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Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 1319 (26 November 2010)
Last Updated: 30 November 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Kaur
v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 1319
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Citation:
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Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 1319
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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JASVIR KAUR v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number(s):
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NSD 1197 of 2010
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Judge:
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JACOBSON J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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MIGRATION – Student (Temporary)
(Class TU) subclass 572 and 573 visas – application for review of decision
of Federal Magistrate
upholding decision of delegate of Minister to grant
subclass 573 visa and upholding decision of Tribunal to affirm decision of
another
delegate to refuse to grant a subclass 572 visa – whether delegate
gave consideration to selection of visa expiry date
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Legislation:
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Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ss 4, 5, 30, 31,
41, 66, 68, 82, 351Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) regs 2.02, 2.03,
2.05, Schedule 1, Schedule 2
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Cases cited:
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Date of last submissions:
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26 November 2010
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Appellant:
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Solicitor for the Appellant:
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Parish Patience Immigration Lawyers
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Counsel for the Appellant:
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Mr J Smith
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Solicitor for the Appellant:
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DLA Phillips Fox
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIPFirst Respondent
MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be dismissed with costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 1197 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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BETWEEN:
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JASVIR KAUR Appellant
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP First
Respondent
MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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JACOBSON J
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DATE:
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26 NOVEMBER 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW
- This
is an appeal from orders made by Barnes FM on 27 August 2010. Her
Honour dismissed an application for review of two
decisions. The first was a
decision of a delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
(“delegate”), dated
28 June 2006, to grant the appellant a
subclass 573 visa until 6 June 2008. The second was a decision of the
Migration
Review Tribunal (“the Tribunal”), made on
17 September 2009, to affirm a decision of a delegate made on
26 September
2008 to refuse to grant the appellant a subclass 572 visa.
- The
essential issue which arises on the appeal is whether the Federal Magistrate
erred in finding that the appellant failed to establish
that the delegate did
not or did not appropriately consider the question of the date on which the
appellant’s visa expired.
- This
issue arose because, as explained later, the appellant, who had previously held
a subclass 573 visa, applied to the Minister
on 1 September 2010 for a
subclass 572 visa, to enable her to continue her studies in Australia.
- It
was a criterion for the grant of that visa that the application be made within
28 days after the day on which the appellant’s
last substantive visa
ceased to be in effect. This arose from the provisions of the Migration
Regulations 1994 (Cth) (“the Regulations”),
Schedule 2, item 572.211(3)(c)(i) to which I will refer in more detail
later.
- The
delegate, and on review the Tribunal, found that the appellant’s last
substantive visa had ceased to be in effect on 6 June
2008 and,
accordingly, refused to grant the appellant a subclass 572 visa.
- The
evidence before the Federal Magistrate demonstrated that the appellant had
believed that her last substantive visa ceased to
be in effect on 31 August
2008. That belief was based on a label in the appellant’s passport, which
showed the expiry
date as 31 August 2008.
- However,
the appellant, as I have said, whilst in Australia, applied for another visa to
change her course of studies. She was notified
that the visa granted pursuant
to that application was valid until 6 June 2008, but the terms of the
letter set out at Appeal
Book page 197, are, as will be discussed in more detail
later, in terms which are somewhat confusing.
- The
appellant argued before the Federal Magistrate that in granting the appellant
her last substantive visa, the delegate had erred
in imposing an expiry date of
6 June 2008. The substance of the argument was that the delegate had
fallen into jurisdictional
error by failing to consider the date on which the
visa expired or had failed to give appropriate consideration to it.
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
- The
stated object of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (“the Act”)
includes the regulation, in the national interest, of the coming into, and
presence in, Australia of
non-citizens. This is referred to in s 4(1) of
the Act.
- The
central means by which this object is achieved is an elaborate and
interconnected set of statutory provisions dealing with visas.
These are set
out in Part 2, Division 3 of the Act. A visa may be a visa to remain in
Australia during a specified period: see s 30(2)(a) of the Act.
- Section
31 of the Act provides that there are to be prescribed classes of visas.
Section 31(3) states that the regulations may prescribe the criteria for a visa
or visas of a specified class.
- Section
41 provides that the regulations may provide that visas, or visas of a specified
class, are subject to specified conditions.
- Section
66(1) of the Act states that when the Minister grants or refuses to grant a
visa, he or she is to notify the applicant of the decision
in the prescribed
way. However, there is no relevant provision in s 66 of the Act for the
Minister or the Minister's delegate to give reasons.
- Section
68(1) of the Act states relevantly that a visa has effect as soon as it is
granted. Section 68(3) provides that a visa can only be in effect during the
visa period for the visa. The term "visa period" is a defined term. The
definition
is set out in s 5(1) of the Act and provides that the “visa
period” is the period beginning when the visa is granted, and ending,
relevantly,
when the visa ceases to be in effect.
- Section
82(2) of the Act states that a substantive visa held by a non-citizen ceases to
be in effect if another substantive visa (other than a
special purpose visa) for
the non-citizen comes into effect. Section 82(7) provides that a visa to remain
in Australia (whether also a visa to travel to and enter Australia) during a
particular period or
until a particular date ceases to be in effect at the end
of that period or on that date.
- Regulation
2.01 of the Regulations provides that for the purpose of s 31 of the Act, the
prescribed classes of visas are relevantly such classes as are set out in the
respective items in Schedule 1.
- Regulation
2.02 provides for subclasses of visas. Regulation 2.02(1) states
that:
Schedule 2 is divided into Parts, each identified by the word
“Subclass” followed by a 3-digit number (being the number
of the
subclass of visa to which the Part relates) and the title of the
subclass.
- The
criteria for the grant of those classes of visas are referred to in reg 2.03.
- Regulation
2.05 deals with the conditions applicable to classes of visas.
- Item
1222 of Schedule 1 of the Regulations provides for the class of visa known as
Student (Temporary) (Class TU). Item 1222(1)
– (3) of Schedule 1
specifies the formal matters relevant to such a visa, including the form of
application, the cost and various
other matters. Item 1222(4) refers to the
establishment of subclasses of Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visas. These
include in
particular, subclass 572 applicable to Vocational Education and
Training Sector visas, and item 573, which apply to the subclass
known as the
Higher Education Sector.
- Two
items in relation to subclass 572 and subclass 573 are relevant to the present
application. The first is sub-item 572.211(3)(b)(i)
and (c)(i). I will set out
those items as follows:
(3) An applicant meets the requirements of this subclause if:
...
(b) the last substantive visa held by the applicant was:
(i) a student visa; or
...
(c) the application is made within 28 days (or within such period specified by
Gazette Notice) after:
(i) the day when that last substantive visa ceased to be in effect; or
...
- The
relevant sub-item in relation to subclass 573 is 573.511 which relevantly
provided as follows:
Temporary visa permitting the holder to travel to, enter and remain in
Australia:
(a) if the application is made on form 157P or 157P (Internet) – until the
date on which the visa held by the applicant at
the time of application would
have ceased to be in effect; and
(b) otherwise – until a date specified by the
Minister.
THE FACTS
- The
department maintained a record entitled "Movement Details" for the appellant.
That document shows that the appellant arrived
in Australia on 21 July 2005
under a visa granted to her on 5 July 2005 in India. The visa was in subclass
573 and ceased on 26
September 2005.
- Prior
to the expiry of the visa, the appellant applied to the Minister for a Student
(Temporary) (Class TU) visa with permission
to work. On 26 September 2005,
a delegate of the Minister advised the appellant that the subclass 573 Higher
Education Sector
student visa with permission to work had been granted. The
decision of the delegate was recorded in the letter which, as I have
said, was
dated 26 September 2005, and states that the visa was valid until 31 August
2008.
- Details
of the visa, including the visa grant number, were recorded in the record of
Movement Details. Also, the expiry date was
endorsed on the appellant's
passport in a visa label which showed that the visa was granted on 26 September
2008 and that it expired
on 31 August 2008.
- The
delegate's letter stated that the visa was subject to a number of conditions
including condition 8206. The effect of this condition
was that the appellant
could not change her enrolment for a course at a different education provider
for the first 12 months of her
course.
The second delegate’s decision
- On
19 April 2006, the appellant applied for a student visa that would allow her to
change her enrolment. Her application was not
made on either form 157P or 157P
(Internet). The course she proposed to take commenced on 6 April 2006, and
was to end on 6 April
2008. By contrast, the course in which the appellant was
originally enrolled was due to end on 6 July 2008.
- On
28 June 2006, a delegate of the Minister wrote to the appellant to notify her
that she had been granted a subclass 573 Higher
Education Sector student visa
with permission to change her education provider. This decision has been
referred to in argument as
“the second delegate's decision”. It is
the critical decision in this matter.
- The
letter of 28 June 2006 contained the following which appeared under the
subheading "Visa Information":
Your visa is valid until 06 June 2008.
If you applied for your visa on a paper application form, you may already
have a visa label in your passport. Please examine your visa label closely and
note carefully the expiry date of
your visa. If your passport has not yet
been endorsed with a visa label, please follow the instructions at the end
of this letter. [Bold in original]
- The
letter went on to state that the appellant was no longer subject to condition
8206, which, as I have said, meant that she was
permitted to change education
providers. There was information in the last paragraph of the letter dealing
with Visa Information,
which directed the appellant as to how she may check her
visa status if she did not have a visa label in her passport.
- Details
of the delegate’s decision of 28 June 2006 were recorded in the
Movement Details document, to which I have referred.
The Movement Details
document shows the date on which the visa was granted, the grant identification
number, the category of the
visa and, importantly, the notation that the visa
was to cease on 6 June 2008.
Events subsequent to the second delegate’s decision
- The
events which occurred between 28 June 2006 and June 2008 are referred to in
the decision of the Federal Magistrate at [10]
– [12]. It is unnecessary
to repeat them, save to say that the Federal Magistrate observed at [12] of her
reasons for judgment
that the appellant understood that she had until
31 August 2008 to apply for a visa extension and that she agreed to return
to her migration agent for advice in early August 2008.
- On
1 September 2008, the appellant applied for a further student visa. This
was a visa in subclass 572. On 26 September
2008 a delegate of the
Minister notified the appellant that she had been refused a visa, because her
application had not been made
within 28 days after the last substantive
visa had ceased to be in effect.
THE TRIBUNAL’S DECISION
- The
appellant then applied to the Migration Review Tribunal for a review of the
delegate’s decision of 26 September 2008.
The Tribunal stated at [19] of
its findings and reasons that on the evidence before it the tribunal found that
the visa application
was made in Australia and, accordingly, the applicant was
required to satisfy item 572.211.
- The
Tribunal found that the appellant met the requirements of items 572.211(3)(a)
and 572.211(3)(b).
- The
Tribunal then turned to consider the question of whether the appellant met the
terms of item 572.211(3)(c). The Tribunal’s
reasons on this question were
recorded at [21] – [23] of its reasons for judgment dated
17 September 2009. I will set
out those paragraphs in full as
follows:
21. To meet cl.572.211(3)(c), the applicant was required to have lodged the
current visa application within 28 days of the latter
of either: the day when
the last visa ceased to be in effect; or if the visa was cancelled and the
Migration Review Tribunal set
aside the decision to cancel or not revoke the
cancellation, the day when the applicant was taken to be notified of that
decision
under ss.368C, 368D and 379C of the Act. The visa application on the
Departmental file was receipted on 1 September 2008 and on the basis of this
information
the Tribunal finds that the current visa application was made on
that date.
22. The Tribunal also finds, on the basis of information in the
Department’s movement records, that the applicant’s last
substantive
visa ceased to be in effect on 6 June 2008.
23. On the basis of the above, the Tribunal finds that the application was not
made within 28 days after the last substantive visa
ceased to be in effect.
Accordingly, the Tribunal finds the applicant does not meet
cl.572.211(3)(c).
THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATE’S DECISION
- The
appellant’s application for review to the Federal Magistrates Court was
made out of time, but the learned Federal Magistrate
considered that it was
appropriate to make an order extending the time within which to apply for relief
in respect of the second
delegate’s decision and the Tribunal’s
decision.
- The
appellant attacked the decision of the second delegate, only insofar as it
specified the date on which the visa ceased to have
effect. I have referred
earlier to the substance of the argument, which was pressed on behalf of the
appellant before the Federal
Magistrate.
- The
Federal Magistrate found at [96] that the appellant had not established that the
delegate failed to consider the issue of the
date on which the visa was to
cease.
- Her
Honour said at [97] that there was no evidence to support the contention that
the delegate did not consider whether the date
of 6 June 2008 was an
appropriate expiry date.
- The
substance of her Honour’s reasons are set out at [98] as
follows:
98. Thus, in the absence of an obligation to give reasons for the grant of a
visa and having regard to the date that was in fact
specified, it has not been
established that there was a failure to have regard to the appropriateness of
the expiry date or to Departmental
policy requiring selection of an expiry date
which suggested an appropriate date would be one month after completion of the
course
for which the visa was obtained. As pointed out by counsel for the first
respondent, there was good reason in this case to fix a
visa expiry date earlier
than 31 August 2008. The previous course in which the applicant had been
enrolled had an end date of 6
July 2008, for which there was a visa expiry date
of 31 August 2008. The issue came before the delegate in 2006 in the context of
an application for a visa which permitted a change to education providers. It
was based on a proposed change of the applicant’s
course of study to a
course which was to finish on 6 April 2008 instead of 6 July 2008. The expiry
date of 6 June 2008 that was
fixed by the delegate for the 2006 visa was for a
date two months after the completion of the proposed course of study. This was
more generous than the one month after completion of the course suggested by
policy (see PAM3 cl 135.8).
- The
appellant also sought to attack the decision of the delegate on the ground that
it was arbitrary or capricious. The Federal
Magistrate rejected that argument
at [100]. Her Honour stated that the date chosen was well within the bounds of
what might reasonably
and logically have been considered to be an appropriate
cessation date. She referred to the recent decision of the High Court
in
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZMDS [2010] HCA 16; (2010) 240 CLR 611.
- Her
Honour also dismissed a submission that the delegate otherwise misconstrued
and/or misapplied the criterion stated in item 573.511.
Her Honour’s
reasons were set out at [101]. This ground of attack failed, essentially for
the reasons set out at [98] of
the Federal Magistrate’s reasons for
judgment. So too did an attack upon the exercise of power of the delegate to
grant the
visa with an expiry date of 6 June 2008.
- Her
Honour also dismissed the attack which was made on the decision of the tribunal.
- The
substance of her Honour’s reasons were set out at [119] as
follows:
119. In these circumstances, in the absence of any demonstrated invalidity in
the delegate’s fixing of the expiry date on
any basis contended for by the
applicant, the Tribunal’s exercise of power could not have been affected
by any inquiry as to
whether the date of 6 June 2008 was validly specified by
the delegate in the decision to grant the last substantive visa held by
the
applicant at the time she made the 2008 visa application. Even if the expiry
date was a question of law and the Tribunal should
have considered the validity
of the specification of the last visa expiry date, failure to do so was not an
error that affected the
Tribunal’s exercise or purported exercise of power
because there is no basis for finding that the fixing of the 6 June 2008
date
was invalid. Hence no jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal in the
sense considered in Craig v South Australia (1995) 184 CLR 163 ; [1995]
HCA 58 has been made out.
THE PRESENT APPLICATION
- The
first ground upon which the appellant seeks to attack the decision of the
Federal Magistrate is recorded at [20] of the written
submissions of the
appellant’s counsel, Mr Reynolds.
- These
submissions seek to re-agitate the grounds of review upon which the appellant
failed before the Federal Magistrate. It is
unnecessary to deal with this in
any detail. It seems to me that her Honour was correct for the reasons set out
at [98] of her reasons
for judgment.
- However,
in the appeal, Mr Reynolds seeks to put the first ground of appeal on a
slightly different basis from that on which
he argued before the Federal
Magistrate. Mr Reynolds submitted that when the second delegate’s
letter is read as a whole,
the effect of it is that either the delegate did not
specify a date on which the visa ceased to have effect, or that it specified
two
different dates. In either event this would, on Mr Reynolds’
submissions, constitute a failure to exercise the power
to specify the expiry
date of the visa.
- Mr Reynolds’
argument focused in particular upon the inter-relationship between the two
paragraphs of the letter of 28
June 2006 which I have set out above. The
substance of his submission was that the words appearing in the second paragraph
of the
quoted passage of the letter which stated,
relevantly:
Please examine your visa label closely and note carefully the expiry date of
your visa
constituted a reference to the expiry date of 31 August 2008 as recorded in
the visa label in the appellant’s passport. Mr Reynolds
pointed, in
particular, to the sentence which included the words:
you may already have a visa label in your
passport.
- Mr Reynolds
submitted that these words amounted to the specification of a different date
from the date stated in the previous
paragraph of the letter which stated, quite
simply, that the visa was valid until 6 June 2008.
- Mr Reynolds
submitted that when the two paragraphs are read together, it must be inferred
that the delegate either failed to
consider the expiry date or selected two
inconsistent dates.
- Counsel
for the Minister, Mr Smith, submitted that it was not open to
Mr Reynolds to pursue this argument on appeal because
the matter was run in
a different way before the Federal Magistrate. Mr Smith submitted that if
this argument had been presented
in the Federal Magistrates Court he may have
wished to call evidence in order to answer the alternative way in which the case
is
now pursued.
DISCUSSION
- There
is some force in Mr Smith’s submission, but I have come to the view
that it is open to Mr Reynolds to run this
argument on appeal.
Nevertheless, I reject the submission.
- In
my opinion, the delegate’s letter shows that the delegate did select and
specify the expiry date of 6 June 2008. She did
so in plain words in the first
paragraph of the letter appearing below the subheading “Visa
Information”. What follows
in the next paragraph is merely a request to
the appellant to examine her visa label. I do not think that anything turns on
the
question of whether this refers to the visa label (if any) for the visa
issued on 28 June 2006 or to the visa label which was endorsed
in the
appellant’s passport and which specified an expiry date of 31 August 2008.
- In
my opinion, the words on which Mr Reynolds relies do not constitute the
selection of a date. Rather, they amount to a request
or advice to the
appellant to examine the label and note the expiry date of her visa.
- Nothing
was said in the second paragraph of the relevant passage to suggest that this in
any way varied the plain words of the sentence
stating that the visa was valid
until 6 June 2008. Properly and fairly read, the second delegate’s letter
specified only one
expiry date for the visa. There was no selection of another
date, nor was there any inconsistency between the first and second paragraphs
of
the letter.
- Mr Reynolds
accepted that if I were to determine this point adversely to him, the remaining
grounds of appeal must also fail.
It follows that I reject the ground based on
irrationality or illogicality.
- I
also reject the ground that the Tribunal failed to ask the correct question.
The substance of that point was that Mr Reynolds
submitted that the
question of what date was specified by the Minister is a question of law.
- In
my opinion it is a question of mixed fact and law. I see no error in the
reasons of the Tribunal in the paragraphs that I have
set out above. It is
clear that the Tribunal asked itself the right question by considering the
relevant items in Schedule 2 of
the Regulations. Ultimately the question of
the date specified by the Minister must be a question of fact.
- Mr Reynolds
submitted that the Tribunal misdirected itself by determining the date on which
the appellant’s visa ceased
to be in effect by reference to the
Department’s Movement Record. He submitted that if the Tribunal had asked
itself the correct
question, it would have had regard to the letter from the
second delegate of 28 June 2006.
- However,
even if that is correct, the view which I have taken as to the meaning of that
letter has the effect, as Mr Reynolds
acknowledged in argument, that this
ground must also fail.
- It
follows that the appeal must fail. However, in my view the second
delegate’s letter of 28 June 2006 is one which is to
say the least
confusing. That was demonstrated in argument before me this morning and the
learned Federal Magistrate at [7] of her
reasons described the second paragraph
of the relevant passage of the letter as “somewhat confusing”.
- Moreover,
her Honour accepted at [46] and [47] that the appellant had sought and
relied on the advice of her migration agent
as to the expiry date of her visa,
and that she had followed the migration agent’s advice which had resulted
in the lodgement
of her visa application out of time.
- It
seems to me that the advice which was given and acted upon by the appellant,
although for the reasons set out above not correct,
was not unreasonable in
light of the confusing terms of the letter.
- In
those circumstances it may be a matter in which the Minister would be prepared
to revisit the question of whether to substitute
a more favourable decision
pursuant to s 351 of the Act.
I certify that the preceding sixty-five (65)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Jacobson.
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Associate:
Dated: 30 November 2010
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