Fang v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs
[2004] FCA 1387
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2004-10-29
Before
Nicholson J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 This is an appeal from a decision of a Federal Magistrate (McInnis FM) given on 6 May 2004 (Fang v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FMCA 280). That decision dismissed an application seeking judicial review of a decision of the Migration Review Tribunal ('the MRT') given on 11 October 2002. The MRT had affirmed a decision that a Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visa held by the appellant be cancelled. 2 On the hearing of the appeal the appellant sought leave to file a minute of amended notice of appeal. It was agreed that the issue of the grant of leave be held over pending argument. That having occurred, I am satisfied that the issues raised by the new grounds are within the scope of the issues raised by the case as presented: Teoh v Minister of State for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1994) 49 FCR 409 at 429 (not affected on appeal to the High Court in Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183 CLR 273). Accordingly I grant leave for the filing of the amended notice of appeal. 3 The reasons of the Federal Magistrate were extensive and it is not intended in these reasons to canvass all the issues here in the same detail. Although there are ten grounds of appeal, two of them are conceded by the appellant and others are wholly or partly dependent on the argument raised in ground 2.
factual background 4 The background circumstances as they appeared before the MRT were as follows. The appellant applied for a Student (Temporary) visa on 11 June 2001. He was granted a Subclass 560 (Student) visa on 10 August 2001. Condition 8202 was among the conditions of the grant of visa. 5 The appellant attended at Notre Dame University undertaking a tertiary preparation course from September 2000 to February 2001. On 12 February 2001 he commenced a university foundation course. This was a course leading to business studies. However, it was the appellant's wish to study computer science, a course which was not offered by Notre Dame University. The appellant, therefore, approached Curtin International College. On 28 November 2001 he received from Curtin University an offer of enrolment with respect to a Diploma of Information Technology leading to a Bachelor of Computer Science. On the offer it was stated that the course would commence in February 2002. There is no evidence of the appellant having provided a written acceptance of the offer or made payment of the fees. However, in an affidavit filed before the Federal Magistrate an officer of the Curtin International College stated that the making of the offer had the effect that the appellant was accepted into the course at Curtin. 6 The appellant claimed that having received the letter from Curtin he thought that his transfer to that College had been completed and he 'just stayed at home and studied from home and the library to prepare for [his] course with Curtin International College since 29 November 2002'. There was evidence before the MRT that in so acting the appellant had relied upon conversations with the respondent's Department. As will appear, it is not necessary to state the particularities of that evidence save to say that there is evidence that such conversations have occurred. 7 At the end of week 10 in September 2001 the appellant was doing well in his course and had been only absent for 16 classes out of 250. However, as a result of his perceptions of the effect of the 'transfer', he did not attend the last two weeks of the course at Notre Dame University nor did he sit the final examinations there. 8 On 12 December 2001 the appellant received a letter from Notre Dame International advising as follows: 'At a recent Board of Examiners meeting your results were reviewed. The end of the semester results are comprised of your in class work, assignments and exams. Your enrolment has been placed on a conditional basis for poor attendance and academic performance. It was decided by the Board that based on the reasons outlined above, that your enrolment in the Notre Dame International Foundation Program be terminated. Please be advised that we are required to inform the Department of Immigration that you are no longer studying with Notre Dame International.' 9 On 22 January 2002 the appellant was given a notice of intention to consider cancellation of his visa. The possible ground for cancellation as set out in that notice was 'notification from Notre Dame International that student not meeting course requirements and enrolment had terminated'. The notice was given at 9.20 am on that date. 10 At 9.40 am the appellant's visa was cancelled. He was given a record of the decision which stated that grounds for cancellation existed because 'the student has not met academic requirements. End of wk 20, student failed all subjects and was absent 51 out of 240 classes. Enrolment has been terminated by Notre Dame'. It was noted on the record of decision that there had been non-compliance with visa condition 8202. It was also recorded that the decision to cancel the visa was based on the application of s 116(3) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) ('the Act') and reg 2.43(2)(b). 11 On the day of the cancellation the appellant applied to the MRT to review the decision of the delegate. As the reasons of his Honour recount, in a notice dated 3 July 2002 the MRT invited comment on the information in the notice pursuant to s 359A of the Act. Specifically, the letter stated: 'You are invited to comment, in writing, on the following information: · Condition 8202 attached to your subclass 560 (Student) visa required you to maintain satisfactory academic results. As you failed four out of six subjects at the University of Notre Dame in 2001, you have not met your course requirements and are therefore in breach of condition 8202. You are invited to submit any reasons why you did not comply with condition 8202.' 12 It is conceded by the respondent that this notice contained an error in that it refers to a failure of the appellant in four out of six subjects when in fact it should have referred to a failure in two out of six subjects. It is noted the appellant relied upon a statutory declaration dated 30 August 2002 where the error in relation to the number of subjects allegedly failed has been corrected. 13 In its reasons the MRT found that the appellant had not complied with visa condition 8202 by not completing any of his subjects in the term ending on week 20, 2001 and that thereby he did not achieve a result that could be certified by Notre Dame International to be at least satisfactory for that term. As a result, it found that s 116(1)(b) of the Act applied and the visa may be cancelled. The MRT proceeded on the basis that a failure to meet one of the three requirements of condition 8202 was sufficient to be in breach of the whole condition and that the condition did not import any discretion to consider the reasons for poor academic performance or any circumstances beyond the appellant's control. 14 It was this decision which was upheld by the Federal Magistrate essentially for the same reason. He dealt in detail with the grounds of review before him, most of which have been re-argued on this appeal. One issue which has not been re-argued is the issue of estoppel based on what the appellant claimed had been said to him by the respondent's Department.