AMM15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2016] FCA 443
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2016-04-08
Before
Gibbs J, Stephen J, Mason J, Aickin J, Murphy J
Catchwords
- Number of paragraphs: 34
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
Background 6 The appellant, who is now in immigration detention, affirmed an affidavit on 9 March 2016 in which he said that he was aware of the hearing date of 18 February 2016 because he had previously received a letter from the Court. However, he said that he had a severe fever a few days leading up to the hearing and also during that time developed an acute headache and blacked out on that day. He also said that he lost focus on 18 February 2016 and did not attend the hearing because he was "overwhelmed by these illnesses at that time". He said he no longer had access to Medicare, could not afford to see a doctor and therefore did not consult one. He subsequently consulted a lawyer and attached to his affidavit a draft notice of appeal that raised five new grounds, namely that the Tribunal had committed jurisdictional errors because: (1) it denied him procedural fairness and/or failed to comply with s 425 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) because it did not raise with him the issue as to whether he could afford, or would be able to have someone pay, the amount of any bail set by a court in Sri Lanka when he returned, having illegally departed there; (2) and (3) it misapplied ss 5 and 36(2A) of the Act by misconstruing, first, the definition of significant harm when it dealt with the conditions he would face in Sri Lankan prisons during the period before which he could be brought before a magistrate after his return and detention by the authorities at Colombo airport, or secondly, the words "intentionally inflicted" and "intended to cause" in the definitions of cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment and degrading treatment or punishment in s 5 of the Act and thereby failed to take into account the cumulative effect of the suggested mistreatment; (4) it failed to apply Ministerial Direction No 56 made pursuant to s 499 of the Act, known as the "PAM3 guidelines"; (5) it applied a balance of probabilities test in evaluating the nexus of the Refugees Convention to his claims that his father had gone missing in circumstances suggestive of abduction (that I described in my earlier reasons).