Hong v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2018] FCA 1085
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2018-07-20
Before
Lee J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
- The amended originating application dated 17 February 2018 be dismissed with costs. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
A INTRODUCTION 1 By an amended originating application for review of a migration decision, the applicant seeks to review a decision of the second respondent (Tribunal) made in November 2017 (to affirm a decision made by a delegate of the first respondent (Minister) not to revoke the cancellation of the applicant's Class BC (subclass 100) visa). 2 The circumstances leading up to the decision made by the Tribunal can be shortly stated. The applicant is a citizen of the People's Republic of China who married an Australian citizen and came to Australia in 2009. In 2012, the applicant was granted a 'spouse visa'. Four and a half years later, the applicant was convicted of several offences in connexion with her involvement in the importation of unregistered firearms and prohibited goods. This led to her being sentenced in the District Court of New South Wales, with a head sentence of two years, with a non-parole period of one year. 3 In March 2017, while the applicant was in gaol, a delegate of the Minister cancelled her visa pursuant to s 501(3A) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (Act). Shortly thereafter, the applicant unsuccessfully requested that the Minister revoke the cancellation of her visa pursuant to s 501CA(4) of the Act. The applicant then applied to the Tribunal for review of the delegate's decision and, as noted above, the Tribunal affirmed the decision of the delegate. 4 Both before the Tribunal and on this application, the applicant has been represented. For reasons that will become evident, this assumes some importance in the disposition of this application. It should be noted, however, that Mr Dobbie, who appeared for the applicant in this Court, did not appear below. 5 Section 501CA of the Act relevantly provides: (1) This section applies if the Minister makes a decision (the original decision) under subsection 501(3A) (person serving sentence of imprisonment) to cancel a visa that has been granted to a person. … (4) The Minister may revoke the original decision if: (a) the person makes representations in accordance with [an invitation made under s 501CA(3)]; and (b) the Minister is satisfied: (i) that the person passes the character test (as defined by section 501); or (ii) that there is another reason why the original decision should be revoked. 6 In addition to the statutory task prescribed by s 501CA, it is worth noting that the Tribunal was required to have regard to Part C of "Direction No. 65 - Visa refusal and cancellation under s501 and revocation of a mandatory cancellation of a visa under s501CA" (Direction 65), being a direction made by the Minister in accordance with s 499 of the Act, which provides that the Minister may give directions to a body having functions or powers under the Act about the performance and exercise of those functions, and that a person or body "must comply" with such a direction. Part C falls under "Section 2 Exercising the discretion" of Direction 65 and sets out the "Primary considerations - revocation requests" and "Other considerations - revocation requests". As set out at cl 6.1(4) of Direction 65, its purpose is to "guide decision-makers performing functions or exercising powers…to revoke a mandatory cancellation under section 501CA of the Act". 7 Having set out the relevant statutory context, it is next convenient to canvass the Tribunal's decision. 8 The Tribunal correctly held that it was bound by Direction 65 (at [6]). It was not in dispute before the Tribunal that the applicant failed the character test, being a person with a substantial criminal record (see [10]). The Tribunal thereupon correctly identified its function, namely deciding "whether there is another reason why the original decision should be revoked". 9 The applicant's background was discussed briefly (at [12]), before a brief outline of her criminal record was provided (at [13]-[15]). The Tribunal then considered the merits of the applicant's case under two broad headings, namely "primary considerations" and "other considerations" (at [16]-[56] and [57]-[70]). 10 Under "primary considerations", the Tribunal took into account the Government's commitment to protecting the community from harm as a result of criminal activity by non-citizens (at [16]). Under the sub-heading "The nature and seriousness of the conduct", the Tribunal considered the applicant's offending in detail. It found that the offences were "serious" (at [23]), having regard to the sentencing judge's remarks, and further found that if the applicant were to engage in further criminal conduct, the nature of the harm would arise from the nature of the firearms and weapons that were the subject of the offences (at [25]). The Tribunal concluded that the applicant had little insight into her offending and did not accept that she had shown any remorse or contrition (at [27]) and was concerned by evidence indicating that the applicant might be importuned by her husband in the future, particularly given that she assisted her husband with criminal conduct at his request (at [28]-[29]). 11 The applicant continued to deny knowledge of the illegality of dealing with the firearms. In light of her plea of guilty to the offences, the Tribunal rejected the claim that the applicant did not know what was in the container in which the weapons, the subject of the offences, were imported (at [30]). Further, the Tribunal rejected the applicant's evidence that she would make enquiries through the internet to check whether something was illegal (at [33]) and held broader concerns regarding the applicant's credibility and the evidence she had given before it (at [34]-[37]). The Tribunal also found the applicant's husband to be an unreliable witness and rejected his evidence (at [42]). Taking all this into account, the Tribunal did not accept that the likelihood of the applicant reoffending was as low as claimed and considered that the protection of the Australian community weighed significantly in favour of not revoking the original decision (at [43]-[44]). 12 Having considered the evidence regarding the circumstances of the applicant's relationship with her adult son's children, the Tribunal found that the best interests of the applicant's grandchildren were served by revocation. That being said, the Tribunal gave this less weight as the applicant was not in a parental relationship with her grandchildren (at [45]-[54]). 13 In considering the "Expectations of the Australian community", the Tribunal found that the Australian community would expect that the applicant should not hold a visa (at [55]). 14 Under "other considerations" the Tribunal discussed the "strength, nature and duration of ties", finding that the applicant did not have ties to the Australian community outside her immediate family, noting the claim that her husband would go with her to China if she returned and that her son and his family would remain in Australia and miss her and her assistance (at [61]). 15 In considering the "Extent of impediments if removed", the Tribunal considered the applicant's claimed medical conditions and her claim that she would not get proper medical care in China. It took into account, however, that there are public and private medical facilities in China (at [63]-[64]). It also found that there were no cultural or language barriers facing the applicant, given her 43-year residence in China and her work history there (at [66]). It noted the applicant's submission that she would not receive money from her mother, sister and brother who live in China, if she returned. It also took into account that "the evidence shows that she will have the support of her husband if she returns because he will go with her", although both he and the applicant claimed that he would not be able to earn a living in China (at [67]). 16 While accepting the applicant would face some hardship upon return, it did not accept that the difficulties were as great as the applicant claimed. In Australia, she was able to assist her husband's business activities with her language skills and worked on weekends with him. The Tribunal found she therefore had some relevant business and language skills, as well as her teaching skills. It found that any hardship would diminish over time and that she was well-equipped to re-establish herself in China with the support of her husband, family and friends, and would attain a living standard at least that of other citizens (at [68]-[69]). In arriving at that conclusion, the Tribunal took into account the applicant's husband's medical conditions, lack of Chinese language skills and the claimed impossibility of his living and working in China "to the extent that [these factors] impact on the Applicant's capacity to establish herself there and maintain basic living standard" (at [70]). 17 Finally, the Tribunal concluded that it was not satisfied that there was another reason why the original cancellation decision should be revoked, having found that the non-revocation considerations outweighed the best interests of the applicant's grandchildren and the relevant other considerations (at [71]-[73]).