@Muttonhawk You brought this on yourself. I shall henceforth remember cases based on stuff from the guild.
There is CS & Rendón Marín (2016). CS obviously stands for Character Sheet. As for Rendón Marín. I know for certain that they have two foreign letters in them - so I start from there and hope for the best.
Writes in examThe case of Baumbast & R (2002) (i.e BBeaster) concerned a German father who left the UK to work elsewhere, leaving his wife and children in the UK. It was combined with the case of R who were the children of a divorced American woman. In both cases, the children (and through them, their non-Eu mothers) had a right to remain in the UK. The right of the mothers to remain, strangely, was considered 'independent' and would become a permanent personal right to remain once 5 years had passed. Much of this is now contained in the Directive, but the cases are good to know too.
The case of Punakova (2012) (aka Puny Malchivo) concerned a Czech full-time mother who was formerly self-employed, living in the UK. The question arose of whether she, having been self-employed rather than conventionally employed, could be considered a 'worker' and thus have a right to remain in the UK - along with her child. The court never got to decide, as it was ascertained that the father had in fact been employed in the UK, and so the child had a right to remain in the UK. The mother had a derived right through him. The status of self-employed EU workers, thanks to the unsatisfactory escapism of the judges in Puny Malchivo's case, remains uncertain.
I will keep you posted on the
others.Woah, when wasting your time on RPGuild because you don't want to revise turned into the most productive revision session in ages.