The submissions of the parties
47 Counsel for the applicant relied on the affidavit evidence of the chief executive officer of the applicant, Mr Sarang Dhawan. The main points that arise from that affidavit evidence are -
(a) the applicant had been operating without restriction from the conclusion of the final hearing on 7 June 2017 until 7 January 2021 when, by consent, the Tribunal further stayed the underlying decision until 29 January 2021 but imposing conditions that the applicant was not permitted to train any students or to enrol any new students;
(b) the applicant agreed to the order of 7 January 2021 in the terms that were made because the stay granted by the Tribunal on 7 June 2017 was due to expire on 7 January 2021 by operation of s 43(5C) of the AAT Act, and in circumstances where because of the holiday period and the unavailability of legal practitioners, the applicant had been unable to prepare necessary appeal documents by that time;
(c) currently, the applicant has 51 students studying with it who are enrolled in one of two courses being of 56 weeks and 42 weeks respectively in duration;
(d) the applicant has a further 26 enrolled students to whom the applicant has provided a "confirmation of enrolment" and who have not yet commenced their course;
(e) the applicant has a further 75 student applications that have not been processed;
(f) the confirmation of enrolment facilitates the students' applications for visas;
(g) of all the students to whom a confirmation of enrolment has been issued, 30 have been granted visas and have been studying online due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and a further 20 do not yet have visas;
(h) in the past six months, 30 students have been enrolled, and 26 students with a confirmation of enrolment are scheduled to commence courses in the next six months;
(i) the applicant has various ongoing fixed expenses, the largest items being rental of premises under a two year lease expiring on 23 August 2021, and wages of three administrative staff and two trainers and assessors;
(j) the applicant continues to engage Ms Hodge of RTO Advice;
(k) if the Court does not stay the Tribunal's decision, then the applicant will cease to be able to operate as a provider of training and education to international students, and will be required to make arrangements under the ESOS Act to transfer all of its students to another provider or to cancel their enrolment;
(l) the applicant would then effectively have to cease operating as a business, and will have to lay off staff and it will lose its premises;
(m) the applicant does not have any accumulated cash reserves, and has operated under financial "duress" for a number of years pending a decision by the Tribunal, as it was difficult to operate a business without certainty of registration;
(n) the applicant spent significant funds in the last 12 months in connection with the review by the Tribunal after the respondent lodged its further evidence;
(o) the applicant has experienced additional difficulties in the international student market in the last 12 months as a result of COVID-19 restrictions on international arrivals; and
(p) in summary, the applicant would be unable to survive if it was not permitted to operate pending the hearing and determination of the appeal.
48 Counsel for the applicant emphasised the fact that from 7 June 2017 to 7 January 2021 the applicant had been permitted to operate its business unhindered pursuant to the Tribunal's unconditional stay orders. Picking up the language of s 44A(2) of the AAT Act, counsel submitted that the interim stay sought is appropriate for the purpose of securing the effectiveness of the hearing and determination of the appeal. That was because, to adapt the analysis of Tamberlin J in Shi v Migration Institute of Australia Ltd [2003] FCA 1304; 134 FCR 326 at [28]-[29], the operation of the applicant's business was a continuum, and if the applicant is successful on appeal then the applicant will have wrongfully had its registration terminated by the Tribunal's orders of 10 December 2020 with consequential damage and disruption to its business for which there was no provision for recovery of loss. Counsel went further and submitted that the appeal might be rendered nugatory if, as a result of not being registered, the applicant ceased to trade.
49 For the purposes of the applicant's application for interim relief, counsel grouped the applicant's students and potential students into three categories based upon the evidence of Mr Dhawan to which I referred above -
(a) those students who were enrolled and who had commenced their course;
(b) those students who had enrolled but who had not commenced their course; and
(c) those persons who had applied for a course who had yet to enrol.
50 In relation to the first group of students, they were due to re-commence their studies shortly. In relation to the second group of students, counsel informed the Court that there were no enrolled students who had not commenced and were due to commence their studies during the proposed period of an interim order. Accordingly, they could be excluded from consideration for the time being. In relation to the third group, counsel submitted that there was no intention to commence teaching those persons during the proposed period of an interim stay, but that the applicant should be permitted to process applications for enrolment so that the applicant's business might be able to continue as a going concern in the interim period.
51 In relation to what might occur should an interim stay lapse, or further down the track should a stay pending appeal lapse if the appeal is unsuccessful, counsel for the applicant relied on a number of provisions of Part 3 and Part 5 of the ESOS Act. Part 3 imposes obligations on registered providers. Part 5 contains mechanisms which seek to protect overseas students' interests in the event that a registered educational service provider fails to provide tuition, which s 46A defines as a "default". The ostensible effect of these mechanisms is to impose certain obligations on a defaulting provider in relation to affected overseas students. Without being exhaustive, the relevant provisions can be summarised as follows.
52 Within Part 3, ss 28 and 29 require all providers to credit tuition fees received from an overseas student before their commencement of study to a bank account within five days of receipt. The provider is obliged to ensure that there are sufficient funds in that account to repay all such tuition fees. The provider is prohibited from drawing on those funds to pay its debts, other than in limited specified circumstances. Contravention of these obligations is an offence under s 32.
53 Within Part 5, s 46D obliges a defaulting provider to arrange for affected students to be offered a place in an alternative course at the provider's expense, or provide a refund of any unspent tuition fees received by the provider, within 14 days. Failing to do so is an offence under s 46F. A provider is permitted to draw money from the bank account described above to pay a refund pursuant s 46D.
54 Counsel for the applicant submitted that, in respect of any fees received on enrolment from new students, those fees would be held in accordance with these protective provisions at risk of criminal sanction.
55 Finally, counsel emphasised the imperative of the Court making an order on 29 January 2021 having regard to the terms of the Tribunal's order of 7 January 2021, under which that stay was expressed to be "until close of business on 29 January 2021". Counsel submitted that if the deemed registration of the applicant was not continued, then the applicant's inability to undertake those activities which its registration enabled it to conduct would result in "provider default" for the purposes of s 46A of the ESOS Act, and trigger obligations under Part 5 of the Act to transfer its students to other providers.
56 Ms Quadrio did not dispute any of the applicable principles for the grant of a stay. Commendably, the respondent narrowed the issues in dispute and did not oppose the grant of an interim stay on terms, pending a further interlocutory hearing at which the respondent would have the opportunity to give proper consideration to the application, marshal evidence, and make more considered submissions. The respondent submitted that any interim stay should be subject to conditions. For present purposes, the respondent -
(a) did not oppose an interim stay that would permit the applicant to continue teaching courses to enrolled students who had already commenced studying;
(b) opposed permitting the applicant under the terms of any stay to commence teaching courses to any enrolled students who had not already started their course, but this was not in issue; and
(c) opposed the making of an interim stay that would permit the applicant to continue to enrol students.
57 The respondent submitted that it was inappropriate to permit the applicant to enrol new students when there was a Tribunal decision adverse to the applicant that affirmed the respondent's decision to refuse to renew the applicant's registration that enabled it lawfully to provide tuition and education services to overseas students. The respondent submitted that, should the interim order not continue, there would be inconvenience to the overseas students concerned.