S.L. Williams v The Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs
[1984] FCA 467
•21 Dec 1984
| FURTHER | DISTRIBUTION | UNNECESSARY |
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| THE | FEDERAL | COURT OF | AUSTRALIA | ) |
| 1 |
| VICTORIA | DISTRICT | REGISTRY | ) | No. VG 331 of 1984 |
| 1 |
| GENERAL | D I V I S I O N | 1 |
B E T W E E N :
S .L. WILLIAMS and OTHERS
A N D :
| THE | MINISTER | FOR | I?@IIGRATION |
| AND ETHNIC | AFFAIRS |
| 21 DECEMBER, 1984 | KEELY J. |
| ORAL REASONS | FOR | JUDGMENT |
| HIS HONOUR: | The applicants have lodged an application under |
section 5 of the Adminlstrative Decisions (Judicial
| Review) Act to review | what I see | to be eight decislons |
| made by the Minister of State for Immigration | and |
Ethnlc Affairs (The Respondent) and/or by hls offlcers
| and/or by his delegates, including | the making of |
| deportation orders in | respect of the first and second |
named applicants. The three applicants are persons aggrieved and they seek various orders includlng
| an order that the deportatlon orders are | vold or |
| invalid. | The applicants have taken out a notice |
of motion seeklng orders that:
1. The operation of the decislon of the respondent
or his delegate made the 14th day of November that the first-name& and secondLnamed applicants be deported from Australia be stayed and suspended until further order.
| wilmin 21.12.84 | 38 |
| amf jar Id |
| 2. |
All proceedings to deport the first-named be stayed until further order.
|
appllcants of a fallure to make an order staying
the orders of deportation would outwelgh any
harmful consequences to the respondent, if such
a stay were granted, and that it may well be that
the enforcement of the deportation orders would
render nugatory any success by the appllcants
in the proceedings.
' However, as the full court sald In Faingold
and Others versus Zammit and Another, in an
| unreported declslon on 20 January 1984, | I quote |
| from that decision at page | 10: |
In our opinion it will be difficult
' for an applicant to show that reasons
or circumstances exist-which make It
just that the court should make the
order sought unless It 1s demonstrated
that the applicant has a point of
substance to argue whlch, If successful,
| wlll result in judgment in | hls favour. |
| There are two broad bases | on whlch Mr Rose |
of Counsel for the appllcants contends that there
| is "a point of substance to argue". The flrst | 1s |
that the flrst-named appllcant was the holder of
an entry permit for some years. On the present
| state of the evidence, it | 1s not entlrely clear |
whether she was formally the holder of such an
| entry permlt | or whether she was slmply permltted |
to reside In Australla with her mother.
However, the respondent conceded that she
| had validly entered Australia in | 1967 and remained |
here until 1972. Accordingly, for present purposes,
| I shall assume that she was the holder | f a valid |
| entry permlt during that period. Mr Moshlnsky | of |
counsel, on behalf of the respondent, submitted that
| section 9(1) of the Migration Act | 1958 operated to |
deprive the first-named applicant of any benefit
| for present | purposes flowlng from | the holding | of |
| such a valid | entry permit in those | earlier years. |
section 91 is in the following terms:
Where a non-citizen who is the holder
of an entry permit leaves Australia,
the entry permlt has no force or effect
| in relation | to him upon-or after his |
re-entry into Australla.
| wilmin 21.12.84 | 39 |
| e chf lc |
| Notwithstanding the submissions to the | contrary, |
| put by Mr Rose, I accept | Mr Moshinsky's submisslon |
| that the first-named applicant | at the materlal time |
| fell within the words of section 9 | (1) | : |
| permit leaves Australla . . . . . . . . | --- who is the holder of an entry |
and accordingly that her entry permit had "no force
or effect in relation to her upon or after her
re-entry Into Australia."
| It appears that since | the period 1967 to |
1972 the first-named appllcant has, on three occasions,
| been granted an entry permlt, each for a | period of |
| six months. | Those permits were granted In 1974, |
1975 and 1983 respectively. In my opinion, nelther
the material presently before the court, nor the
submissJons put on behalf of the applicant, show
| any point of substance | to be argued on thls aspect. |
Secondly, Ur Rose relies upon a number of grounds,
which are the same as or substantially the same
| as the grounds rejected | by this court In Kioa versus |
| the Minlster for Ethnic Affairs 1984 | 53 Australlan |
| Law Reports 658. | An appeal from that declslon was |
| dlsmissed unanimously by a full court | on 3 October |
| 1984. | See also a declslon of another full court | in |
Smlth versus the Mlnister, reported In 1984 53
| Australlan Law Reports | 551. |
Mr Rose has sought to rely upon the fact that
special leave to appeal from the declslon of the
| full court of thls court | in Kioa's was granted by the |
High Court of Australla on 16 November 1984 and that
| that appeal is | to be | heard by the full court on |
| 5 February 1985. | However, in my opinion, the |
| application for a stay must be determined upon | the |
| matters at present before the court and upon a present state of the law. |
| The law, on those matters, dealt with | by the |
full court in Kioa's case, and in Smlth's case,
is blnding upon me as a single judge of thls court,
| add-that law is contrary | to the | proposed contentlons |
| of the applicants. | In my view, it would not be proper |
for this court to stay the operation of a deportation
| order made under the | Migration A c t simply on | the basis |
| that the full Hhgh | Court might at some future date |
| authoritatively determine that | the relevant | law is |
| different from that acted upon | by the full court | in |
| those two | cases. |
| wilmin 21.12.84 | 40 |
| e chf 2c |
.
| In those circumstances | it is not necessary |
| f o r | m e | to cons ider the o ther submiss ion put | by |
| M r Moshinsky on behalf | of | the respondent, namely, |
tha t the mater ia l before the cour t does not
| suppor t the conten t ion tha t there | was | i n f a c t | any |
| denia l o f na tura l | j u s t i ce | t o | t h e a p p l i c a n t s . | A s |
l
| t o t h a t submission | it was | made | c l e a r from the ba r |
| t a b l e t h a t t h e r e | would | be | a | d i s p u t e a s t o | the | f ac t s . |
| Accordingly the motion | by | t h e a p p l i c a n t s | is | dismissed. |
| H I S HONOUR: | The | app l i can t s | a re o rde red | to | pay the | respondents |
| cos t s | of and | i n c i d e n t a l t o t h i s n o t i c e | of motloq. |
| HIS HONOUR: | Thank you, | gentlemen. | The court is adJourned |
s ine d i e .
AT 4.52 PM THE MATTER WAS ADJOURNED
INDEFINITELY
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| wilmin 21.12.84 | 41-42 |
| pmv caf l c |
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