Parmar v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2018] FCA 502
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2018-04-13
Before
Dowsett J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (8 paragraphs)
- the application dated 17 October 2017 be dismissed; and
- the applicant pay the first respondent's costs of the application. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
introduction 1 On 11 September 2014, the applicant, a citizen of India, lodged an application for a medical treatment (subclass 602) visa. The first respondent's delegate (the "delegate") refused his application. Any application for such a visa had to be made within 28 days after the expiry of the relevant person's last substantive visa. See the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) (the "Migration Regulations") at Sch 2 cl 602.213(5) and Sch 3 criterion 3001(1) (as at the relevant time). The applicant's last such visa expired on 4 April 2009. It was upon that basis that the delegate refused the application. 2 On 2 October 2014 the applicant applied for review of that decision by the second respondent (the "Tribunal"). At the relevant time, s 347(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the "Migration Act") provided: (1) An application for review of a [Tribunal] 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 [Tribunal] reviewable decision is covered by subsection 338(2), (3), (3A), (4) or (7A) - 28 days after the notification of the decision; or (ii) if the [Tribunal] reviewable decision is covered by subsection 338(5), (6), (7) or (8) - 70 days after the notification of the decision; or (iii) if the [Tribunal] reviewable decision is covered by subsection 338(9) - the number of days prescribed, in respect of the kind of decision in question prescribed for the purposes of that subsection, after the notification of the decision; and (c) be accompanied by the prescribed fee (if any). 3 At that time reg 4.13 provided: (1) Subject to this regulation, the fee for an application for review of a decision by the Tribunal is $1,540. (2) No fee is payable on the following: (a) an application for review by the Tribunal of a primary decision of a kind referred to in subsection 338(4) of the Act; (b) an application, made by a non-citizen who is in immigration detention, for review by the Tribunal of a decision to which paragraph 4.02(4)(f) applies. … (4) If the Registrar, or a Deputy Registrar, of the Tribunal, or another officer of the Tribunal authorised in writing by the Registrar, is satisfied that the payment of the fee mentioned in subregulation (1) has caused, or is likely to cause, severe financial hardship to the review applicant, the Registrar, Deputy Registrar or officer may determine that the fee payable is 50% of the amount mentioned in subregulation (1). (Emphasis added.) 4 Section 348 provided: (1) Subject to subsection (2), if an application is properly made under section 347 for review of a [Tribunal] reviewable decision, the Tribunal must review the decision. (2) The Tribunal must not review, or continue to review, a decision in relation to which the Minister has issued a conclusive certificate under section 339. 5 At some time shortly after the applicant had filed his application, he applied for reduction of the fee. On 9 October 2014, the applicant was advised that the fee had been reduced by 50% to $802. Where a determination is made under reg 4.13(4), the fee must be paid within a reasonable period after such determination (see Braganza v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2001) 109 FCR 364). The applicant was asked to pay the reduced fee by 3 November 2014. He did not do so. When contacted by an officer of the Tribunal, he indicated that he could not pay the reduced amount, and asked for further time to pay. The officer indicated that he should put his request in writing. He did not do so. On 24 November 2014, the Tribunal informed him that it had no jurisdiction to determine his application for review. This decision appears to have been based upon the view that the applicant had failed to pay the reduced fee within a reasonable time, and so had not complied with the requirement contained in s 347(1)(c), and that the application was not "properly made" pursuant to s 348(1). That section required the Tribunal to review a decision if an application was "properly made". Section 348(2) expressly forbade the Tribunal from considering an application in certain circumstances which are not presently relevant. The section said nothing concerning the Tribunal's consideration of an application which did not comply with s 347(1)(c). 6 On a strict construction of s 347(1) the prescribed fee was to be paid at the time at which the application was made. However reg 4.13 prescribed the fee for the purposes of s 347(1)(a) and contemplated reduction of it by up to 50%. Whilst it might be argued that any reduction had to be requested and granted prior to the application being made, the first respondent seems not to have generally proceeded in that way, apparently applying the decision of the Full Court in Braganza (supra). The Full Court there held at [51] that: In our view this argument should be accepted. The effect of doing so is to hold that, where an applicant for a visa makes an application for a waiver of the prescribed fee in accordance with reg 4.13, and that application is made within the prescribed period, the application for review may be entertained; provided that the fee is either eventually waived, or paid within a reasonable time after the application for waiver is rejected. That is, s 347(1)(c) should be read as being subject to the qualification that, provided an application for a waiver of the fee has been made within the prescribed period, the MRT is not prevented from considering the application for review merely because the prescribed fee has not been paid within the prescribed time.