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AAT/ART Appeal Wins Subclass 485 Visa After Department's Narrow Regulatory Interpretation Is Challenged

Visa TypeSubclass 485
CategorySkilled Migration

Case Summary

Mr. Z's Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate Visa was refused based on the Department's excessively narrow interpretation of a specific migration regulation. The AAT/ART was persuaded that a broader, legislatively consistent interpretation was correct — overturning the refusal.

Background

Mr. Z, an international student who had completed studies in Australia, had his Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate Visa refused. The refusal did not arise from missing documents or ineligibility — it arose from the Department's interpretation of a specific migration regulation clause, which directly led to a finding that the eligibility criteria were not met. The regulation was open to interpretation and challenge.

Challenges

  • Refusal was based on a legal interpretation dispute rather than factual ineligibility — an unusual and sophisticated appeal scenario
  • The Department's regulatory interpretation needed to be challenged as excessively narrow and inconsistent with legislative intent
  • Supporting precedents and case law were needed to persuade the Tribunal that an alternative interpretation was correct

How We Helped

After meticulous legal analysis of the refusal decision, we identified that the regulation relied upon was open to interpretation. We challenged the Department's narrow reading, arguing it was inconsistent with the overall legislative intent of migration law. We conducted in-depth case law research to identify favourable precedents and supportive opinions. We prepared comprehensive legal submissions advancing the broader interpretation and presented these before the AAT, arguing that the Department's decision involved an error of law.

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Key Success Factors

  • Precise identification that the refusal rested on a disputable regulatory interpretation rather than incontestable facts
  • Legislative intent argumentation — demonstrating the Department's narrow reading was inconsistent with the broader purpose and scheme of migration law
  • Case law research yielding precedents directly supporting the broader interpretation advanced before the Tribunal
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Outcome

The AAT accepted the legal arguments, found an error of law in the Department's decision, and overturned the Subclass 485 visa refusal — enabling Mr. Z to continue his career plans in Australia.

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