Consideration
84 The appellant, during the course of the hearing, submitted that the Minister would not suffer prejudice because he was on notice, in a broad sense, that there was an issue with the way that the Tribunal had raised the matters before the appellant.
85 Counsel for the respondent submitted that a consideration of whether leave ought to be granted does not ordinarily involve a full consideration of the merits of the grounds: Iyer v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [2000] FCA 1788 at [24]. Accepting that is the case, it is nonetheless the merits of the proposed new ground that the appellant primarily relied upon in seeking leave, and on which the success of the application for leave will depend.
86 The substance of the new ground of appeal is that the Tribunal did not put the appellant on notice of an issue that arose on review. The Tribunal considered the issue of the breach of the appellant's condition from 21 March 2014 until 31 March 2015 as a significant factor that pointed to cancelling the visa, in circumstances where it was not satisfied that the breach of the condition had occurred in extenuating circumstances beyond the appellant's control having regard to the evidence before it.
87 The Tribunal had made an adverse finding against the appellant by reason of the fact that she had not contacted course providers concerning enrolment in July 2016 and, crucially, because she had failed to seek an offer of enrolment to enable her to secure admission which the Tribunal found cast doubt on the appellant's genuine intention to enrol and undertake studies as she claimed.
88 The appellant submitted that this issue arose from a number of exchanges between the Tribunal and the appellant or her representative during the hearing on 29 April 2016. The exchanges are contained in the transcript of the Tribunal hearing.
89 The appellant submits that in response to direct questioning from the Tribunal at the hearing as to what course the appellant would enrol in "if her student visa was to be reinstated", the appellant explained that, if that circumstance arose, she would study an MBA.
90 The exchange between the Tribunal and the appellant herself was as follows:
Q. Okay, so if your student visa was to be reinstated, what would you enrol in?
A. First of all, if that condition comes, like, I will be very highly grateful to you, like I will go for MBA once again.
…
91 The appellant was then asked about whether she had inquired into enrolling in a course, and answered that she had not and that she still had a further month to make those inquiries:
Q. Okay. So we invited you to the hearing 11 March 2016, I think it was emailed out to you, have you contacted any of those universities about the possibility of enrolment in July of this year?
A. Of this year?
Q. Yes.
…
Q. But have you contacted any of these educational providers about being enrolled in July this year?
A. No, I haven't - I haven't contacted them.
Q. But you've been aware the hearing is coming up, if you wanted to be enrolled in something, if you wanted to go and enrol in a course, I'm surprised you haven't been contacting them about the availability and whether you'd be able to get into a course in July.
A. Because there is one month in between that period, I can talk with them about the study and all.
…
92 The appellant submits that the Tribunal made an adverse finding against the appellant not only because she had failed to make contact with any potential course providers but also because she had not sought "an offer of enrolment to enable her to secure admission" which the Tribunal found cast doubt on whether the appellant had any genuine intention to enrol and undertake studies as claimed.
93 This, she submits, denied her procedural fairness by failing to identify an issue critical to the disposition of the review, namely that, the appellant's failure to obtain an offer of enrolment in a course prior to her student visa being reinstated could cast doubt on her genuineness as a student. This she submits was not an issue the delegate considered to be dispositive, and because the Tribunal said nothing about this matter which it decided against the appellant, it had breached s 360 of the Act. Thus, she submits that she was reasonably denied an opportunity to present her case to the Tribunal. Further, she submits that had she been put on notice of that issue, she could have, for example, provided evidence that she was, following the cancellation of her student visa, subject to a condition which prohibited her from engaging in any studies or training in Australia.
94 The appellant then relied on an exchange between a member of the Tribunal and the appellant's representative in which the representative had the opportunity to say anything he wished.
95 The relevant excerpts of that exchange between the Tribunal member and the representative are as follows:
Q. Okay. As I said to you, I want to give you the opportunity to make comments to me, so is there anything that you'd like to say on behalf of your client?
…
R: Yes, because the side effect. So she having medical issue during that period. And now actually I think her visa's got cancelled, actually unless she has the visa she won't be able to get enrolled in the courses now.
Q: Yes, I mean I can't take that against her -
R: Yes.
Q: Well, I mean she could seek an offer of enrolment, she could have sought an offer.
R: Yes.
…
96 Counsel for the appellant during the hearing pointed to the comment by the Tribunal member that the appellant '…could seek an offer of enrolment, she could have sought an offer' as not giving rise to a meaningful opportunity for the appellant to her claim.
97 We do not accept these submissions. At the hearing, the Tribunal put to the appellant, who was represented that:
(a) the appellant could have contacted an education provider before the Tribunal hearing about the possibility of enrolment in July 2016; and
(b) it was surprising that she had not done so;
and then gave the appellant an opportunity to respond.
98 It is apparent from the passages of the transcript that the Tribunal member's comment to the appellant's representative was put as a question, rather than merely a throwaway line. I am satisfied that the appellant was given a real and meaningful opportunity both to give evidence and present argument relating to the delegate's decision.
99 The merits of the proposed ground of appeal are, for these reasons, short of warranting giving leave to the appellant to raise them before this Court.
100 Leave to amend the Notice of Appeal is therefore refused.