Allieu (Migration)

Case

[2022] AATA 2574

18 July 2022


Allieu (Migration) [2022] AATA 2574 (18 July 2022)

DECISION RECORD

DIVISION:Migration & Refugee Division

REVIEW APPLICANT:  Ms Jeneba Allieu

VISA APPLICANTS:  Mr Junisa Sorie Kabba
Ms Satta Kaba
Ms Hawa Kaba
Ms Mariame Kaba
Ms Tenneh Kaba

REPRESENTATIVE:  Mr Ben Aylen (MARN: 0639670)

CASE NUMBER:  2015055

HOME AFFAIRS REFERENCE(S):          BCC2016/3548188

MEMBER:Anne Grant

DATE:18 July 2022

PLACE OF DECISION:  Melbourne

DECISION:The Tribunal remits the visa application to the Minister for reconsideration, with the direction that the application be taken also to be an application for:

·a Partner (Migrant) (Class BC) visa; and

·a Partner (Provisional) (Class UF) visa

that is made on the day the visa application is remitted to the Minister.

Statement made on 18 July 2022 at 1:25pm

CATCHWORDS
MIGRATION – Prospective Marriage (Temporary) (Class TO) visa – Subclass 300 (Prospective Marriage) – validly married in home country after department’s decision and before review application finally determined – application now taken to be for partner visa – decision under review remitted

LEGISLATION
Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss 12, 65
Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth), r 2.08E(2A), (2B)
Marriage Act 1961 (Cth), Part VA, s 88E

STATEMENT OF DECISION AND REASONS

APPLICATION FOR REVIEW

  1. This is an application for review of decisions made by a delegate of the Minister for Home Affairs to refuse to grant the visa applicants Prospective Marriage (Temporary) (Class TO) visas under s 65 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the Act).

  2. The visa applicants applied for the visas on 25 October 2016 on the basis that the first named visa applicant (the primary visa applicant) was the prospective spouse of their sponsor, the review applicant. The delegate refused to grant the visas on 23 September 2020.

  3. The review applicant applied to the Tribunal on 8 October 2020 for review of the delegate’s decisions. The Tribunal has been advised that the review applicant and primary visa applicant are now married.

    CONSIDERATION OF CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE

  4. Where an application has been made for review of a decision to refuse to grant a Prospective Marriage visa, and the visa applicant validly marries the sponsor after that decision was made and notifies the Tribunal of the marriage before the review application has been finally determined, reg 2.08E of the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) (the Regulations) requires the Tribunal to remit the visa application to the Minister for reconsideration with the direction that the application be taken also to be an application for a Partner (Migrant) (Class BC) and a Partner (Provisional) (Class UF) visa. This allows the now married applicant to be assessed for a spouse visa rather than a prospective marriage visa.

  5. For the purpose of deciding whether a marriage is to be recognised as valid for the purposes of the Act, s 12 of the Act provides that Part VA of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth) (the Marriage Act) applies as if s 88E of the Marriage Act were omitted. Subject to certain exceptions not relevant to the present matter, foreign marriages recognised under local civil law in the country where they are solemnized will be recognised in Australia under Part VA of the Marriage Act. The exceptions relate to whether either party was already married, whether the parties were of marriageable age at the time of the marriage, whether the parties are within a prohibited relationship, whether the consent of each party was real consent, and whether the marriage is voidable under the local law.

  6. In the present case, the review applicant informed the Tribunal that she and the primary visa applicant were married in Conakry, Republic of Guinea on 21 January 2022.  The Tribunal has been provided with evidence of the marriage in the form of the marriage certificate and a certified translation of the certificate.  Movement records reflect that the review applicant departed Australia on 31 December 2021 and returned on 23 March 2022, which is consistent with the review applicant being in Guinea on 21 January 2022. 

  7. On the evidence before it, the Tribunal finds that the applicants applied for Prospective Marriage (Temporary) (Class TO) visas, the Minister refused to grant the visas, and the sponsor applied for review of those decisions in accordance with the Act.

  8. The Tribunal is also satisfied that in the period after the delegate’s decisions were made and before the review application was finally determined, the primary visa applicant married the sponsor, the review applicant notified the Tribunal of the marriage, and the marriage is recognised as valid for the purposes of the Act. Therefore, the requirements of reg 2.08E(2A) are met and, in accordance with reg 2.08E(2B), the application must be remitted to the Minister for reconsideration.

    DECISION

  9. The Tribunal remits the visa application to the Minister for reconsideration, with the direction that the application be taken also to be an application for:

    ·a Partner (Migrant) (Class BC) visa; and

    ·a Partner (Provisional) (Class UF) visa

    that is made on the day that the visa application is remitted to the Minister.

    Anne Grant
    Member


Areas of Law

  • Immigration

  • Statutory Interpretation

Legal Concepts

  • Jurisdiction

  • Procedural Fairness

  • Remedies

  • Statutory Construction

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