Upvote:2
You do not need to worry about the prior refusal, except that you should of course mention it when you are asked whether you have ever been refused in the past. My mother in law received an EEA family permit a couple of years ago just a few weeks after being refused for a standard visitor visa.
If you fail to mention the refusal, it's quite possible that it will be held against you if you ever try to apply for a UK visa after the UK leaves the EU.
The UK government's page on this visa is at https://www.gov.uk/family-permit. You should submit the documents mentioned there. In particular, you need to show three things:
You do not need to show that you are dependent on your wife because being dependent is only a requirement for other kinds of family relationships, not for spouses or registered partners. You do not need to worry about your wife being a "qualified person" because she has not already been in the UK for over three months.
You should note that because your marriage is recent, you are likely to be asked to prove that it is genuine. That is, the entry clearance officer (ECO) is likely to suspect that your marriage is a "marriage of convenience" entered into in order to get you into the UK. You should probably therefore submit evidence showing that your relationship is genuine.
In particular, establishing that you have lived together is supposed to rule out conclusively any suspicion; here's what the EEA family permit guidance has to say about it:
The ECO should not consider the following cases as marriages / civil partnerships of convenience where:
- there is a child of the relationship;
- there is evidence to suggest cohabitation.
If you can show that you have lived together then you should not worry about submitting photographs, communications records, and the like.