants is not formally accredited as required by article 40.a) of the Asylum Law 12/2009. In addition to that, it highlights the fact that both applicants have Syrian nationality, while her daughter is Palestinian, which according to the already mentioned article 40.a) would preclude family reunification. The provision that would be applicable to the circumstances of this case, where the applicant and her parents hold different nationality, lies within article 41 of the Law 12/2009. However, this article specifically establishes the need to develop this provision by means of regulation, which Spain should have had complied with by June 2010. As this regulation is not yet made, the Administration concludes that the provision of article 41 cannot be applicable in this case and, therefore, rejects the petition on family reunification in light of article 40.a) of the Law 12/2009.

Decision & reasoning:

The Court, by means of the report that UNHCR made on the circumstances of the case, contains that the wording of article 41 of the Law 12/2009 barely differs from the one used in article 40. Therefore, the lack of regulation regarding article 41 would not be a sufficient reason to disregard its provisions, as it is intrinsically linked to article 40. This provision, as stated by the Court, should be interpreted in light of the Directive 2003/86/CE about family reunification, regarding the difficult conditions suffered by Syrian refugees, and therefore the appellants should be granted family reunification rights.

Outcome:

Appeal granted.

Relevant International and European Legislation:

Cited National Legislation:

Cited National Legislation
Act 12/2009 of 30 October regulating the Right of Asylum and Subsidiary Protection (Ley 12/2009
de 30 de octubre
reguladora del derecho de asilo y de la protección subsidiaria) – Article 39
article 40
article 41.
Act 29/1998 of 13 July regulating the Administrative Jurisdiction (Ley 29/1998
de 13 de julio
reguladora de la Jurisdicción Contencioso-administrativa) – Article 139.1
article 89.2.

Other sources:

  • UNHCR Report, 20th March 2016.