Consideration
19 This appeal turns on the proper construction of s 140 of the Migration Act. The section relevantly provides:
(1) If a person's visa is cancelled under section 109 (incorrect information), 116 (general power to cancel), 128 (when holder outside Australia), 133A (Minister's personal powers to cancel visas on section 109 grounds), 133C (Minister's personal powers to cancel visas on section 116 grounds) or 137J (student visas), a visa held by another person because of being a member of the family unit of the person is also cancelled.
(2) If:
(a) a person's visa is cancelled under section 109 (incorrect information), 116 (general power to cancel), 128 (when holder outside Australia), 133A (Minister's personal powers to cancel visas on section 109 grounds), 133C (Minister's personal powers to cancel visas on section 116 grounds) or 137J (student visas); and
(b) another person to whom subsection (1) does not apply holds a visa only because the person whose visa is cancelled held a visa;
the Minister may, without notice to the other person, cancel the other person's visa.
20 It is not in dispute that Ms Sapkota's visa was cancelled pursuant to s 128 of the Migration Act.
21 The crux of the appellant's submissions is that s 140(1) did not apply as at the time of the visa cancellation, as he was no longer Ms Sapkota's "spouse" - and therefore no longer a member of her family unit - by virtue of the fact of his divorce from Ms Sapkota. He argues further that, in circumstances where he was no longer a member of Ms Sapkota's family unit, there could be no mandatory cancellation of his visa under s 140 (1) of the Migration Act. Rather, cancellation of his visa required the exercise of discretion pursuant to s 140(2) of the Migration Act. In that respect, the appellant submits that the Minister failed to consider the appellant's specific circumstances, that is, that he was divorced and making an application for a visa.
22 The Minister contends that s 140(1) is focussed on the basis for a person obtaining, acquiring or qualifying for the grant of a secondary visa, not on whether they in fact continued to be a member of the same family unit as another person.
23 Both parties relied on Rani. In particular, Sackville J said at 399:
These difficulties may well require some modification of the applicant's submissions, but I do not think that they detract substantially from the basic point made by Mr Beech Jones. This is that s 140(1) was drafted at a time when it was clearly contemplated that the secondary criteria for many classes of visa would be specifically expressed to include a requirement that the applicant be "a member of the family unit of" the primary applicant. It was also contemplated at that time that applicants satisfying this requirement would usually, if not invariably, apply at the same time as the primary applicant.
In my opinion, the structure of the Migration Regulations supports the view that s 140(1) was intended to apply only where a visa holder obtained his or her visa by satisfying a criterion explicitly framed in terms of being "a member of the family unit" of another person whose visa is later cancelled… In other words, s 140(1) may apply to a person who acquired a visa by satisfying a primary criterion expressed specifically in terms of being a "member of the family unit" of another person whose visa is later cancelled. But I think the better view is that s 140(1) was not intended to effect the automatic cancellation of the visa held be a person who obtained the visa because he or she satisfied the description in any one of the subparagraphs of the definition contained in reg 1.12 of the Migration Regulations.
(Emphasis added.)
24 In my respectful opinion, the observations of Sackville J in Rani apply to the circumstances currently before me.
25 The distinction between circumstances in which s 140(1) and s 140(2) apply is illustrated by contrasting the present circumstances with those in, for example, Ara v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCA 130 where s 140(2) was relevant.
26 In this case, the appellant obtained his visa as a secondary applicant, referable to Ms Sapkota's visa application, because he was a member of her family unit.
27 In Ara the applicant's husband, Mr Ahmed, had a permanent resident (subclass 880) visa. The applicant sought and was granted a subclass 100 spouse/partner visa granted on the basis of her marriage to Mr Ahmed. Driver FCCJ at first instance (Ara v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2016] FCCA 2154) examined in detail the interaction between ss 140(1) and 140(2), and in particular observed:
33. In my opinion, the interpretation Ms Ara seeks to place on the word "only" in s.140(2)(b) of the Migration Act is an artificial one. In the first place, she, like Sackville J in Rani, could not point to any class of visa that is held only because another person holds a visa. It was observed in argument that a member of a family unit may hold a visa only because someone else in their family holds a visa but that situation is dealt with in s.140(1) and subsection (2) only applies where subsection (1) does not apply. Ms Ara submits that the fact that no class of visa is dependent solely on another person holding a visa does not mean that s.140(2) is invalid or incapable of rational administration, because regulations could be made prescribing a class of visa with such a sole condition. In my opinion, however, the word "only" does not mean solely in s.140(2)(b) but, rather, means that the fact of another person holding a visa was a condition precedent to the grant of the visa. It may not be the only condition for the visa granted but it is the material condition for the purposes of the subsection.
34. Subsections 140(1) and 140(2) are substantially similar; they both provide for the cancellation of a second person's visa. The two main differences are that:
a. subsection 140(1) is an automatic cancellation whereas subsection 140(2) is a discretionary power of cancellation;
b. subsection 140(1) applies to a "member of the same family unit", whereas subsection 140(2)(b) applies beyond persons granted the visa by virtue of family unit membership, to "another person to whom subsection (1) does not apply holds a visa only because the person whose visa is cancelled holds a visa".
35. The first difference above does not appear to be in dispute. However it is the second with which Ms Ara is taking issue.
36. According to PAM3 - Act - Visa Cancellation powers (ss 109, 116, 128 and 140) the present situation is precisely the situation that s.140(2) contemplates. That is, where Ms Ara held a visa (here a subclass 100 spouse visa) by virtue of her husband's subclass 880 visa and not because she was the member of a family unit, as a secondary visa holder to her husband's subclass 880 visa.
…
39. The Minister submits, and I accept that, if Ms Ara's argument is that the phrase "only because the person whose visa is cancelled" might be ambiguous because other criteria (unconnected to the cancelled visa holder) must be satisfied like health and character, then it must fail. Health and character requirements are present in every visa subclass, but s 140(2) of the Migration Act is designed to ensure a liability for cancellation arises materially where the applicant's visa, as here, is held because of the connection with another person whose visa has now been cancelled.
28 On appeal Jagot J said at [7]:
…Section 140(2)(b), by the use of the word "only because", should be understood to mean that the person holds a visa by reason of another person having held a visa, in the sense that another person holding a visa was, as the primary judge said, "a condition precedent to the grant of the visa" (Ara v Minister for Immigration ]2016] FCCA 2154 at [33]).
29 Section 140(1) applies to the appellant. He obtained the same visa as Ms Sapkota as a secondary applicant, on the basis that he was a member of her family unit at the relevant time. The appellant is "another person" who held a visa because of being a member of the family unit of the person whose visa is also cancelled. The fact that the appellant had ceased to be a member of the same family unit as Ms Sapkota by the time of the delegate's decision was irrelevant - s 140(1) looks to the circumstances in which the visa was acquired, not subsequent events.
30 Despite what appears to be potential overlap between circumstances envisaged by ss 140(1) and 140(2), the differences in application are illustrated by the decision in Ara, where the applicant/appellant:
obtained a spouse/partner visa (that is, different to the visa held by her husband); and
held that visa only because her husband held a permanent residence visa.
31 Accordingly, I agree with the primary Judge that the circumstances of this case give rise to the automatic cancellation of the appellant's visa by operation of s 140(1) and dismiss the appellant's first ground of appeal.