WCJS v Minister for Home Affairs
[2021] FCA 1093
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2021-09-10
Before
Stewart J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (24 paragraphs)
- The respondent's decision dated 5 February 2020 be set aside.
- The respondent pay the applicant's costs. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 1 The applicant seeks judicial review under s 476A of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) of a decision of the Minister for Home Affairs who refused to grant a visa to the applicant pursuant to s 501A(2) of the Act. The Minister personally exercised powers to set aside a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal which had revoked a decision of a delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection to cancel the applicant's visa under s 501(1) of the Act. 2 The applicant came to Australia from Bangladesh in 2007 at the age of 26. He arrived on a student visa and settled in Sydney. He studied Accounting and Hotel Management at TAFE and subsequently obtained a Master's degree in Commerce and Business. He established himself in the security business, and was employed by a large department store in Sydney as a Deputy Security Manager. He has also had other employment, mainly on the weekends, as a security guard at various events, including at nightclubs. 3 In early 2014, the applicant entered into a domestic relationship with his current partner, a New Zealand citizen. At the time of his visa application, he held a New Zealand Citizen (Family Relationship) (Temporary) (Class UP) subclass 461 visa. 4 The applicant's partner subsequently applied for a Skilled - Independent (Permanent) (Class SI) subclass 189 visa, which the applicant joined as a dependant applicant. 5 In October 2016, the Department of Immigration and Border Protection sent to the applicant a notice of intention to consider refusal of his visa application under s 501(1) of the Act. Such a refusal would be on the basis that the applicant "does not satisfy the Minister [or the Minister's delegate] that the person passes the character test". The delegate refused the visa in February 2017 and decided that the applicant had failed the character test on the basis that there "is a risk that the person would engage in criminal conduct in Australia" (s 501(6)(d)(i) of the Act). 6 The delegate relied on, amongst other things, the applicant's criminal record. That record, as reflected in a National Police Certificate dated 9 November 2015 was the following: (1) 29 October 2010, Downing Centre Local Court, Common Assault (Domestic Violence), without conviction, bond to be of good behaviour for 12 months. (2) 7 December 2011, Penrith Local Court, Contravene Prohibition/Restriction in Apprehended Violence Order (Domestic), without conviction, no further penalty imposed. (3) 24 November 2015, Downing Centre Local Court, Common Assault, pending matter. 7 Also before the delegate was a subsequent National Police Certificate, dated 4 May 2016, which did not reflect the third of those matters, indicating that that matter had been finalised without a conviction against the applicant. The evidence is that that matter arose from a road rage-type incident in November 2014 which was ultimately disposed of on 9 March 2016 under the Mental Health (Forensic Provisions) Act 1990 (NSW) (no longer in force) without a conviction being entered against the applicant. 8 In February 2017, the applicant sought merits review of the decision of the delegate in the Tribunal. The Tribunal set aside the delegate's decision in May 2017 and decided that the applicant's visa should not be refused on character grounds, and in any event, the discretion to refuse the applicant's visa should not be exercised against the applicant had a contrary view on the character test been reached. 9 The Tribunal considered that the applicant had sought to create a life for himself in Australia, had established himself in the security business, was partway through a second master's degree with aspirations of working for a national security organisation, was in a stable domestic relationship, and had plans to marry his partner and have a family. His partner gave evidence in the proceeding, and the Tribunal found that she presented as a stable and solid person and was well-presented, articulate and very supportive of the applicant. His partner has a bachelor of Medical Laboratory Science and has approximately 12 years of employment experience that is relevant to the current position as a Medical Laboratory Scientist at a private hospital in Sydney. 10 Although the Tribunal found that the applicant has had some problems in the past with managing anger and his ability to control his emotions, it accepted that the applicant had an appreciation of his mental health issues and had been engaging in treatment. 11 The Tribunal did not accept the applicant's claim that Australia's international non-refoulement obligations, namely the obligation to protect him from being subjected to degrading or inhumane treatment on the basis of his mental health issues if returned to Bangladesh, was a significant consideration. However, it did take into account that his partner would, if necessary, accompany the applicant back to Bangladesh, which would have a severe effect on her in terms of assimilating and being accepted into the culture. 12 On the whole of the evidence, the Tribunal found that the applicant's visa should not be refused on character grounds, and in any event, the discretion should be exercised in a way that would not refuse the applicant's visa had a contrary view on the character test been reached.