S.L. Williams v The Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs

Case

[1984] FCA 467

21 Dec 1984

No judgment structure available for this case.

FURTHER

DISTRIBUTION

UNNECESSARY

';--- -4b7

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.

I accept that the harmful consequences

to the

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

l

wilmin 21.12.84

41-42

pmv caf l c

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