Procedural fairness owed under s 46A?
Federal Court (Full Court): This decision could positively affect other unauthorised maritime arrivals who missed the deadline of 1 October 2017 for making a protection visa application. Question to the FCAFC: Is the exercise of the revocation power in s 46A(2C) subject to procedural fairness? Was the Appellant afforded procedural fairness in the exercise of that power? Did the Minister make a personal procedural decision to consider the exercise of his powers under s 46A? Was a sufficient interest of the Appellant affected?
Appeal: member of the Australian community?
Federal Court (Full Court). The Minister found that child pornography offences for which the Appellant was convicted were "offences against vulnerable member of the community". Was the Minister referring to members of the Australian community, despite the fact the location of the children involved was unknown? Was Dunn v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 489 wrongly decided?
Direction 79: para 14.1 interpreted
Federal Court (Full Court). Does para 14.1(2) of Direction 79 require decision-makers to take account of non-refoulement obligations? If not, might those obligations be required to be considered nevertheless for other reasons, such as because an applicant has raised those obligations? Since the introduction of s 197C, is indefinitely holding a person in detention for no lawful purpose and not refouling the person a possible legal outcome? If so, is the last sentence of para 14.1(6) incorrect to the extent it suggests otherwise? Was AAT obliged by paragraph 14.1(2) to proceed on the basis that refoulement was not a possible outcome?
Subclass 309: is affection required?
Federal Circuit Court. Section 5F(1)(b) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) provided that the prospective partner visa applicant and her sponsor must "have a mutual commitment to a shared life as husband and wife to the exclusion of all others". Did s 5F(1)(b) require the visa applicant and sponsor to manifest an affection for each other?
Mandatory cancellation: retrospective effect & more (Appeal)
Federal Court (Full Court): The mandatory cancellation provision, s 501(3A), was inserted into the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) in 2014 and obliges the Minister to cancel a visa if he/she is satisfied that a non-citizen has a substantial criminal record and is serving a full-time sentence of imprisonment. "What happens, then, where the non-citizen is serving a term of imprisonment at the time of the Minister’s decision (after the commencement of the mandatory visa cancellation scheme), but the non-citizen has a “substantial criminal record” only because of a different sentence of imprisonment that was served exclusively before the commencement of that scheme? Is the non-citizen’s visa liable to mandatory cancellation in these circumstances?"
s 91X: duty of imperfect obligation?
Federal Court (Full Court). Can it be said that "s 91X of the [Migration Act 1958 (Cth)] gives rise to a duty of imperfect obligation, breach of which neither invalidates the FCCA’s earlier decision, nor sounds in a judicial remedy, including declaratory relief"? We summarise the answer to this and several other questions.
What factors are relevant to s 473DD(a)?
Federal Court (Full Court): s 473DD provides that IAA must not consider new information unless certain preconditions are satisfied. But does that provision expressly or impliedly empower IAA to consider new information? Can it be said that "the factors in s 473DD(b)(i) and (ii) of the Act must, in all cases, be considered by the [IAA] in deciding whether 'exceptional circumstances' exist", pursuant to s 473DD(a)? What factors is IAA "required to consider in reaching its state of satisfaction or non-satisfaction of the twin requirements of s 473DD"? Can the "matters concerning the substance or merits of the new information" sometimes be relevant for the purposes of s 473DD(a)? Is IAA "required to take into account or have regard to the matters advanced by the applicant as establishing either" ss 473DD(b)(i) or (ii)?
“For reasons of” membership of a particular social group
Federal Court: AAT found: Kenyan authorities did not discriminate against people with mental illness, as they did not recognise those types of illness; rather, the authorities would, through a law of general application, take action against the Appellant on the basis of his (potentially criminal) erratic behaviour; thus, AAT found that he would not be discriminated against. Is a foreign law of general application capable of being implemented in a discriminatory manner? If so, can that amount to persecution? Does persecution require a subjective element of enmity or malignity?
BAL19 overturned
Federal Court (Full Court). Is the power conferred by s 501 to refuse to grant a visa "exercised in the performance of the duty imposed by s 65(1)(b) to refuse to grant the visa for the reason that the grant of the visa is prevented by s 501"? In BAL19, FCA decided that s 501 did not apply to protection visa applications. Was BAL19 wrongly decided? Must the power under s 501A(2) be exercised within a reasonable period of time? If so, was a period of 18 months unreasonable?
De facto partner: a different angle
Federal Court (Full Court). Child applied for child visa. Cl 101.222 of Sch 2 required approval of sponsorship. Sponsoring mother used to live with Mr M, who was not the father of the child, was in prison at TOD, was the father of 2 other children of the mother and gave her financial support. AAT had power under reg 1.20KB(12) to refuse sponsorship if it requested police check for sponsor's de facto partner and such partner did not provide it. Mother denied Mr M was her de facto partner and police check was not provided. Is residence in prison a factor as to whether a couple has a de facto relationship? Should AAT have considered s 5CB? If so, did AAT's speculation that Mr M might want to "visit" his children once released despite its finding that he was in a de facto relationship with the mother indicate it did not consider s 5CB(2)(c) and therefore s 5CB?


















