Keo v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
[2009] FCA 676
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2009-06-22
Before
Siopis J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 The appellant is a citizen of Cambodia. She applied to the Australian Embassy in Phnom Penh for a Partner (Migrant) (Class BC) visa under s 65 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the Act) on 4 May 2004. She was sponsored by Mr Asna Yi, an Australian citizen. The application was accompanied by a statutory declaration from Mr Yi, who declared that he married the appellant in Cambodia on 17 April 2004. 2 The appellant and her sponsor attended an interview at the Australian Embassy on 6 September 2004. On 9 September 2004, the appellant was granted a Subclass UF 309 Spouse Provisional (Temporary) visa. She arrived in Australia on 11 September 2004. On 18 December 2006, a delegate of the Minister refused the appellant's application for a Partner (Migrant) visa. The delegate notified the appellant by a letter sent by registered mail on 19 December 2006. The appellant did not actually receive the notification of the decision until 15 January 2007.
THE TRIBUNAL 3 The appellant applied to the Migration Review Tribunal (the Tribunal) for review of the delegate's decision on 24 January 2007. The Tribunal found that the decision of the delegate was an MRT-reviewable decision under s 338(2) of the Act, but that it did not have the jurisdiction to conduct the review because the appellant's application for review was received outside the time limits prescribed by the Act. 4 Section 348(1) of the Act provides: (1) Subject to subsection (2), if an application is properly made under section 347 for review of an MRT-reviewable decision, the Tribunal must review the decision. 5 Section 347(1) of the Act relevantly provides: (1) An application for review of an MRT-reviewable decision must: (a) be made in the approved form; and (b) be given to the Tribunal within the prescribed period, being a period ending not later than: (i) if the MRT-reviewable decision is covered by subsection 338(2), (3), (3A), (4) or (7A) - 28 days after the notification of the decision. 6 Regulation 4.10(1)(a) of the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) (the Regulations) provides: (1) For paragraph 347(1)(b) of the Act, the period in which an application for review of an MRT-reviewable decision must be given to the Tribunal: (a) if the MRT-reviewable decision is mentioned in subsection 338(2) or (7A) of the Act - starts when the applicant receives notice of the decision and ends at the end of 21 days after the day on which the notice is received. 7 Section 494C(4) of the Act provides: If the Minister gives a document to a person by the method in subsection 494B(4) (which involves dispatching the document by prepaid post or by other prepaid means), the person is taken to have received the document: (a) if the document was dispatched from a place in Australia to an address in Australia - 7 working days (in the place of that address) after the date of the document; or (b) in any other case - 21 days after the date of the document. 8 The Tribunal found that the delegate's decision notification letter was dated 18 December 2006 and was sent by prepaid registered mail on 19 December 2006 from a place in Australia to the appellant's Canley Heights address in Australia provided to the Minister for the purpose of receiving documents. The Tribunal was satisfied that this met the requirements of s 494B(4) of the Act. Accordingly, the Tribunal found that, pursuant to s 494C(4), the appellant was taken to have received the notification of the decision on 29 December 2006, being seven working days from the date of the notice, even though the notice was not received by the appellant until 15 January 2007. 9 The Tribunal found that the fact that the appellant did not actually sign for and receive the letter until 15 January 2007 was irrelevant to the operation of the deeming provision under s 494C(4) of the Act. 10 The Tribunal concluded that as the application for review was received by the Tribunal outside the mandatory time limit it was not a valid application and, therefore, the Tribunal did not have the jurisdiction to review the delegate's decision.