Opposite to an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error
Federal Court (Full Court). Can it be said that, although a court cannot scrutinise an administrative decision with "an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error", it is equally well-established that the eyes of a reader “should not be so blinkered as to avoid discerning an absence of reasons or reasons devoid of any consideration of a submission central to a party’s case"?
Family violence: must relationship be genuine? Materiality onus shifted?
Federal Court. Delegate refused second stage partner visa (subclass 100) on the basis of end of relationship. On review at AAT, Appellant made family violence claim. At what point did the requirement to prove the existence of a genuine relationship end? Secretary: issued two s 375A certificates which covered documents that were capable of proving that relationship was genuine; revoked 1 of those certificates; and issued a s 376 certificate. In circumstances where Minister defended a denial of procedural fairness by successfully claiming at FCCA public interest immunity in respect of a document covered by an undisclosed certificate, is the onus to prove that, had the Tribunal not failed to disclose the s 376 certificate, it could have arrived at a different decision, shifted from Minister to Appellant?
Appeal: can AAT direct a person to attend a medical examination?
Federal Court (Full Court). Was the Tribunal's direction, requiring the Applicant to attend and participate in a consultation with a psychiatrist, an impermissible interference with the Applicant's fundamental rights to liberty or privacy? Did the Tribunal have the power to stay the proceedings for non-compliance with its direction?
Nathanson expanded to failure to consider claim or evidence?
Federal Court. In Nathanson, Kiefel CJ, Keane and Gleeson JJ held in the context of a denial of procedural fairness that the standard of reasonable conjecture, used to determine whether an error was material and thus jurisdictional, was "undemanding". Is a reasonable conjecture applicable in the context of an assessment of the materiality of errors in the form of a failure to consider a claim or evidence in support of a claim? If so, is the standard of reasonable conjecture also undemanding in such a context?
Functus officio and estoppel explained
High Court. Does functus officio address the capacity, or authority, to adjudicate a matter, whereas estoppel addresses the capacity of the litigants to litigate a matter?
Principles of statutory interpretation
High Court. Is the existence of a duty to afford procedural fairness a question of statutory interpretation? Is there a "strong" common law presumption, "generally applicable to any statutory power the exercise of which is capable of having an adverse effect on legally recognised rights or interests, that the exercise of the power is impliedly conditioned on the observance of procedural fairness"?
Medevac: meaning of “remote assessment”
Federal Court: under the Medevac provisions, 2 doctors must assess ("either remotely or in person") a transitory person before they can be brought to Australia for medical treatment. The non-citizen argued that the review of medical records of itself constituted "remote assessment". The Minister argued that "remote assessment" must involve a consultation.
Adducing evidence on judicial review
Federal Court. In what circumstances can courts admit evidence adduced on judicial review? If the Tribunal is exercising the merits review jurisdiction conferred on it by s 500(1)(ba) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) in respect of a decision under s 501CA(4) made by a delegate of the Minister, does s 43 of the AAT Act invest for that purpose the Tribunal with all of the powers, discretions and statutory obligations of the delegate?
PIC 4020: several concepts discussed
Federal Court. Are decision-makers required to identify the precise respects in which information is false or misleading? Can the question of whether a person provided "false or misleading information in a material particular" within the meaning of PIC 4020 be answered by a court? In order for the "false or misleading in a material particular" limb of PIC 4020 to be enlivened against a visa applicant, must the applicant have knowledge that the information is false or misleading? If so, are decision-makers required to identify knowledge as a requirement and make an express finding about the matter? Does the materiality threshold involve a question of whether the chances of a different outcome in the absence of error would have been "slim"?
Is possibility of Minister not having assisted Tribunal a proper basis to seek discovery?
Federal Court. Applicant could not be removed from Australia, due to effect of NZYQ. In the context of a refusal of a protection visa under s 501(1), Minister submitted to Tribunal that “that there were no third country removal options for the Applicant”. On judicial review, Applicant argued that was not true. Does Applicant have a proper basis to seek discovery of what information was available to the Minister concerning the impending third country reception arrangement with the Republic of Nauru at the time of the Tribunal hearing?




















