Failure to disclose reliance on movement records a JE?

Federal Court. The Tribunal obtained the sponsor’s movements record after the hearing and took that evidence into account in affirming the decision without giving the appellant an opportunity to be heard about the evidence of the sponsor’s travel and the couple’s time apart in relation to whether compelling reasons existed. The movement records had a direct bearing on the veracity of the appellant’s "compelling reasons" claim. Did that constitute a failure to comply with ss 359A or 360 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)?

Material taken to be before the Minister

Federal Court (Full Court): Where a Minister 'relies on the assessment of a Departmental officer and an officer ... within the Department withholds ... a not insignificant part of that assessment, ... the Minister will be taken to have failed to take that not insignificant material into account'

Refusal to remove under s 198(1): a “migration decision”?

Federal Court (FCA). Following unsuccessful requests to be removed from Australia under s 198(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), the Applicant applied to the FCA for mandamus directing the Commonwealth to do so. Subsection 476A(1) provided that, despite any other law, the FCA's "original jurisdiction in relation to a migration decision" was limited to the matters under s 476A(1)(a) to (d). Is the refusal to discharge the obligation under s 198 a "migration decision", with the result that the FCA lacked jurisdiction?

PIC 4005 / 4007 policy might be unlawful

Federal Court (Full Court): Are MOCs allowed to calculate what constitutes "significant costs" under PIC 4007(1)(c)(ii)? Does the degree with which MOCs are required to describe the particularity of the "form or level" of a condition "depend upon the extent to which there is diversity in the experience for those with the particular type of condition"? Who bears the onus of proving that degree on judicial review? Are MOCs' opinions binding for the purposes of waiver? If not, are they at least relevant for those purposes? Can a decision be vitiated with jurisdictional error for having relied on a MOC opinion based on outdated information? If so, must there be a "real indication in the material that the condition ... was changing" in order for the information to be outdated? Does this decision resolve the Ibrahim / Nguyen tension?

Cl 11.2(4)(e) of Direction No 65 directed only to existing state of affairs?

Federal Court. Does it matter for the purpose of s 501(7)(c) the country where a non-citizen is sentenced? Was subparagraph 11.2(4)(e) of Direction No 65 directed only to an existing state of affairs, as opposed to possible future events? If so, does it follow that AAT could not have considered possible future events if there had been sufficient evidence before it?

Incorrect info cancellations: summary of principles

Federal Court. Does s 108 authorise the Minister to "decide that there has been non-compliance with s 101 of the Act in a manner that has not been particularised in a notice lawfully given under s 107"? Can it be said that "whilst the particulars of the alleged non-compliance are to be described in the [NOICC], the range of materials available to the decision-maker is not restricted to the responses" of the non-citizen? Was it "impermissible for the Tribunal to have regard to events occurring after the grant of the visa in determining whether the answers given by the appellant were incorrect at an earlier time"? We summarise the answers to the above and many other questions.

Can AAT fee be paid after application deadline?

Federal Court: the Appellant made a Tribunal application but mistakenly answered in the application form that he held a refugee visa, with the result that the AAT's online system did not ask for payment of the application fee. That fee was only paid after the timeframe for making a valid application. The AAT recognised the mistake was understandable given how its online system was designed, but nevertheless found it had no jurisdiction. Was the review application 'accompanied by the prescribed fee'?

Meaning of “time of the Minister’s decision”

Federal Court. Paragraph 21(2)(h) of the Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth) provides that "[a] person is eligible to become an Australian citizen if the Minister is satisfied that the person ... is of good character at the time of the Minister's decision on the application". Does the fact that the above provision refers to the time the "Minister" makes a decision mean that the Tribunal must assess the applicant's character by reference to the time of the Minister's decision? Or should the Tribunal make that assessment by reference to the time of its own decision? Further, with respect, does this FCA decision stand in contrast to the High Court's majority judgement in SZMTA on the onus of proving that an error was material to the decision?

Indefinite detention & s 501CA(4)

Federal Court. In the context of s 501CA(4), was the Tribunal required to genuinely consider representations made by an applicant with respect to the issue of indefinite detention "arising in addition to, and separately of, the fact that indefinite detention needs to be considered as a standalone legal consequence of the decision"? Can it be said that "a logical conclusion to a finding of non-refoulement obligations being owed would be a consideration of whether indefinite detention would be a risk imposed on the applicant", despite s 197C?

Minister capitulated during judicial review?

Federal Court. Should it be inferred that the reason why the Minister determined the visa application shortly after the judicial review application was filed is that he capitulated and recognised that the Applicant would succeed in his claim to a writ of mandamus, with the result that the Respondents should pay the Applicant's costs incurred until the time of the visa grant?