Cl 13.1.2(1)(b): possibility vs likelihood

Federal Court. Cl 13.1.2(1)(b) of Direction 79 provided that, for the purpose of s 501CA(4) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), "In considering the risk to the Australian community, decision-makers must have regard to, cumulatively ... The likelihood of the non-citizen engaging in further criminal or other serious conduct"? Is there a "material or substantive difference between an assessment of the possibility that the applicant may reoffend and the likelihood that the applicant may reoffend"?

Does assessment of materiality assume open mind

Federal Court. Could the applicant’s representations in relation to rehabilitation "be properly engaged with if he relied on evidence of having completed six separate courses (plus counselling) and the Tribunal only took account of the evidence relating to three of those courses"? In assessing whether an error is material, should it be assumed that the administrative decision-maker approached the review with an open mind?

Tribunal taken to have complied with s 359A by default?

Federal Court: AAT failed to disclose a document containing adverse information and its existence. That document was not protected by a non-disclosure certificate. Non-disclosure constituted a breach of procedural fairness. Was that breach material to the decision? Can it be inferred from s 359A and from the lack of reference in the Tribunal's decision record to that document that its non-disclosure was not material to the decision? Does the copying by an AAT member of the reasons of a prior member necessarily mean jurisdictional error?

Failure to comply with s 43(2B) an error of law?

Federal Court (Full Court). Section s 43(2B) of the AAT Act provided that written reasons for a decision “shall include its findings on material questions of fact and a reference to the evidence or other material on which those findings were based.” Is a failure to give reasons as required an error of law?

May s 473DD(a) and (b)(ii) overlap?

Federal Court: May ss 473DD(a) and (b)(ii) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) overlap? Further, IAA refused to consider new info, saying: "The mere fact that some of the applicant’s siblings have been granted protection on the basis the applicant claims is the same as his own claims, has no probative value when assessing the applicant’s claims for protection". Did IAA, in effect, say that "in no circumstances could evidence" relating to the siblings "have probative value when assessing the applicant’s claims for protection", thus amounting to jurisdictional error?

Injunction pending determination of Ministerial intervention requests

Federal Court. Sections 195A, 351 and s 417 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) give the Minister powers which can only be exercised by the Minister personally in the public interest. Is the evaluative task of determining whether it is in the public interest for such powers to be exercised a task which cannot be delegated or undertaken through any form of agency in any respect? Is there a basis to grant injunctive relief preventing the removal of the appellant from Australia while the Minister considered whether to exercise those powers?

Did practitioner act in contravention of ss 245AR & 245AS?

OMARA. Did the practitioner facilitate payments to a sponsor in exchange for a visa applicant’s employment and sponsorship? If so, did she act in contravention of ss 245AR and 245AS?

Mandatory cancellation: retrospective effect & more

Mandatory cancellation under s 501(3A) requires that (a) the non-citizen not pass the character test and (b) be serving a sentence of imprisonment at the time of cancellation. Federal Court: it is irrelevant when the sentence that enlivens s 501(3A)(a) is imposed or completed; the sentence enlivening s 501(3A)(a) does not need to be the same sentence enlivening s 501(3A)(b)

Interplay between ss 473DD(a) and (b)

High Court. Should the circumstances in ss 473DD(b)(i) and (ii) be factored into s 473DD(a)? Is the IAA required to consider the conditions in ss 473DD(b)(i) and (ii) before considering s 473DD(a)? If not, would it at least be efficient and prudent for the IAA to consider first the conditions in ss 473DD(b)(i) and (ii) and only then consider s 473DD(a) if one or both of those conditions is satisfied?

Student visa and materiality

Federal Court. Were the financial capacity criterion and enrolment criterion not entirely independent, with the result that the Tribunal's finding on the latter did not render its error on the former immaterial?

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