RYDE AUTO SERVICES PTY LTD (Migration)
[2020] AATA 5861
RYDE AUTO SERVICES PTY LTD (Migration) [2020] AATA 5861 (1 December 2020)
DECISION RECORD
DIVISION:Migration & Refugee Division
APPLICANT: RYDE AUTO SERVICES PTY LTD
CASE NUMBER: 1813387
HOME AFFAIRS REFERENCE(S): BCC2017/2335834
MEMBER:Mary Sheargold
DATE:1 December 2020
PLACE OF DECISION: Melbourne
DECISION:The Tribunal affirms the decision under review to refuse the nomination.
Statement made on 01 December 2020 at 12:39pm
CATCHWORDS
MIGRATION – Employer Nomination – approval of nominated position – Temporary Residence Transition nomination stream – financial capacity to maintain nominee’s future employment – no response to s.359A invitation – Tribunal declined indefinite adjournment of decision – financial position of business – business’s gross payroll expenditure in the past 12 months – decision under review affirmedLEGISLATION
Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss 359C, 360, 363A
Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth), r 5.19CASES
Huo v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2002] FCA 617Kaur v Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 915
Manna v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FMCA 28Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Singh [2014] FCAFC 1
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li [2013] HCA 18STATEMENT OF DECISION AND REASONS
APPLICATION FOR REVIEW
This is an application for review of a decision made by a delegate of the Minister for Home Affairs on 24 April 2018 to reject the applicant’s application for approval of the nomination of a position in Australia under r.5.19 of the Migration Regulations 1994 (the Regulations).
The applicant applied for approval on 30 June 2017. The requirements for the approval of the nomination of a position in Australia are found in r.5.19 of the Regulations which contains two alternative streams: a Temporary Residence Transition nomination stream (r.5.19(3)) and a Direct Entry nomination stream (r.5.19(4)). If the application is made in accordance with r.5.19(2) and meets the requirements of either stream, then the application must be approved. If any of the requirements are not met then the application must be refused: r.5.19(5).
In this case, the applicant has applied for approval of a nomination, seeking to satisfy the criteria in the Temporary Residence Transition nomination stream.
The delegate refused the application on the basis the applicant’s nomination did not satisfy r.5.19(3)(d)(i) of the Regulations because the applicant did not demonstrate that the nominee would be employed on a full-time basis for at least 2 years.
The applicant was represented in relation to the review by its registered migration agent.
For the following reasons, the Tribunal has decided to affirm the decision under review to refuse the nomination.
CONSIDERATION OF CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE
The issue in this case is whether the applicant meets the requirements for approval of the nomination under the Temporary Residence Transition nomination stream set out in r.5.19(3), which is extracted in the attachment to this decision. For the nomination to be approved, all the requirements must be met.
Future employment of the visa holder: r.5.19(3)(d)
Regulation 5.19(3)(d) only applies to certain nominees (those described in r.5.19(3)(c)(i)). For this class of person, the Regulations require that the nominee will be employed on a full time basis for at least 2 years on terms that do not expressly preclude the possibility of an extension.
The nomination application was lodged with the Department on 30 June 2017, and the Department refused the nomination application in a decision made on 24 April 2018. While the Tribunal notes the Departmental file contains documents relied upon by the delegate in reaching their decision, no additional information was provided to the Tribunal at review.
On 12 November 2020, the Tribunal wrote to the applicant inviting the applicant to provide information that demonstrated that the business meets all of the requirements of the criteria in r.5.19(3) of the Regulations at the time of the Tribunal’s decision. A copy of r.5.19(3) was annexed to the letter. A response to the request for information was due by 26 November 2020. As at the date of this decision, no response has been received.
The Tribunal notes it has not received the information requested, and in these circumstances, it is able to proceed to decision based on the evidence before it.
The Tribunal has considered whether it should adjourn the review under s.363(1)(b) of the Act to allow the applicant additional time in which to provide further evidence to support its review application.
In doing so, the Tribunal has taken into account the decisions in the Tribunal has taken into account the decisions in Huo v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[1] and Manna v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship[2] where the Courts have held that the Tribunal is not required to indefinitely defer its decision-making processes. It has also had regard to the decision in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li[3] regarding the reasonableness of any request for an adjournment, and the Full Federal Court of Australia decision in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Singh[4] which considered this issue, as well as the more recent decision in Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection[5] where analogous issues were discussed.
[1] [2002] FCA 617.
[2] [2012] FMCA 28.
[3] [2013] HCA 18 (8 May 2013).
[4] [2014] FCAFC 1 (4 February 2014).
[5] [2014] FCA 915 (28 August 2014).
The Tribunal has considered whether, in the circumstances of this case, the information that the applicant meets the requirements in r.5.19(3) is likely to be forthcoming and whether the applicant has had a fair opportunity to provide the relevant information already, and the significance of the information to the applicant.
The Tribunal has had regard to the fact that the nomination application was refused by the Department on 24 April 2018 because the delegate concluded that the applicant had not demonstrated that it would employ the nominee on a full-time basis for at least 2 years. The applicant submitted a copy of the primary decision record with the review application. As a result, the Tribunal observes that the applicant has been aware for more than 30 months of the reasons for the nomination application refusal.
Further, as noted above, the applicant has provided no further information to the Tribunal since the application for review was received on 9 May 2018, despite being invited to do so.
In these circumstances, and for the reasons set out in this decision record, the Tribunal considers that the applicant has had a fair opportunity to provide the relevant information and sufficient time to take steps to satisfy the regulatory criteria. The Tribunal notes that it is uncertain if and when the applicant will provide information in writing as to whether the nominating business meets the requirements of r.5.19(3). The Tribunal is not disposed to delay making a decision indefinitely.
Accordingly, the Tribunal has decided not to exercise its discretion under s.363(1)(b) of the Act to adjourn the review any further to allow the applicant more time in which to demonstrate that the nominating business meets the requirements of r.5.19(3).
The primary decision record noted that, based on profit and loss information provided by the applicant to the Department, the applicant’s business did not appear to be able to support the nominee’s guaranteed annual earnings of $60,225 per annum. The primary decision record noted that the business’s gross payroll expenditure in the 12 months prior to the application being lodged was only $34,000. The primary decision record noted that the applicant had not provided a letter from its accountant attesting to the financial position of the business and its capacity to meet employment obligations, nor did it provide any explanation regarding its current financial circumstances and how the financial position of the business may improve in the future.
No additional evidence has been provided to the Tribunal with the lodgement of the review application demonstrating that the applicant will employ the nominee on a full-time basis for at least 2 years. Therefore, the Tribunal finds that there is no quantifiable evidence before it at the time of review that could lead the Tribunal to find that the applicant will employ the nominee on a full time basis for at least 2 years.
Accordingly, the requirement in r.5.19(3)(d)(i) is not met.
For the above reasons the Tribunal is not satisfied that the applicant meets the requirements of r.5.19(3). The applicant has not sought to satisfy the criteria in Direct Entry nomination stream, and as such has not met the requirements in r.5.19(4). Accordingly, the nomination of the position cannot be approved. Therefore, the Tribunal must affirm the decision under review.
DECISION
The Tribunal affirms the decision under review to refuse the nomination.
Mary Sheargold
MemberATTACHMENT - EXTRACTS FROM THE MIGRATION REGULATIONS 1994
5.19Approval of nominated positions (employer nomination)
…
(2)The application must:
(a)be made in accordance with approved form 1395…; and
(aa) include a written certification by the nominator stating whether or not the nominator has engaged in conduct, in relation to the nomination, that constitutes a contravention of subsection 245AR(1) of the Act; and
(b)be accompanied by the fee mentioned in regulation 5.37.
Temporary Residence Transition nomination
(3)The Minister must, in writing, approve a nomination if:
(a)the application for approval:
(i) is made in accordance with subregulation (2); and
(ii) identifies a person who holds a Subclass 457 … visa granted on the basis that the person satisfied the criterion in subclause 457.223(4) of Schedule 2; and
(iii) identifies an occupation, in relation to the position, that:
(A)is listed in ANZSCO; and
(B)has the same 4-digit occupation unit group code as the occupation carried out by the holder of the Subclass 457 … visa; and
(b)the nominator:
(i) is, or was, the standard business sponsor who last identified the holder of the Subclass 457 … visa in a nomination made under section 140GB of the Act or under regulation 1.20G or 1.20GA as in force immediately before 14 September 2009; and
(ii) is actively and lawfully operating a business in Australia; and
(iii) did not, as that standard business sponsor, meet regulation 1.20DA, or paragraph 2.59(h) or 2.68(i), in the most recent approval as a standard business sponsor; and
(c)either:
(i) both of the following apply:
(A)in the period of 3 years immediately before the nominator made the application, the holder of the Subclass 457 …visa identified in subparagraph (a) (ii) has:
(I)held one or more Subclass 457 visas for a total period of at least 2 years; and
(II)been employed in the position in respect of which the person holds the Subclass 457 … visa for a total period of at least 2 years (not including any period of unpaid leave);
(B)the employment in the position has been full-time, and undertaken in Australia; or
(ii) all of the following apply:
(A)the person holds the Subclass 457 … visa on the basis that the person was identified in a nomination of an occupation mentioned in sub-subparagraph 2.72(10)(d)(iii)(B) or sub-subparagraph 2.72(10)(e)(iii)(B);
(B)the nominator nominated the occupation;
(C)the person has been employed, in the occupation in respect of which the person holds the Subclass 457 … visa, for a total period of at least 2 years in the period of 3 years immediately before the nominator made the application; and
(d)for a person to whom subparagraph (c)(i) applies:
(i) the person will be employed on a full-time basis in the position for at least 2 years; and
(ii) the terms and conditions of the person’s employment will not include an express exclusion of the possibility of extending the period of employment; and
(e)the terms and conditions of employment applicable to the position will be no less favourable than the terms and conditions that:
(i)are provided; or
(ii)would be provided;
to an Australian citizen or an Australian permanent resident for performing equivalent work in the same workplace at the same location; and
(f)either:
(i) the nominator:
(A)fulfilled any commitments the nominator made relating to meeting the nominator’s training requirements during the period of the nominator’s most recent approval as a standard business sponsor; and
(B)complied with the applicable obligations under Division 2.19 relating to the nominator’s training requirements during the period of the nominator’s most recent approval as a standard business sponsor; or
(ii) it is reasonable to disregard subparagraph (i); and
Note Different training requirements apply depending on whether the application for approval as a standard business sponsor was made before 14 September 2009 or on or after that date.
(g)either:
(i) there is no adverse information known to Immigration about the nominator or a person associated with the nominator; or
(ii) it is reasonable to disregard any adverse information known to Immigration about the nominator or a person associated with the nominator; and
(h)the nominator has a satisfactory record of compliance with the laws of the Commonwealth, and of each State or Territory in which the applicant operates a business and employs employees in the business, relating to workplace relations.
Key Legal Topics
Areas of Law
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Immigration
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Administrative Law
Legal Concepts
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Judicial Review
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Procedural Fairness
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Statutory Construction
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Appeal
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