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Tan and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] AATA 877 (12 December 2011)
Last Updated: 23 December 2011
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No: 2011/3398
GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION )
Re Leilani Tan
Applicant
And Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
Respondent
DECISION (CORRIGENDUM)
Tribunal Mr R P Handley, Deputy President
Date 14 December 2011
Place Sydney
WHEREAS:
The Tribunal published its written reasons to decision in this matter on 12
December 2011:
- The
Tribunal wishes to amend the written reasons to decision to rectify an
error.
- The
Tribunal therefore orders that the decision of the Tribunal should be amended to
reflect the following amendment to paragraph
[23] of the decision:
- Ms
Weston said the Minister contends that Ms Tan does not meet the requirement
set out in ss 22(9)(d) for a close and continuing association
with Australia in
the fouryear period prior to lodging her application.
..............[sgd]...........
Mr R P
Handley
Deputy President
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
DECISION AND REASONS FOR DECISION
[2011] AATA 877
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No 2011/3398
GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION
|
|
|
Re
|
Leilani Tan
|
Applicant
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And
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Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
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Respondent
DECISION
Tribunal
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Mr R P Handley, Deputy President
|
Date 12 December 2011
Place Sydney
Decision
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The decision under review is affirmed.
|
....................[sgd]......................
Mr R P
Handley
Deputy President
CATCHWORDS
IMMIGRATION & CITZENSHIP - refusal to grant citizenship by conferral
– applicant married to Australian citizen - applicant
does not meet
residence requirements – application of Australian Citizenship
Instructions
RELEVANT ACT
Australian Citizenship Act 2007 ss 21, 22, 22A, 22B, 23, 24
CITATIONS
Hneidi v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2010) 182 FCR 115;
(2010) 114 ALD 26; (2010) 265 ALR 292; [2010] FCAFC 20
Re Jiang and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] AATA
688
Re Minhas and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2011) 121 ALD
647;
[2011] AATA 388 
OTHER AUTHORITIES
Australian Citizenship Instructions, Chapter 5, 15 September 2011
REASONS FOR DECISION
|
Mr R P Handley, Deputy President
|
|
|
- Ms Tan
has applied to the Tribunal for a review of a decision of a delegate of the
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship to refuse
her application for
Australian citizenship by conferral on the ground that she did not meet the
residence requirements. The issue
for the Tribunal is whether this is the
correct or preferable decision.
BACKGROUND
- Ms Tan,
who is aged 45, was born in the Philippines where she is a citizen. She married
Robert Tan in 1995. Mr Tan was born in the
Philippines but was granted
Australian citizen by conferral in 1992. Mr and Mrs Tan have two children, aged
12 and 15, who are Australian
citizens by descent. Mr Tan is currently
employed as the Chief Operating Officer/Executive Vice-President of CBN
(Christian Broadcasting
Network) Asia based in Manila where Mr and Ms Tan
are living with their two children. He has also previously been posted by CBN
to other Asian countries, including serving in Indonesia from 2002 to 2007.
Ms Tan states that CBN is an international organisation
with headquarters
in Virginia Beach in the United States.
- Ms Tan
entered Australia as a visitor in 1995/1996, 2001 and 2003, staying for two or
three weeks on each occasion. She became a
permanent resident of Australia on
24 January 2004 when she arrived with a BF-100 Permanent Resident Spouse visa
which was granted
on 26 September 2003. On that occasion, Ms Tan stayed
for about a week. Since then, she has visited Australia in 2005/2006 (four
weeks), 2008 (a month), and 2010 (four weeks), most recently departing Australia
on 21 July 2010.
- Ms Tan
maintains a Commonwealth Bank account in Sydney. She has a sister and a brother
who are both Australian citizens and live
in Sydney with their families.
Ms Tan states that she and her husband plan to move to Australia in late
2014 or 2015 to enable their
eldest son to prepare for and undertake tertiary
study here.
- According
to movement records maintained by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
(the Department), Ms Tan has been present
in Australia for 99 days since
she arrived in Australia as a permanent resident on 24 January 2004. In the
four years before making
her application for citizenship, Ms Tan was in
Australia for a total of 60 days, and in the 12 months before making her
application
for citizenship, she was in Australia for 29 days.
- On
11 July 2011, Ms Tan lodged an Application for Australian Citizenship by
Conferral, which was refused by a delegate of the Minister
on 1 August 2011. On
22 August 2011, Ms Tan lodged an application with the Tribunal for a
review of this decision.
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK AND
POLICY
- Section
21(1) of the
Australian
Citizenship Act 2007 (the Act) provides that a person may make an
application to the Minister to become an Australian citizen. Section 24(1)
states that if a person makes such an application, “the Minister must, by
writing, approve or refuse to approve the person
becoming an Australian
citizen”. Section 21(2) states the general eligibility
requirements:
(2) A person is eligible to become an Australian
citizen if the Minister is satisfied that the
person:
(a) is aged 18 or over at the time the person made the application;
and
(b) is a permanent
resident:
- (i) at the
time the person made the application; and
- (ii) at the
time of the Minister's decision on the application; and
(c) satisfies the general residence requirement (see section
22) or the special residence requirement (see section 22A or 22B), or has
completed relevant defence service (see section
23), at the time the person made the application; and
(d) understands the nature of an application under subsection (1);
and
(e) possesses a basic knowledge of the English language; and
(f) has an adequate knowledge of Australia
and of the responsibilities and privileges of Australian
citizenship; and
(g) is likely to reside, or to continue to reside, in Australia
or to maintain a close and continuing association with Australia
if
the application were to be approved; and
(h) is of good character at the time of the Minister's decision on the
application.
- Thus,
s 21(2)(c) requires that the applicant must either satisfy the residency
requirements set out in ss 22, 22A or 22B, or have completed the relevant
defence service described in s 23.
- Section
22(1) sets out the general residence
requirement:
(1) Subject to this section, for the purposes of section 21
a person satisfies the general residence requirement if:
(a) the person was present in Australia
for the period of 4 years immediately before the day the person made the
application; and
(b) the person was not present in Australia
as an unlawful noncitizen at any time during that 4 year period; and
(c) the person was present in Australia
as a permanent
resident for the period of 12 months immediately before the day the person
made the application.
- Section
22(9) and (10) of the Act state:
- (9) If the
person is the spouse, de facto partner or surviving spouse or de facto partner
of an Australian citizen at the time the
person made the application, the
Minister may treat a period as one in which the person was present in Australia
as a permanent resident
if:
- (a) the
person was a spouse or de facto partner of that Australian citizen during that
period; and
- (b) the
person was not present in Australia during that period; and
- (c) the
person was a permanent resident during that period; and
- (d) the
Minister is satisfied that the person had a close and continuing association
with Australia during that period.
- (10) In
subsection (9):
surviving spouse or de facto partner of a person who has died
means a person who was the person's spouse or de facto partner immediately
before the person died and who
has not later become the spouse or de facto
partner of another person.
- The
Government has developed policy in the form of the Australian Citizenship
Instructions (the Instructions) to provide guidance
to decision-makers. As the
Full Federal Court said in
Hneidi v Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCAFC 20; (2010) 182 FCR 115 at 122, the Tribunal should
take such policy into account and accord it appropriate weight. The
introduction to the Instructions
states that their role
is:
... to support the Australian Citizenship Act 2007. The instructions
provide guidance on policy in relation to the interpretation of, and the
exercise of powers under, the Act and
the Regulations. Decision makers should
be mindful that policy must not be applied inflexibly. Policy cannot constrain
the exercise
of delegated powers under the
Act.
- The
Instructions state that the discretion to treat periods spent overseas by an
applicant as periods during which the applicant was
present in Australia as a
permanent resident can only be applied to periods when: (i) the applicant was
the spouse or de facto partner
of a person who was an Australian citizen; (ii)
the applicant was a permanent resident; and (iii) the applicant had a close and
continuing
association with Australia. This discretion would usually only be
exercised if the applicant was overseas with their Australian
citizenship spouse
or de facto partner.
- The
Instructions state that factors that may contribute to a close and continuing
association with Australia include: (i) Australian
citizen children; (ii) length
of relationship with the Australian citizen spouse or de facto partner; (iii)
extended family in Australia;
(iv) return visits to Australia; (v) periods of
residence in Australia; (vi) intention to reside in Australia; (vii) employment
in
Australia (for example, public or private sector); (viii) ownership of
property in Australia; (ix) evidence of income tax payment
in Australia; and (x)
current bank accounts in Australia.
- The
Instructions state, further:
In assessing whether a person has a close and continuing association with
Australia for the purposes of s 22(9)(d), more weight should be given if they
have been lawfully and physically present in Australia for at least 365 days in
the 4 years
immediately before making an application for Australian citizenship
(including at least 90 days as a permanent resident). Less weight
should be
given if they have not been present in Australia for at least this period.
- Ms Tan
concedes that she does not meet the general residence requirement set out in s
22(1) of the Act. The question for the Tribunal, therefore, is whether the
Minister’s discretion in s 22(9) should be exercised in
Ms Tan’s favour to treat periods of time spent by Ms Tan
overseas as periods of permanent residence.
The first issue this raises is
whether Ms Tan meets the requirements for the exercise of the discretion in
s 22(9) - relevantly, whether she had a close and continuing association with
Australia during the relevant period, namely the four years
prior to the lodging
of her application: 10 July 2007 to 10 July 2011. Secondly, if Ms Tan
meets the requirements for the exercise
of the discretion, should the discretion
be exercised in her favour?
MS TAN’S AND
MR TAN’S EVIDENCE
- Ms Tan
and her husband, who are currently in Manila, gave oral evidence by conference
telephone at the hearing. Ms Tan said when
she and Mr Tan were
married in 1995, he was already an Australian citizen. Mr Tan said his
whole family – including his parents,
his brother and sister -
migrated to Australia in the late 1980s, first of all his mother in 1986.
Mr Tan moved to Australia in
April 1987. His family now live in Melbourne
and he has no immediate family in the Philippines. He had various jobs in
Australia
including working in a supermarket, for an import/export company and
latterly for a superannuation company between 1990 and 1993.
Mr Tan said
he moved to the Philippines in 1993, and subsequently worked for CBN in Cambodia
and China before his posting to Indonesia
in 2002.
- Ms Tan
said that when she and her husband first met, she was working for HSBC. She
stopped work when their first child was born in
1996 and since then has been a
housewife, looking after their children, because Mr Tan is usually away for
between five and seven
days a month as part of his job, which involves
humanitarian work in the region. Their plan has always been to return to
Australia
for their children’s education and because they want to live
there permanently. They moved to Indonesia in 2002 when Mr Tan
was
appointed CBN’s production manager there, thinking that they might return
to Australia after about five years. However,
when Mr Tan was offered his
present position in Manila, this presented a good career move for him and he
decided to accept the offer.
- Ms Tan
said that their current plan is to move to Australia in late 2014 for their
older child to finish his final year at school
in Australia and enable him to
better prepare for university entry. They have not currently enrolled their
children in any Australian
school, but the children are currently enrolled in an
international school in the Philippines which is better suited for children
continuing with education in Commonwealth countries.
- Ms Tan
conceded that she has only ever visited Australia and has never lived there.
However, this has been because of the nature
of her husband’s work and her
need to keep the family together and care for their children. She and
Mr Tan have now been married
for 16 years. She is concerned that while her
husband and children are all Australian citizens, she is not, and she worries
about
how she would support them if something happened to her husband, who often
travels for his work in areas where he may be at risk.
There would be few
opportunities for her to work in the Philippines.
- Ms Tan
said that she has a Commonwealth Bank account in Australia into which she makes
monthly deposits of their savings in preparation
for moving to Australia. There
is currently about $9,500 in this account. She acknowledged that neither she
nor her husband is
paying tax in Australia – because her husband’s
work is currently in the Philippines. They do not own any property in
Australia. Ms Tan said her brother and sister and their families live in
Sydney and she has more than 20 uncles, aunts and cousins
in Australia. She has
few family members in the Philippines – her parents live in the United
States.
- Mr Tan
confirmed his and his wife’s intention to move to Australia, probably in
late 2014, to enable their older child to finish
his final year at school here.
Because of Mr Tan’s 15 years’ experience in humanitarian work
and television, he does not anticipate any problem in obtaining employment in
Australia.
He said they do not own any property and apart from their savings
account in Australia, they have savings of about US $10,000 in
the Philippines.
SUBMISSIONS
- Ms
Weston, for the Minister, noted that Ms Tan concedes that she does not meet
the general residence requirement. Ms Tan was in Australia
for only 60
days in the four years before her application for citizenship was lodged (1,400
days short of the requirement) and only
29 days in the 12 months before lodging
the application (336 days short of the requirement). Thus, the issue for the
Tribunal concerns
the exercise of the discretion in s 22(9) of the Act.
- Ms
Weston said the Minister contends that Ms Tan does not meet the requirement
set out in ss 22(9)(d) for a close and continuing association with Australia in
the fouryear period prior to lodging her application. Moreover, even if
Ms Tan did meet that requirement, the Minister contends that the discretion
should not be exercised in her favour. Ms Weston noted
that Ms Tan’s
intention is to reside in Australia in the future but she had no intention to do
so in the four years prior to
lodging her application. During this period, she
only made two visits to Australia, totalling 60 days, and while she has a bank
account here and family members here, this is not sufficient to establish a
close and continuing association with Australia. For
example, Ms Tan did
not reside here, did not own property here, was not employed here, and did not
pay tax here.
- Ms Tan
noted that she and her husband, her Australian citizen spouse, have been married
for 16 years and she has not lived in Australia
because of her need to be with
her husband and children while her husband has been working overseas. She has
not satisfied the general
residence requirement for this reason. Ms Tan
said she has visited Australia regularly, maintained a savings account in
Australia,
and many of her family and most of her husband’s family are
there. She has not paid tax in Australia because she does not
currently live
there and she and her husband do not currently have the means to buy property in
Australia. Her and her husband’s
intention is to move to Australia to
enable their children to complete their secondary education there before seeking
entry to university.
DISCUSSION
- The
first issue for the Tribunal is whether Ms Tan meets the requirements for
the exercise of the discretion in s 22(9): relevantly, whether she had a close
and continuing association with Australia during the four years prior to the
lodging of her application.
The Instructions identify a number of factors that
may contribute to such an association, and these are set out in paragraph 13
above. The Instructions also say that where a person has been in Australia for
less than 365 days in the fouryear period, this tends
to weigh against the
existence of a close and continuing association.
- With
regard to the factors to which the Instructions refer in assessing whether a
person has a close and continuing association with
Australia, I note that
Ms Tan’s husband of 16 years and their two children are all
Australian citizens. Ms Tan has made two
visits to Australia in the period
10 July 2007 to 10 July 2011, totalling 60 days. Her brother and sister and
their families live
in Sydney and she also has extended family here. She has
not been resident during this period. It is understandable that she has
preferred to remain with her husband and children during her husband’s
posting to Manila which, I accept, was a good career
move for him. Ms Tan
has not worked in Australia and has not paid income tax. She does not own any
property here and says that
she does not currently have the means to do so. She
does, however, maintain a bank account here into which she and her husband
regularly
make deposits from their savings. Ms Tan states that she and her
husband intend to move to Australia in, probably, late 2014, to
enable their
older son to complete his secondary education here in preparation for seeking
entry to university. She also states
that she and her husband intend to remain
in Australia permanently.
- The
major stumbling block for Ms Tan is the very limited time she has spent in
Australia. It is not unreasonable to expect that a
person who aspires to the
privilege of citizenship should have demonstrated a commitment to Australia by
at least residing here for
an extended period, even if the period falls short of
the general residence requirement in s 22(1), and provided there are other
factors indicating a close and continuing association. The Instructions
suggest, not unreasonably,
that a period of less than 365 days should be
considered less favourably. In Ms Tan’s case, the time she has spent
in Australia
– 60 days in the relevant fouryear period - falls far short
of this. I agree with Ms Weston’s submission that in this
respect
Ms Tan’s situation is similar to that of the applicant in Re Jiang
and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] AATA 688, who had spent
only 76 days in the relevant fouryear period in Australia. In that case, as in
Re Minhas and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
[2011] AATA 388
; (2011) 121
ALD 647, the Tribunal was not satisfied that the applicant had a close and
continuing association with Australia. In both cases, the applicants
were
essentially visitors who had spent little time here.
- To
date, Ms Tan has only ever been a visitor in Australia and has spent
relatively little time here. In my view, despite the presence
of some other
indicators of a close and continuing association, in particular, the fact of her
husband and children being Australian
citizens, this is not of itself sufficient
to satisfy me of a close and continuing association with Australia. Since I am
not satisfied
that Ms Tan satisfies s 22(9)(d) of the Act, the discretion
in s 22(9) is not enlivened and its exercise is not open to the decision-maker
in her case.
- This
does not close off Ms Tan’s rights. She will be able to apply for a
further visa on the expiry of her current one and
it will be open to her to
reapply for citizenship by conferral in the
future.
DECISION
- The
decision under review is affirmed.
I certify that the 30 preceding
paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for the decision herein of Mr R P
Handley, Deputy President.
Signed:...........[sgd]...................................................................
Associate
Date of Hearing 7 December 2011
Date of Decision 12 December 2011
Representative for the Applicant Self-represented
Solicitor for the Respondent L Weston, Minter Ellison
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