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Sochorova v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2010] FMCA 33 (22 January 2010)
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia
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Sochorova v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2010] FMCA 33 (22 January 2010)
Last Updated: 27 January 2010
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SOCHOROVA v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
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PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Application for
summary judgment – applicant seeks damages for defective decision making
–
summary dismissal of proceedings granted.
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Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss.67, 68,
373Federal Court Act 1976, s.31A Federal Magistrates
Act 1999, s.17AJudiciary Act 1903,
s.39BAdministrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977,
ss.5, 6, 7, 11, 16Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act,
s.60 Federal Magistrates Court Rules 2001, r.13.10
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First Respondent:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP
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Second Respondent:
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MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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N/A
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In person by brother Mr Joseph Moda
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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N/A
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Solicitors for the Respondents:
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Clayton Utz
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ORDERS
(1) There be judgment for the respondents against the
applicant pursuant to s.17A Federal Magistrates Act 1999, and the
application filed 11 August 2009 is dismissed.
(2) The applicant shall pay the respondents’ costs of and incidental to
the proceedings, including the costs of the notice
of motion filed 5 October
2009, to be taxed if not
agreed.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATCAIRNS
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BRG 722 of 2009
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION &
CITIZENSHIP
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First Respondent
MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
respondents seek summary dismissal of the applicant’s claim. The
proceedings were commenced in the Federal Court of Australia.
The
respondents’ Notice of Motion seeks dismissal under s.31A Federal Court
Act 1976. On 9 October Logan J remitted the matter to this Court. Section
17A Federal Magistrates Act 1999 (“FMC Act”) is in the same
terms as s.31A Federal Court Act. It relevantly
provides:
- (2) The
Federal Magistrates Court may give judgment for one party against another in
relation to the whole or any part of a proceeding
if:
- (a) the
first party is defending the proceeding or that part of the proceeding;
and
- (b) the
Court is satisfied that the other party has no reasonable prospect of
successfully prosecuting the proceeding or that part
of the
proceeding.
- (3) For
the purposes of this section, a defence or a proceeding or part of a proceeding
need not be:
- (a) hopeless;
or
- (b) bound
to fail;
- for it to
have no reasonable prospect of success.
- In
their written submissions, the respondents refer to Rule 13.10 Federal
Magistrates Court Rules 2001. That Rule relevantly
provides:
- The Court
may order that a proceeding be stayed, or dismissed generally or in relation to
any claim for relief in the proceeding,
if the Court is satisfied
that:
- (a) the
party prosecuting the proceeding or claim for relief has no reasonable prospect
of successfully prosecuting the proceeding
or claim; or
- (b) the
proceeding or claim for relief is frivolous or vexatious; or
- (c) the
proceeding or claim for relief is an abuse of the process of the
Court.
- There
has been debate as to the extent to which the court should examine the merits of
a case in determining whether to summarily
dismiss it. Although s.17A of the
FMC Act (and the cognate s.31A Federal Court of Australia Act 1976) were
introduced to allow the courts more flexibility in dealing with what were
perceived to be unmeritorious migration appeals (for
the history of which see
White Industries Aust Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2007] FCA 511 at
[55] ff) the legislation now embraces a test that allows a court considerably
more scope in all proceedings than the ‘traditional
test’ in cases
such as Dey v Victorian Railways Commissioners [1949] HCA 1; (1949) 78 CLR 62 and
General Steel Industries Inc v Commissioner for Railways (NSW) [1964] HCA 69; (1964) 112
CLR 125. That is, in my view, made abundantly clear by the language of s.17A(3)
of the FMC Act.
- In
Jefferson Ford Pty Ltd v Ford Motor Co of Australia Ltd [2008] FCAFC 60
the Full Federal Court was not unanimous as to the appropriate test to apply on
an application for summary dismissal. Rares J, a
member of the Full Court, had
earlier expressed the test in Boston Commercial Services Pty Ltd v GE Capital
Finance Australasia Pty Ltd [2006] FCA 1352; (2006) 236 ALR 720, as follows, at [42], [44]
and [45]:
- “[42] I
am of the opinion that, properly construed, s31A(2)(b) requires a person moving
a motion for summary disposal (the
moving party) to satisfy the court that there
is no reasonable prospect of the party claiming relief (the plaintiff)
successfully
prosecuting the proceeding or the part of the proceeding in
question. ...
[44] In a case to which s31A
applies, where there is a real issue of fact to be decided in the sense
identified in the above principle,
and, possibly, where there is a real issue of
law of a similar kind, it is obviously appropriate that the matter does to
trial.
...
[45] I am of opinion that in assessing what reasonable prospects of success
are for the purposes of s31A, the court must be very
cautious not to do a party
an injustice by summarily dismissing the proceedings where, in accordance with
the principles in Hocking
(1947), contested evidence might reasonably be
believed one way or the other so as to enable one side or the other to succeed.
As
soon as the evidence may have such an ambivalent character prior to a final
determination, I am of the opinion that then, as a matter
of law, at that point
there are reasonable prospects of success within the meaning of s31A. Unless
only one conclusion can be said
to be reasonable, the moving party will not have
discharged its onus to enliven the discretion to authorise a summary termination
of the proceedings which s31A envisages. ...”
- Nuances
in the test to be applied do not arise in this case because the respondents
submit that, as a matter of law, the applicant
cannot succeed in her claim,
because the Court does not have the jurisdiction to grant the remedy that she
seeks.
- An
application was filed, on 11 August 2009, purportedly seeking relief under the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (“ADJR
Act”) in respect of the decision made on 23 March 2006 to grant the
applicant a permanent residency visa. In
fact, when one has regard to the
applicant’s material, she does not in fact seek any relief in respect of
the decision of 23
March 2006, except that her visa should have been backdated,
but rather her complaint is as to the length of time that it has taken
for the
visa to be granted.
- The
issue of whether the visa can be backdated can be dealt with shortly. Section
68(1) and (2) Migration Act 1958 provide:
- (1) Subject
to subsection (2), a visa has effect as soon as it is granted.
- (2) A visa
may provide that it comes into effect at the beginning of a day, being a day
after its grant:
- (a) specified
in the visa; or
- (b) when
an event, specified in the visa, happens.
- By
s.67 of the Act:
- A visa is
to be granted by the Minister causing a record of it to be
made.
- There
is no provision in the Act that permits a visa to be granted from a day earlier
than when it is recorded. It can be post-dated
but not backdated.
- It
follows that the applicant has no basis upon which she can seek relief in
respect of the decision actually made on 23 March 2006.
She cannot seek a writ
of mandamus, as claimed by her. That part of the application has no reasonable
prospects of success.
- I
turn then to the other aspect of the claim, which is that by their delay in
granting the visa, the respondents, and each of them,
has caused the applicant
to suffer loss. This is because, it is said, due to the delay the applicant has
not been entitled to receive
benefits under the Social Security Act 1991,
nor from Medicare under the Health Insurance Act 1973.
- The
applicant seeks damages in three components:
- For
medical expenses of $19,175;
- For
loss of pension entitlements of $107,194; and
- For
stress related injury to health of $320,833
- The
application is made under s.39B(1A)(c) Judiciary Act and ss.5, 6, 7 and
16 of the ADJR Act.
- The
provision of the Judiciary Act relied upon by the applicant
provides:
- (1A) The
original jurisdiction of the Federal Court of Australia also includes
jurisdiction in any matter:
- ...
- (c) arising
under any laws made by the Parliament, other than a matter in respect of which a
criminal prosecution is instituted
or any other criminal
matter.
- The
applicant did not refer to any statute that entitles her to claim damages
against either respondent. In her written submissions,
reference is made in a
number of places to false imprisonment. If the applicant had a justiciable
claim for damages for false imprisonment
(about which I express no conclusion,
because it is not part of the application before the Court) it would not be one
that arises
under any law made by the Commonwealth Parliament. It is a claim at
common law.
- No
claim for damages could arise under the Migration Act itself.
- I
conclude, therefore, that the applicant’s claim for damages insofar as it
relies on the Judiciary Act, has no reasonable prospects of success.
- The
ADJR Act claim gives rise to three problems for the applicant. First, the Act
does not confer any entitlement to claim damages
in respect of the defective or
unlawful making of an administrative decision. Section 16 of the Act sets out
the remedies that can
be granted.
- Secondly,
s.11(3) ADJR Act prescribes a 28 day time limit for applications seeking review
of decisions. As I will shortly set out,
a number of decisions have been made
that have affected the applicant. The latest of those decisions was on 23 June
2006. More
than three years has elapsed since the making of the last decision.
No application has been made for an extension of time.
- Thirdly,
the applicant has not properly identified the decision or decision that she
seeks review of. In so far as the applicant
seeks review of decisions made
under the Migration Act, as I think must be the case, that legislation
specifically provides for a regime of review. It contains a procedure by which
privative
clause decisions can be challenged, sets time limits, and provides a
comprehensive code of the rules of natural justice. By schedule
1 to the ADJR
Act, in particular sub-clauses (da) and (db), the ADJR Act would not apply to
the decisions of which the applicant
complains. The applicant has exercised her
rights to seek review of decisions made adversely to her under the Migration
Act.
- In
my view, the applicant has no reasonable prospects of successfully prosecuting
her claim for the relief that she seeks under the
ADJR Act.
- It
follows that the two claims articulated by the applicant ought be summarily
dismissed.
- The
dismissal of these proceedings does not mean that the Court condones the way in
which the applicant’s claim for a visa has
been handled. Of course, the
Court has not heard all of the evidence about why it took so long for the
applicant’s claim to
a visa to be dealt with. However, the delays
involved do seem excessive. It is hard not to feel sympathy for a 67 year lady
who
has been trying for years to obtain a visa to be re-united with her brother
from whom she was separated during the Second World War.
- The
applicant applied for her visa on 14 July 1999. It was not granted until 23
June 2006.
- In
the intervening period, the applicant has been to the Migration Review Tribunal
four times, to the Federal Court twice and to the
Full Federal Court twice, as
well as having numerous meetings and correspondence with officers of the
department. She has been embroiled
in a petty bureaucratic wrangle over whether
she should have a waiver of fees, because the Regulations changed between when
her application
was first made and when it was reconsidered, and a fresh
application had to be made. The Minister sought leave to appeal to the
Full
Court against an extension of time granted by Kiefel J that was necessitated by
the deficient way in which the Tribunal’s
initial decision was handed
down.
- Unfortunately,
the way in which the applicant has been subjected to a bureaucratic nightmare
does not confer a right of action under
any Commonwealth statute. Indeed, as
Kirby P (as his Honour then was) said in Macksville & District Hospital v
Mayze (1987) 10 NSWLR 708 at 724:
- “There
has for some years been a large debate concerning the entitlement of persons
affected adversely by administrative decisions
to compensation for the damaging
consequences thereof. Sometimes judicial review is a precursor to a claim for
damages, as in Dunlop
v Woollahra Municipal Council [1982] AC 158. Sometimes,
in the course of a civil action, the legality of the administrative action will
be raised. No general cause of action
exists by our law under which public
authorities which exceeded their jurisdiction (as by denial of natural justice
which they are
obliged to accord) are liable in damages for the consequences
which they thereby occasion.”
- I
should add, for the sake of completeness, a reference to two matters.
- The
first is that, although not argued, members of the Migration Review Tribunal
enjoy certain privileges and immunities: s.373 Migration Act (and by
application s.60 Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act, and the principles
discussed is cases such as Gallo v Dawson [1992] HCA 44; (1992) 109 ALR 319).
- The
second is that the solicitor for the respondents helpfully drew to the
applicant’s and the Court’s attention to the
Scheme for Compensation
for Detriment caused by Defective Administration (the CDDA Scheme). A copy of
Finance Circular No. 2006/05
was provided to the applicant.
- I
raise the first matter to highlight the difficulties that the applicant might
confront if she seeks a remedy in another Court.
The applicant has already been
the subject of an adverse order in this Court when she attempted to obtain much
the same relief under
the Migration Act or the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission Act 1986: Sochorova v Minister for Immigration
& Anor [2008] FMCA 1544.
- I
raise the second matter because it may afford the applicant with a means of
recovering some, although probably not all, of the loss
that she claims she has
incurred. Of course, no representation was made by either respondent as to the
applicant’s prospects
of receiving a payment under the CDDA scheme.
- The
applicant will have to pay the respondent’s costs, as they have been
successful on their application. It is, of course,
a matter for the respondents
whether they enforce that order.
I certify that the preceding
32Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!thirty-twothirty-two (32) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for
judgment of Wilson FM
Associate: Lynnette Chin
Date: 22 January 2010
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