Minister estopped from treating Appellant as non-citizen?

Federal Court (Full Court). Commonwealth made representations to Appellant that he was an Australian citizen by granting him a passport and enrolling him to vote. He reasonably relied on those representations to his detriment in that he never applied for citizenship and became liable to visa cancellation under s 501(3A). If Commonwealth was his guardian under the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946 (Cth) and breached its duty to apply for citizenship for him, did the breach, coupled with the representations, render the Minister equitably estopped from treating him as a non-citizen?

Domestic violence: what constitutes ‘treatment’

Federal Court: 'if the evidentiary requirements were satisfied simply by a statutory declaration made by [a nurse], who is a non-treating [nurse], the words [under IMMI 12/116] in relation to treatment would be otiose'

AAT made decision after the 84-day deadline

Federal Court: AAT mistakenly added 1 week to the 84-day deadline for making a decision (s 500(6L)) and neither Applicant nor Minister noted it at directions hearing. Minister's advocate noted the mistake only after the actual deadline and before the mistaken deadline and notified Tribunal, which nevertheless proceeded to provide reasons for affirming the original decision. Did the AAT make a decision? Did the Federal Court have jurisdiction for a judicial review application? If so, what remedies were available?

Did Code 35 NPC satisfy request for police check?

High Court (single Justice). In determining whether to grant the plaintiff a time extension to file his judicial review application, does he disclose an arguable basis for relief in arguing that the delegate made an error in treating a Code 35 NPC as not satisfying the request?

Reconsider what you know about the scope of merits review

We have always thought that the Tribunal can expand the scope of a merits review by considering issues and provisions not considered by the Department. However, according to this landmark Federal Court decision, that is not always the case. We explain why and how practitioners can use this decision in favour of their clients in terms of limiting the scope of the Tribunal's review. By limiting that scope, clients could have 2 chances to have each issue or provision assessed on their merits, one at the Department level and another at the Tribunal level.

Can child’s best interests be neutralised?

Federal Court. In considering s 501CA(4) and Direction No 79, AAT expressly accepted Applicant's minor siblings loved and missed him but impliedly found best interests of the children should have neutral weight, based on 4 factors: "the relationship between the applicant and the children was non-parental; there was no evidence he had given them any personal or financial support; for a significant period he had been in custody; and there was 'no evidence upon which the Tribunal can rely to suggest that the Applicant will play a positive or significant role in their future upbringing'". Were those 4 factors capable of entirely negating or neutralising the love children had for Applicant, with the result that they could "lead to a conclusion that the best interests of the children taken as a whole neither weigh for nor against revocation"?

What if earlier and later country information are contradictory?

Federal Court (Full Court). Can it be said that, where "there are two sets of information, going to the safety and suitability of the place of relocation, which are contradictory and inconsistent, the decision-maker must necessarily engage in a “process of evaluation” of the “reliability” of the contradictory and inconsistent sets of information so as to reach a reasoned and reasonable conclusion as to which information, or set of information, he or she will rely upon", for the purposes of ss 36(2)(a) and (aa) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)?

National interest: international obligations a mandatory consideration?

Federal Court (Full Court). Is "the violation of international law ... intrinsically and inherently a matter of national interest, and therefore within the subject of evaluation" under s 501A(2)? If not, does this answer "create any relevant incongruity with a finding that a failure to consider those obligations in a particular case ... means that the state of satisfaction as to national interest mandated by s 501A(2)(e) has not been arrived at reasonably in the legal sense"? Does the Minister have a discretion under s 501A(2)?

Obligation to give reasons informs whether decision-maker failed to consider claim?

Federal Court (Full Court). Is the content of any statutory obligation to give reasons for a decision "relevant to the question of what, if any, inferences may be drawn from a decision-maker’s statement of reasons vis a vis the apparent absence of any reference to, or findings on, particular claims or evidence"?

Denial of PF in that s 501(3A) decision could have been made under s...

Federal Court (Full Court). Was the Appellant denied procedural fairness in that "the Minister or the Minister’s delegate decided to exercise the cancellation power in s 501(3A) rather than 501(2) [of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)] when the latter requires the person affected to be given an opportunity to be heard before the power is exercised whereas the former does not"?