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Thapa v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2018] FCCA 2182 (10 August 2018)

Last Updated: 10 August 2018

FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA

THAPA v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & ANOR


Catchwords:
MIGRATION – Application for review of a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal – Partner (Temporary) (Class UK) visa – whether Tribunal failed to comply with reg.1.15A of the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) – jurisdictional error – matter remitted to the Tribunal for determination according to law.


Legislation:
Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) reg.1.15A, Sch.2 cl.820.211

Cases cited:
Ali v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2018] FCCA 121.
Gill v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 51; (2017) 250 FCR 309.
Minister for Immigration v SZRKT [2013] FCA 317; (2013) 212 FCR 99.
SZDXZ v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2008] FCAFC 109.
SZWCO v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 51.


Applicant:
SHEKHAR BAHADUR THAPA

First Respondent:
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & BORDER PROTECTION

Second Respondent:
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL

File Number:
MLG 2680 of 2016

Judgment of:
Judge Hartnett

Hearing date:
21 May 2018

Delivered at:
Melbourne

Delivered on:
10 August 2018


REPRESENTATION

Counsel for the Applicant:
Mr Aleksov

Solicitors for the Applicant:
M Joseph & Associates

Counsel for the Respondents:
Mr Maloney

Solicitors for the Respondents:
DLA Piper Australia


ORDERS

(1) The decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal made on 10 November 2016 in matter number 1610601 be set aside.
(2) The matter be remitted to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for determination according to law.
(3) The First Respondent pay the Applicant’s costs of the proceeding fixed in the sum of $7,328.

FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT
OF AUSTRALIA
AT MELBOURNE

MLG 2680 of 2016

SHEKHAR BAHADUR THAPA

Applicant

And

MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & BORDER PROTECTION

First Respondent

ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL

Second Respondent


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. By amended application filed 22 November 2017 the Applicant seeks judicial review of a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (‘the Tribunal’) dated 10 November 2016. The Tribunal affirmed a decision of a delegate of the Minister (‘the delegate’) on 28 June 2016 to refuse to grant the Applicant a Partner (Temporary) (Class UK) visa (‘the visa’) under s.65 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (‘the Act’).
  2. The Applicant relies upon one ground of review which is as follows:-
  3. The First Respondent seeks dismissal of the application and costs.
  4. Before the Court is the evidence as contained in the Court Book filed 23 June 2017. The Applicant relies upon submissions dated 27 November 2017 and the Respondent upon submissions dated 3 May 2018.

Background

  1. This is as accurately set out in the First Respondent’s submissions paragraphs 5 to 12 inclusive which are as follows:-

The Tribunal

  1. The Applicant applied to the Tribunal for review of the Delegate’s decision. The Applicant appeared before the Tribunal on 20 October 2016 to give evidence and present arguments in relation to the issues in his matter. The Tribunal also received oral evidence from the sponsor, Ms Chozin Maitland. The Tribunal hearing was conducted with the assistance of an interpreter in the Nepali and English languages. The Applicant was represented by his migration agent. At the hearing, the Applicant provided further evidence which included cards exchanged between he and the sponsor and ten further statutory declarations from supporting witnesses.
  2. On 20 October 2016, the Applicant was given an invitation, pursuant to s 359A of the Act, to comment on inconsistencies which the Tribunal had identified between the oral evidence of the Applicant and the oral evidence of the sponsor with respect to their residential history. Most notably, the Applicant had indicated that he had started living with the sponsor in 2012, some two years prior to their marriage in 2014; the sponsor indicated they did not live together until three or four months before their marriage in 2014.
  3. The Applicant’s agent responded by email dated 3 November 2016, stating:-
  4. Further documentary evidence was attached to the response, including screenshots of text messages between, and photographs of, the Applicant and sponsor; Commonwealth Bank statements addressed to the Applicant and sponsor; screenshots of the Applicant and sponsor’s Facebook pages; recent call records from the Applicant or sponsor’s phone; Vodafone call records; and a statutory declaration from a supporting witness.

The Tribunal decision

  1. On 10 November 2016, the Tribunal affirmed the Delegate’s decision. Again, the Tribunal referred to cl.820.211(2) of Schedule 2 to the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) (‘the Regulations’) and reg.1.15A of the Regulations (the latter was annexed to its reasons) and s.5F of the Act. The Tribunal had regard to the financial and social aspects of the relationship, the nature of the household and the nature of the Applicant and sponsor’s commitment to each other.
  2. When considering the financial aspects of the relationship, the Tribunal found, critically, for the purposes of this judicial review application and its single ground of review, the following:-
  3. Thereafter, the Tribunal concluded, relevantly:-

Consideration

  1. The Applicant asserts that the Tribunal’s decision is affected by a jurisdictional error of the kind identified in Minister for Immigration v SZRKT [2013] FCA 317; (2013) 212 FCR 99 (‘SZRKT’). The Applicant’s submissions assert that the Tribunal must consider the evidence advanced by the Applicant, in the sense of giving ‘active intellectual consideration to it’; and, if the Tribunal misunderstands or misconstrues evidence, and relied on that misunderstanding or misconstruction in its decision, this is ‘constructively equivalent to a failure to consider the evidence as actually advanced by the applicant and constitutes jurisdictional error’.[1]
  2. Referring to the financial records at pages 352-406 of the Court Book, the Applicant submits these include ‘frequent and numerous transactions for obvious ‘daily expense’ items including groceries (e.g. Coles and Safeway purchases)’. The Applicant submits that:-

“Upon a fair review of this evidence the only explanation for the Tribunal’s finding that it ‘does not accept that these statements are evidence of daily expenses’ ... is that the Tribunal must have misunderstood or misconstrued this important evidence. There was no tenable path of analysis open to the Tribunal upon which it could be said that these transactions were not evidence of ‘daily expenses’.

In these circumstances, the appropriate inference is that the Tribunal failed to engage intellectually with the important evidence in the form of bank statements, which did constitute strong evidence of financial intermingling.”[2]
  1. The First Respondent submits the Applicant’s reliance on SZRKT, and the other authorities to which its submissions refer, is misplaced. The First Respondent submits that in SZRKT, the Tribunal ignored critical corroborative evidence, being a university transcript. In that case, the Tribunal rejected the Applicant’s claims about past events and experiences in Pakistan, which founded his claim to fear harm if he returned to Pakistan, because it believed he had not been truthful about his former study in that country. The university transcript went directly to the truth of his account of having studied there. Accordingly, the Tribunal made an error of fact which was critical to its conclusion; and its failure to consider the university transcript was tantamount to a failure to consider the Applicant’s claim.
  2. The First Respondent submits that this is not a case:-
  3. In this matter, the Tribunal recorded that amongst the evidence before it, were three joint bank statements as set out in paragraph 15 of the Decision Record (see paragraph 11 above). These had been provided by the Applicant in order for the Tribunal to address the financial aspects of his relationship with the sponsor. The Tribunal set out its consideration of those statements in paragraph 15 of the Decision Record.
  4. The Tribunal’s consideration was informed by s.5F of the Act which provided at the relevant time:-
  5. Regulation 1.15A(3) of the Regulations provided at the relevant time:-
  6. The Court does not accept the submissions of the First Respondent.
  7. In considering a partner visa application, the Tribunal was required to consider, as a stated matter incumbent on the Tribunal to consider, the financial aspects of the relationship. In that consideration, the Tribunal clearly made an illogical and erroneous finding of fact in its conclusions made upon an examination of the relevant bank statements of the Applicant and his sponsor, which the Court finds, was material to the Tribunal’s ultimate conclusions.[4]
  8. The Tribunal’s error was not one on which reasonable minds may differ.[5] The Tribunal’s error was critical to the Tribunal’s ultimate decision. The Tribunal was “required to weigh all of the circumstances of the relationship. None of the circumstances of the relationship could be understood as independent”[6]
  9. The Court finds that the Tribunal constructively failed to consider the bank statements the Applicant put before the Tribunal as evidence of ‘daily expenses’ of the Applicant and the sponsor. Those expenses were incurred via a joint bank account and could not be attributable to business expenses. There was not, as submitted by the First Respondent, a ‘tenable path of analysis’ open to the Tribunal upon which it could find many of the transactions across the bank accounts tendered, did not provide evidence of ‘daily expenses’, and by inference drawn by the Tribunal, were statements connected with the sponsor’s business account. The bank accounts did constitute evidence of a ‘sharing of day to day household expenses’.[7] The Applicant has demonstrated to the Court,[8] that it is appropriate to draw the inference that the Tribunal failed to engage intellectually with the documentary evidence which was the bank statements, those statements putting before the Tribunal evidence of the parties intermingling of their finances and purchasing of ‘daily expenses’.
  10. Jurisdictional error attends the Tribunal decision.

I certify that the preceding twenty-four (24) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Judge Hartnett

Date: 10 August 2018


[1] Applicant’s submissions filed 27 November 2017, paragraph 3.
[2] Applicant’s submissions filed 27 November 2017, paragraph 5-6.
[3] First Respondent’s submissions filed 3 May 2018, paragraph 37-38.
[4] Gill v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 51; (2017) 250 FCR 309, 82.
[5] SZWCO v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 51, 63.
[6] Ali v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2018] FCCA 121, 40.
[7] Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) reg.1.5A(3)(v).
[8] SZDXZ v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2008] FCAFC 109, 25.


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