![]() |
[Home]
[Databases]
[WorldLII]
[Search]
[Feedback]
Federal Court of Australia |
COURT
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIACATCHWORDS
Administrative Law - judicial review - immigration - refusal of grant of resident status - construction of s. 6A(1)(b) and (e) - whether policy applied blindly - validity of policy - whether all factors relevant to strong compassionate or humanitarian grounds were considered.Immigration - ditto.
Migration Act 1958, s. 6A
Surinakova v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (Hill J., unreported, 4 December 1991)
Howells v Nagrad Nominees Pty Ltd (1982) 66 FLR 169
Chumbairux v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1986) 74 ALR 480
Tang v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1986) 67 ALR 177
HEARING
SYDNEYCounsel for the Applicant: Mr N.J. Williams
Solicitors for the Applicant: Messrs Elsworthy Jones
Counsel for the Respondent: Mr D.M. Yates
Solicitors for the Respondent: Australian Government Solicitor
ORDER
The decision under review be set aside.The applicant's application for reconsideration be remitted for determination according to law.
The respondent pay the applicant's costs of and incidental to the application. NOTE: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.
DECISION
This is an application, brought under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977, to review a decision made on or about 6 December 1990 to maintain, upon reconsideration, a decision refusing to grant resident status in Australia to the applicant and his wife. The decision was made on the recommendation of an Immigration Review Panel. In challenging it, the applicant invokes the jurisdiction of the court under s. 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903, as well as under the Judicial Review Act.2. Promptly after the decision sought to be reviewed, the applicant's
solicitors requested a statement of reasons. A reply was forwarded
to them,
dated 21 February 1991, which referred to "the refusal decision by Grant of
Resident Status section of 19 July 1990, letters
to and from Neil Hitchcock
and Associates Pty Ltd and the Department's letter of 6 December 1990 with
enclosed papers". It was stated:
"These letters set out in full the findings of fact and the
reasons for the refusal of the applications. The evidenceThe applicant therefore referred to the documents mentioned in this letter as containing the Minister's reasons, which are claimed to involve errors of law.
upon which those findings of fact were based is in the file
referred to above.
Accordingly, under the provision of Section 13(11) of the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act, it is not
necessary to supply a Statement of Reasons, which would not
differ from that already supplied."
3. Before turning to the impugned reasons, it is appropriate to state briefly the nature of the applications with which they dealt. The applicant and his wife Rachel, who are South African citizens, are the parents of three sons. Two live in South Africa, but the youngest son, David, migrated to Australia with his family in 1986, and he became an Australian citizen on 13 July 1988. David and his wife have three children aged about ten, eight and five. The applicant and his wife have spent most of their time in Australia with their son David and his family since November 1987. They have come here on visitors' visas for extended holidays in order to do so. On 5 July 1989, when their last extended temporary entry permits were still current, but about to expire, they made their applications for resident status. At that time, Mrs Rachel Sacharowitz qualified as an aged parent within the meaning of s. 6A(4) of the Migration Act 1958, and thus within the meaning of s. 6A(1)(b). By the time the application came to be dealt with, on 19 July 1990, the applicant also qualified as an aged parent. Both ss. 6A(1)(b) and 6A(1)(e) were relied on. Their formal application for resident status was supported by their son.
4. The applications for resident status were put on the basis: "We would be
very distressed if we now had to be separated from our
son, daughter-in-law
and three grandchildren. ... Our Australian family would also be very
distressed if we were separated from
them." Although the applicant and his
wife have two other sons (twins) living in South Africa, they are more than
five years older
than David Sacharowitz, and they "do not have (with the
applicant and his wife) the strong ties evident between (the applicant and
his
wife) and the Australian family". This assertion can hardly be doubted, in
view of the long separation from South Africa and
close association with
David, his wife and the grandchildren. It was claimed, on behalf of the
applicant and his wife, that they
had "a strong emotional bond" with their
son, daughter-in-law and grandchildren, so that Mrs Rachel Sacharowitz, in
particular, became
"distraught" upon separation from them. They have known
their daughter-in-law since she was 15 years old, and regard her as a
daughter.
David Sacharowitz has sworn an affidavit in support of the present
application in which he deposes that, "as the youngest son I
have always been
very close to my parents as shown by their wish to uproot and live in a new
country (at) this late stage in their
lives to be with me and my family". He
refers to their loving relationship with his wife over a period of 17 years,
and adds:
"My three children are extremely close to my parents and I5. Although the application for resident status contained general statements about the situation, this particular affidavit was not, of course, before the decision-makers. But there was a request to be permitted to appear before the Panel personally to present further details, and if that had been acceded to, the material would have been available. It is difficult to understand how the closeness of a human relationship can be evaluated without an interview, and certainly statements that a family tie is very close cannot rationally be rejected in the absence of an opportunity to evaluate them. There is nothing improbable about such a statement, in itself. Indeed, the particular statement here in question, about the affection of these aged parents being peculiarly concentrated on their youngest son, echoes what is perhaps the earliest known account of a migrant son bringing an aged parent to his new country, the account in Genesis of Joseph bringing Jacob to Egypt. His father "loved Joseph more than all his children, because he was the son of his old age": Genesis 37:3. No one sensitive to human emotions can fail to understand Jacob's journey to Egypt, or Rachel Sacharowitz's desolation, being severed from her son and grandchildren.
believe to wrench this relationship apart would have
extremely detrimental effects on all members of my family,
most importantly on my children, the oldest of whom is ten
years of age and experienced significant emotional
challenges when we emigrated due to instability and insecurity."
6. The "refusal decision ... of 19 July 1990" did, in fact, contain a
statement acknowledging "the strong emotional bond" here in
question. The
statement included the following:
"The applicants meet the legal preconditions for the grant7. The letter of 6 December 1990, referred to in the response to the request for reasons, is a quite formal letter which gave no grounds, but stated that a delegate of the Minister had studied the report of the Immigration Review Panel, and the other information available, and had accepted the Panel's recommendation. The only indication of any further grounds is to be found in the enclosed papers, which contain handwritten notes apparently emanating from the Immigration Review Panel. Those notes state:
of resident status under S6A(1)(b) of the Act in that they
have now both met the Australian retirement age - 65 for
males, 60 for females. Their application is supported by
their son David Sacharowitz, an Australian citizen.
Applicants are also required to meet policy requirements for
the grant of resident status under S6A(1)(b) of the
Migration Act, unless there are compelling reasons to waive
normal policy requirements.
One of the policy requirements under this subsection is that
applicants should have more of their children lawfully
permanently resident in Australia than in any single other
country or at least an equal number of children lawfully
permanently resident in Australia as overseas. The
applicants have a total of 3 children, two of whom reside in
South Africa. The policy requirement regarding the balance
of family has not been met.
I have no reason to doubt that there is a strong emotional
bond between the applicants and their son and his family in
Australia nor that the applicants were distraught when their
son migrated to Australia. Further, I have no reason to
doubt that the applicants are in good health and are able to
support themselves. In order for normal policy requirements
to be waived strong compassionate circumstances must exist.
These circumstances must be significantly severe and
burdensome. Simple inconvenience, discomfort or
disadvantage either to themselves or to an Australian
citizen or resident as a result of an applicant not being
allowed to remain in Australia are not sufficient.
Accordingly, the policy does not encompass claims which
reflect an individual's wish to live in Australia where that
wish essentially reflects an individual's perception that
they will be better off in some way in Australia as opposed
to their normal country of residence. ... I do not
consider that these claims are strongly compassionate and
that waiver of normal policy requirements applicable to
other applicants assessed under the aged parent category is
warranted. I have also no reason to doubt that the
applicants have not undertaken employment in Australia. I
am unable to accept this claim as a ground for approval of
resident status when not undertaking employment is a
condition of visitor entry to Australia.
Further claims in relation to the application for resident
status are that:
. the two children of the applicants remaining in South
Africa do not have the strong ties evident between the
parents and the Australian family
. the closeness of the ties between the applicants and
the Australian family is clearly evidenced by the duration
of their stay here as visitors
. there is no prospect of the two remaining children in
South Africa seeking to migrate to Australia in the
forseeable (sic) future.
I do not consider that the claims put forward are
significantly severe and burdensome to warrant waiver of
normal policy requirements. The claim that the two
remaining children in South Africa will not seek to migrate
to Australia in the forseeable (sic) future is not a
relevant consideration as it is based on conjecture of a
likely or unlikely future event. It is of course always
open to the applicants to use the visit or (sic) entry
facilities to see their child son (sic) and his family or
alternatively, if their funds are sufficient, apply for
temporary entry to Australia under the self supporting
retiree category.
The applicants do not meet the requirements for approval as
aged parents nor do I consider that there are strong
compassionate circumstances for the grant of resident status
in Australia. There are no other subsections of S6A under
which the applicants are eligible for consideration.
I have decided that the application is one for refusal."
"It is not disputed that the applicants fail to meet the8. The passages to which I have referred contain the reasons pointed to in response to the applicant's request for reasons. If they disclose errors of law, I think those errors are plainly attributable to the decision-maker: Surinakova v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (Hill J., unreported, 4 December 1991).
requirements of (the) balance of family test ... . ... It
has been requested that the applicants be assessed on
compassionate grounds ... . It was also requested that the
applicants be granted an interview. The case was assessed
... but was refused. No new facts have emerged which could
be considered as grounds for reconsideration outside normal
policy guidelines. It is appreciated that the applicants
feel very close to their son and grandchildren here and that
they would now prefer to remain in Australia. However, this
situation existed before their arrival as visitors and it is
expected that visitors abide by the conditions of their visa
issue. It is open to the applicants to apply for entry as
self-supporting retirees. Compassionate circumstances are
not considered to be strong in this case. An interview
would not assist."
9. It was common ground that this matter had to be determined in accordance
with the provisions of s. 6A of the Migration Act 1958, and not under the
provisions which would now apply to such a case. For the purposes of these
decisions, the statutory provisions
were to be found in s. 6A(1)(b) and (e),
by which it was provided:
"An entry permit shall not be granted to a non-citizen after10. So far as para. (b) is concerned, there was in existence a statement of policy guidelines, both at the time of the original decision and at the time of its review, in the following terms:
his entry into Australia unless one or more of the following
conditions is fulfilled in respect of him, that is to say -
. . .
(b) he is the spouse, child or aged parent of an
Australian citizen or of the holder of an entry permit;
. . .
(e) he is the holder of a temporary entry permit which is
in force and there are strong compassionate or
humanitarian grounds for the grant of an entry permit to him."
"The following specific policy requirements apply in the11. It will be appreciated that these policy guidelines, if valid, could not possibly be treated as general requirements of the application of s. 6A(1)(b), as distinct from mere guidelines. For the sole criterion laid down by the Act, in relation to an aged person referred to in that paragraph, is that he or she should be an "aged parent of an Australian citizen or of the holder of an entry permit". To take the first of the "guidelines", the aged parent does not have to have "an adult child", whether an Australian citizen or not. Indeed, it would be easy to imagine circumstances which, although not common, could not possibly have been intended by Parliament to be excluded from para. (b), which would fall outside this guideline. The other guidelines, too, contain conditions of which there is not a hint in para. (b).
assessment of applications from aged parents:
. The application should be supported by an adult child
who is an Australian citizen or resident;
. The relative providing support should have been a
permanent resident in Australia for at least two years;
. (Here was set out a detailed provision about the
obtaining of `an Assurance of Support from an
Australian citizen or resident', although it was
conceded `an Assurance of Support has no force or
effect after the subject becomes an Australian
citizen'.)
. An aged parent should have more of their (sic)
children lawfully permanently resident in Australia
than in any single other country;
OR
. At least an equal number of their children lawfully
permanently resident in Australia as overseas."
12. The joint judgment of Fox and Franki JJ. in Howells v Nagrad Nominees Pty
Ltd (1982) 66 FLR 169 at 194-195 contains the following statement, which has
often been cited:
"The interface between policy and discretion in the exerciseIt is hardly necessary to point out that the "policy guidelines" here in question do purport to contain "a series of fairly precise requirements". To the extent that they do so, the law as declared by the Full Court in Howells demands that they be read down. Assuming, however, that they can be read as validly setting out matters of policy, the principles stated by Fox and Franki JJ. do not permit them to be applied as "requirements", only to be departed from where "there are compelling reasons to waive (them)". Nor was it in accordance with the law for the original decision-maker to say: "In order for normal policy requirements to be waived strong compassionate circumstances must exist. The circumstances must be significantly severe and burdensome. ..." That does not exhibit any "readiness to depart from policy", and it imposes a hurdle for an applicant to get over, of which the Act says nothing. (I appreciate that para. (e), referring to "strong compassionate or humanitarian grounds", was also relied on, but the comment I have quoted was made in the course of discussing the "policy requirements" for the application of para. (b); it was not made in relation to para. (e), as the almost immediately ensuing references to "the policy" - the only policy mentioned was that applicable to para. (b) - and "the aged parent category" emphasize.)
of statutory powers is a difficult one. ... No one test
can be articulated for all cases.
Where the power given relates to the consideration of
individual cases, it is not to be denied that the
predominant aspect must be the consideration of the
particular case. The merits of that case must be considered
genuinely and realistically; there must always be a
readiness to depart from policy. The policy does a
disservice to those who have to measure it against the
individual situation if it is expressed in dogmatic or
mandatory terms.
The term `policy' is itself difficult of definition. What
it does not include is a series of fairly precise
requirements."
13. In Chumbairux v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1986) 74 ALR
480, a case involving another category of person mentioned in para. (b) of s.
6A, I referred (at 493) to what Fox and Franki JJ. had
said in Howells, and
also to the statement of Brennan J. in Re Drake v Minister for Immigration and
Ethnic Affairs (No. 2) (1979)
2 ALD 634 at 640-1, where his Honour said:
"A policy must be consistent with the statute. ... HisIn Chumbairux (at 492) I said of para. (b):
(i.e. the Minister's) discretion cannot be so truncated by a
policy as to preclude consideration of the merits of
specified classes of cases. ... There is a distinction
between an unlawful policy which creates a fetter purporting
to limit the range of discretion conferred by a statute and
a lawful policy which leaves the range of discretion intact
while guiding the exercise of the power."
"In unambiguous terms, this provision makes eligible for the issueSubstituting the words "aged parent" for the word "spouse", this passage is directly applicable to the present case. After making some observations about the far-reaching implications of the role of "spouse" which the legislature chose for a criterion, and the range of relationships fundamental to the individual and to society which Parliament must have had in mind in doing so, observations which are almost equally applicable to the relationship expressed by the words "aged parent", I continued:
of an entry permit the spouse of an Australian citizen.
Eligibility is not confined to one kind of spouse."
"It is of course well recognised that a general discretion,14. In Eskaya v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1989) 18 ALD 217 at 222, Lee J. said:
such as that conferred by s. 6A of the Migration Act may be
guided in its exercise by some general policy. But as is
stated in de Smith, Judicial Review of Administrative Action
4th ed., p 311: `A tribunal entrusted with a discretion
must not, by the adoption of a fixed rule of policy, disable
itself from exercising its discretion in individual cases.'"
"(A) statement of policy may not be applied in the sameHe set aside a decision which treated a policy as having a more compelling effect than this. In Dahlan v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (Hill J., unreported, 12 December 1989), the statement of Gummow J. in Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (11 December 1987, unreported) was cited:
manner as a statutory list of disqualifying events without
regard to the Act or the merits of the case. Normally, such
statements of policy are intended to operate as guidelines
under which a range of significant matters to be addressed
by decision-makers is detailed and some indication is given
as to the weight that may be attached to certain elements."
"(W)hat was required of the decision maker ... was that inHill J., for himself, said:
considering all relevant material placed before him, he give
proper, genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of
the case and be ready in a proper case to depart from any
applicable policy".
"While policies are necessary to ensure some uniformity of15. In my opinion, the original decision-maker, in the present case, plainly did not act in accordance with these statements of the law. She took the policy to be a requirement from which departure could be justified only in the case of compelling reasons. How imperative the demand must be, as the decision-maker saw it, is best indicated by her own words, which denied that she could depart from the policy merely for close parental ties (although one would have thought close parental ties must have been the very factor Parliament had in mind in adopting the relevant part of para. (b)), but only in circumstances she described as "significantly severe and burdensome".
action among delegated decision-makers, and should, as here,
be openly proclaimed so that persons seeking an exercise of
discretion know in advance the criteria that will generally
be applied, they may not be slavishly followed so as to be a
substitute for the exercise of discretion in the particular
facts of a particular case."
16. Not only did the delegate, on reconsideration of the decision, adopt the
reasons of the original decision-maker; he also adopted
the notes, to which I
have referred, of the Immigration Review Panel. They contained the statement,
with reference to the close
relationship which the Panel clearly accepted was
present in this case:
"However, this situation existed before their arrival asThis comment seems to echo a policy consideration frequently raised by the Department, its objection to "queue-jumping". But to appeal to this in support of the proposition that para. (b) of s. 6A(1) should not be applied, is to be involved in a further error of law. For the very point of s. 6A was to specify a limited set of cases to which the barrier against the making of an application for resident status after entry into Australia should not apply. It cannot be a general ground for rejecting the application of s. 6A(1)(b) that the applicants' position as aged parents, having close ties with their son in Australia, existed before their arrival on visitors' visas, and that it is open to them, after return to their country of origin, to apply for entry. Section 6A(1)(b) says they fall within an exceptional category of persons not barred by those considerations. If the negative language in which s. 6A is couched renders its precise effect at all obscure, the Court is entitled to take into account the explanatory memorandum which accompanied the Migration Amendment Bill (No. 2) 1980, by which the section was inserted into the Act. That explanatory memorandum contained the following:
visitors and it is expected that visitors abide by the
conditions of their visa issue. It is open to the
applicants to apply for entry as self-supporting retirees."
"Clause 6: Conditions on which entry permits may be grantedThis makes clear the intention to establish positive grounds of eligibility.
to immigrants after entry into Australia
Clause 6 inserts a new section 6A into the Act which
specifies the categories of immigrants who will in future be
eligible to be granted permanent residence following their
entry into Australia. (Emphasis added.) The new section 6A
will prohibit the grant of permanent residence to an
immigrant after his entry into Australia unless:
. . .
(b) he is the spouse, unmarried child or aged parent of an
Australian citizen or of a permanent resident; ... ."
17. In Tang v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1986) 67 ALR 177,
it was held by the Full Court that an application of the "queue-jumping"
policy to s. 6A, such as that made by the Immigration Review
Panel in the
present case, involves an error of law. Davies J. (with whom Evatt J. agreed)
said (at 182-183):
"The reasons ... refer to a policy that `... persons abideThis passage applies, a fortiori, in the present case, in which valid temporary entry permits were still current when the applications were made. For this reason also, I think it must be held that the decision upon reconsideration of the applicant's application was vitiated by error of law.
by normal migration selection processes and do not queue-
jump by entering or remaining illegally in Australia to the
prejudice of prospective migrants who abide by the
procedures'. Mr Owen said: `I considered that prohibited
non-citizens should expect to face the prospect of
deportation when located unless there are strong
countervailing reasons to allow them to remain.'
. . .
The result of the application of this policy was that
the decision-makers anticipated that Mr Tang would return to
Taiwan and there make application for entry to Australia.
Mr Owen appears to have taken the view that, on such
application being made, Mr Tang would be granted a permanent
entry permit ... . Mr Owen said, in para. 16:
`16 ... I considered that a temporary separation and
the costs arising from return home to apply for
migration in the normal manner were not mitigating
circumstances to be accorded significant weight.'
In my opinion, such a result and, indeed, the policy
or practice that led to it, is inconsistent with the
legislative policy enunciated in s. 6A of the Migration Act
1958 (Cth). The various paragraphs in s. 6A specifically
distinguish between those cases in which the application for
the entry permit ought not to be considered unless the
applicant is the holder of a temporary entry permit, and
therefore legally in Australia, and those cases in which the
application for an entry permit ought to be considered
notwithstanding that the applicant is a prohibited
non-citizen. Paragraph (b) makes it plain that an entry permit
may be granted to a person who is the spouse of an
Australian citizen, notwithstanding that that person is not
the holder of a temporary entry permit. ... By providing
that an entry permit may be granted to a person who is the
spouse of an Australian citizen, notwithstanding that he is
not the holder of a permanent entry permit, ss. 6 and 6A of
the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) necessarily imply that such a
person may make application for an entry permit and that
that application, once made, should be considered on its
merits."
18. In any case, neither the applicant nor his wife was an "aged parent" within the meaning of para. (b) at the time of their arrival in Australia. If the comment of the Immigration Review Panel means that the decision upon reconsideration was based on the alleged fact that the applicant could have applied outside Australia, before he came here, for an entry permit as an aged parent of an Australian citizen, then "that fact did not exist" within the meaning of s. 5(3)(b) of the Judicial Review Act.
19. The applicant and his wife, as I have said, also relied on para. (e), under which the criterion is whether "there are strong compassionate or humanitarian grounds for the grant of an entry permit to (an applicant)". Although their applications referred to several of the deepest of human attachments, that between parent and son and daughter-in-law, and that between grandparent and young grandchildren, and although the reasons of the original decision-maker (adopted by the Immigration Review Panel) accepted that these attachments constituted "a strong emotional bond" and that the applicants "were distraught when their son migrated to Australia", the original decision concluded, without explanation of the basis of such a conclusion, "nor do I consider that there are strong compassionate circumstances for the grant of resident status in Australia." The notes of the Immigration Review Panel likewise conclude, without explanation: "Compassionate circumstances are not considered to be strong in this case. An interview would not assist."
20. A bare conclusion is not a statement of reasons: cf. ARM Constructions Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (1986) 10 FCR 197 at 203-205; Faulkner v Conwell [1989] FCA 103; (1989) 99 ALR 92; Soldatow v Australia Council (1991) 22 ALD 750; Dornan v Riordan (1990) 24 FCR 564. But, in this case, the comment made by the Immigration Review Panel raises a separate issue, which also brings the validity of its decision into question. The statement that an interview would not assist must mean that the circumstances, which, on any view, must excite feelings of compassion and humanity, fall so far below what could amount to strong compassionate or humanitarian grounds that no understanding of the emotional force and depth of the feelings involved, and no explanation, which an interview might afford, could elevate them to a level where they could possibly be held to be strong compassionate grounds. For if they could possibly be so regarded, the refusal of the Immigration Review Panel even to hear the applicant and his wife seems to me to be inexcusable. It was their duty to give the matter genuine consideration.
21. I find it impossible to accept that the Immigration Review Panel applied its mind to a correct understanding of the meaning, in law, of s. 6A(1)(e); and I think the proper conclusion is that it left out of account matters which it was bound to take into account. There is no trace in any of the reasons communicated to the applicant of any consideration of the impact of the decision upon three young children of an Australian citizen, Mr David Sacharowitz. (Cf. ARM Constructions (supra, at 205).) These young children have known the applicant and Rachel Sacharowitz virtually all their lives. To wrench apart their relationship with grandparents who are so close to their parents, as well as to them, must be seen as a very grave matter. It certainly would arouse feelings of compassion and humanity, of what Virgil called, in one of his most famous lines, "the tears of things".
22. Paragraph (e) is not concerned only with the feelings of an applicant.
It is expressed in the broadest language, and embraces
all effects which may
reasonably be attributed to the separation and loss involved in the refusal of
an entry permit. Hill J., as
I respectfully think, expressed the matter well
when he said in Surinakova (supra):
"It is obvious that in considering whether there are strongHis Honour referred to his own earlier decision in Dahlan v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (unreported, 12 December 1989), from which he cited a passage:
compassionate or humanitarian grounds regard must be had to
the whole matrix of facts which would be relevant to the
existence of such grounds. No one matter will necessarily
be determinative and it may be necessary to consider
together a whole series of matters which cumulatively reveal
the existence of the necessary strong compassionate or
humanitarian grounds."
"The courts have not sought to create an all embracing testHill J. went on in Surinakova to point out:
of what constitutes strong compassionate or humanitarian
grounds; nor would such an exercise be either possible or
desirable. The words are very broad. Compassion is an
emotion akin to pity; it is felt when the circumstances of
others excite our sympathy so that we suffer with them.
Hence compassionate grounds will exist when the
circumstances of an applicant are such as to enliven in the
reasonable man his compassion. By humanitarian grounds are
meant no doubt grounds the denial of which would be inhumane
having regard to the ordinary views of mankind. The
adjective `strong', involves as French J. pointed out in
Damouni v Minister of State for Immigration, Local
Government and Ethnic Affairs `a judgment that the relevant
hardship be substantial'."
"Where the issue for determination by a decision-maker is23. In the present case, the total omission to mention such an important matter as the effect on the three young grandchildren, and the surprising nature of a decision that amounts to saying the circumstances could not amount to strong compassionate or humanitarian grounds, leads me to conclude that the position of the grandchildren was in fact left entirely out of account. I think it was a factor which was plainly relevant and required to be taken into account, as a matter of law.
whether there are strong compassionate or humanitarian
grounds for the grant of an entry permit, the decision-maker
does not have a discretion to determine whether or not to
take into account a particular matter. The context of the
decision which he is bound to make is not in its terms
unconfined so that its scope is to be found in the subject-matter,
scope and purpose of the statute itself. The
decision-maker is required to make a finding on what is a
question of fact, once the meaning of the collocation of
words strong, compassionate and humanitarian grounds is
understood ... . In making that decision, he is required to
consider all relevant material which is placed before him
giving, in the words of Gummow J. in Khan v Minister for
Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs
(unreported, 11 December 1987, at 11-12): `... proper,
genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of the
case.'"
24. For these reasons, the decision under review must be set aside, and the respondent must pay the applicant's costs.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/1992/2.html