Injunctive relief
6 The applicant is being detained for the purpose of removing him from Australia when it is reasonably practicable to do so, and for the purpose of excluding him from the community prior to his removal. There is no present intention to remove the applicant while his applications for review of the cancellation decision and refusal of his protection visa application have yet to be finally determined. Detention under those circumstances is authorised by ss 189 and 196 of the Act.
7 The system of detention established by ss 189 and 196 is one of mandatory detention: Al-Kateb v Godwin (2004) 219 CLR 562 per McHugh J at [33]-[35], Hayne J at [221]-[233], [241] (with whom Heydon J at [303] substantially agreed) and Callinan J at [292] and [298].
8 Under s 189 of the Act there is a statutory command to officers to detain a person known, or reasonably suspected, to be an "unlawful non-citizen": Ruddock v Taylor (2005) 222 CLR 612. It was this statutory command on which immigration officers acted in detaining the applicant.
9 A person becomes subject to being detained if he or she has the status of being an "unlawful non-citizen", or is reasonably suspected of being an unlawful non-citizen, a status that is defined in contrast to a person who is a "lawful non-citizen", being a person in the migration zone who holds a visa (s 13(1) of the Act). Although the applicant denies that this is his status in fact he became an unlawful non-citizen, and thereby subject to detention under s 189, upon the cancellation of his visa. Although his application for review would challenge the decision to cancel his visa, until such time that the Court may find that the decision is affected by error the applicant remains an unlawful non-citizen.
10 Sections 196(1), (3) and (4) are in these terms:
Duration of detention
(1) An unlawful non-citizen detained under section 189 must be kept in immigration detention until:
(a) he or she is removed from Australia under section 198 or 199; or
(aa) an officer begins to deal with the non-citizen under subsection 198AD(3); or
(b) he or she is deported under section 200; or
(c) he or she is granted a visa.
. . .
(3) To avoid doubt, subsection (1) prevents the release, even by a court, of an unlawful non-citizen from detention (otherwise than as referred to in paragraph (1)(a), (aa) or (b)) unless the non-citizen has been granted a visa.
(4) Subject to paragraphs (1)(a), (b) and (c), if the person is detained as a result of the cancellation of his or her visa under section 501, the detention is to continue unless a court finally determines that the detention is unlawful, or that the person detained is not an unlawful non-citizen.
11 It is common ground that none of the events specified in s 196(1) have occurred with respect to the applicant.
12 The effect of s 196(3) is to prevent this or any court from releasing an unlawful non-citizen detained under s 189 other than in the circumstances described at s 196(1)(a), (aa) or (b) unless the non-citizen is granted a visa. Although couched in the context of an application for an order restraining the Minister from continuing to detain the applicant, the effect of such an order would be to release the applicant from detention.
13 In Al-Kateb Hayne J said, in reference to ss 189, 196 and 198, that the words of the sections are "intractable" (at [241]). Justice McHugh said that "[t]he words of the three sections are too clear to read them as being subject to a purposive limitation or an intention not to affect fundamental rights" (at [33]), and, specifically in relation to s 196 (at [35]):
The unambiguous language of s 196 - particularly sub-s (3) - indicates that Parliament intends detention to continue until one of the conditions expressly identified therein - removal, deportation or granting of a visa - is satisfied.
14 The applicant contends that the general power vested in this Court by s 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) is warrant for the order he seeks. This is not so. As Kirby J said in Re Woolley; Ex parte Applicants M276/2003 (2004) 225 CLR 1 (at [193]):
[The Migration Act 1958 (Cth)] is specific, particular and clear so far as its requirement for universal mandatory detention is concerned, including in relation to children. Such requirements prevail over any otherwise existing general powers enjoyed by federal courts, including this Court …".
15 The applicant seeks to rely on the decisions of Preston v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 420 and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v VFAD (2002) 125 FCR 249. Preston, VFAD and the related line of cases are no longer good authority with respect to the granting of interlocutory relief concerning persons held in immigration detention. As the Minister correctly submits those cases were decided prior to the High Court's decisions in Al-Kateb and Re Woolley, in which the High Court refused to read down ss 189 and 196, and were decided prior to the amendments to the Act made by the Migration Amendment (Duration of Detention) Act 2003 (Cth), which introduced s 196(4) to the Act.
16 Section 196(4) represents a further restriction upon the granting of relief by an order which would effect the applicant's release. It provides that subject to release from detention in the circumstances allowed by s 196(1)(a), (b) and (c), if a person is "detained as a result of the cancellation of his or her visa under section 501", the detention is to continue "unless a court finally determines that the detention is unlawful, or that the person detained is not an unlawful non-citizen".
17 The expression "detained as a result of the cancellation of his or her visa", I accept, must be understood in the context of s 189.
18 Accordingly, where, as here, a person has the status of being an unlawful non-citizen because of a decision to cancel his or her visa under s 501 that detention is "as a result of" the cancellation under s 501.
19 I would for these reasons dismiss the applicant's interlocutory application for injunctive relief with costs.