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Chen v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 23 (25 January 2011)
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia
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Chen v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 23 (25 January 2011)
Last Updated: 22 February 2011
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
CHEN v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
|
|
MIGRATION – VISA – Business Visa
– Class EA (subclass 132) (Business Talent) – application for
judicial review
of decision of Administrative Appeals Tribunal – decision
by delegate to cancel visa – where applicant was secondary
visa holder
– whether notice under Migration Act 1958 (Cth) s. 135 can only be
issued once the primary holder’s visa has been cancelled – where
notice to the secondary visa holder when
the primary visa holder’s visa
had not been cancelled – whether the Tribunal erroneously took into
account the situation
of “many students” rather than the
applicant’s personal circumstances – whether the Tribunal decision
was
unreasonable.
|
|
First Respondent:
|
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP
|
|
Second Respondent:
|
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
|
|
Hearing date:
|
17 November 2010
|
|
Date of Last Submission:
|
17 November 2010
|
|
Delivered on:
|
25 January 2011
|
REPRESENTATION
Solicitor for the
Applicant:
|
Dobbie and Devine Immigration Lawyers
|
Counsel for the First Respondent:
|
Mr Potts
|
Solicitor for the First Respondents:
|
Clayton Utz
|
Solicitors for the Second Respondents:
|
Phillip Kellow
|
ORDERS
(1) The application is dismissed.
(2) The applicant is to pay the first respondent’s
costs.
|
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT
SYDNEY
|
SYG 1719 of
2010
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION &
CITIZENSHIP
|
First Respondent
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
|
Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Application
- This
is an application for review of a decision by the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal made on 9th July 2010 to affirm a decision of
a delegate of the first respondent, the Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship, to cancel the
applicant’s Class EA (subclass 132) (Business
Talent) visa.
- In
his application, the applicant seeks the following:
- A
writ of certiorari directed to the second respondent, the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal[1], quashing
the Tribunal decision;
- A
writ of mandamus directed to the second respondent requiring it to rehear and
determine the applicants’ application according
to law;
- A
writ of prohibition preventing the first respondent, the Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship, his servants and agents from
acting upon or giving
effect to the Tribunal decision;
- Other
relief as appropriate; and
- Costs.
- The
applicant relies on the following ground:
- The
Tribunal misinterpreted the applicable law and misapplied the law to the
facts.
- The
particulars are divided into three sections, marked A, B and C.
- As
to A, the applicant claims that the Tribunal misinterpreted and misapplied the
law by finding that the cancellation of the Applicant’s
visa under s.
13494) of the Migration Act 1958 was lawful in
circumstances:
- where
it is a condition precedent to the valid exercise of the delegate’s power
to cancel the Applicant’s visa under s 134(4) that a notice under s 135 of
the Act (proposing to cancel his visa under s 134(4) of the Act) be issued
within a prescribed three year period (s 134(9)); and
- where
the s 135 notice can only be issued after the visa held by the primary visa
holder (being the Applicant’s father) relevantly had to have
been
cancelled under s 13491); and
- where
the primary visa holder’s visa had not been cancelled under s 134(1) when
the purported s 135 notice was issued to the
Applicant
such that the cancellation of the
Applicant’s visa could not be cancelled
(sic)[2] as the
prescribed notice was not given within the three year period prescribed by s
134(9).
- As
to B, the applicant claims that the Tribunal misinterpreted and misapplied the
law in relation to whether s 134(5) applied to the Applicant:
- in
determining whether the Applicant would suffer extreme hardship for the purposes
of ss 134(40 and 134(50 of the Act, the Tribunal erroneously took into account
the situation of ‘many students’, rather than the Applicant’s
personal circumstances.
- As
to C, the applicant claims that the Tribunal’s decision is so unreasonable
and or not supported by probative evidence as
to be invalid:
- In
determining whether the Applicant would suffer extreme hardship for the purposes
of ss 134(4) and 134(50 of the Act, in circumstances where the Applicant’s
application for Australian Citizenship had been approved, but where citizenship
could not be granted if the Applicant’s permanent residence visa was
cancelled, the Tribunal unreasonably and without any probative
evidence:
- speculated
that the Applicant might somehow obtain permanent residence in the future by way
of an unstated visa class; and should
permanent residence be granted
- posited
that the Applicant might in the future then be able to apply for Australian
Citizenship.
Background
- The
primary visa holder is Mr Minhua Chen, who is the applicant’s father. Mr
Chen (senior) applied for a Business Skills –
Business Talent (Migrant)
(Class EA) (Subclass 132) visa along with his wife, his daughter, and the
applicant.
- On
30th March 2006, a delegate of the Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship notified Mr Minhua Chen that he and his wife and
children
had been granted Subclass 132 visas, subject to the condition that they
entered Australia by 20th August 2006. They entered
Australia on their visas on 7th July 2006.
- On
25th June 2009, a delegate of the Minister wrote to the
applicant. The letter was headed Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation
of your Visa.
- The
letter said (in part):
- I am
writing to notify you that there may be grounds to consider cancellation of your
Business Skills visa. Please read this letter
carefully as it contains important
information about the Minister’s powers to cancel your visa, your
opportunity to make representations
about the proposed cancellation, as well as
the consequences of having your visa cancelled....
- Reasons
for Considering Cancellation
- On 25 June
2009, Mr Minhua Chen was sent a Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation of
his Business Skills visa under section 134 of the Act. As you were granted a
visa because Mr Minhua Chen was granted a visa, your Business Skills visa must
be cancelled.
- Opportunity
to comment
- The Act
gives you the opportunity to comment on these grounds for cancellation. Your
representation should say why you think the
cancellation of any visas held by
you and members of your family unit (eg dependent children) would result in
extreme hardship. You
may include documents that support your
claims.[3]
- A
delegate of the Minister decided to cancel the applicant’s visa on
21st October 2009. In the delegate’s Record of
Decision, the delegate noted;
- I received
a written response from Mr Minhua Chen through Mr John Han on 23 July 2009 via
email to the notice of intention to cancel.
- No claims
were made that the cancellation would result in extreme hardship for members of
the family unit.
- Part D:
Whether To Cancel
- No claims
have been made by any members of the family unit that extreme hardship would be
suffered as a result of their visa being
cancelled. In the absence of any other
information, I do not consider the cancellation of their visas would result in
extreme hardship
to any of the family members.
- Part
E: Decision to Cancel
- Having
already cancelled the visa of Mr Minhua Chen, I have decided to cancel
the Business Skills visas held by:
- CHEN, TING
(25/03/1984, M)
as I am satisfied that members of
the family unit would not suffer extreme hardship as a result of visa
cancellation.[4]
- That
same day, the delegate wrote to the applicant, giving him notice that his visa
had been cancelled. The letter stated (in part):
- The
Migration Act 1958 (the Act) provides that where a person’s visa is
cancelled under section 134 of the Act and another person holds a visa only
because the person whose visa is cancelled a visa, then the Minister must
cancel the other person’s visa by giving written notice. On 21 October
2009, Mr Minhua Chen’s visa was cancelled under
section 134 of the Act. As
you were granted a visa because Mr Minhua Chen was granted a visa, your visa
must be cancelled:
- At the time
of notifying both yourself and Mr Minhua Chen of my intention to consider
cancellation of your visas, you were given
the opportunity to make
representations about whether you would suffer any extreme hardship as a result
of having your visa(s) cancelled.
As no representations about hardship were
made, your visa(s) has been cancelled under section 134 of the Migration Act. A
record of my decision is
attached.[5]
- On
1st February 2010, the applicant applied to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal for review of the delegate’s decision. The
Tribunal
heard the application, along with that of his father, mother and
sister, on 28th June 2010 and handed down its decision
on 9th July 2010, affirming the delegate’s
decision.
The Tribunal Decision
- In
its Reasons for Decision, the Administrative Appeals Tribunal defined the issues
in relation to the applicant, his mother and his
sister, as:
- whether
the decisions to cancel their visas were made in accordance with the provisions
of the Act; and
- whether
their visas should not be cancelled because they will suffer extreme hardship as
a result.[6]
- The
applicants argued that it was a condition precedent to the valid exercise of the
delegate’s power to issue a notice proposing
to cancel the
visas[7] held by the
secondary visa holders, Mr Ting Chen, Ms Fan and Ms Chen, that the visa held by
the primary visa holder, Mr Minhua Chen,
had already been cancelled. The
applicant relied on the decision of Lander J in Zhong v Minister for
Immigration and
Citizenship[8],
which considered when a Notice under s 107 of the Act could be issued for
the purposes of a cancellation under s 190 of the Act. Lander J held at
[72]:
- In my
opinion, s 107 is only engaged where the Minister, or relevantly a delegate of
the Minister, has concluded that the holder of a visa has not complied
with one
of the sections or subsections mentioned in s 107(1). It is only in that case
that the Minister or the delegate is entitled to give notice to the visa holder
in accordance with that subsection.
Section 107 is engaged because the minister,
or a delegate of the Minister, has reached a state of mind where they consider
that the holder of
a visa has not complied with a relevant
section.[9]
- However,
the Tribunal followed its own decision in Lin and Minister for Immigration
and Citizenship[10],
distinguishing the decision in Zhong v Minister for immigration and
Citizenship and rejecting the argument that the cancellation of the visa
holder’s visa is a pre-condition or a condition precedent to the
issuing
of a notice to the secondary visa holder under s 135 of the
Act.[11]
- The
Tribunal noted that the applicant had spent nearly nine months in
Australia
in 2007 and seventeen months in Australia in 2008/2009, departing on
21st July 2009. The Tribunal took note of the
applicant’s statement that said:
- He
loved the life and people in Sydney;
- He
had made several friends;
- He
applied for Australian citizenship on 11th June
2009.
- It
was argued by Mr Dobbie, for the applicant, that if his visa were cancelled he
would be unable to attain Australian citizenship,
which would cause him extreme
hardship.
- The
Tribunal rejected that argument, saying:
- In the
Tribunal’s view, Mr Chen’s situation is similar to that of many
students who have studied in Australia. The fact
that his business visa has been
cancelled does not prevent him from applying for a visa on his own account.
Ultimately, if he is
granted a visa entitling him to permanent residency, he may
in future be able to apply for Australian citizenship. Thus, while Mr
Chen may
have preferred another outcome, the Tribunal is not satisfied on the basis of
the evidence before it that he will suffer
extreme hardship if his visa is
cancelled, and we are satisfied that s 134(5) does not therefore
apply.[12]
- The
Tribunal affirmed the delegate’s decision.
Application to the Federal Magistrates Court
- The
applicant filed his application on 6th August 2010,
along with an affidavit in support by Ma Rosario Xiella Devine, solicitor,
annexing a copy of the Tribunal decision.
- The
applicant’s solicitor filed a written outline of submissions on
4th November 2010. The first respondent’s
solicitors filed their outline of submissions on 12th
November 2010.
- The
application was heard by way of submissions on 17th
November 2010.
The Applicant’s Submissions
- The
applicant’s solicitor, Mr Dobbie, submitted that the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT) had committed jurisdictional
error in rejecting the
argument that it was a condition precedent to the valid exercise of power to
give the s 135 notice that the visa held by Minhua Chen had to have been
cancelled before the notice could be given.
- Although
it was not directly on point, the applicant relied on the decision of Lander J
in Zhong v Minister for immigration and
Citizenship[13],
particularly at [71] and [72]. The submission is that the AAT fell into
error by following its earlier decision in Lin and Minister for Immigration
and Citizenship[14],
where Handley DP distinguished the decision in Zhong on the facts,
stating that:
- ...it was
concerned with non-compliance and the relevant section of the Act in that case
required the Minister to have first decided
that the holder of the visa had not
complied with specific provisions of the Act before giving the holder of the
visa a notice. While
s 134(4) is subject to s 134(5) and s 135, s 134(4) is
purely about cancelling visas by giving written notice of cancellation to the
visa holders, and does not itself deal with the
grounds for cancellation. There
is no requirement in the subsection for the Minister to have attained a
particular state of
mind.[15]
- The
applicant’s submission is that, contrary to the AAT’s finding, a
prescribed state of mind is required before the s 135 notice can be given. That
state of mind, prescribed in clear language by s 135(1)(a), is that the Minister
“proposes to cancel the visa: held by the applicant.
- The
only time that state of mind can exist is when the visa held by the primary visa
holder has been cancelled under s 134(1). The power under s 134(4) is only
enlivened if the primary visa holder’s visa has been cancelled under s
134(1).
- The
thrust of the applicant’s argument is that the Minister is not permitted
to give notice under s 135 for the purposes of a cancellation under s 134(4)
until the primary visa holder’s visa is cancelled. The construction of the
legislation, given the interaction between ss 134 and 135, requires it. Mr
Dobbie referred the decision of Gleeson CJ in Plaintiff S157/2002 v The
Commonwealth of
Australia[16],
where his Honour said at [19]:
- Later
again, in R v Metal Trades Employers’ Association; Ex parte Amalgamated
Engineering Union, Australian
Section[17], Dixon
J referred to “imperative duties or inviolable limitations or
restraints” which may be imposed by legislation,
contravention of which
would not be protected by a privative provision. To describe the duty as
imperative, or a restraint as inviolable,
is to express the result of a process
of construction, rather than a reason for adopting a particular construction;
but it explains
the nature of the judgment to be made. Because what is involved
is a process of statutory construction, and attempted reconciliation,
the
outcome will necessarily be influenced by the particular statutory context.
- Mr
Dobbie submitted that there was an absurdity relating to the time to respond to
a s 135 notice on the construction adopted by the AAT, namely, that s 135
contains different time limits to respond to a notice:
- A
visa holder has 28 days to respond if notice is given in Australia; but
- A
visa holder has 70 days to respond if notice is given outside
Australia.
- The
absurdity that is argued is that if the secondary visa holder was given notice
in Australia but the primary visa holder was given
notice outside Australia, the
secondary visa holder would have to respond within 28 days, before the primary
visa holder, who would
have 70 days to respond.
- It
was further submitted that another absurdity would arise if the Minister were to
give a section 135 notice to a secondary visa holder without reference to a
primary visa holder at all.
- The
submission is that it is a precondition to the giving of a s 135 notice that the
primary visa holder’s visa has been cancelled pursuant to s 134(1) before
the notice could be given, as the state of mind required by s 135(1)(a) could
not exist before that cancellation occurred.
- As
to the second leg of the ground, it was submitted that the AAT committed
jurisdictional error by failing to have regard to the
applicant’s personal
circumstances. The applicant had claimed that he would suffer extreme hardship
if his visa were to be
cancelled, because:
- in
his mind and his heart he had committed fully to Australia;
- he
had applied for Australian citizenship; and
- the
cancellation of his visa has devastated him and prevented him form becoming an
Australian citizen.
- Mr
Dobbie submitted that, despite correctly stating that the test for extreme
hardship is a subjective test requiring a full consideration
of the
applicant’s personal circumstances, the Tribunal had erroneously applied
an objective test by comparing his situation
to that of many other students who
had studied in Australia.
- The
third leg of the ground is that the Tribunal’s decision is so unreasonable
and or not supported by probative evidence that
it is invalid. Mr Dobbie
submitted that the Tribunal, in circumstances where the applicant’s
application for Australian citizenship
had been approved, but where citizenship
could not be granted if his permanent residence visa was cancelled, the Tribunal
unreasonably
and without any probative evidence:
- speculated
that the applicant might somehow obtain permanent residence at an unspecified
time in the future by way of an unstated
visa class, and, if that were
granted;
- posited
that the applicant might then be able to apply for Australian citizenship.
- However,
he submitted, there was no evidence that the applicant would be eligible for a
visa entitling him to permanent residence.
It was unreasonable to determine the
applicant’s claim of extreme hardship on the basis of baseless
speculation. There was,
therefore, a failure to give a proper consideration to
the applicant’s claims, which constitutes jurisdictional error.
- Mr
Dobbie referred to the decision of the High Court in Minister for Immigration
and Citizenship v
SZMDS[18], where
Crennan and Bell JJ held at [130]-[131] that:
- 130. In the
context of the Tribunal’s decision here, ‘illogicality’ or
‘irrationality’ sufficient to
give rise to jurisdictional error must
mean the decision to which the Tribunal came, in relation to the state of
satisfaction required
under s 65, is one at which no rational or logical
decision maker could arrive on the same evidence....
- 131. ...but,
the test for illogicality or irrationality must be to ask whether logical or
rational or reasonable minds might adopt
different reasoning or might differ in
any decision or finding to be made on evidence upon which the decision is based.
The First Respondent’s Submissions
- Mr
Potts of counsel appeared for the Minister.
- As
to the applicant’s first ground, or the first leg of the ground, that the
cancellation under s 134(1) of the visa held by the primary visa holder is a
condition precedent to the valid exercise of power to give notice to a secondary
visa holder under s 135(1), Mr Potts submitted that there was a logical fallacy
in the applicant’s argument that there needs to be a prescribed state
of
mind before a section 135 notice can be given. The fallacy is the assumption
that the state of mind can only exists in relation to a secondary visa holder
once the primary visa holder’s visa has been cancelled.
- It
was submitted that the legislative scheme envisages that the Minister will have
reached a point at which he intends to cancel the
visa, subject to consideration
of any representations that the visa holder wishes to make. In sending a section
135 notice to the secondary visa holder, the Minister is indicating an intention
to cancel the primary visa holder’s visa; as a
consequence the Minister
would cancel the visa held by the secondary visa holder.
- Mr
Potts submitted that there was no absurdity in respect of the fact that there
are two different periods of time prescribed for
making representations, 28 days
and 70 days, depending on whether the visa holders are inside or outside
Australia at the time the
notice is given. Further, it was submitted that the
applicant had not explained how in practice a situation would arise where the
Minister would give a section 135 notice to a secondary visa holder without
reference to the primary visa holder.
- In
respect of the applicant’s claim that the Tribunal misinterpreted and
misapplied the law in relation to s 134(5) by taking into account the situation
of ‘many students’ rather than the applicant’s personal
circumstances in determining
whether he would suffer extreme hardship, Mr Potts
submitted that this was not an accurate characterisation of the way that the
Tribunal
dealt with the claim of extreme hardship.
- The
Tribunal had taken the applicant’s personal circumstances into account and
the claimed bases on which he said he would suffer
extreme hardship. There was
nothing impermissible in the Tribunal contrasting the applicant’s
situation with those of others
in order to make some assessment of the relative
level of hardship he might face if his visa were to be cancelled. The term
‘extreme’
was a comparative term which invites comparison wit other
levels of hardship. Nothing in the text of s 134(5) prevents the Tribunal from
considering whether the circumstances which would befall the applicant upon the
cancellation of his visa
would involve a level of hardship which was more or
less extreme than that which would be experienced by students in a similar
position.
- It
was put to the tribunal that the applicant was already mentally committed to
becoming an Australian citizen and that the cancellation
of his visa would
prevent this from happening. The Tribunal addressed that argument by finding
that he might be able to obtain a
visa entitling him to permanent residency and
thereby attain Australian citizenship that way.
- As
to the third leg of the applicant’s ground, that the Tribunal’s
decision was so unreasonable and not supported by probative
evidence as to be
invalid, Mr Potts submitted that the Tribunal decision in relation to extreme
hardship was plainly open to it.
There was no illogicality or irrationality in
what the Tribunal did.
Conclusions
- It
is argued that the s 135 notice given to the secondary visa holder is invalid
because it is a condition precedent that the primary visa holder’s visa
must actually have been cancelled before the notice is sent to the secondary
visa holder. It was further argued that the Minister
needs to have a particular
state of mind, namely that the Minister proposes to cancel the visa, which can
only come into existence
in respect of the secondary visa holder’s visa
has been cancelled.
- Subsection
134(4) provides:
- Subject to
subsection (5) and to section 135, if:
- (a) the
Minister cancels a person’s business visa under subsection (1) or (3A);
and
- (b) a
business visa is held by another person who is or was a member of the family
unit of the holder of the cancelled visa; and
- (c) the
other person would not have held that business visa if he or she had not been a
member of the family unit of the holder of
the cancelled visa;
- the
Minister must cancel the other person’s business permit or business visa
by giving written notice to that person.
- However,
subsection (5) provides the circumstance in which the secondary visa
holder’s visa must not be cancelled:
- The
Minister must not cancel the other person’s business visa under subsection
(4) if the cancellation of that visa would result
in extreme hardship to the
person.
- Again,
s 135(1) requires the Minister to give written notice to a visa holder:
- Before
cancelling a visa under subsection 134(1), (3A) or (4), the Minister must give
its holder written notice:
- (a) stating
that the Minister proposes to cancel the visa; and
- (b) inviting
its holder to make representations to the Minister concerning the proposed
cancellation within:
- (i) if the
notice is given in Australia – 28 days after the notice is given;
or
- (b) if the
notice is given outside Australia – 70 days after the notice is
given.
- Subsection
134(4) requires the minister to cancel the visa of the secondary visa holder
once the primary visa holder’s visa has been cancelled,
unless the
cancellation of the secondary visa holder’s visa would result in extreme
hardship to that person (s 134(5)). This is subject to the requirement under s
135 that the Minister must give both the primary visa holder and the secondary
visa holder the opportunity to make representations within
specified period of
time. The primary visa holder can, of course, make representations about matters
pertinent to subsections (1)
or (3A), noting the guidelines, which are
non-exhaustive, set out in subsection (3). However, the secondary visa holder
can only
make representations about extreme hardship.
- In
my view, it does not follow that the Minister can only call on the secondary
visa holder to make representations under s 135 once the primary visa
holder’s visa has been cancelled. The decision to cancel the primary visa
holder’s visa will normally
be made after considering all the
representations made by the primary visa holder. If those representations are
unsuccessful, the
visa will be cancelled. It follows that the visa of the
secondary visa holder will also be cancelled, unless that person satisfies
the
Minister that this cancellation would result in extreme hardship.
- To
my mind, there is nothing in either s 134 or s 135 that requires the Minister to
wait until the primary visa holder’s visa is actually cancelled before
issuing under s 135 to the secondary visa holder giving him or her the
opportunity to make representations on the limited issue of extreme hardship.
- The
language of the sections does not require the decision to be made to cancel the
visa of the primary visa holder before issuing
a notice under s 135 to the
secondary visa holder. As the cancellation of the secondary visa holder’s
visa must follow unless it would result in
extreme hardship, it would clearly be
more practical for the Minister to have that information available at the time
of cancelling
the visa of the primary visa holder.
- The
argument raised about an “absurdity” arising from different of time,
28 days or 70 days, according to whether the
visa holders are in Australia or
outside Australia does not, with respect, lead anywhere. I am unable to discern
any absurdity in
practice, just as I am unable to envisage a situation where a
section 135 notice would be given to a secondary visa holder without reference
to the primary visa holder. There would be no point in doing so,
because the
cancellation of the secondary visa holder’s visa flows from the
cancellation of the visa of the primary visa holder.
-
It can certainly be said that the cancellation of the primary visa
holder’s visa is a condition precedent to the cancellation of the
secondary visa holder’s visa under s 134, but it is not a condition
precedent to the giving of notice under s 135.
- The
first leg of the applicant’s ground of review has not been made out.
- The
applicant has also argued that the Tribunal fell into error by failing to
consider the applicant’s claim of extreme hardship
subjectively. Instead,
he claims that the Tribunal erroneously applied an objective test.
- What
the Tribunal did was to consider the applicant’s claims of the hardship he
would suffer, set out in paragraphs [54] and
[55] of the decision. The Tribunal
noted:
- There is no
specific evidence of
hardship.[19]
- The
Tribunal then, in paragraph [56], equated the applicant’s situation to
that of many students who have studied in Australia
and noted that there was
nothing top prevent him from applying for some other sort of visa on his own
account. That could well lead
him to obtaining permanent residence and
eventually citizenship.
- That,
with respect, is not speculative. It is no more than a consideration and
evaluation of the applicant’s claim. The Tribunal
noted that there was no
specific evidence of hardship, and what its examination of the applicant’s
claim was doing was considering
that claim against the test for extreme hardship
set out in Man Ki Kim v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic
Affairs[20], where
Foster J held at 487:
- ...it is,
in my opinion, important to approach the phrase ‘extreme hardship’
in a broad way. Clearly, it imports a high
degree, perhaps a very high degree of
hardship, but it must be applied in the context of the facts of the particular
case. ‘Hardship’
is in itself a relative term. What may be a
‘hardship’ to a sensitive person, or one in a particularly
vulnerable situation,
may be no great burden at all to a person of more stoical
disposition or in a more protected situation. Similarly, the word
‘extreme’
must be evaluated against the facts of the particular
case. Such an evaluation cannot, consistently with the duties imposed upon
the
decision-maker by the Act, be approached in a dismissive or perfunctory fashion.
A full and proper consideration of the person
allegedly suffering the hardship
or prejudice must be undertaken.
- What
the applicant claimed was that he was “devastated” by the
cancellation of his visa because it would prevent him form
becoming an
Australian citizen, which he had committed to doing. All the Tribunal was doing
was noting that many people would be
in that situation, and it was looking for
some evidence from the applicant that this situation would impose extreme
hardship on him, which he had failed to provide. The Tribunal could hardly
be expected just to accept the applicant’s claim
that he was
“devastated” without being provided with information as to why that
was the case.
- The
applicant did not provide any evidence that the cancellation would cause more
hardship to him than it would to any other person
in a similar situation, for
reasons that were peculiar to him. The Tribunal’s task was to evaluate his
claim that the hardship
that would result would be extreme hardship, rather than
a lesser form. Hardship is not an absolute, it is a relative term.
- The
Tribunal applied the test correctly and did not fall into error.
- As
to the applicant’s claim that the Tribunal’s decision was so
unreasonable, illogical or irrational that no rational
or logical decision maker
could arrive at such a decision, I am far from persuaded that this claim has
been made out.
- The
applicant claimed that the cancellation would cause him extreme hardship because
it would deprive him of the chance to obtain
permanent residence and eventually
citizenship. The Tribunal was not satisfied on the basis of the evidence he
provided that he had
established his case.
- There
is nothing unreasonable, irrational or illogical about that.
- The
applicant has not succeeded in establishing that the Tribunal fell into
jurisdictional error and, in the absence of such error,
his application must
fail.
- The
application will be dismissed.
- I
will consider the question of costs. The applicant is an adult and is not under
any disability. It is normally the case that costs
follow the
event.
I certify that the preceding
70Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!seventyseventy (70) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment
of Scarlett FM
Date: 25 January 2011
[1]
AAT
[2] There appears
to be a typographical error in this sentence. It presumably refers to the visa
not being able to be
cancelled.
[3] Court
Book at P24 - P25
[4]
Court Book P9
[5]
Court Book P6
[6]
Court Book P37 at paragraph
8
[7] A notice under
the provisions of s 135 of the Migration Act
[8] (2008) 171
FCR 444
[9] [2008] FCA 507; (2008)
171 FCR 444 at
[72]
[10] [2009]
AATA 938
[11] Court
Book P41 at [26] –
[27]
[12] Court
Book P49 at
[56]
[13]
supra
[14]
supra
[15]
[2009] AATA 938 at
[17]
[16] (2003)
211 CLR 476
[17]
Footnote
omitted
[18] (2010)
266 ALR 367
[19]
Court Book P49 at
[55]
[20] [1995] FCA 1088; (1995) 37
ALD 481
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