Consideration
23 The question for this court is whether the FCCA judge made an appellable error in dismissing Mr Ali's application to the FCCA for review of the Tribunal's decision.
24 In order to find "compelling reasons", the Tribunal was required to identify reasons that would "force or drive" it to decide that the Sch 3 criteria should not apply to Mr Ali: Plaintiff M64/2015 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] HCA 50; (2015) 258 CLR 173 (Plaintiff M64/2015) at [31] (French CJ, Bell, Keane and Gordon JJ) and Babicci v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCAFC 77; (2005) 141 FCR 285 at [21]. Furthermore, as Gageler J put it in Plaintiff M64/2015 at [64] (citations omitted):
A statutory requirement that a decision-maker arrive at a state of satisfaction as a precondition to an exercise of a statutory power, like a requirement that a decision-maker hold a belief as a precondition to an exercise of a statutory power, necessitates that the decision-maker "feel an actual persuasion" - "an inclination of the mind towards assenting to, rather than rejecting, a proposition". A statutory requirement that a decision-maker be satisfied that there are "compelling reasons" for taking particular action is a requirement that the decision-maker be persuaded that there are reasons in favour of taking that action which, when weighed within the context of the particular statutory scheme, are irresistible.
25 The reasons given by Mr Ali were ones that the Tribunal might have accepted as compelling reasons, particularly the interests of Mr Ali's step-son. However, the Tribunal was not required by law to reach that conclusion. It was a matter for the Tribunal to decide for itself whether it considered that the reasons were "compelling".
26 Grounds 1 to 3 of the notice of appeal accurately describe the Tribunal's reasoning but do not identify any legal error in that reasoning. Similarly, there was no legal error in the FCCA judge's analysis of Mr Ali's grounds of review set out above.
27 As to ground 4, Mr Ali's complaint is that the Tribunal failed to act on its finding that Mrs Ali had suffered domestic violence in a previous relationship. A fair reading of the Tribunal's reasons is that the Tribunal identified that, for several reasons, Mrs Ali and her son are "heavily dependent" upon Mr Ali. The Tribunal was not satisfied that this dependence provided the requisite "compelling reasons". Reasonable minds may differ about whether the Tribunal should have reached a different conclusion but the Tribunal was not legally obliged to find that there were "compelling reasons" either because Mrs Ali had suffered domestic violence, or because she and her son are "heavily dependent" upon Mr Ali. However, the Tribunal's reasons do not suggest that it failed to consider the issue of domestic violence or otherwise committed a legal error in addressing the issue of the sponsor's experience of domestic violence.
28 Ground 5 is based on a false premise. Although the length of a relationship with the sponsor may amount to "compelling reasons", it was a matter for the Tribunal whether that matter constituted, either alone or with other matters, "compelling reasons" in this case. In any event, the Tribunal identified the matters that were said by Mr Ali to be compelling at para 25 of its decision record. They did not include the duration of Mr Ali's relationship with his wife. The Tribunal did record the relevant facts concerning the duration of the relationship. In these circumstances, ground 5 does not identify any legal error on the part of the Tribunal.
29 Mr Ali's oral submissions were concerned principally with whether he has "compelling reasons". The submissions demonstrated that the Tribunal could have made a decision in his favour but not that it was legally required to make a decision in his favour, or that it or the FCCA judge made any legal error in addressing Mr Ali's case.
30 In relation to the submission that the Tribunal did not take into consideration issues arising out of the security and economic situation in Egypt, taken together with Mr Ali's inability to be separated from his wife, this is correct. The Tribunal addressed issues related to the "need for the applicant to be present in the lives of his wife and her son", but not any reason based on a proposition that anyone apart from Mr Ali would travel to Egypt. The Tribunal made findings concerning Mr Ali's travel to Egypt and his ability to access family support and accommodation in Egypt. The Tribunal noted that Mr Ali did not claim that he would be unable to find work in Egypt.
31 I have reviewed the transcript of the Tribunal hearing. From that transcript, it does not appear that Mr Ali identified the security and economic situation in Egypt as part of the "compelling reasons" for not applying the Sch 3 criteria at the Tribunal hearing. Nor was the issue raised in Mr Ali's 6 January 2017 submission. In her evidence to the Tribunal, when asked whether she thought about going to Egypt with Mr Ali in late 2014, Mrs Ali replied:
He didn't ask me to go but I didn't really want to go anyway. I just heard it's not, like, the best area and, like, it sounds dangerous. I didn't want to take my son over there.
32 For his part, Mr Ali's evidence was that Mrs Ali had refused to go to Egypt, saying that the situation in Egypt was not safe.
33 I am not satisfied that the issue raised by Mr Ali on the appeal concerning the security and economic situation in Egypt was raised by him in front of the Tribunal. Mr Ali did not suggest to the Tribunal that there were "compelling reasons" arising out of the risks of living in Egypt, whether by himself or with Mrs Ali and her son. Accordingly, I am satisfied that this submission does not reveal any legal error on the part of the Tribunal.