Time of delegate’s decision?

Federal Court. Appellant had to satisfy the following time of application criterion under cl 890.211 of Sch 2 to the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth): "The applicant has had, and continues to have, an ownership interest in 1 or more actively operating main businesses in Australia for at least 2 years immediately before the application is made". She also had to satisfy the following time of decision (TOD) criterion under cl 890.221: "The applicant continues to satisfy the criteria in clauses 890.211...". A delegate of the Minister refused to grant the visa and the Appellant applied to the Tribunal for merits review. Should the Tribunal determine the TOD by reference to the time of the delegate's decision? Or should it determine the TOD by reference to the time of its own decision?

Submission templates

High Court. Practitioner used written submissions deriving from a previous client as a template for submissions sent to the IAA concerning 2 other clients. As a ground of judicial review, must fraud affect a particular duty, function, or power of the IAA? If so, were they affected for either of those 2 other clients? Was the IAA's failure to exercise the power in s 473DC to get new information, namely new submissions, legally unreasonable?

Appeal: were hotels ‘immigration detention’?

Federal Court (Full Court). Did subpara (b)(v) of the definition of “immigration detention” in s 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) impliedly confer power on the Minister to approve in writing “another place” of immigration detention? If so, did that power exclude the power to create a de-facto detention centre, which is already provided for in subpara (b)(i) of that definition and s 273 of the Act? Is immigration detention lawful even if the expenditure involved in detaining the appellant was not lawfully authorised?

s 501CA(4): can decision-maker defer assessment of non-refoulement claims?

High Court. "Where the representations do include, or the circumstances do suggest, a claim of non‑refoulement under domestic law", is it open to the decision-maker to "defer assessment of whether the former visa holder is owed those non‑refoulement obligations on the basis that it is open to the former visa holder to apply for a protection visa"?

Effect of professional representation

Federal Court. In determining whether an unarticulated claim nevertheless clearly arose from the materials before an administrative decision-maker, is it relevant that the non-citizen was professionally represented before that decision-maker throughout the process?

s 23 of FCA Act: power or jurisdiction?

Federal Court (FCA). Is s 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) a conferral of power, not jurisdiction? Does the FCA have the power to grant an injunction in an appropriate case in aid of a statutory right?

Pitfall: last email address provided to the Minister

Federal Court: the applicant's last email address provided to the Minister for the purposes of receiving documents was the one provided by the AAT

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"?

Not liable to s 189 detention if not an alien?

High Court. Can it be said that a non‑citizen who does not have a visa that is in effect is not liable to detention under s 189(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) if they are not an alien? Can it be said that, "what constitutes reasonable grounds for suspecting a person to be an unlawful non‑citizen must be judged against what was known or reasonably capable of being known at the relevant time"? In other words, can it be said that what constitutes reasonable grounds cannot be invalid ab initio?

MARA: “provision of unlawful migration assistance”

OMARA: "I am satisfied that the Agent knowingly entered into arrangements that facilitated the provision of unlawful migration assistance... I have taken into account that the applications submitted to the Department on behalf of these sponsors were handled through the Agent’s business and that she was the nominated migration agent. It follows that I am satisfied the Agent knew, else ought to have known, immigration assistance was provided unlawfully in relation to their respective matters".

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