Sections 500(6J) and (6H) interpreted

Federal Court. Can it be said that s 500(6J) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) "does not apply to information which is sought from the applicant by the Tribunal of its own initiative, and, instead, it applies only in respect of information provided by the applicant in support of his case in chief"?

Claims arising tolerably clearly or sufficiently from materials?

Federal Court. If a claim is not clearly articulated but arises tolerably clearly or sufficiently from the materials, is the Tribunal required to consider it?

Are decisions of international bodies relevant to domestic law?

Federal Court: "The High Court has warned against attaching particular significance to the [International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights - ICCPR] and its attendant jurisprudence in interpreting sections of the [Migration Act 1958 (Cth)] which incorporate ICCPR obligations". However, can decisions of international bodies interpreting Art 7 of the ICCPR "in the context of withheld or inadequate healthcare ... be of assistance in determining when an obligation might arise in the context of deportation"?

Attribution of individual weight without explaining overall balancing exercise

Federal Court (Full Court). Is compliance with the Direction 90 achieved by focussing upon individual considerations and attributing some form of “weight” to that consideration viewed in isolation, without disclosing any process of reasoning which led from the attachment of weight to each consideration to the ultimate conclusion?

“court must not publish … person’s name”

Federal Court: IAA affirmed decision to refuse Appellant a protection visa. Appellant then unsuccessfully applied to Federal Circuit Court (FCCA) for judicial review. FCCA's decision did not publish Appellant's name, in compliance with s 91X of Migration Act 1958 (Cth), which prohibits courts from publishing names of protection visa applicants. Appellant eventually appealed to Federal Court (FCA), arguing that: FCCA had constructively breached s 91X by publishing information sufficient to identify him; that breach was an appealable or jurisdictional error "because it frustrates the scheme by rendering the IAA decision nugatory..., in that it raises a new claim for protection". Should FCA issue a declaration that FCCA breached s 91X?

Thornton and Lesianawai extended to Victorian offences?

Federal Court. In Thornton, the High Court held that, as the non-citizen's finding of guilt in Queensland was made without recording of a conviction, his offending as a minor was an irrelevant consideration under s 501CA(4) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). Should Thornton be extended to Victorian offences?

Can Parliament abolish natural justice requirements?

Federal Court (Full Court). Can the Parliament "abolish natural justice to the extent that it no longer applies to an officer of the Commonwealth in the context of constitutional writs under s 75(v) of the Constitution"? Can it be said that s 501BA(3) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) "impermissibly confines or restricts the judicial power conferred on the High Court under s 75(v) of the Constitution and is therefore invalid"?

Order of processing correlated applications

Federal Court (Full Court): ordinarily, a subclass 820 visa application will be decided first and the 801 second. However, decision makers can reverse that order in some circumstances; perhaps that means that a TSS visa can be refused before nomination is processed in some circumstances, thus denying review rights to visa applicants

Stewart plainly wrong?

Federal Court (Full Court). In the decision in Stewart  plainly wrong? If an invitation issued under s 501CA contained an error in the specification of the deadline for the making of representations, can it nevertheless be said that whether the invitation is invalid will depend on the extent and consequences of the error? If an invitation issued under s 501CA is invalid, does it follow that the anterior mandatory cancellation decision itself under s 501(3A) is also invalid?

Direction 65 made DFAT report a mandatory consideration?

Federal Court: Ministerial Direction No 65, now replaced by Direction No 79, provided as follows: "Where the [DFAT] has prepared a country information assessment expressly for protection status determination processes, and that assessment is available to the decision-maker, the decision-maker must take into account that assessment, where relevant, in making that decision". Are decision makers obliged to consider DFAT reports when making decisions to which Direction No 65 applies?

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