Mohammed v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2018] FCA 767
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2018-05-24
Before
Middleton J
Catchwords
- Number of paragraphs: 36
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
- The appeal is dismissed.
- The appellant pay to the first respondent the costs of and in connection with the appeal fixed in the sum of $6,439.00. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
INTRODUCTION 1 This is an appeal from a judgment of the Federal Circuit Court given on 10 November 2017. The primary judge dismissed an application for judicial review of a decision of the second respondent (the 'Tribunal') made on 27 October 2014, to affirm a decision by a delegate of the first respondent (the 'Minister') to refuse to grant the appellant a Skilled (Provisional) (Class VC) visa (a 'skilled visa'). 2 On 24 November 2017, the appellant filed a notice of appeal with the following grounds that the Federal Circuit Court:- (1) Erred in dismissing the case unfairly without any evidence. (2) Ignored the fact that the appellant had not "colluded" in the fraud of his migration agent ('S & S Migration'). (3) Erred in finding that the appellant was "indifferent" to the fraudulent actions of his migration agent in a manner that amounted to a general authority to his agent. (4) Erred in considering that in its finding that the appellant "was indifferent" to his agent's fraud, having regard to the nature of that indifference, was a sufficient basis to deny the appellant the relief he sought given that the Federal Circuit Court found that there was fraud by the migration agent and no evidence that the appellant was positively complicit in that fraud. 3 One of the main contentions of the appellant was that the primary judge should have found that his visa application was invalid, on the basis that the purported application was vitiated by fraud perpetrated by his migration agent. 4 The written submissions of the appellant filed in this Court included the following grounds: 1. The Honour Judge ought to have seen that the standard of proof applied should be the criminal standard of beyond reasonable doubt is not applicable in the present case to the applicant. Neither the Honour Judge in his reasoning in the impugned judgment nor the respondent in his arguments dealt with the question squarely. Though the Honour Judge categorically recorded at Paragraph 25 that strictly speaking, it was not correct to conclude there was no evidence about the matters about which the applicant spoke as the applicant filed affidavit setting out certain issues. That said, I invited the applicant to tell me all he wanted to tell me about the visa application in this case and of the role of S&S had in the process. 2. The Honour Judge should not have confined to evidence tested by cross- examination or oral evidence as it cannot have been easy for the appellant to face lengthy questioning from experienced counsel before the court of High level. 3. The Honour Judge should have found that the respondent's decision was not in accordance with the law since the judge failed to point out the insufficient evidence provided to allege that the applicant was indifferent to his agent's fraud. The letter of Tribunal 28 April 2014 stating that information relating to the applicant was located in the S&S and the S&S had been found to have lodged applications to the then Department of Immigration and Citizenship that contained false or misleading Information. On the other hand evidence given by the applicant by filing document under the heading "Affidavit for Federal Circuit Court of Australia and the statement made by the applicant before the Honour Judge from the bar table are consistent and candid. 4. The Honour Judge ought to have held that the appellant is not bound by the strict rules of evidence and is entitled to have regard to discharging the burden of proving the fraud on the balance of probabilities and the evidence on record duly affirming by both the parties that S&S migration has committed the fraud. 5. The Honour judge grossly erred to infer from the appellant choosing the option not to enter the witness box in order to give evidence that no such evidence of fraud committed on the appellant exist. 6. The Honour Judge erred in law by failing to consider that the Tribunal has not given a fair chance to the applicant to appear and give evidence on oath before its authority when alleging that the applicant was indifferent to his agent's fraud and wrongly held at Paragraph 15 that "the Tribunal was entitled to proceed to make a decision without taking any further action to obtain the applicants view on the information once the applicant failed to provide the information the Tribunal sought in its 28 April 2014 letter. 7. The Honour Judge does not make any findings on the evidence and submissions made by the applicant that he was the victim of fraud and arrived to a wrong conclusion that the applicant failed to discharge the burden of proving the fraud having been given an opportunity. 8. It is unclear on what basis and evidence the Honour judge finds that the Tribunal was correct in reaching the conclusion given that the Honour Judge found there was a fraud committed by the migration agent and no evidence that the appellant was positively complicit in that fraud. 9. The Honour Judge provides in adequate reasons for arriving at the conclusion set out. 10. It is submitted that the determination of the Federal Circuit Court is unsafe and unlawful and materially erred in law and that an order allowing this appeal by setting aside the orders of the Federal Circuit Court made on 10 November 2017 and remitting the matter either to the FCCA or Tribunal for rehearing according to law may be granted.