Authorised recipient for one purpose = all purposes?

Federal Court. Should the determination of whether a representative’s email address was provided for the purpose of one matter but not another be determined objectively, without considering the subjective intention? Can an authorisation to receive documents in relation to a business monitoring survey constitute an authorisation to receive documents in relation to a NOICC?

s 501C(4)(b) not met due to different limb of s 501(6)?

Federal Court. If the Minister relies on an Adverse Security Assessment (ASA) rather than independently assessing the risk posed by a person, does this amount to dictation? Can the Minister consider non-refoulement obligations as part of the residual discretion under s 501(2)-(3)? Is a decision under s 501(3) or 501C(4) rendered invalid by relying on s 501(6)(g) in circumstances where the ASA is invalid? In assessing whether s 501C(4)(b) is met, is the Minister limited to considering the same sub-sections of s 501(6) which founded cancellation under s 501(3)?

Materiality test a balancing or binary exercise?

Federal Court (Full Court). This decision confirms that, when a decision-maker is balancing various factors in determining whether a criterion is satisfied and finds that such a criterion is not satisfied, the fact that it found one of those factors to go in favour of satisfying the criterion does not mean that an error in the assessment of that factor was not material to the outcome of the decision. After all, more weight could have been attributed to that factor, had the error not been made, which could have led to the criterion being satisfied.

s 140(1): cancellation of visa held because of being a MOFU

Federal Court: Appellant and wife were granted subclass 186 visas as secondary and primary applicants, respectively, and then divorced. DHA then cancelled the wife's visa under s 128 and the Appellant's visa was cancelled under s 140(1) by operation of law: "a visa held by another person because of being a member of the family unit [MOFU] of the person is also cancelled". Appellant applied for judicial review (JR) arguing: he had standing in the JR application; as he was no longer a MOFU at the time of the cancellation, s 140(1) did not apply; s 140(2) applied instead.

s 438 & materiality: “convoluted” & “confusing”

Federal Court: "On my understanding of the majority approach in SZMTA in those circumstances, read with MZAOL, where there is an admitted non-disclosure of the existence of a s 438 notification, there must be a two-step process undertaken by the supervising court on judicial review to determine “materiality” so as to arrive at a conclusion of jurisdictional error".

Must Secretary give IAA court decision on remittal?

Federal Court. Can it be said that, “in order to make a decision in accordance with law on the remittal of a matter it is necessary, in the sense required by the doctrine of necessity as an exception to the bias rule, that the differently constituted IAA be provided by the Secretary (under s 473CB(1)(c) of the Migration Act) with a copy of the judgment or judgments identifying the legal error which vitiated the first decision of the IAA”?

Must each of the matters in para 8.4(4) of Direction 110 be considered for...

Federal Court. Did the requirement in Direction 110 to give “individual consideration” to the best interests of each child require that each of the matters identified in para 8.4(4) be considered in respect of each child?

Materiality test disguising merits review: Part 2

Federal Court: As discussed in a previous article, a judge of the FCA had echoed the writer's concerns about the fact that, sometimes, the Minister inadvertently labels merits review as materiality test considerations. With respect, those concerns have just been echoed by another judge of the FCA.

Materiality: can court speculate on counterfactual?

Federal Court (Full Court). Is it "permissible for the Court to speculate as to how the Tribunal might have reasoned or what conclusions it might have reached if it had not made the error in question"?

Reg 1.15AA(1)(e) interpreted

Federal Court. Can it be said that, in forming a view, for the purposes of r 1.15AA(1)(e) of the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth), "as to whether the assistance cannot reasonably be (a) provided by any other relative of the resident (being a relative who is an Australian citizen, an Australian permanent resident or an eligible New Zealand citizen), or (b) obtained from welfare, hospital, nursing or community services in Australia, it is necessary for the Tribunal to have regard to the nature and extent of the relevant person’s need for direct assistance in attending to the practical aspects of daily life"?

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