Yeung (Migration)

Case

[2022] AATA 751

15 March 2022


Yeung (Migration) [2022] AATA 751 (15 March 2022)

DECISION RECORD

DIVISION:Migration & Refugee Division

APPLICANTS:  Chun Yip Yeung
Wen-Ting Yen

CASE NUMBER:  2004602

HOME AFFAIRS REFERENCE(S):          BCC2019/6414336

MEMBER:T. Quinn

DATE:15 March 2022

PLACE OF DECISION:  Melbourne

DECISION:The Tribunal affirms the decisions not to grant the applicants Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visas.

Statement made on 15 March 2022 at 7:52pm

CATCHWORDS

MIGRATION – Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visas – Subclass 500 (Student) – genuine student – genuine temporary entrant – enrolment in a registered course – decision under review affirmed    

LEGISLATION

Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000, s 10
Migration Act 1958, ss 65, 338, 347, 359, 363
Migration Regulations 1994, Schedule 2 cls 500.211, 500.212, 500.311; r 1.03

CASES

Hasran v MIAC [2010] FCAFC 40
Huo v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2002] FCA 617
Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 915
Manna v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FMCA 28

Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Singh [2014] FCAFC 1
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li [2013] HCA 18

STATEMENT OF DECISION AND REASONS

APPLICATION FOR REVIEW

  1. This is an application for review of a decision made by a delegate of the Minister for Home Affairs (‘the delegate’) on 20 February 2020 to refuse to grant the applicants Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visas (‘the visa’) under section 65 of the Migration Act 1958 (‘the Act’).

  2. The applicants applied for the visas on 2 December 2019 (‘the application’).  At the time of application, Class TU contained two subclasses: Subclass 500 (Student) and Subclass 590 (Student Guardian). The primary visa applicant (‘the applicant’) applied for the visa (being a Subclass 500 (Student) visa) to undertake study in Australia and does not claim to meet the criteria for a Subclass 590 (Student Guardian) visa.

  3. On 20 February 2020, the delegate refused to grant the visas on the basis that the applicant did not satisfy the requirements of clause 500.212 of Schedule 2 to the Migration Regulations 1994 (‘the Regulations’), namely that the applicant was not considered to be a genuine applicant for entry and stay as a student. A copy of the delegate’s decision was provided to the Tribunal with the applicant’s review application.

  4. On 8 March 2020, the applicants applied for a review of the delegate’s decisions with this Tribunal pursuant to sections 338(2) and 347 of the Act.

  5. Approximately 2 years have elapsed since the making of the delegate’s decision and the applicants’ application for review with the Tribunal. In coming to consider the merits of the application for review, the Tribunal recognises the applicant’s personal circumstances bearing upon their visa application may have changed during that time. The Tribunal considered that it would be beneficial for the applicant to provide updated and further information to the Tribunal for the purposes of determining the outcome of their application for review. To this end, on 17 September 2021, the Tribunal wrote to the applicant, pursuant to section 359(2) of the Act, inviting them to provide information in writing about the course(s) of study the applicant was undertaking and their entry and stay in Australia as a student (‘the s359(2) letter’). The s359(2) letter requests that a questionnaire (‘the questionnaire’) be completed by the applicant.

  6. The applicant did not provide the information requested in the s359(2) letter within the prescribed period or otherwise and no extension of time was requested. Where an applicant is invited to provide further information under section 359(2) of the Act and fails to provide that information within the prescribed period, the Tribunal may make a decision on the review without taking any further action.[1] 

    [1] Pursuant to section 359C(1) of the Act.

  7. The Tribunal finds that the applicant did not provide further information as requested. In these circumstances, section 359C of the Act applies and pursuant to section 360(3) of the Act the applicants are not entitled to appear before the Tribunal. The effect of section 363A of the Act is that if an applicant has no entitlement to a hearing, the Tribunal has no power to permit him or her to appear.[2]

    [2]           Hasran v MIAC [2010] FCAFC 40.

  8. The Tribunal, therefore, has no additional information relating to the applicants’ visa application beyond that which was before the delegate in February 2020 (save for a PRISMS search as set out below) and is otherwise discernible from the delegate’s decision and Department file.

  9. The Tribunal has considered whether, in the circumstances of this case, information that the applicant meets the requirements of the Act and Regulations is likely to be forthcoming and whether the applicant has had a fair opportunity to provide relevant information already.

  10. The Tribunal has given consideration to whether it should adjourn the review under section 363(1)(b) of the Act to allow the applicants additional time in which to provide further evidence to support the review application. In doing so, the Tribunal has had regard to the decisions in Huo v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[3] and Manna v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship[4] where the Courts have held that the Tribunal is not required to indefinitely defer its decision-making processes.  It has also had regard to Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li[5] regarding reasonableness of any request for an adjournment, and the Full Federal Court decision in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Singh[6] which considered analogous issues, as well as the decision of Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection.[7]

    [3] [2002] FCA 617.

    [4] [2001] FMCA 28.

    [5] [2013] HCA 18 (8 May 2013).

    [6] [2014] FCAFC 1 (4 February 2014).

    [7] [2014] FCA 915 (28 August 2014).

  11. In these circumstances, for the reasons set out in this decision record above, the Tribunal considers that the applicants have had a fair opportunity to provide relevant information.

  12. Accordingly, the Tribunal has elected not to exercise its discretion under section 363(1)(b) of the Act to adjourn the review any further to allow the applicant more time. In these circumstances, the Tribunal has decided to proceed to make a decision having regard to the information it has before it, including the information previously provided by the applicant to the Department and the Tribunal.

  13. It is for the applicants to satisfy the Tribunal that the requirements of the Act and Regulations have been met. The decision maker is not required to make the applicants’ case. Whilst the concept of onus of proof does not apply to administrative decision making, the relevant facts of the individual case must be supplied by the applicant, in as much detail as necessary to enable the decision maker to properly consider the case that is being put.

  14. The Tribunal has proceeded to a decision having had regard to all the information before it, including the information previously provided by the applicants to the Department but without taking further steps to obtain the additional information sought by this Tribunal under section 359(2) of the Act.

  15. For the following reasons, the Tribunal has concluded that the decisions under review ought to be affirmed in this case.  In reaching its decision, the Tribunal has had regard to:

    a.all written material filed by or on behalf of the applicants; and

    b.other relevant documents on the Tribunal and Department files.

    The Tribunal notes that not all the evidence and material that has been placed before the Tribunal has been specifically referred to in the Tribunal’s reasons as set out below. The reasons incorporate reference only to that information that the Tribunal has been found to be fundamental or materially significant to the determination of the issues in the case.

    STATUTORY FRAMEWORK

  16. The criteria for a Subclass 500 (Student) visa are set out in Part 500 of Schedule 2 to the Regulations. The primary criteria in clause 500.211 to clause 500.218 must be satisfied by at least one applicant. Other members of the family unit, if any, who are applicants for the visa need only satisfy the secondary criteria.

  17. While the determinative issue before the delegate was whether the applicant met the genuine temporary entrant criteria under clause 500.212 of the Regulations, the material and evidence before the Tribunal indicate that he is not currently enrolled in a registered course of study.

    Enrolment (clause 500.211)

  18. Clause 500.211 relevantly requires that, at the time of decision, the student visa application in question be founded on evidence that the primary applicant is enrolled in a course of study.[8] The applicant does not claim to meet any of the alternative criteria in clause 500.211 of the Regulations.

    [8]Clause 500.211(a) of Schedule 2 to the Regulations.

  19. ‘Course of study’ is defined as a ‘full-time registered course’ and a ‘registered course’ is a course provided by an institution which has been registered under the Education Services for Overseas Students Act2000 (Cth) (‘the ESOS Act’) to provide that course to overseas students.[9]

    [9]Regulation 1.03 of the Regulations.

  20. All registered courses and course providers are listed in the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (‘CRICOS’), an online register kept in accordance with the requirements of the ESOS Act.[10]  Details of courses listed in CRICOS are integrated into the Provider Registration and International Student Management System (‘PRISMS’), a database maintained by the Australian government.[11] The PRISMS database is the principal means by which registered course providers comply with legislative requirements relating to the monitoring of international students studying in Australia. Upon enrolling an international student into a registered course of study, the course provider enters the details of that enrolment into the PRISMS database. The database then records a Confirmation of Enrolment (‘COE’) for the student. The COE functions as a record of the student’s enrolment status in the course and as proof of enrolment for the purposes of clause 500.211 of Schedule 2 of the Regulations.

    [10]Section 10 of the ESOS Act.

    [11]See generally, Department of Education and Training, Provider Registration International Student Management System (PRISMS): Provider User Guide (Department of Education and Training, May 2018).

    Significance of Enrolment Criterion

  21. Producing evidence of current enrolment is a critical first step towards obtaining a student visa.  Such evidence shows that the applicant has, prior to the Tribunal making its decision, entered into a legally binding contract with a registered course provider.  That contract gives rise to several significant obligations.  First, it obliges the course provider to provide the applicant with a pre-determined course of education or training over a specified period.  Second, it obliges the applicant to pay for the course.  Third, it obliges the applicant to complete the course requirements to receive a testament from the course provider as to what the applicant has achieved by way of formal qualification.  An enrolment therefore represents a present and operating commitment by the applicant to complete a course of study.  It is persuasive evidence of a tangible and immediate need for a student visa.

  22. An enrolment continues to be of legal significance once a student visa is issued.  All student visas are subject to a condition that the visa holder remains enrolled in a registered course of study.[12]  That condition operates on a continuing basis every day the visa remains valid.  If a student visa is issued to an applicant who is not enrolled in a course of study, the visa will be breached as soon as it is granted.

    [12]Schedule 5 to the Regulations.

  23. The Tribunal must therefore be presented with evidence that shows the applicant is currently enrolled in a registered course of study. Absent such evidence, a student visa cannot sensibly be grated. Indeed, in any case for a student visa, consideration of whether all other primary criteria are met, as contained in clauses 500.211-500.218 of the Regulations, is premised on the enrolment criterion in clause 500.211 first being satisfied. If clause 500.211 is not met, there is no administrative utility in the Tribunal proceeding to consider any further primary criteria.

    CONSIDERATION OF CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE

  24. The applicant did not complete the questionnaire requested to be completed in the s359(2) letter. This puzzles the Tribunal. The Tribunal undertook a PRISMS search on 19 January 2022. This search indicates that the applicant’s enrolments have all either finished or been cancelled.[13] 

    [13]          See Tribunal file document ID 9349068.

  25. On 25 January February 2022, the Tribunal wrote to the applicant, pursuant to section 359A of the Act, explaining the contents of the PRISMS search, its relevance to his case and indicating that the information in the PRISMS search could be relied upon as the reason or part of the reason for the Tribunal affirming the decisions in his case. The Tribunal invited the applicant to comment or respond to this information by 8 February 2022. To date, the Tribunal has not received any response to this correspondence.

  26. The applicant’s confirmation of enrolments have now expired or been cancelled and there is no current confirmation of enrolment for any other course(s) presently before the Tribunal.

  27. The s359(2) letter made several enquiries about enrolment in a registered course of study and current confirmation of enrolment and, importantly, stated ‘[a]s you applied for the visa on the basis of undertaking a course of study in Australia, it is a requirement of the visa for you to be:

    · enrolled in a registered course of study; and

    · a genuine applicant for entry and stay as a student.’

  28. The s359(2) letter also requires a questionnaire to be completed (‘the questionnaire’). The questionnaire makes several requests for information relating to the enrolment condition contained in clause 500.211 of the Regulations. In the section of the questionnaire making these enquiries, the document also states “[n]ot being enrolled in a registered course of study may be a reason, or a part of the reason, for the Tribunal affirming the decision under review, even if this is not the same criteria or issue considered by the primary decision maker.” The applicant has not responded to the s359(2) letter or completed the associated questionnaire.

    Not Appropriate for Tribunal to Postpose Determination

  29. The Tribunal has considered whether postponing the determination of the present application for review is appropriate and whether it ought to write to the applicant, again pursuant to section 359(2) of the Act, to request information from the applicants. Such a request would be specifically designed to invite the applicant to produce satisfactory evidence of a current enrolment given that they have produced none to date. After considering this possible course, the Tribunal has decided against it. The Tribunal considers it would not be appropriate to do so for a variety of reasons as set out below.

  30. Firstly, the Tribunal considers that the applicant has had sufficient time and notice to arrange and produce clear evidence of a current enrolment for the purposes of their application before the Tribunal.  The applicant has not provided such evidence when they could have done so.

  31. Secondly, while the Tribunal may have a general duty to inquire, its role is not to advise and advocate for a particular outcome.  If the Tribunal were to write to the applicant, specifically requesting that he provide further evidence of a current enrolment, implicit in that request would be advice that the applicant’s case as it stands is deficient.  It would also suggest that the deficiency is capable of being remedied if the applicant were to take certain affirmative action.  In effect, the Tribunal would be assisting the applicants to bolster their case to increase their chances of obtaining a favourable outcome.  That is essentially the role of an advocate.  It is not a proper or appropriate function for this Tribunal.

  32. Thirdly, writing to the applicant again would frustrate the purposes of the Act. Division 5 of Part 5 of the Act (section 375A to section 367) was intended by Parliament to constitute an exhaustive statement of the principles of natural justice in relation to the matters it deals with. The Tribunal’s original s359(2) letter was designed to elicit evidence of enrolment if any such evidence existed. The applicants did not respond and have not met the requirements of clause 500.211 of the Regulations. In doing this, the applicant also caused the Act to operate to preclude them from any further hearing. The scheme of this part of the Act is designed to balance the interests of applicants in being able to make their case to the Tribunal as against the public interest in having the Tribunal determine matters that come before it expeditiously and without undue delay. The Tribunal has already afforded the applicant an opportunity to produce satisfactory evidence of a current enrolment pursuant to s359(2) of the Act. To provide the applicants with another such opportunity because what they produced was unsatisfactory cannot be justified. The Tribunal must now move to make a determination based on the information before it.

    Conclusion on enrolment

  33. The evidence before the Tribunal is that the applicant does not have a COE.  The Tribunal considers that the determinative issue in the applicants’ case has changed as a current confirmation of enrolment has not been provided. 

  34. The Tribunal has no evidence of a current Confirmation of Enrolment which would establish that the primary applicant meets the essential requirement under clause 500.211(a). The applicant has had an adequate opportunity to obtain such evidence. In the circumstances, the question of whether the applicant meets the criteria under clause 500.211 has become determinative for the purposes of the case before the Tribunal. If the applicant does not meet the criteria under clause 500.211, then there is no utility in the Tribunal proceeding to consider whether the genuine temporary entrant criteria are met under clause 500.212.

  35. The applicant does not meet the regulatory requirements for the grant of a student visa because there is no evidence satisfying any of the criteria in clause 500.211 of the Regulations.

  36. Consequently, as the decision in relation primary applicant’s review has been affirmed, the Tribunal cannot be satisfied that clause 500.311 in Schedule 2 of the Regulations is met by the second applicant as it requires that they be a member of the family unit of a person who satisfies, or has satisfied, the relevant primary criteria.

  37. Therefore, the criteria for the grant of a Student visa are not met by the second applicant and the decision in relation to their application must also be affirmed.

    FINAL CONCLUSIONS

  38. The Tribunal is not satisfied that at the time of its decision, the applicant was enrolled in a course of study and accordingly clauses 500.211 and 500.311 of the Regulations are not met.

  39. Given the above findings, the Tribunal finds that the criteria for the grant of a Subclass 500 (Student) visa are not met.  The applicant does not claim to meet the criteria for a Subclass 590 (Student Guardian) visa.  Accordingly, the decisions under review must be affirmed.

    DECISION

  40. The Tribunal affirms the decisions not to grant the applicants’ Student (Temporary) (Class TU) visas.

    T. Quinn
    Member


Areas of Law

  • Immigration

  • Administrative Law

  • Statutory Interpretation

Legal Concepts

  • Judicial Review

  • Procedural Fairness

  • Natural Justice

  • Statutory Construction

  • Jurisdiction

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