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Re: LI GUONG YO
And: MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND ETHNIC AFFAIRS
No. WA G22 of 1986
Administrative Law
COURT
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
GENERAL DIVISION
Muirhead J.
CWDS
Administrative Law - Judicial Review - deportation under Migration Act -
deportation order suspended by Minister to enable applicant to marry -
applicant Chinese citizen - proposed wife aboriginal person in far north -
mother of applicant's son - marriage ceremony not performed for unavoidable
reasons - later decision to deport - application for stay - natural justice
considerations.
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977, s.15
Freedom of Information Act 1982, s.18
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976
Migration Act 1958, s.23
Cases referred to:
Dallikavak v. Minister of State for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs
(Unreported - Federal Court of Australia - 6 August 1985.)
Rifki v. Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs 46 ALR 301
Piroglu v. Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1981) ALD 323
Jason Kioa and Others v. Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs and The
Comnmonwealth of Australia (unreported - delivered 18 December 1985)
Thomson Australian Holdings Pty Ltd v. Trade Practices Commission (1981) 55
ALJR 614
HRNG
PERTH
#DATE 14:3:1986
ORDER
1. Execution of the deportation order is stayed until further order.
2. The application for review will be adjourned for hearing on 16 April
next at 10.15 a.m.
3. The parties to be at liberty to file such affidavits as they may be
advised, such affidavits, if any, to be filed and served upon the solicitor
for the other party on or before 11 April next.
4. Costs reserved.
5. Liberty to apply.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt
with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.
(See also Order 37 rule 2(3).)
JUDGE1
The applicant seeks judicial review of a decision of the Minister made on
the 24th December 1985 ordering deportation of the applicant, execution of
which was delayed for some time, and review of a decision made on about 6th
March last to put the deportation order into effect.
2. As a matter of urgency and without documentation the applicant sought to
restrain the Minister from carrying the deportation into effect. This
application was heard by Toohey J. on 7th March when his Honour ordered that
deportation be stayed, that an application for review be filed and that the
matter be adjourned until 13th March. Yesterday I heard further argument, the
application being for a further stay. Reasons for decision under s.13 of the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 have been sought but such
reasons are not yet to hand. Application has also been made under the Freedom
of Information Act for release of material upon which the decision was based
but that has not as yet been discovered.
3. A brief background will suffice. The applicant, who hails from China
entered Australia in 1982 and he was granted a temporary entry permit valid
until 24th April 1983. No further permit has been granted, he has been a
prohibited non-citizen since that date and thus subject to deportation. He
failed to leave Australia and in June 1985 voluntarily visited the department
in Sydney. He did not then seek to apply for any change of status and the
department understood he wished to return to China. His passport was taken
and he was released on reporting conditions which he did not comply with. The
department lost track of him until he was located at Kununurra in W.A. and he
was taken into custody early in December last. It appears he then indicated
he wished to marry an aboriginal girl at Kalumburu - a remote community in the
North West - who has born him a child. He had been working as a cook at
Kununurra, employment which is still open to him, and it was apparently by
reason of an enquiry by his employer to the Department made on the applicant's
behalf that his whereabouts were discovered.
4. Solicitors were instructed after his apprehension. It suffices to say
that there is evidence that the proposed marriage is genuine. His intended
wife Matilda Djanghara is of the Catholic faith and difficulties of
communication, statutory requirements of notice of intended marriage and
certain requirements of the priest who it is hoped will perform the marriage,
have served to delay the marriage.
5. On 17th December 1985 his solicitor wrote to the Regional Director in
Perth advising of the applicant's intention to apply for a temporary entry
permit, to allow him to pursue an application for change of status and to
pursue an application for resident status under s.6A(1)(b) of the Act and
under the "labour shortage" category. A considerable body of material was
then sent to the Minister, which is not before me at this stage. The letter
referred to "compassionate and humanitarian grounds" based on his intended
marriage and the fact that he has a son who is an Australian citizen.
6. On 20th December last an application for a further temporary entry permit
and for an entry permit as a permanent resident, based on compassionate and
humanitarian grounds s.6A(1)(a)- was lodged but was not accepted by the
department as a further document required completion. On 30th December the
applicant's solicitor was advised the deportation order had been signed on
Christmas eve and later on 8th January last he was informed that
administrative steps had been completed to return the applicant to China on
12th January. On 10th January following representations to the Minister he
stayed the decision for one month to enable the applicant to marry his
fiancee. On 17th January the applicant was released from custody subject to
reporting conditions in Perth.
7. I am satisfied that the applicant's solicitor who is familiar with the
outback region in question, has since done everything practical to bring about
the ceremony. He has sought more time without success. Difficulties imposed
by the applicant being in custody for some of the time, the necessity of the
marriage taking place in the North, consideration of the views of aboriginal
kin, the requirements of one month's notice of intended marriage, the
necessity of the church being satisfied that the applicant understood certain
religous precepts or the nature of marriage in the eyes of the Church and
inability at times to make contact by radio telephone made it virtually
impossible to arrange for the ceremony to take place within the period
contemplated by the Minister when he allowed a 30 day suspension. It was
certainly not due to the default of the applicant nor to the lack of effort on
the part of his advisers. The difficulties are documented in the affidavit of
Stephen Walker (the applicant's solicitor)filed on 11 March. On the 7 March
Mr Walker was informed that the Minister had decided to execute the
deportation. His client was in custody and it was then planned to fly him to
Sydney that night for deportation. On the same day Mr Walker received a
letter from the department's Regional Director, in the following terms:
"Dear Sir
LI GUO YONG
I refer to your letter of 28 February 1986.
I am writing to confirm that the Minister for
Immigration and Ethnic Affairs has reviewed all matters
that have transpired since Mr Li was ordered deported
on 24 December 1985.
In the absence of Mr Li's compliance with conditions as
set out in my latter of 27 February 1986, the Minister
has directed that Mr Li be deported on the first
available flight. Steps are being taken to effect the
Minister's decision.
I have attached for your information copies of
deportation passage and maintenance costs which Mr Li
has incurred and is liable to pay.
The brochure omitted from my correspondence of 27
February 1986 is also enclosed.
Yours faithfully"
8. The Regional Director was informed by Mr Walker that the marriage
arrangements were by then in hand and sources from which this could be
confirmed were indicated. But he was advised that as the Minister had made
his decision it was too late to take the matter further. Hence the urgent
application to the court soon after.
9. By virtue of an amendment to the application which I permitted, the
application before me is to "review the decision of the respondent made on the
24th day of December 1985 to deport the applicant from Australia and his
further decision made on 6th or 7th days of March 1986 to execute his decision
of 24th December 1985". Whether the latter decision is reviewable may be a
matter of debate as indeed may be the power of the Minister to suspend a
deportation order. (See Dallikavak v. Minister of State for Immigration and
Ethnic Affairs (Unreported - Federal Court of Australia - 6 August 1985.) But
that suspension is part of the history and I am satisfied of this Court's
jurisdiction to review the deportation order itself. The matter is one of
urgency and I am not now asked to make final orders. This court has power
under s.15 of the Judicial Review Act to suspend the operation of a decision
and to order a stay of proceedings under that decision. In Rifki v. Minister
for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs 46 ALR 301 Toohey J. considered also the
general powers of the Court under s.23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act
1976 "in relation to matters in which it has jurisdiction, to make orders of
such kinds, including interlocutory orders .... as the Court thinks
appropriate", and he agreed with earlier decisions of this court that in a
case such as this the Judicial Review Act may not be the sole source of power.
(See also Piroglu v. Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1981) 4 ALD
323.) Miss Francas on behalf of the Minister has referred to the nature of
the power granted to the Minister under s.18 of the Migration Act 1958,
unfettered by statutory criteria, and she has stressed that the Minister's
decision was made after information was in his hands concerning the
applicant's paternity of a child and of his aspirations for marriage. She
categorises the applicant's situation as "hopeless" and submits that his
deportation is inevitable. But of course hope burns eternal and in the
affairs of men (and courts) few things are certain. The odds may be weighed
against the applicant but I bear in mind the earlier suspension of the
Minister's deportation order, apparently to enable the marriage to take place,
the strenuous, albeit unsuccessful efforts to achieve the marriage within the
narrow time limits, and the applicant's paternity of a child of Australian
citizenship. Under our system of justice expediency will seldom oust
principles of natural justice, including procedural fairness. I am persuaded,
assuming I must be guided by principles appropriate to interlocutory
injunctions that there is a serious question to be tried. And here "the
balance of convenience" a rather inappropriate phrase in the present
circumstances is weighed heavily in favour of the applicant. This court is
able to grant a relatively early date to consider the substantive application.
By then the reasons for decision under the Judicial Review Act will probably
be to hand and this court will be in a position to determine the issue
unfettered by the haste which has attended this application to date.
10. Neither the public interest nor the Minister's administration of the
Migration Act is likely to suffer by reason of a short delay before
substantive consideration of the application. The rights, interests and
status of the woman the applicant seeks to marry and those of her son must not
be overlooked.
11. I would prefer to base my decision on principles of procedural fairness
or natural justice. The High Court in Jason Kioa and Others v. Minister for
Immigration and Ethnic Affairs and The Commonwealth of Australia (unreported -
delivered 18 December 1985) emphasised that the Minister in reaching a
decision as to deportation should when circumstances permit have regard to the
person whose interests are affected and should give such person the
opportunity not only of knowing the basis of the decision, but if appropriate
of replying to material in the Minister's hands which may be prejudicial.
This court became vested with the matter under conditions of urgency. I am
persuaded that all practical steps were taken, by the applicant's solicitor
during the earlier suspension of the Minister's order to bring about the
marriage ceremony which the suspension was designed to facilitate. It also
appears probable that factors which the applicant could not avoid prevented
the marriage taking place according to the rites of the Church. It would be a
hollow exercise in these circumstances to bring the stay to an end and thus to
deny to the applicant the opportunity of review. At this stage the court
itself, due to logistic problems, and in the absence of therequested reasons
for decision and the material upon which it was based, is unable to finally
determine the application following appropriate hearing and argument. If I do
not order a further stay the order would, to use the words of Fitzgerald J. in
Thomson Australian Holdings Pty Ltd v. Trade Practices Commission (1981) 55
ALJR 614 "render nugatory any entitlement in the applicant to the substantive
relief claimed and to any grant to the applicant of that relief". I say that
as the applicant would, no doubt, be sent quickly beyond our shores.
12. I order as follows:
1. Execution of the deportation order is hereby stayed until
further order.
2. The application for review will be adjourned for hearing on
16 April next at 10.15 a.m.
3. The parties to be at liberty to file such affidavits as they
may be advised, such affidavits, if any, to be filed and
served upon the solicitor for the other party on or before
11 April next.
4. Costs reserved.
5. Liberty to apply.