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Singh v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2017] FCCA 1921 (17 July 2017)
Last Updated: 15 August 2017
FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SINGH v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
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Catchwords: MIGRATION – Application for
judicial review – subclass 573 Higher Education visa – no matters of
principle –
application dismissed.
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First Respondent:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & BORDER
PROTECTION
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ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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REPRESENTATION
The Applicant appeared
In Person
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Solicitors for the First Respondent:
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Sparke Helmore
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ORDERS
(1) The application be dismissed.
(2) The Applicant pay the First Respondent’s costs fixed in the sum of
$5,800.00.
FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT
MELBOURNE
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MLG 903 of
2016
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & BORDER
PROTECTION
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First Respondent
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered extempore)
- This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (“the Tribunal”) made
on 6 April 2016 affirming a
decision of the delegate of the first respondent to cancel the applicant’s
Subclass 573 Higher
Education sector visa.
- The
applicant had been granted a fast-track visa under subclass 573 on 2 May 2014 on
the basis that he intended to undertake a Bachelor
of Information Technology at
Griffith University in Queensland.
- The
course was structured in such a way that he was to firstly do a diploma with
TAFE Queensland in Information Technology, and then
proceed with his
bachelor’s degree, receiving credit towards the bachelor’s degree as
a result of undertaking the diploma.
The applicant was to commence his studies
on 18 June 2014. The applicant did not commence the course that he enrolled in,
nor the
course that was the basis for the grant of the visa.
- On
17 November 2014, the Department sent a Notice of Intention to Consider
Cancellation, which advised the applicant that, whilst
he was enrolled in a
course of study, he was not enrolled in a course of study before and for the
purposes of the principal courses
of study. In short, the applicant had ceased
to be enrolled in the course that he had come for, and therefore was not
complying
with the visa conditions or, at the very least, his circumstances had
changed significantly.
- On
20 November, the applicant responded to the Notice. The Tribunal summarised his
responses as follows:
- 12. The
applicant provided a submission to the Department. In that submission he
explained that he had come to Australia to complete
his Diploma in Software
Development leading to a Bachelor of Information Technology at Griffith
University. He was alone in Brisbane
and felt very upset as no one was there to
help him out, he could not find accommodation and the university would not
assist him
with accommodation, so he shared a house with English people. He
tried to make contact with his university friends but to no avail.
He was
homesick. He spoke with the university to discuss his genuine problems.
Finally he called his friends in Melbourne and
they told him to come to
Melbourne. He went to his University and talked to them regarding his migration
to Melbourne and they said
they could not do anything, just cancel his enrolment
and after that you are allowed to go anywhere. The university did not give
him
proper guidance or counselling. They cancelled his confirmation of enrolment
(CoE) and he moved to Melbourne. At that time
he was not aware that if he had
cancellation and no enrolment in an SVP provider no one would consider him for
enrolment. He applied
for ATMC, Polytechnic Australia but they refused his
enrolment. An education agent misguided the applicant and he enrolled in a
certificate III, IV and Diploma of hospitality. The agent did not tell him he
could not start with lower study but his intention
was genuine to study at
higher level as well so he got another CoE of Bachelor of Business. On 17
November he got an email that
he could not study at the lower level. He
consulted a migration agent and came to know that he should start his course
with a Diploma
leading to a degree so he arranged this. His parents have spent
a lot of money on him...
- The
applicant provided copies of enrolment certificates for a Bachelor of Business
with Holmes Institute Pty Ltd and a Diploma of
Business with Sher-E-Punjab Pty
Ltd and an Advanced Diploma of Business with Sunshine College of Management Pty
Ltd. Whilst the
Holmes Institute is now an eligible provider under the relevant
parts of the class 573 visa provisions, it was not so eligible back
in 2014,
and, when it became eligible in mid-2015, it was only with respect to
applications made after that date. Thus, in the applicant’s
case, the
Holmes Institute cannot be an eligible provider with respect to this particular
visa.
- On
22 March 2016, the applicant appeared before the Tribunal. The applicant gave
evidence and presented his arguments and had the
assistance of a migration agent
and a Punjabi interpreter. The Tribunal affirmed the decision for the delegate
to cancel the visa
on 6 April 2016. The applicant then lodged an application for
judicial review in May.
The Tribunal’s Findings.
- The
Tribunal traversed the relevant facts and circumstances relating to the grant of
the visa, paragraphs [7] to [9] of their decision
saying:
- 7. In this
case the delegate stated that the applicant was no longer an eligible higher
degree student, as defined in cl.573.111,
and therefore did not satisfy
cl.573.223(1A). The delegate stated that whilst the applicant was enrolled in a
principal course of
study for the award of a bachelor’s degree by
coursework that is provided by an eligible education provider, the visa holder
was not enrolled in another course of study before and for the purposes of the
principal course of study. At the relevant time Holmes
Institute was not an
eligible education provider – although it became one in instrument 15/096
dated 15 June 2015, for visa
applications made on or after 1 July 2015, and has
remained so in subsequent instruments to date. It appears therefore that the
applicant no longer met the definition of eligible higher degree student when he
cancelled his enrolment in the Bachelor of IT and
enrolled in the Bachelor
course at Holmes, a Bachelor course provided by a provider that was not an
eligible education provider.
- 8. To the
Tribunal the applicant provided a copy of the delegate’s decision, and a
submission dated 14 March 2016. The submission
argues that the applicant met
cl.573.231 and therefore there was no breach. In my view, this misunderstands
the basis for the cancellation
decision, as I explained to the applicant at the
hearing. His visa was granted on the basis that he met cl.573.223(1A), because,
inter alia, he met the definition of an eligible higher degree student by being
enrolled in a Bachelor course provided by a provider
that was an eligible
education provider. Once he had his bachelor enrolment cancelled at Griffith,
and failed to be enrolled in
a bachelor course provided by a provider that was
an eligible education provider, he no longer met the definition of an eligible
higher degree student. This is material because the applicant, in being
assessed under cl/573.223(1A) and the SVP provisions, had
to meet lower
evidentiary requirements than he would have done if he had been required to meet
cl.573.231. I therefore reject the
argument in the submission as it
misunderstands the basis for the cancellation and the material change in
circumstances.
- 9. On the
information before the Tribunal it appears that the applicant ceased to be an
eligible higher degree student when he cancelled
his enrolment in his Bachelor
of IT, and therefore did not meet the requirements of cl.573.223(1A). This is
significant because
cl.573.223(1A) is designed to allow students to enter
Australia under the Streamlined Visa Program (SVP) with less evidentiary
requirements
than otherwise. Having considered the circumstances I find that
the applicant no longer being an eligible higher degree student
when he
cancelled his enrolment in his Bachelor of IT, and therefore not meeting the
requirements of cl.573.223(1A,) is a material
change in circumstances which, in
the case of the applicant, permitted the grant of the visa and now no longer
exist.
- Having
found that a ground for cancellation existed under s.116 of the Migration Act
1958 (“the Act”), the Tribunal went on to consider whether the
power to cancel the visa should be exercised.
- The
Tribunal considered the applicant’s compliance with visa conditions (at
paragraph [15]), the degree of hardship that may
be caused to him (paragraph
[16]), circumstances in which the ground for cancellation arose (paragraph
[17]), and the applicant’s
work and study history (paragraph [18]),
together with his future plans (paragraph [19]). Importantly, the Tribunal
noted:
- 18. I asked
the applicant what study or work he had done in India. He said he had done IT
study and worked for 2-3 years in a software
shop, and had wanted to explore his
knowledge of IT here. He had a diploma of civil engineering and 3 years as a
software advisor.
I asked, if he had experience in that field, why did he change
to cookery/hospitality? He said he did not get admission to IT courses
in
Melbourne as they needed 6 in each band and then he moved to cookery. I asked if
he had completed any of his studies in Melbourne.
He said he was studying but
then he got the notice and it was cancelled. He said then he was fed up and he
just got the Diploma of
Business and Bachelor of Business enrolments. He said
after his visa was cancelled he went to immigration to ask for study rights,
and
when these were denied he just waited for his hearing.
- 19. He said
his plan was to complete his studies, he wants to get higher education, that's
his plan. I asked what he wanted higher
education for. He said he wanted to get
higher education for his better future. I asked him to be more specific and he
said he wanted
to get higher education as Australian higher education is very
famous. I asked if he could be more specific about his future plans.
He said
that he could explore his business in India. I asked what attracted him to a
Bachelor of Business. He said there was a big
scope in India for business, he
wants to explore his business in India, he wants to start a business in
marketing or in management,
and he can explore marketing in mobile phones. I
asked how his hospitality courses fitted into this plan. He said his main focus
was the Bachelor of Business, once he completed this he would have a lot of
options on that plan.
- 20. I noted
that I had concerns that he may not be a genuine student or a genuine student
for study at the higher education level,
because he had not started his studies
in Brisbane before cancelling his enrolment, and had changed courses three
times. He said
that he had tried to get into IT in Melbourne, but was unable to.
He had applied for study rights to the Department three times,
not for work or
travel rights, just study rights. I noted he had changed study paths three
times, which caused me concern. He said
he had wanted to do IT, but he had to
get six in English to do it, that was why he did not get admission. He said then
with hospitality
he was looking for more opportunities, his main motivation was
the bachelor of business. I asked why he had not just done the bachelor
of
business then. He said he had had to do a Diploma, they were asking for six each
band. I noted that the only courses he had actually
studied in Australia were at
a much lower level than those he had proposed to study, and this concerned me
that he had no genuine
intention to study at the higher education level. He said
he was thinking to get more experience, the certificate III and IV, he
was
looking for more motivation. I asked if the difficulty in studying at the higher
education level was, as he was suggesting, a
lack of English ability, why did he
not enrol in an English course and a bachelor. He said no one gave him an
opportunity like this.
I noted that I remained concerned that he had, or had
ever had an intention to study at the higher education level. He reiterated
that
due to IELTS he could not get a Bachelor enrolment straight
away.
- The
Tribunal ultimately made findings as follows:
- 25. I have
considered the applicant’s circumstances, the submissions and the
documents provided. On the evidence before me
the applicant has been compliant
with visa conditions, he has been compliant in his dealings with the department,
and I give these
factors some weight in his favour. I accept that he may suffer
some hardship if the visa remains cancelled, but on the evidence
he has provided
I do not accept that there would be significant emotional, financial or other
hardship and I give this only little
weight in his favour. I find that there is
little chance, on his evidence, of the applicant becoming unlawful or being
detained
for any significant period, and whilst his ability to apply for visas
may be curtailed he is not prevented from making certain applicants,
and that on
his evidence no international obligations would be breached if the visa remains
cancelled, and give these factors no
weight. I have considered the
circumstances in which the cancellation occurred. I find the applicant’s
explanation of why
he cancelled his enrolments at Griffith and left Brisbane
wholly unconvincing. I find it significant that he had not even started
his
Diploma before cancelling his enrolment. I do not accept on his evidence that
the reasons he claims for leaving Brisbane, or
the process he went through in
deciding what to do, are plausible, and I find that the evidence supports a
conclusion that he has
come to Australia with no intention of studying his
courses in Brisbane, or of studying at the higher degree level. Whilst he
engaged
in actions, including enrolling in the Bachelor of Business at Holmes,
and seeking study rights on his bridging visa, I find that
these actions have
been at attempt to provide the appearance of a genuine intention to study at the
higher education level. His
explanations of the course changes he has made are
indicative. I do not accept his explanations that he could not enrol in a
Bachelor
or IT courses because he needed better English – he could have
enrolled in precursor English courses, and I do not accept that
he was not made
aware, or could have found out that this was possible if he had genuinely
intended to study IT or a bachelor in Melbourne.
I find his change of course
particularly telling given that he had a work and study history in India in IT,
yet appeared to abandon
this immediately on travel to Australia. I also found
his evidence on why he chose hospitality and business to change over the course
of the hearing. For all of these reasons I find that the circumstances which
gave rise to the cancellation, and the purpose of the
visa holder’s travel
to and stay in Australia indicate that he is not a genuine student for study at
the higher education level,
that he had and has no intention to study at the
higher education level, and I give these factors significant
weight.
Grounds for Review
Ground One
- The
applicant sets out five grounds for judicial review. The first ground is drawn
as follows:
- 1. The AAT
Migration and Refugee Division erred in not giving consideration to the evidence
that the Applicant being myself complied
with the requirements of the 573 Visa.
Accordingly MRT failed to give consideration to the evidence as a matter of
law.
- In
this case, it seems clear that the applicant did not, in fact, comply with the
conditions of his 573 visa, in that he cancelled
his enrolment after arriving,
and therefore had a period where he was no longer enrolled at Griffith
University nor any other institute
that would meet the criteria for the
particular type of visa. To the extent that the applicant argues that enrolment
in other institutions
which are not within the fast-track category evidence
compliance, it does not appear to me that this is a correct interpretation
of
the Migration Regulations 1994.
Ground Two
- The
second ground that the applicant set out is as follows:
- 2. The AAT
erred in not giving due weight to the fact that the Applicant was entitled to
undertake 9 COEs before commencing the
principal course (under Sub-regulation
1.40A(1) of the Migration Regulations) at the time the visa was cancelled, and
that the Applicant was undertaking a Diploma of Business at South Pacific
College and was
enrolled with Holmes College for a Bachelor of Business clearly
evidencing that the Applicant was a genuine student.
- The
difficulty with this ground is that the colleges referred to are not eligible
colleges for the purpose of the visa that the applicant
had received. Whilst
Holmes Institute or Holmes College has now become an eligible provider, it is
only with respect to applications
made after mid-2015, which does not cover the
applicant’s circumstances.
Ground Three
- The
third ground is as follows:
- 3. The ATT
erred in giving excessive weight to the fact that the Applicant had changed
courses a couple of times, to unreasonably
determine at law that the Applicant
was not a genuine student.
- This
is ultimately a matter for weight for the Tribunal to determine whether or not
to exercise the discretion to cancel the visa.
I have considered whether or not
this ground is, in substance, a ground that the Tribunal acted so unreasonably
that their decision
should be set aside. However, in the circumstances of this
case, it is difficult to conclude that the Tribunal’s decision was
unreasonable. Indeed, on the facts and circumstances before the Tribunal, it
seems to me to be likely that any other Tribunal member
that heard the matter
would have come to the same decision.
Ground Four
- The
fourth ground that the applicant relies upon is as follows:
- 4. The
Minister for Immigration and Border Protection and the AAT failed or
neglected to inquire into the Applicant’s academic results which they were
compelled to do before determining
the legitimacy of the Applicant’s claim
to be a genuine student and as such erred at law.
- In
this case, the academic results of the applicant undertaking his diploma courses
are not an issue. The central question is whether
or not the applicant was
studying an appropriate course for the category of visa, and the fact that he
had changed courses so many
times that led to the cancellation of his visa. It
is not a situation where the Tribunal concluded that the applicant was incapable
of doing the lower level courses that he was, in fact, studying. However, it
seems clear, even on his own evidence, that the applicant
was not capable of
undertaking the courses at a higher level, which were the basis of the visa
grant.
Ground Five
- The
fifth ground that the applicant relies upon is follows:
- 5.
Further, the ATT erred in not giving full consideration and due weight to much
of the evidence before the tribunal that clearly
showed that the Applicant was
committed to studying in Australia and achieving higher education through a
Bachelor degree. Accordingly
the AAT failed to give consideration to the
evidence as a matter of law.
- Again,
this ground appears to be a complaint about the outcome of the decision and
whether or not the Tribunal reached a reasonable
conclusion. On the material
before it, it seems to me that the decision was well within the reasonable
exercise of the Tribunal’s
discretion. With respect to the claims that
the applicant makes that the Tribunal had not considered relevant factors, it
seems
that the circumstances of this applicant were considered by the Tribunal
and no significant facts or circumstances had been raised
that the Tribunal did
not consider in their decision.
- Finally,
I note that, in this case, the applicant has successfully made a complaint to
the Migration Agents Authority, a copy of which
is Exhibit ‘1’. This
complaint was upheld, although no significant sanctions were imposed upon the
agent who had given
him the wrong advice. This does not preclude the applicant
from bringing proceedings against the agent in contract or tort in the
appropriate Courts for such proceedings. In Victoria, that is likely to be the
Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. These
are not bases on which I can
conclude that the Tribunal’s decision in this case with respect to the
operation of the Regulations
is in error or has in some way failed to comply
with the law.
- In
all of the circumstances, I therefore dismiss the application of the
applicant.
[Further argument ensued]
- In
this matter, the applicant has been unsuccessful. The Minister seeks costs at a
fee less than scale. It seems to me that this is
reasonable, and, as the
Minister has been successful, the Minister should receive its
costs.
I certify that the preceding twenty-four (24) paragraphs
are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Judge
Riethmuller
Associate:
Date: 14
August 2017
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