s 36(2)(aa): consequence of past acts

Federal Court (Full  Court). FCCA remitted matter to AAT "for determination according to law". AAT disagreed with FCCA reasons and instead followed an earlier FCA decision. Was AAT bound to follow FCCA conclusion? Should a judge follow the judgment of another judge of the same court unless persuaded it is clearly wrong? If FCCA (previous FCCA) finds alternative grounds against Minister, matter is remitted to AAT, Minister does not appeal, AAT affirms original decision and non-citizen applies to FCCA (next FCCA) for judicial review: is it an abuse of process for Minister to argue before next FCCA that previous FCCA was wrong; does previous FCCA decision create an issue estoppel? Are the consequences of a past act or omission capable of engaging the complementary protection criterion in s 36(2)(aa)?

Inadvertent characterisation of doc B means doc A is bogus?

Federal Court. Is it "antithetical to the appellate process [or] at odds with s 476A" for FCA to allow "a new ground not considered by the primary judge"? Further, Appellant presented his taskera (Afghan ID card) in support of protection visa application. Delegate suspected taskera was bogus and his representative provided delegate with a document from Appellant's father as evidence that Appellant's taskera was not bogus. The document the representative provided was the father's birth certificate. But representative inadvertently mischaracterised that document as the father's taskera. Given discrepancies between Appellant's taskera and his father's "taskera", delegate found the former was a bogus document. Did delegate make a jurisdictional error despite being entirely blameless? Was forensic examination of taskera irrelevant?

Must AAT consider information considered by previous AAT?

Federal Court. If a decision-maker first states its conclusion and then talks about the evidence concerning that conclusion, does that indicate the decision-maker made the conclusion without considering that evidence? Does s 416 require AAT to refuse to consider the information that was before a previous AAT, or to have regard to the previous AAT's decision, or to take it to be correct? Can AAT adopt or accept the conclusion or the process of reasoning of a previous AAT in whole or in part?

Fraud “on” visa applicant: what must be proved and by whom?

Federal Court. When a visa applicant alleges fraud on the part of a representative in the lodgement of a visa application so as to establish that the application was invalid and thus avoid issues with s 48 and PIC 4020, what has to be proven and who bears the onus of proof?

Makasa extended to s 501(3A)?

Federal Court. If a conviction forms the basis for a visa cancellation under s 501(3A) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) and the cancellation is then revoked under s 501CA(4), is a decision-maker prevented from using that same conviction as the basis to cancel the visa under s 501(3A)? Did s 501(3A) require an act of the Minister by which a visa was cancelled? Or was the provision rather self-executing?

Court proceedings to be adjourned pending Royal Assent of Bill addressing Pearson?

Federal Court (Full Court). Can a formal submission only be made that a decision of another Full Court is plainly wrong and should not be followed? Does it follow from the fact that a delegate had no power to cancel a visa under s 501(3A) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) that the discretion to revoke the original decision under s 501CA(4) was never enlivened? Has the Appellant's visa, which was invalidly cancelled as per the reasoning in Pearson, remained in full force and effect, whatever may be the effect of the Bill if ultimately enacted into law with retrospective effect?

Sex photos needed to prove homosexuality?

Federal Court: "There are a number of troubling aspects of the Tribunal’s reasoning which could, at an impressionistic level at this stage, give rise to a successful appeal. Just by way of example, they include the following... The Tribunal appears to have held it against the applicant that he failed to provide explicit photographs of him and his partner engaging in homosexual sex to prove that he is homosexual".

50 shades of TOD?

Federal Court: this decision answers whether: time of decision (TOD) criteria require decision-makers to consider up-to-the-minute information or whether there can be a gap between the point in time the information relates to and the TOD; in protection claims, the assessment of fear of harm can be temporally relative such as "the risks have reduced over time" or whether it must be an absolute assessment of the fear as at the TOD; decision-makers can "rely on the subjective experience of a limited class of people, of uncertain characteristics, to determine an objective level of safety" for an applicant.

Entitlement to pro bono assistance referral?

Federal Court. Is a party entitled to apply to the Federal Court for a referral for pro bono assistance? If not, may that party nevertheless "raise the possibility of a referral and thereby invite the Court to consider the exercise of the discretion under r 4.12 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth)"?

Appeal: evidence of parentage for citizenship

Federal Court (Full Court). For a person to be a ‘parent’ within the meaning of s 12 of the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth), must he or she be the biological parent of the child? Can it be said that, "whether the relationship between [the Respondent's mother and the Respondent's claimed father] was “genuine and continuing” at the time of [the Respondent's] birth or whether [her mother] may have made misrepresentations concerning the extent of her relationship with [the claimed father] is of limited relevance to, much less determinative of, the statutory question"?