Avala-Gurayya v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs
[2024] FCA 217
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2024-03-08
Before
Mr J, Beach J
Catchwords
- MIGRATION - appeal - leave to raise new ground - appeal dismissed - no point of principle
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The name of the first respondent be amended to "Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs".
- The appeal be dismissed.
- The appellant pay the first respondent's costs of and incidental to his appeal. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
BEACH J: 1 This is another meritless appeal in this area where the underlying question has been answered adversely to the appellant at all three lower levels, albeit re-characterised and re-formulated to reflect the different levels of decision making. 2 The appellant, a Mauritian national, was refused a Temporary Business Entry (Class UC) (subclass 457 - Temporary Work (Skilled)) visa by a delegate of the Minister. This decision was affirmed by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, which was not satisfied that the appellant had the skills, qualifications and employment background necessary to perform the tasks of the nominated occupation. 3 The appellant sought judicial review in the court below, but the primary judge dismissed the appellant's application for such review from which he now appeals to this Court, which in essence is the fourth level of consideration relating to the underlying question. 4 Now the appellant does not seek to re-agitate the point run below. Rather, his sole ground of appeal before me raises new matters that were not pressed at first instance such that leave is required. The new ground is as follows: The Tribunal went beyond the scope of the power conferred to it when determining the requisite 'employment background' as contemplated in cl 457.223(4)(da) of Schedule 2 of the Migration Regulations: (a) The Tribunal despite acknowledging there is judicial authority to the effect that the policy guidelines in PAM3 cannot go beyond the wording of the legislation, applied a higher threshold, than was required in the circumstances. (b) The Tribunal had before it a Certificate III and IV in Commercial Cookery, obtained via RPL. (c) These facts should have been enough to establish the 'qualifications' element of cl 457.223(4)(da), and thereby did not require the Applicant to prove 3 years of work experience to determine the Applicant's 'employment background' in satisfaction of that same clause. (d) The Tribunal went outside its scope to determine the weight of an educational providers certification, despite accepting the education provider was registered. This had the effect of the Tribunal, considering what was 'more' than necessary to perform the tasks of the nominated occupation. (e) It was always open to the Tribunal to request a skills assessment under cl 457.223(4)(e) to determine whether he had the skills necessary to perform the occupation. (f) The subsequent fact-finding mission employed by the Tribunal was an overreach of its powers, as the applicant could have been provided the same opportunity by obtaining a positive skills assessment. 5 For the reasons that follow, I would grant leave to the appellant to raise this new ground over the opposition of the Minister, but dismiss his appeal. 6 Now before proceeding further I should note that in terms of having this appeal heard there have been delays. Originally the matter was listed to be heard on 20 October 2023, which was a date chosen for the convenience of the appellant who was not otherwise available between August and October 2023. But on 18 October 2023 the appellant sought an adjournment for many months so that he could visit his sick mother in Mauritius, who he said he had not seen since 2016. I granted that adjournment and re-listed the hearing of the appeal for this afternoon.