CTHFCAFC
Titoa v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs
[2024] FCAFC 163
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)|2024-12-13|Before: Mr J, Needham JJ
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Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)
Decision date
2024-12-13
Before
Mr J, Needham JJ
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
[1]
- The appeal be dismissed.
- The appellant pay the first respondent's costs to be taxed if not agreed. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
[2]
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 INTRODUCTION [1] 2 DIRECTION 90 AND THE MIGRATION ACT [7] 3 THE NOTICE OF CONTENTION [11]
[3]
- INTRODUCTION 1 This appeal raises the question of whether or not the Administrative Appeals Tribunal failed to make a determination as to the best interests of minor children in accordance with Direction No. 90 - Visa refusal and cancellation under section 501 and revocation of a mandatory cancellation of a visa under section 501CA (Direction 90) (a direction made under s 499(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)) and, if it did, whether that error was material to the conclusion that the cancellation of the appellant's visa pursuant to s 501(3A) of the Migration Act should not be revoked. 2 The appellant is a citizen of New Zealand who has held a Class TY subclass 444 special category visa since moving to Australia at the age of 9 in February 2004. On 7 September 2021, a delegate of the Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs cancelled his visa pursuant to s 501(3A) for failure to pass the character test (as defined by s 501(6) of the Migration Act) as a result of being sentenced to two years' imprisonment following convictions on several counts of break and enter. The appellant sought revocation of that decision. On 28 March 2022, a delegate of the Minister declined to do so. On 21 July 2022, the Tribunal affirmed the decision of the delegate. 3 The appellant then sought judicial review of the Tribunal's decision in this court relying on three grounds, only one of which is relevant to the current appeal, namely that the Tribunal failed to make a determination as to whether revocation of the visa cancellation was in the best interests of minor children in Australia. That ground was dismissed by the primary judge on the basis that, whilst the Tribunal failed to make a relevant determination, that error was not material within the principles enunciated in LPDT v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2024] HCA 12; 98 ALJR 610 at [7], [14], [16] (per Gageler CJ, Gordon, Edelman, Steward, Gleeson and Jagot JJ, Beech-Jones J agreeing at [38]): Titoa v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs [2024] FCA 605 at [45] (per Meagher J). 4 The appellant appeals from that decision. He advances the following grounds: (1) The primary judge erred in finding at [45] that the Tribunal's failure to make a determination about whether or not non-revocation of the appellant's visa was in the best interests of the minor children it had identified could not realistically have changed the Tribunal's decision. (2) The primary judge erred in finding at [58] that the Tribunal did not fail to undertake a proper evaluative exercise of balancing the relevant considerations under Direction 90 when forming its conclusion. 5 The Minister relies on a notice of contention to the effect that the primary judge ought to have dismissed the application for review on the additional basis that the Tribunal did in fact make a determination about whether non-revocation was in the best interests of minor children. 6 For the reasons set out below we consider that the notice of contention must succeed. The consequence is that the grounds raised in the notice of appeal do not arise. The appeal must be dismissed with costs.