THE OBJECTION AS TO COMPETENCY
10 Division 3 of the Act provides for the grant of visas to non-citizens of Australia.
11 Section 29(1) of the Act provides:
'(1) Subject to this Act, the Minister may grant a non-citizen permission, to be known as a visa, to do either or both of the following:
(a) travel to and enter Australia;
(b) remain in Australia.'
12 Section 30 of the Act provides:
'(1) A visa to remain in Australia (whether also a visa to travel to and enter Australia) may be a visa, to be known as a permanent visa, to remain indefinitely.
(2) A visa to remain in Australia (whether also a visa to travel to and enter Australia) may be a visa, to be known as a temporary visa, to remain:
(a) during a specified period; or
(b) until a specified event happens; or
(c) while the holder has a specified status.'
13 Section 31 of the Act provides:
'(1) There are to be prescribed classes of visas.
(2) As well as the prescribed classes, there are the classes provided for by sections 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 37A and 38.
(3) The regulations may prescribe criteria for a visa or visas of a specified class (which, without limiting the generality of this subsection, may be a class provided for by section 32, 36, 37 or 37A but not by section 33, 34, 35 or 38).
(4) The regulations may prescribe whether visas of a class are visas to travel to and enter Australia, or to remain in Australia, or both.
(5) A visa is a visa of a particular class if this Act or the regulations specify that it is a visa of that class.'
14 Section 65 of the Act provides:
'(1) After considering a valid application for a visa, the Minister:
(a) if satisfied that:
(i) the health criteria for it (if any) have been satisfied; and
(ii) the other criteria for it prescribed by this Act or the regulations have been satisfied; and
(iii) the grant of the visa is not prevented by section 40 (circumstances when granted), 500A (refusal or cancellation of temporary safe haven visas), 501 (special power to refuse or cancel) or any other provision of this Act or of any other law of the Commonwealth; and
(iv) any amount of visa application charge payable in relation to the application has been paid;
is to grant the visa; or
(b) if not so satisfied, is to refuse to grant the visa.'
15 As these sections demonstrate, a visa is a purely personal licence and a bare visa confers no right on any other person: Phung v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 821 at [5]. A refusal of the Minister's delegate to grant the visa sought gives the applicant the right under s 338(2) of the Act to seek a review of the delegate's decision by the MRT. On a review the MRT may exercise all of the powers and discretions that are conferred by the Act on the person who made the decision and the MRT may affirm, vary, set aside and substitute its own decision or remit the matter for reconsideration: s 349(1) and s 349(2). That is, the relief available upon a review is also personal to the applicant for review.
16 Where an applicant applies under s 39B of the Judiciary Act for relief directed at quashing the decision of the MRT and requiring the MRT to conduct the review under s 338(2) of the Act according to law, the subject matter of the proceedings is the vindication of private rights arising under the Act which concern the grant of a personal licence to remain in Australia.
17 Whether or not the right in the present proceedings to seek review of a decision of the MRT (to affirm the decision of the delegate to refuse to grant to Boris Kamychenko the visa sought) is a 'cause of action' which survives his death for the benefit of his estate, is a question of statutory construction: Stephenson v Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (1996) 68 FCR 290 at 296-297; Kalejs v Minister for Justice and Customs (2001) 111 FCR 442; [2001] FCA 1769 at [21] - [22] Phung at [4].
18 In my view the rights invoked by Boris Kamychenko in applying for a visa, and seeking review of administrative decisions refusing the grant of a visa to him were not of a transmissible kind. As Kenny J said in Kalejs (at [22]): '… The personal nature of the rights that the late Mr Kalejs invoked is manifest in the relief he sought.' No visa can now issue to Boris Kamychenko because a visa cannot survive the death of the visa holder due to its inherent character as a personal licence and, as such, the proceedings now lack a subject matter. Boris Kamychenko can no longer be affected by the decision he sought to have reviewed. His right to review in this Court abated with his death: Phung at [5]; V120/00A v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2002) 116 FCR 576; [2002] FCA 264 at [54] - [55].
19 The question remains as to what then is the position of Mrs Kamychenko and her son as applicants in the proceedings in this Court.
20 The primary criteria to be satisfied for the grant of a Business Skills (Residence) subclass 845 visa are set out in cl 845.2 of Sch 2 to the Migration Regulations. That provision notes that the primary criteria must be satisfied by at least one member of a family unit. The other members of the family unit who are applicants for a visa of this subclass need satisfy only the secondary criteria.
21 Mrs Kamychenko and her son were shown in Section 1 of the Form 1029 as family members wishing to remain permanently in Australia who were included in the application. Boris Kamychenko is shown as the main applicant and he made the declaration in par 108 of the form required to be made under the criteria cl 845.219 by the applicant for the visa at the time of application. Mrs Kamychenko did not set out to satisfy the primary criteria of an applicant for a Business Skills (Residence) subclass 845 visa even though she may have qualified had she done so. For example, she has not made the declaration required under cl 845.219. Having completed the Form 1029 on the basis that Mrs Kamychenko and her son were applying for the grant of a visa as family members of an applicant for a Business Skills (Residence) subclass 845 visa and that it was Boris Kamychenko who was to satisfy the primary criteria, it is not open to her and her son to amend the form to substitute Mrs Kamychenko as the main applicant for such a visa or to read the Form 1029 filed on 21 December 1999 as if it were so amended: V120/00A at [58] - [59]. Having made the application as other members of a family unit, other than the member required to satisfy the primary criteria, Mrs Kamychenko and her son had to satisfy the secondary criteria.
22 The secondary criteria to be satisfied at the time of the decision included the following:
'845.321 (1) The applicant meets the requirements of subclause (2), (3) or (4).
(2) An applicant meets the requirements of this subclause if the applicant is a member of the family unit of a person (in this clause called the non-dependent holder) who, having satisfied the primary criteria, is the holder of a Subclass 845 visa.'