(4 July 2024)
[2024] NZHC 1803
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- [2024] NZHC 1803
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Taliau v Minister of Immigration [2024] NZHC 1803 (4 July 2024)
Last Updated: 8 August 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WELLINGTON REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TE WHANGANUI-A-TARA ROHE
CIV-2024-485-145
[2024] NZHC 1803
UNDER
the Immigration Act 2009
IN THE MATTER
of an application for leave to appeal a
decision of the Immigration and Protection Tribunal 2023 NZIPR 600758
BETWEEN
MIKA TALIAU
Applicant
AND
MINISTER OF IMMIGRATION
Respondent
Hearing:
2 July 2024
Appearances:
K Ah Kuoi for the Applicant
M Davie and M Jones for the Respondent
Judgment:
4 July 2024
JUDGMENT OF GORDON J
This judgment was delivered by me on 4
July 2024 at 3 pm, pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules
Registrar/Deputy Registrar Date:
Solicitors:
Crown Law, Wellington Ah Kuoi Law, Wellington
TALIAU v MINISTER OF IMMIGRATION
[2024] NZHC 1803
[4 July 2024]
Introduction
[1] The
applicant, Mika Taliau, seeks leave to appeal to this Court on a question of
law
1
from a decision of the Immigration and Protection Tribunal
(Tribunal) dismissing his humanitarian appeal against deportation
liability.
2
[2] Mr Taliau is
liable for deportation as a consequence of a conviction for indecent assault
committed not later than two years after
Mr Taliau first held a residence class
visa.
3
[3] In his
application for leave to appeal Mr Taliau says the Tribunal did not give
sufficient weight to the humanitarian grounds
provided in his evidence and the
evidence of his partner and his father.
[4] The
respondent, the Minister of Immigration (Minister) opposes the appeal. Mr Davie,
counsel for the Minister, says that the scope
for the High Court to consider
complaints against the Tribunal’s assessment of the evidence is limited.
Mr Taliau’s argument
that the Tribunal should have given more weight to
the adverse consequences which will or may follow deportation falls outside that
narrow compass. In any event, Mr Davie submits the Tribunal’s conclusion
was plainly open to it.
Background
[5] Mr
Taliau is a Samoan citizen. He was born in Samoa on 1 November 1997. He is now
aged 26 years.
[6] His
biological parents (parents) and younger brother live in Samoa. He has three
older siblings: two sisters who live in New Zealand
and another sibling who
lives
1
Immigration Act 2009, s 245.
Taliau
v Minister of Immigration
[2023] NZIPT 600758.
The Tribunal directed,
pursuant to s 215(1) of the Immigration Act, the removal of the period of
prohibition on entry to New Zealand
that would otherwise apply under s 179
following Mr Taliau’s deportation from New Zealand. The Tribunal also
ordered a nine
month work visa for Mr Taliau from the date of its decision
(1 December 2023) to enable him to support his partner during and
for a short
while after the birth of their child and to give them time to make plans for
their future.
Immigration
Act, s 161(1)(a)(iii). Indecent assault is an offence punishable by more than
three months’ imprisonment: Crimes
Act 1961, s 135.
in the United States of America. Mr Taliau remains close to his parents in Samoa
and communicates with them on a regular basis.
[7] Mr Taliau
was present in New Zealand between November 2017 and May 2018 under the
Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) scheme.
In October 2018, Mr
Taliau’s maternal uncle, Tulaga Taliau (adoptive father), a New Zealand
citizen and his wife adopted
Mr Taliau. The aunt has since died.
[8] Mr Taliau
made an application for residence under the Family (Dependent Child) category in
April 2019. This was granted in August
2019 and Mr Taliau arrived in New Zealand
on 14 September 2019 as a resident.
[9] Mr Taliau
met his partner, Laura Tiatia, in around September 2019. They initially lived
separately and started living together
in September 2021.
[10] Ms Tiatia
is 23 years old and was born in Samoa. She has been living in New Zealand
since August 2018. She was adopted by her
aunt so that she could come to New
Zealand to work and support her biological family in Samoa. She gained residence
under the Family
(Dependent Child) category in June 2018 and is now a New
Zealand citizen.
[11] Ms
Tiatia’s parents remain living in Samoa with two of her younger siblings.
She has another younger sister who was adopted
by her aunt at the same time as
she was adopted. Her younger sister is 14 years old and attends school in New
Zealand.
[12] At the time
of the Tribunal hearing Ms Tiatia was pregnant with their child.
She gave birth to a daughter, Lise, on 17 April 2024.
4
[13] The events
that gave rise to Mr Taliau’s conviction occurred on 15 February 2020. Mr
Taliau and a friend were in Wellington
standing beside his adoptive
father’s car. Mr Taliau had access to the car but did not hold a driver
licence. Mr Taliau was
approached by a 24 year old woman who was intoxicated and
asked for a ride home.
4
The Minister did not oppose the Court receiving a copy of the
birth certificate.
Mr Taliau agreed to do so but said he needed to drop his friend off first. The
victim got into the back seat of the car.
[14] After the
friend had been dropped off, the victim realised they were not going towards her
home. She protested and tried opening
the doors to jump out of the moving car,
but the doors were locked. Mr Taliau continued to drive and parked in a secluded
parking
spot. The victim was unable to find her phone to call 111.
[15] Mr Taliau
got out of the car and got into the back with the victim. He lifted her dress
and stroked her bare thigh, saying: “I
want you here, I will protect you,
I will look after you”. The victim yelled at him and pushed him
away.
[16] Mr Taliau
got back into the driver’s seat and drove away from the scene
aggressively. He crashed the car causing it to
flip onto its side and roll down
a bank, stopping only when it hit some trees. Mr Taliau left the scene leaving
the victim there.
[17] He then
went back to retrieve his passport, only helping the victim when she requested
his assistance to get out of the car.
She eventually waved down a vehicle and
the driver of that vehicle took her home.
[18] As a result
of the crash the victim suffered multiple bruises to her body and limbs. She
also sustained multiple grazes and cuts
to her head, arms and legs, which
required hospital treatment.
[19] The Police
charged Mr Taliau with indecent assault,
5
abduction,
6
and
careless driving causing injury.
7
The abduction charge was later
withdrawn.
[20] Following
Mr Taliau’s guilty plea, on 11 June 2021 Judge Davidson sentenced him on
both remaining charges to community
work for 100 hours and 12 months of
intensive supervision.
8
5
Crimes Act, s 135. Maximum penalty: 7 years’
imprisonment.
6
Crimes Act, s 208. Maximum penalty: 14 years’
imprisonment.
Land
Transport Act 1998, s 38. Maximum penalty: 3 months’ imprisonment or a
fine not exceeding $4,500.
R
v Taliau
[2023] NZDC 17544. Mr Ah Kuoi, counsel for Mr Taliau, noted that Mr
Taliau had served the sentence without incident.
[21] The Judge
noted that the combination of charges was unusual reflecting, it seemed to him,
the “unusual and highly concerning
circumstances of what
occurred”.
9
He further said:
10
Here you have agreed to drive a drunken female victim home. You have taken
the opportunity to indecently assault her in a secluded
area. Although it
involves skin-on-skin contact, the indecent assault in and of itself would at
best be described as moderately serious.
There was a breach of trust and an
associated detention in the way that I have described. Although your driving
after the incident
was bad it is not of the worst kind.
[22] As a
consequence of the conviction for indecent assault, being an offence punishable
by more than three months’ imprisonment
committed not later than two years
after Mr Taliau first held a residence class visa, he became liable to
deportation.
[23] Immigration
New Zealand served a deportation liability notice on Mr Taliau on 27 June 2023.
Mr Taliau appealed his deportation
liability to the Tribunal under s 206 of the
Immigration Act 2009 (the Act).
Test on appeal to Tribunal
[24] The
grounds for determining humanitarian appeals against deportation are set out in
s 207 of the Act as follows:
207 Grounds for determining humanitarian appeal
(1) The Tribunal must allow an appeal against liability for deportation on
humanitarian grounds only where it is satisfied that—
(a) there are exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian nature that would make
it unjust or unduly harsh for the appellant to be
deported from New Zealand;
and
(b) it would not in all the circumstances be contrary to the public interest to
allow the appellant to remain in New Zealand.
[25] The Supreme
Court in
Ye v Minister of Immigration
discussed the “exceptional
circumstances” test in the predecessor provision in the 1987 Act
saying:
11
[34] That brings
us back to the first criterion in s 47(3) which has the following ingredients:
(i) exceptional circumstances; (ii)
of a humanitarian
9
At [7].
10
At [7].
11
Ye v Minister of Immigration
[2009] NZSC 76
, [2010] 1
NZLR 104 at
[34]
–[35].
nature; (iii) that would make it unjust or unduly harsh for the person to be
removed from New Zealand. The need for the circumstances
of the case to be
exceptional means that those circumstances must be well outside the normal run
of circumstances found in overstayer
cases generally. The circumstances do not
have to be unique or very rare but they do have to be truly an exception rather
than the
rule. It is unnecessary and undesirable to attempt to define the
compass of the word “humanitarian”. It is unlikely to
be difficult
to decide whether the circumstances of a particular case fulfil that
description. If there are exceptional circumstances
of a humanitarian nature, it
is then necessary to determine whether they make it unjust or unduly harsh to
remove the person from
New Zealand.
[35] The
qualification of the word “harsh”, by the word “unduly”,
recognises that there may be some degree
of harshness in removing an overstayer
from New Zealand. In particular some degree of harshness may be involved where
the removal
affects New Zealand citizen children. But the statutory test is
couched on the basis of undue harshness. Undue in this context means
that the
harshness goes beyond the level of harshness that must be regarded as acceptable
in order to preserve the integrity of New
Zealand’s immigration system.
That is why a generic concern on that account is not enough to outweigh
fulfilment of the first
criterion in s 47(3).
(footnote omitted)
[26] Then in
Minister of Immigration v Jooste
the High Court commented on statements
made by the Tribunal in that case regarding the “exceptional
circumstances” test
saying:
12
[45] In my view such
comments reflect an erroneous view of the exceptional circumstances test. They
effectively equate the stringent
statutory test of “exceptional
circumstances of a humanitarian nature” with “compassionate
factors”, circumstances
that are more than simply "routine", or "genuinely
concerning circumstances". The latter phrases fail, by a significant margin, to
adequately capture the high threshold for a finding of
exceptional
circumstances of a humanitarian nature, as articulated in
Ye
and the
other cases I have referred to.
The Tribunal’s decision
[27] Mr
Taliau filed a statement from himself and statements from his adoptive father
and Ms Tiatia. Mr Taliau and his adoptive father
gave evidence at the hearing on
21 November 2023. The Tribunal referred to and generally accepted the following
evidence:
12
Minister of Immigration v Jooste
[2014] NZHC 2882
,
[2015] 2 NZLR 765 at
[45]
.
(a) Mr Taliau has supportive family members in New Zealand, namely his adoptive
father and his children, as well as Mr Taliau’s
two biological sisters and
other extended family members.
(b) Mr Taliau left Samoa expressly for the purpose of financially assisting his
parents and from time to time he sends his parents
remittances as and when they
have needed assistance, including for their day to day living costs and for
their regular contributions
to their church.
(c) While New Zealand provides greater employment opportunities than Samoa, Mr
Taliau does not face any personal barriers to employment
there that he does not
face in New Zealand. Mr Taliau’s sisters in New Zealand would continue to
support his parents financially
should he return to Samoa.
(d) Mr Taliau is in a genuine and stable relationship with his partner, Ms
Tiatia, and they have wanted to marry and begin a
family since they first began
a relationship with each other. They are expecting a baby which was due in April
2024 who, when born,
will be a New Zealand citizen.
(e) While Ms Tiatia thinks her parents would understand if she wanted to return
to Samoa with Mr Taliau, her parents would be sad
if she went back. She came to
New Zealand for her future and to support her family in Samoa.
(f) While Ms Tiatia has family in New Zealand, she thinks she would not be able
to cope with the baby on her own in New Zealand.
However, she feels she cannot
return to Samoa with Mr Taliau for the reasons referred to in (e) above.
[28] The
Tribunal noted it was mindful of art 23(1) of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) which provides
that as “the natural and
fundamental group unit of society” the family is “entitled to
protection by society and
the State”, and to art 17 of the ICCPR which articulates the right not to
be subject to “arbitrary or unlawful”
interference with the
family.
[29] The
Tribunal accepted that Mr Taliau and his pregnant partner were a family for the
purposes of the ICCPR. The Tribunal, however,
went on to say that this was not
absolute but rather a factor to be weighed in the assessment.
[30] The
Tribunal found that Ms Tiatia’s pregnancy was relevant to its assessment
of Mr Taliau’s personal circumstances
following
Panchal v Minister of
Immigration
where this Court confirmed that where a child was not yet born,
the assessment in the original Tribunal case was correctly limited
to a
consideration of the circumstances of the return of the family to their home
country and a more direct assessment in respect
of matters affecting the child
alone was not necessary.
13
[31] The
Tribunal accordingly proceeded on the basis that the fact that Ms Tiatia was
pregnant and was to give birth in April 2024
and the welfare of Mr
Taliau’s unborn child, who will be a New Zealand citizen, were
considerations for the Tribunal and relevant
to the overall assessment of
whether Mr Taliau had exceptional humanitarian circumstances.
[32] The
Tribunal found there were no exceptional circumstances. Its conclusion on this
issue is set out in the following paragraphs:
[71] The
Tribunal has considered the settlement of the appellant in New Zealand and
the loss of opportunities for him if he must
leave, his relationship with his
partner and the welfare of their unborn child, and the respective financial
contributions that he
and his partner make to their families in Samoa in line
with the weight of expectation of those families. While these are humanitarian
circumstances, they are not exceptional.
[72] The
appellant has lived in New Zealand for only a relatively brief period. He came
here as a young adult and retains strong ties
to Samoa through his biological
family, to whom he is still close, as well as his extended family members. The
appellant’s
parents remain supportive of him. He will have a place to live
and practical support while he adjusts to a new way of life. The loss
of
opportunities he may have had in New Zealand is an inevitable consequence of
deportation.
[73] The
Tribunal acknowledges that both the appellant and his partner will be distressed
at their potential separation, particularly
in light of her
13
Panchal v Minister of Immigration
[2017] NZHC 2080
at
[48]
–[54].
pregnancy. However, it is for the couple to consider their situation and to
decide together the best way forward for them. His partner,
who is a dual New
Zealand and Samoan citizen, is able to return to Samoa, where she, too, has
lived most of her life, and where they
would be able to raise their child in
proximity to their respective families. Alternatively, the couple may choose
that she remain
in New Zealand for the better opportunities it presents. Given
her ability to return to Samoa, if the partner remains in New Zealand,
their
separation would be the result of their decisions, rather than the inevitable
consequence of his deportation.
[74] The
appellant’s deportation will cause him, his partner, and members of their
respective families, both in New Zealand
and Samoa, disappointment and some
negative financial consequences. However, it has not been demonstrated that
these will have an
impact so detrimental as to be exceptional. Considered
cumulatively, the Tribunal finds that those factors do not equate to exceptional
circumstances of a humanitarian nature in the appellant’s case.
[33] Given the
finding that there were no exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian nature,
the Tribunal considered it was unnecessary
to consider either the “unjust
or unduly harsh” or “public interest” stages of the inquiry
under the statutory
test.
Test for leave
[34] Section
245 of the Act provides for an appeal to the High Court on a question of law
with leave. In deciding whether to grant
leave, the Court must have regard to
whether the question of law involved in the appeal is one that, by reason of its
general or
public importance, or for any other reason, ought to be submitted to
the High Court for its decision.
14
[35] The first
limb of s 245(3) requires an applicant to identify a “seriously arguable
question of law” which has importance
extending beyond the particular
case.
15
The existence of a leave requirement indicates an intention
to limit appeals and judicial reviews to this Court.
16
14
Immigration Act, s 245(3).
15
Chai v Minister of Immigration
[2024] NZCA 183
at
[4]
.
SK
v Immigration and Protection Tribunal
[2014] NZHC 2693 at [5];
X v Chief
Executive, Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment
[2013] NZHC 642
,
[2013] NZAR 513 at
[3]
.
Is there an arguable question of law?
[36] As
already noted, Mr Taliau’s Notice of Application for Leave says that the
Tribunal did not give sufficient weight to
the humanitarian grounds provided in
his evidence and the evidence of his partner and father. Both by reference to
the Notice of
Application and the submissions filed by Mr Ah Kuoi, counsel for
Mr Taliau, it is apparent that he is seeking a general review of
the
Tribunal’s finding and its ultimate decision. As Mr Davie submits, this is
contrary to the scheme of the Act, which places
a responsibility for determining
an appeal under s 207 on the Tribunal and limits the role of this