Suppose a visa applicant submits a “bogus document” to the Department in support of her/his application: is the application “dead on arrival” due to the application of Public Interest Criterion 4020?
What if the Administrative Appeals Tribunal determines that PIC 4020 should not be “waived”? Is your client’s application “toast”?
A case that came out of the Federal Circuit Court yesterday, 6 October 2015,Sharma v Minister for Immigration & Border Protection & Anor, (2015) FCCA tells us: “No, not necessarily. If the AAT did not engage in an “active intellectual process” in considering the applicant’s evidence, then it may very well be found to have committed jurisdictional error. (Of course, the least that an applicant has a right to expect is that the AAT will engage in an “active intellectual process” and indeed, jurisdictional error may be found to exist not just in cases arising under PIC 4020, but with respect to any case where the AAT fails to engage in a proper assessment of the evidence).
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