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Hadchity v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2010] FCA 144 (2 March 2010)
Last Updated: 3 March 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Hadchity v Minister for Immigration &
Citizenship [2010] FCA 144
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Citation:
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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PAUL HADCHITY v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and MIGRATION REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number:
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NSD 1227 of 2009
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Judge:
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EDMONDS J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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MIGRATION – visas – partner
visa – domestic/family violence – whether Tribunal invalidly
obtained an expert’s
opinion – whether the quashing of the initial
decision invalidated the expert’s opinion.
Held: The Tribunal validly obtained the expert’s opinion. The
quashing of the initial decision did not invalidate the expert’s
opinion.
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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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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Paramonte Legal
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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Mr G Kennett
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Solicitor for the Respondents:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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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.
- The
appellant pay the first respondent’s 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 1227 of 2009
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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BETWEEN:
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PAUL HADCHITY 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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EDMONDS J
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DATE:
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2 MARCH 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is an appeal from the Federal Magistrates Court (Scarlett FM): Hadchity v
Minister for Immigration & Anor [2009] FMCA 958, dismissing an
application for review of a decision of the second respondent (‘the
Tribunal’) affirming the decision
of a delegate of the first respondent
(‘the Minister’) not to grant the appellant a Partner (Migrant)
(Class BC) visa.
BACKGROUND
- The
appellant applied for a Partner (Migrant) (Class BC) visa on 23 November 2005.
A delegate of the Minister refused to grant the
visa on 6 February 2007. The
reason for this refusal was that the appellant and his sponsor were no longer
living together as husband
and wife and he therefore did not satisfy cl
100.221(2) of Sch 2 to the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) (‘the
Regulations’).
- The
appellant applied to the Tribunal to review this decision on 6 March 2007.
- At
a hearing before the Tribunal on 2 August 2007, the appellant claimed that he
had separated from his sponsor because of her violence
towards him. This claim
was elaborated later in writing. It raised a question whether the appellant
could meet the criterion in
cl 100.221 by satisfying subcl (4), which
applies (broadly speaking) in circumstances where the spousal relationship has
ended
in circumstances where the visa applicant has suffered ‘family
violence’ (at the relevant time, the phrase used was ‘domestic
violence’).
- Division
1.5 of the Regulations sets out a process by which decision-makers are to
determine whether a person has suffered, and whether
another person has
perpetrated, ‘family violence’. The key provision of Div 1.5 for
present purposes is reg 1.23. Where
a claim of family violence has not been
‘judicially determined’, reg 1.23(1B) and (1C) require the
decision-maker to
proceed as follows:
(a) If satisfied that the
person has suffered family violence, determine the application on that
basis;
(b) if not satisfied that the person has suffered family violence, to refer
the issue to an ‘independent expert’; and
(c) take the expert’s opinion to be correct, for the purpose of
determining whether the person satisfies any visa criteria that
involves having
suffered family violence.
- The
Tribunal sent the appellant a further invitation to comment on information on
4 October 2007 and in December 2007 received
further material from his
advisers. It later invited the provision of more evidence. Further material
was received on 8 and 18
February 2008.
- On
21 February 2008 (see [46] of the Tribunal’s first decision) or 25
February 2008 (see AB 164) (it matters not which), the
Tribunal sent a bundle of
material to Centrelink for assessment by a social worker in the role of an
independent expert. The Tribunal
received a report from a social worker dated
12 March 2008, which it sent to the appellant’s advisers on 2 April 2008.
It
appears that a further hearing had been scheduled for 4 April 2008 but the
appellant did not attend.
- The
Tribunal handed down a decision on 18 April 2008 affirming the decision of the
delegate. The basis for that decision, applying
the reasoning of the Full Court
of this Court in Minister for Immigration & Citizenship & Anor v Sok
[2008] FCAFC 18; (2008) 165 FCR 586 (handed down on 5 March 2008), was that a non-judicially
determined claim of domestic violence could only be considered if it had
been
made before the delegate.
- The
Tribunal’s decision of 18 April 2008 was set aside by the Federal
Magistrates Court, by consent, on 3 November 2008. This
occurred because, in
the meantime, the decision in Sok had been reversed on appeal to the High
Court: (2008) 238 CLR 251 (16 October 2008).
- The
Tribunal made contact with the appellant and in December 2008 invited him to
comment on the social worker’s report. A
further hearing took place on 20
February 2009. The Tribunal was not reconstituted.
- On
the same day the Tribunal made a new decision and sent it to the appellant.
This is the decision presently under review.
- The
basis for this decision was that the Tribunal had not been satisfied that the
appellant had suffered domestic violence; it had
therefore referred the question
to an independent expert pursuant to reg 1.23(1B)(b); the expert’s opinion
was that the appellant
had not suffered domestic violence; and the Tribunal was
bound to concur with that opinion. This compelled the conclusion that the
appellant did not satisfy subcl 100.221(4) and thus could not meet the criterion
in cl 100.221.
PROCEEDINGS IN THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT
- The
amended application, upon which the appellant relied, alleged that the Tribunal
had erred in considering itself bound by the
expert’s opinion. The
alleged error was characterised as a failure to conduct a review in accordance
with Pt 5, Div 3 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (‘the Act’),
asking the wrong question and/or failing to apply the relevant regulations. The
appellant was also
critical of the fact that the Tribunal had not been
reconstituted, although this was not advanced as a further ground of
review.
- His
Honour held that there was no error in the Tribunal being constituted by the
same member. His Honour then accepted the submission
of the Minister that, with
an independent expert’s opinion already having been obtained in accordance
with reg 1.23, the Tribunal
had no choice but to treat that opinion as correct
and decide the issue of domestic violence
accordingly.
THE APPEAL
- Ground
1 of the notice of appeal substantially repeats the ground of review advanced in
the court below. The notice of appeal also
raised a new ground, alleging
apprehended bias on the part of the Tribunal, but this was abandoned at the
commencement of the hearing.
- Ground
1 was articulated as follows:
‘1.) His Honour erred in finding that the Tribunal had conducted a review
in accordance with Part 5, Division 3 of the Migration Act, and section
360, had not [sic] asked asked [sic] the wrong question, and/or failed to apply
the relevant migration regulations.
1.1 His Honour should have found that the above errors occurred, when the
Tribunal failed to ask whether or not it was satisfied
that Mr Hadchity had
suffered “domestic violence”, and when it considered itself bound by
an expert report invalidly
obtained by the Tribunal earlier constituted
(“the First Tribunal”), prior to the quashing of the First
Tribunal’s
decision.
1.2 The Regulations required the Tribunal to first determine whether it could be
satisfied for itself, reviewing all of the evidence,
that Mr Hadchity had
suffered relevant domestic violence, and only if it determined that it was not
so satisfied was it empowered
and required to obtain an expert report to
determine the matter (migration regulation
1.23(1B)).’
- The
first leg of this ground was that the expert’s opinion was
‘invalidly obtained’ by the Tribunal prior to the
quashing of the
Tribunal’s first decision. According to the appellant, the Tribunal had
not validly conducted the review that
it was required to conduct by law, before
it could validly obtain the expert opinion that it obtained. So much, according
to the
appellant, was manifest in [13] of the Tribunal’s first
decision:
‘The effect of the Full Federal Court’s decision in Sok is
that a non-judicially determined claim of domestic violence for the purposes of
regulation 1.23(1)(f) or (g) can only be made to
the Minister. Where a claim is
not made to the Minister (or his or her delegate), in accordance with the
Regulations, the Tribunal
cannot consider the claim. Furthermore, in light of
Sok, the Tribunal is of the view that where an issue of domestic violence
arises, the Tribunal is limited to considering whether any
of the alternatives
in regulation 1.23(c), (d), (e), (f) or (g) is satisfied. The Tribunal is
unable to form an opinion for itself,
or undertake the enquiries provided for in
Division 1.5 of the Regulations.’
- However,
it is an undisputed fact that prior to 5 March 2008, when the Full Court of this
Court handed down its decision in Sok, the Tribunal had sought the
opinion of an independent expert about whether the appellant had suffered
domestic violence pursuant
to reg 1.23(1B). Paragraph 12 of the
Tribunal’s first decision reads:
‘In the circumstances of this review the applicant made his claim that he
had suffered relevant domestic violence perpetrated
by his former sponsoring
spouse at a hearing before the Tribunal. He subsequently provided evidence in
accordance with regulation
1.24, 1.25 and regulation 1.26 in relation to a
non-judicially determined claim of domestic violence and regulation 1.23(1)(f).
The Tribunal had sought the opinion of an independent expert about whether the
alleged victim has suffered domestic violence: regulation
1.23(1B). However,
prior to the Tribunal being provided with the expert opinion, the Full Federal
Court in MIAC v Sok [2008] FCAFC 18 handed down its
decision.’
- The
appellant submitted that there was nothing in this passage from the
Tribunal’s reasons to indicate that the Tribunal was
not satisfied that
the appellant had suffered domestic violence so as to provide a lawful basis for
the issue to be referred to an
independent expert; and that what the Tribunal
said in the second decision at [78], namely:
‘Having considered all of the evidence before it, including the evidence
of a non-judicially determined claim of domestic violence
provided by the
applicant, the Tribunal was not satisfied that the alleged victim had suffered
relevant domestic violence as the
applicant’s account of the break down of
his spousal relationship given by him at the hearing may not have amounted to
relevant
domestic violence. Therefore, in accordance with regulation
1.23(1B)(b), on 25 February 2008 the Tribunal sought the opinion of
an
independent expert about whether the alleged victim had suffered relevant
domestic violence. On 13 March 2008, the independent
expert provided an opinion
that the alleged victim had not suffered relevant domestic
violence.’
was an ex post facto rationalisation; indeed, pure reconstruction.
- I
cannot agree. The inference is well and truly open from the fact that the
Tribunal referred the matter to Centrelink on 21 or
25 February 2008, that the
Tribunal was not satisfied that the appellant had suffered domestic violence.
The fact that it did not
express that lack of satisfaction in its reasons is not
to the point; it was under no obligation to record its lack of satisfaction
either in its reasons or elsewhere. Moreover, since by the time the Tribunal
came to deliver its first decision and reasons, the
Tribunal understood, on the
basis of the Full Court’s decision in Sok, that the domestic
violence claim was not able to be considered, there was no reason to expect the
Tribunal’s lack of satisfaction
to be recorded in those reasons. I would
conclude, and so find, that what occurred is precisely as set out in [78] of the
Tribunal’s
second decision. In the face of that conclusion, the
contention that the opinion of the independent expert obtained prior to the
quashing of the first decision was invalidly obtained, cannot be sustained.
- The
second leg of Ground 1 was that, even if the independent expert’s opinion
was validly obtained the first time around, predicated
as it was on a lack of
satisfaction by the Tribunal as to the appellant having suffered domestic
violence, the quashing of the Tribunal’s
first decision effectively
quashed the Tribunal’s lack of satisfaction as to the appellant having
suffered domestic violence
and this, in turn, quashed or invalidated the
obtaining of the independent expert’s opinion. The procedure for forming
a state
of satisfaction, or lack thereof, as to the appellant having suffered
domestic violence had to be recommenced before any independent
expert opinion
could be obtained and relied upon. Reliance was placed on what was said by the
High Court in Sok at [8] – [10]; by Gleeson CJ in Minister for
Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Wang (2003) 215 CLR 518 at [16],
namely:
‘The content of the interests of justice, in the events that occurred, is
to be determined in the light of the provisions of
the Act, pursuant to which
the respondent made his application for a protection visa, and pursuant to which
the delegate of the Minister,
the Tribunal, and the Federal Court were acting.
Under the statutory scheme, and in consequence of the other orders made by the
Full
Court, the Tribunal is now obliged to undertake a further review of the
delegate’s decision. The Tribunal’s decision
upon that review is to
be made on the basis of the facts as they appear in the course of that review.
To what extent the information
before the Tribunal will differ from the
information that was originally before Ms Boland is not known. The findings
made by Ms Boland will have no legal status in that further review. Neither Ms
Boland, if she undertakes the further
review, nor any other member of the
Tribunal, if the Tribunal is differently constituted, will be bound by them.
The most that can be said is that, as a practical matter, if Ms Boland
undertakes the review, then, unless there is a significant
change in the
information before the Tribunal, she is unlikely to alter the view of the facts
she took previously, whereas a fresh
decision-maker might see the matter
differently even if the information remains substantially the same.’
(Emphasis added)
And by Gyles J in SZHKA & Anor v Minister for Immigration &
Citizenship & Anor [2008] FCAFC 138; (2008) 172 FCR 1 at [37], namely:
‘[I]t is difficult to see an escape from the proposition that once an
administrative decision is set aside for jurisdictional
error, the whole of
the relevant decision-making process must take place again (Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Bhardwaj [2002] HCA 11; (2002) 209 CLR 597). There
is no analogy between that situation and a rehearing ordered on an appeal in
judicial proceedings or pursuant to statutory
provisions such as s 44 of the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) or the former s 481 of the
Act. Mandatory statutory obligations must be carried out again. The suggested
dichotomy between
an administrative decision and what precedes it is
unconvincing in this context. Such a conclusion would not mean that what has
taken place in the previous review cannot be taken into account in the second
review
if considered relevant. The proceedings are administrative, not
judicial, and the Tribunal can have regard to all relevant material, including a
transcript
of what took place at the previous hearing, subject to compliance
with the statutory regime.’ (Emphasis
added)
Neither Gray nor Besanko JJ made any similar observations.
- The
Minister accepted that, in relation to a question whether a visa applicant meets
a criterion, the Tribunal must normally decide
whether it is satisfied of the
relevant facts on the evidence available to it at the time of its decision.
This has the consequence
that, if a decision is set aside and must be made
again, findings of fact in the earlier decision are not preserved: see Wang
at [15], [16].
- However,
the Minister pointed out that Div 1.5 of the Regulations stipulates a particular
procedure that must be followed in determining
whether a visa criterion
involving the occurrence of ‘family violence’ has been met. The
High Court decision in Sok establishes that the Tribunal is bound by
these provisions, notwithstanding that in their terms they apply to the Minister
(at [27]
– [29]). Relevantly to the present case, that procedure required
a sequence of steps in which the Tribunal was to:
(a) Reach a
conclusion as to whether it was satisfied that there had been family
violence;
(b) if that conclusion were positive, apply it in reaching its decision on
the review;
(c) if that conclusion were negative (as it was in the present case), obtain
the opinion of an independent expert; and
(d) treat the expert’s opinion as correct ‘for the purposes of
deciding
whether the alleged victim satisfies a prescribed
criterion’.
- This
procedure necessarily requires a conclusion to be formed, and action to be
taken, in advance of the Tribunal’s final decision
about whether the visa
criteria are satisfied. Where the procedure is engaged, its outcome dictates
the Tribunal’s decision
about whether a ‘prescribed criterion’
is satisfied.
- The
Minister accepted, as he had to, that the expert’s opinion was obtained by
the Tribunal prior to the making and setting
aside of its first decision.
However, the Minister submitted that this did not deprive the opinion of legal
effect. According to
the Minister, the general principle is that steps taken by
the Tribunal in pursuance of its procedural obligations are not automatically
undone by the setting aside of a decision. The consequence of such an order is
that the Tribunal’s statutory task of reviewing
the delegate’s
decision remains uncompleted. To complete its statutory task in the present
case, the Tribunal needed to reconsider
and decide the review on the basis that
the appellant’s domestic violence claims were able to be considered.
Cautiously it
held a further hearing, but there were no other procedures
required to be revisited.
- Reliance
was placed on what was said by the Full Court of this Court in SZEPZ v
Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs & Anor [2006] FCAFC 107; (2006) 159
FCR 291 at [39]:
‘An invalid decision by the Tribunal is no decision at all but it does not
follow that all steps and procedures taken in arriving
at that invalid decision
are themselves invalid. The Tribunal still has before it the materials that were
obtained when the decision
that had been set aside was
made.’
- The
Minister also made reference to what was said by the Full Court of this Court in
MZXRE v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship & Anor [2009] FCAFC 82; (2009) 176
FCR 552 at [5] and [6]:
‘[5] The word “rehear” should not have been used in the
orders. The order should have used the word “hear”.
The tribunal
commences the process of a review of the delegate’s decision when a valid
application for its review is made under
ss 412 and 414 of the Migration Act
1958 (Cth) (the Act). By force of s 414(1) the tribunal must conduct a
review of a valid application. If some jurisdictional error occurs in the
process of a review, the decision
arrived at will be quashed and the matter
remitted to the tribunal to complete the conduct of the review in accordance
with the procedures
specified in the Act: SZEPZ v Minister for Immigration
and Multicultural Affairs [2006] FCAFC 107; (2006) 159 FCR 291 at [39] per Emmett, Siopis and
Rares JJ. ...
[6] The word “rehear” in the consent orders could be taken to
suggest that whatever had been done by the tribunal had
to be redone. That
would not have been correct. ...’
- I
agree with the submissions of the Minister. Absent some identified
non-compliance in the obtaining of the independent expert’s
opinion, the
existence of that opinion continued to impose an obligation on the Tribunal
under reg 1.23(1C).
CONCLUSION
- There
is no error of the kind alleged in Ground 1 of the notice of appeal on the part
of his Honour below on either of the legs particularised
therein. For that
reason, the appeal must be dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding twenty-nine (29)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Edmonds.
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Associate:
Dated: 2 March 2010
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