The application for a review
16 The applicant's originating application for review, filed on 16 July 2014, contains seven grounds, stated as follows:
1. The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection was not and did not act in good faith when he made his decision to cancel my Class TY, Subclass 444, Special Category (Temporary) visa on 23 June 2014.
2. The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection decision is vitiated by jurisdictional error.
3. The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection denied me procedural fairness and natural justice when he made his decision on 23 June 2014. Given the fact that the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection knew and ought to have known that pursuant to section 201(a)(b)(i)(ii)(A)(B)(C) of the Migration Act 1958, and by the operation and force and the strength of that section of the Migration Act 1958, I am protected and exempted from being deported from Australia.
4. That section 501 of the Migration Act 1958 is inconsistent with the provisions of section 201(a)(b)(i)(ii)(A)(B)(C) and other parts of the Migration Act 1958.
5. The decision of the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection to cancel my visa given the provisions of section 201(a)(b)(i)(ii)(A)(B)(C) and other parts of the Migration Act 1958 is beyond power, invalid and unconstitutional.
6. The judgement in the matter of Nystrom was wrong and wrongly decided and this matter should be transferred to the High Court of Australia should the decides [sic] that it is unable to reach a clear and decisive decision due to Nystrom.
7. The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection did not inform nor warn me that he was not going to have regards and take into consideration the provisions of section 201(a)(b)(i)(ii)(A)(B)(C) and other parts of the Migration Act 1958, and thereby put me on notice and give me adequate opportunity to make comments and put in submissions that the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection should not embark on such course.
17 Grounds 3 to 7 are premised on the power to cancel a visa under s 501 of the Act being unavailable where the power of the Minister to deport a non-citizen is not available by dint of s 201 of the Act, which relevantly provides that the Minister's power to order the deportation of a non-citizen under s 200 of the Act does not apply where the non-citizen is a New Zealand citizen who has been in Australia for a period of 10 years or more as a permanent resident, notwithstanding that the non-citizen has been convicted of an offence in Australia.
18 Similar grounds were considered by Perry J in Taniela v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 375. Her Honour reasoned that, in light of the decision in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Nystrom (2006) 228 CLR 566, those grounds must be rejected: see at [30]-[37]. Her Honour's decision was upheld on appeal (Taniela v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCAFC 104), the Full Court stating (at [18]):
18 The Parliament had power to pass laws under s 51(xix) and (xxvii) of the Constitution with respect to naturalisation and aliens and immigration and emigration. The Act is a law with respect to those subject matters and each of ss 201 and 501 was validly enacted by the Parliament. As the High Court held in Nystrom 228 CLR 566, each of the provisions has a separate and distinct operation and nothing in the provisions of ss 200 and 201 controls or affects in any way the construction and operation of s 501. Her Honour was correct to have applied the principles in Project Blue Sky 194 CLR at 381-382 [70] in that regard. In any event, this Court, as was her Honour, is bound by, and must apply, the decision of the High Court that found that there is a separate operation of each of ss 201 and 501. For the reasons in Nystrom 228 CLR 566, the grounds of appeal in relation to inconsistency and unconstitutionality are hopeless and must be dismissed.
19 It follows that grounds 3 to 7 of the present application must also be rejected. This outcome, in light of the binding nature of the High Court's decision in Nystrom, appears to be foreshadowed in ground 6 of the present application.
20 Grounds 1 and 2 of the present application remain to be decided.
21 At the commencement of the hearing, I asked the applicant, who was unrepresented, to specifically address me on those two grounds.
22 With respect to ground 1, which alleges that the Minister did not act in good faith when deciding to cancel the visa, the applicant said that the only ties he had were with Australia. He said that his only connection with New Zealand was the fact that he was born there. He also felt that he had not been given an opportunity to show that he had changed his life. By this last remark, I understood the applicant to mean that he felt he should have been given an opportunity to demonstrate, by remaining in Australia, that he had changed his ways.
23 These submissions do not make out ground 1 of the application. In any event, the Minister plainly accepted that the applicant had no relatives or support in New Zealand and took this factor into account when weighing up how his discretion under s 501 should be exercised. The Minister was not required to give the applicant a chance to demonstrate that he had changed his life. It follows that this ground of review must be rejected.
24 With respect to ground 2, which alleges that the Minister's decision was vitiated by jurisdictional error, the applicant was unable to identify the error on which he sought to rely. Having carefully considered the Minister's reasons, I am unable to see how the Minister's decision was affected by jurisdictional error. It follows that this ground of review must also be rejected.