THE APPEAL
17 On 4 March 2020, Mr Alam filed a notice of appeal against the judgment of the primary judge. He again was not legally represented. The result was that his grounds of appeal failed to properly identify or articulate any appellable error by the primary judge. The grounds of appeal in Mr Alam's notice of appeal were as follows (as drafted):
1. The FCC made error in judgment regarding law.
2. The FCC did not consider my view on documents that I was expecting.
3. Reconsider my case again.
18 Mr Alam did not file any written submissions. He also failed to advance any meaningful submissions at the hearing of his appeal. Indeed, at the hearing Mr Alam effectively conceded that he did not have any "legal ground" to appeal the primary judge's judgment.
19 Putting that apparent concession and the absence of any meaningful ground of appeal to one side, it is readily apparent that the Tribunal did not err when it found that it had no jurisdiction. It is equally apparent that the primary judge did not err in concluding that the Tribunal's decision was correct and did not involve any jurisdictional error.
20 It is a criterion for the grant of a 457 visa that the non-citizen (in this case, Mr Alam) is "sponsored by an approved sponsor" within the meaning of s 338(2)(d) of the Migration Act: see Ahmad v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2015) 237 FCR 365; [2015] FCAFC 182 at [96]-[96].
21 It is also abundantly clear that, at the time he applied for a review of the decision to refuse his visa application, the circumstances of Mr Alam's case did not meet the criteria or requirements in either subparagraph (i) or (ii) of s 338(2)(d) of the Migration Act. Mr Alam was not sponsored by an approved sponsor at that time because DM's approval as a standard business sponsor had ceased as long ago as 4 September 2017, with the result that the approval of the nomination referable to Mr Alam had ceased on 4 December 2017. There was no evidence before the Tribunal, the primary judge, or this Court, which suggested that Mr Alam was sponsored by any other approved sponsor at the time he filed his review application in the Tribunal. Nor was there any evidence that Mr Alam had ever made an application for review of a decision not a approve a sponsor, or that any such application was pending at the time he filed his review application in respect of the refusal to grant him a 457 visa.
22 There has never been any suggestion, or basis for suggesting, that the decision to grant a 457 visa to Mr Alam was a Part 5-reviewable decision because it was covered by any other subsection of s 338 of the Migration Act. Nor has there ever been any suggestion, or basis for suggesting, that the Tribunal had jurisdiction to review the decision on some other basis. It follows that Mr Alam's appeal must be dismissed.