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Cunliffe v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCA 79 (13 February 2012)
Last Updated: 13 February 2012
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Cunliffe v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship [2012] FCA 79
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Citation:
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Cunliffe v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCA 79
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Parties:
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LESLIE NEIL CUNLIFFE v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION
AND CITIZENSHIP
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File number:
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VID 674 of 2011
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Judge:
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DODDS-STREETON J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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MIGRATION – Minister’s decision
to cancel visa under s 501A(2) of Migration Act 1958 (Cth) – Scope
of obligation to afford procedural fairness – Whether Departmental Issues
Paper provided to Minister mischaracterised
applicant’s submissions
regarding proposed visa cancellation and if so denied opportunity to consider or
posed substantial
risk thereof – Whether Minister misunderstood or failed
to consider applicant’s submissions, or substantial risk thereof
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Whether denial of procedural fairness
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Date of last submissions:
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13 December 2011
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Place:
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Melbourne
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Holding Redlich
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Dr S Donaghue SC
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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LESLIE NEIL
CUNLIFFEApplicant
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIPRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
amended application dated 2 September 2011 be refused with costs.
Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal
Court Rules 2011.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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VID 674 of 2011
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BETWEEN:
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LESLIE NEIL CUNLIFFE Applicant
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Respondent
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JUDGE:
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DODDS-STREETON J
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DATE:
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13 FEBRUARY 2012
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
- The
principal issue in this proceeding is whether the applicant, Leslie Neil
Cunliffe, a citizen of the United Kingdom, who has lived
in Australia for
approximately 45 years, is entitled to relief under s 476A of the Migration
Act 1958 (Cth) (“the Act”). The applicant, who was
convicted of and imprisoned for serious offences in 1999, and released on
parole
in April 2011, seeks to quash the decision of the respondent, the Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship (“Minister”),
to cancel his visa, on the
basis of a failure to afford procedural fairness.
- On
10 June 2011, the Minister decided to cancel the applicant’s Class BF
Transitional (Permanent) visa pursuant to s 501A of the Act.
- The
applicant, who was notified of the decision on 16 June 2011, seeks, by an
amended application filed on 2 September 2011, the
following relief:
- Pending
the hearing and determination of this application, an interlocutory injunction
requiring the respondent and his servants and
agents to refrain from acting on
the respondent’s decision and, in particular, to refrain from removing the
applicant from
Australia.
- A
declaration that the respondent’s decision is invalid and of no
effect.
- An
order that a writ of certiorari issue quashing the respondent's decision.
- An
order that a writ of prohibition issue restraining the respondent or any other
person from acting on the respondent’s decision.
- An
order that the respondent pay the applicant's costs of and incidental to the
application.
- Such
other or further order as the Court thinks
fit.
GROUNDS
- The
grounds of the application are:
- The
respondent’s decision is affected by jurisdictional error because the
respondent failed to afford procedural fairness to
the
applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s submissions
about the best interests of each of the applicant’s
four grandchildren
when he took into account relevant international obligations arising under the
Convention on the Rights of the
Child in relation to one grandchild
only.
- The
respondent’s decision is affected by jurisdictional error because the
respondent failed to afford procedural fairness to
the
applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s submissions
in relation to the International Covenant of Civil
and Political
Rights.
- The
respondent’s decision is affected by jurisdictional error because the
respondent failed to afford procedural fairness to
the
applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s submissions
in relation to the unfairness caused to the applicant
by the conduct of the
respondent, his delegates or department who failed to correct advice given to
the applicant in 2002 that the
respondent had no power to cancel the
applicant’s visa, notwithstanding that they knew since 2003 that the
advice was no longer
correct.
- The
application was supported by written submissions dated 2 September 2011.
- The
application was opposed. Submissions dated 23 September 2011 were filed in
opposition.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
- The
factual background to the application was undisputed.
- The
applicant, who was born on 22 February 1948 in the United Kingdom, migrated to
Australia on 17 September 1967 with his parents,
brother and sister.
- In
1972, the applicant married an Australian. They had two daughters, born in 1974
and 1977.
- On
15 March 1999 the applicant applied for Australian citizenship.
- On
18 May 1999, an officer of the Department of Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs, now known as the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship (“the
Department”), made a decision to approve the application for
citizenship.
- On
18 October 1999, however, the applicant was arraigned and pleaded guilty to
eight criminal offences committed on 10 and 17 May
1999.
- The
applicant was convicted of the relevant offences, which included kidnap,
blackmail and rape. Whilst impersonating a police officer,
he kidnapped a young
woman at gunpoint, handcuffed her, placed a hood over her head, and drove her to
a shed that he had prepared
in advance by padding the walls and bolting a chair
to the floor. He tied her to the chair, blindfolded her, and placed headphones
on her head to prevent her from hearing surrounding sounds. He then placed a
realistic looking explosive device on the victim’s
chest, took a
photograph of her, and forced her to record a ransom demand to her parents.
After leaving the victim in the shed for
several hours while he made his ransom
demand, he returned to the shed, cut the victim’s pants away, and raped
and indecently
assaulted her. He then left her in the shed again for
several hours. The victim eventually freed herself from her bonds, screamed
for
help and was rescued from the shed.
- On
19 November 1999 the applicant was sentenced to a period of 20 years
imprisonment with a minimum non-parole period of 16 years.
- On
18 August 2000 the Victorian Court of Appeal allowed the applicant’s
appeal against sentence and reduced it to 15 years
imprisonment with a minimum
non-parole period of 12 years.
- By
a letter dated 28 August 2000, the Department advised the applicant that
it was considering cancelling his visa.
- By
a letter dated 18 February 2002, the Department advised the applicant that,
following a recent High Court decision, the Minister
no longer had the power to
deport him and was no longer considering cancelling his visa.
- In
2003, the High Court, in Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs [2003] HCA 72; (2003) 218 CLR 28 (“Shaw”), held that British
subjects who arrived after 26 January 1949 and have not become citizens are
“aliens” for the
purposes of the Act. Shaw established that,
contrary to the Department’s advice to the applicant in February 2002, the
Minister did have power to deport
him. Nevertheless, neither the Minister or
the Department, nor any delegate, notified the applicant in 2003 that as a
result of
the High Court’s decision in Shaw, he would now be
vulnerable to deportation and it would appear that the applicant was not
informed of that possibility until 2010.
- By
a Notice dated 4 June 2010, the Department advised the applicant that it was
again considering cancelling his visa under s 501 of the Act. The applicant
signed an acknowledgement of receipt form on 22 June 2010.
- Written
submissions (with supporting documents) dated 13 July 2010 by the
applicant’s legal representative, Julian McMahon,
were made on the
applicant’s behalf.
- Written
submissions (with supporting documents) dated 31 January 2011 were made on the
applicant’s behalf by Rob Daly of Victoria
Legal Aid.
- On
14 February 2011 the Minister’s delegate made a decision not to cancel the
applicant’s visa (“the delegate’s
decision”).
- On
16 April 2011 the applicant, who had been granted parole at the earliest
available date, was released from prison.
- By
a Notice dated 3 May 2011, the applicant was advised that the Minister intended
to consider setting aside the delegate’s
decision and using his personal
power under s 501A(2) of the Act to cancel the applicant’s visa.
- Further
submissions (with supporting documents) were made by the applicant and on his
behalf by Mr McMahon on 27 May 2011.
- On
or about 8 June 2011, the Department forwarded to the Minister a submission in
confidence dated 8 June 2011 attaching an Issues
Paper “outlining the
relevant issues for your consideration” and a draft statement of reasons,
which (should the Minister
decide to use his power under s 501A(2) to set
aside the delegate’s decision and cancel the applicant’s visa) could
be annotated and signed if it adequately
reflected the reasons, or amended to
better reflect them.
- The
submissions in confidence set out some background facts.
- The
Issues Paper stated, inter alia:
To Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
SUBJECT CUNLIFFE, Leslie Neil (22 February 1948)
Consideration of visa cancellation under subsection 501A(2) of the Migration
Act 1958 (the Act).
PURPOSE To provide information on this case and seek your decisions on:
- whether Mr CUNLIFFE passes the character test at subsection 501(6) of the Act;
and
- if not, whether to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE’s Class BF Transitional
(Permanent) visa under subsection 501A(2) of the Act.
RECOMMENDED ACTION That you consider this Issues Paper and the attached
documentation, then indicate your decision as to whether
Mr CUNLIFFE’s
visa should be cancelled under
subsection 501A(2).
- Under
the heading “Issues for Consideration of Possible Visa Cancellation Under
Subsection 501A(2) of the Migration Act 1958”, the Issues Paper set
out:
PART A: IMMIGRATION BACKGROUND
PART B: NOTIFICATION TO VISA HOLDER / PROCEDURAL FAIRNESS
PART C: CONSIDERATION OF VISA CANCELLATION – THE CHARACTER TEST
PART D: NATIONAL INTEREST
PART E: CONSIDERATION OF VISA CANCELLATION – EXERCISE OF YOUR
DISCRETION
- Under
the heading “PRIMARY CONSIDERATIONS”, the Issues Paper set out
“four primary considerations in the Direction”
and references to
relevant available evidence. (The Direction referred to was a
“Direction under s 499 of the Act issued by former Minister
Evans” and “[which] remains in effect, to guide delegates and the
AAT in the exercise
of the discretion whether to refuse or cancel a visa under
section 501 on the ground that the visa holder does not pass the character
test” (at [29]). The Issues Paper stated that the Direction
did not apply
to the exercise of the Minister’s power under s 501A(2), but it was
open to him to be guided by factors there set out and to accord them whatever
weight he considered appropriate).
- The
five primary considerations identified were:
(a) protection of the
Australian community;
(b) risk that the conduct may be repeated;
(c) whether the person was a minor when they began living in Australia;
(d) length of time that a person has been ordinarily resident in Australia;
and
(e) international obligations.
- The
Issues Paper included, under “International Obligations”,
discussions under “Best Interests of the Child”
and
“Obligations under the Refugees Convention and other relevant
international obligations”.
- Under
the heading “Other (Non-Primary) Considerations”, the Issues Paper
included discussions under “Relationships
in Australia and any hardship to
others which may result from removal of the person”, “Age/Health
issues of person”,
“The person’s links to the country to which
they would be removed and the difficulties which may face them there”
and
“Whether the person has previously been formally advised about the
consequences of their conduct for migration purposes.”
- Part
E of the Issues Paper set out the attachments thereto, which relevantly included
Attachment O (“Submissions from Rob Daly
of Victoria Legal Aid, dated 31
January 2011”), Attachment T (“Submissions from Julian McMahon of
Gorman Chambers, dated
13 July 2010”) and Attachment NN (“Further
submissions from Mr CUNLIFFE’s legal representative, Julian McMahon
of
Gorman Chambers, dated 27 May 2011”), which were made on behalf of the
applicant.
- The
Issues Paper made no recommendation as to the decision which the Minister, in
the exercise of his discretion, should reach.
It was not provided to the
applicant prior to the Minister’s decision.
- On
10 June 2011, the Minister decided to exercise his personal power under s
501A(2) of the Act to set aside the delegate’s decision and to cancel the
applicant’s Class BF Transitional (Permanent) visa.
The Minister signed a
document entitled “VISA CANCELLATION UNDER SUBSECTION 501A(2) OF THE
MIGRATION ACT 1958 – DECISION BY THE MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP” dated 10 June 2011, which
stated:
I have considered all relevant matters including an assessment of the
character test as defined by subsection 501(6) of the Migration Act
1958, Ministerial Direction 41 made under section 499 of that Act and all
evidence before me, including that provided by, on behalf of, or in relation to
Leslie Neil CUNLIFFE in connection
with the possible cancellation of his Class
BF Transitional (Permanent) visa.
...
Cancellation outcome
(d) I reasonably suspect that Mr CUNLIFFE does not pass the character test
and Mr CUNLIFFE has not satisfied me that he passes the character
test and I am satisfied that cancellation of his visa is in the national
interest. I have decided to exercise my discretion under subsection 501A(2) to
set aside the original decision of my delegate not to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE’s
visa and to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE’s visa.
I hereby cancel Mr
CUNLIFFE’s Class BF Transitional (Permanent) visa. My reasons for this
decision are set out in the attached
Statement of Reasons.
Chris Bowen
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
Date: 10/06/11
- The
Minister also signed a Statement of Reasons dated 10 June 2011, which
stated:
This statement relates to the Class BF Transitional (Permanent) visa held by Mr
CUNLIFFE at the time of my decision. Any other visas
held by the visa holder
(other than a protection visa or a visa specified by regulations, neither of
which are relevant here) will
be cancelled by operation of law, pursuant to
subsection 501F(3) of the Act.
1. On 10 February 2011 my delegate reasonably suspected that Mr CUNLIFFE
does not pass the character test and was not satisfied that he, Mr
CUNLIFFE, passes the character test. However, he decided NOT to exercise
his discretion under subsection 501(2) of the Act to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE’s
visa but decided to warn Mr CUNLIFFE about his conduct in relation to
subsection 501(2).
CHARACTER TEST
2. On 19 November 1999 Mr CUNLIFFE was convicted and sentenced in the Supreme
Court of Victoria of the following offences. The sentences
were varied in the
Supreme Court of Victoria - Court of Appeal on 18 August 2000 as follows:
• Kidnapping - sentenced to six years imprisonment
• Rape - sentenced to six years imprisonment
• Blackmail - sentenced to five years
imprisonment
- False
Imprisonment (Common Law) - sentenced to four years imprisonment
- Bomb Hoax-Make
Statement/Convey Info - sentenced to two years imprisonment
- Carry Firearm
Whilst Commit Ind/Offence - sentenced to two years imprisonment
- False
Imprisonment (Common Law) - sentenced to one year
imprisonment
• Indecent Assault - sentenced to one year
imprisonment.
As a result of these sentences of imprisonment, Mr CUNLIFFE has a substantial
criminal record within the meaning of subsection 501(7) of the Act. I find that
due to his substantial criminal record he does not pass the character test under
paragraph 501(6)(a) of
the Act.
National Interest
3. I am satisfied that it is in the national interest that the visa held by Mr
CUNLIFFE be cancelled under subsection 501A(2). In making this determination I
gave consideration to a number of factors, including the seriousness and nature
of the crimes committed
by Mr CUNLIFFE listed
above.
4. I took into account that the offences of which Mr CUNLIFFE was convicted on
19 November 1999 are of a serious and particularly
heinous nature, in that they
involved him kidnapping and falsely imprisoning a young woman and taking
advantage of her, whilst defenceless
and deprived of her liberty, for his own
sexual gratification.
5. I also took into account the judges’ comments that Mr CUNLIFFE's
crimes “create fear and abhorrence in the community”, and
that “the general revulsion of the community at large at such
crimes” cannot be ignored.
6. I have noted and acknowledged that Mr CUNLIFFE did not have an extensive
prior criminal history, that forensic assessments of
Mr CUNLIFFE’s
psychological state suggest that he was suffering from depression and suicidal
thoughts before and at the time
of these offences and that the suicidal thoughts
continued while he was incarcerated. I further note his legal representative's
claims that he has a supportive family here in Australia and is at low risk of
re-offending, and a psychologist's assessment that
also concludes that he is at
low risk of re-offending. I have also borne in mind that the consequences of
any further offending
of a similar nature to that he has already committed would
be extremely grave.
7. Having regard to these considerations, I am satisfied that the cancellation
of Mr CUNLIFFE's visa is in the national interest.
DISCRETION
8. Having found that Mr CUNLIFFE does not pass the character test and that it
would be in the national interest to cancel his visa,
I carefully assessed all
of the information set out in the Issues Paper and considered whether to
exercise my discretion to set aside
my delegate's decision and to cancel Mr
CUNLIFFE's visa. In doing so, I had regard to the considerations in Ministerial
Direction
No. 41 - Visa refusal and cancellation under section 501 ("the
Direction") - in so far as I believed it to be relevant to the exercise of my
powers under subsection 501A(2). While the Direction does not apply to the
exercise of my powers under section 501A and in any event does not bind me, I
considered that the matters set out in Part B of the Direction provide
useful guidance for the
exercise of my discretion under subsection
501A(2).
Primary Considerations
9. I gave primary consideration to the protection of the Australian community,
(taking into account the seriousness and nature of
the conduct and the risk that
the conduct may be repeated), the age at which the person commenced living in
Australia, the length
of time that the person has lived in Australia and any
relevant international obligations.
Protection of Australian Community
Seriousness and nature of conduct
10. I noted that the offences above of which Mr CUNLIFFE has been convicted
include Rape and Indecent Assault which are crimes of
violence and of a serious
sexual nature, as well as Blackmail, Kidnapping and False Imprisonment (Common
Law), all of which are of
types listed in paragraphs 10.1.1(2)(c), (d) and (l)
of the Direction as being of particular concern, and for which Mr CUNLIFFE
has
been penalised by substantial terms of imprisonment and sentenced as a
serious sexual offender.
11. I further noted that the crimes occurred when Mr CUNLIFFE took
advantage of a vulnerable victim and were thus also abhorrent
to the Australian
community, according to the Direction.
12. I took into account the forensic assessment of Mr CUNLIFFE's
psychological state at the time and before the offences as well
as his personal
circumstances particularly the financial and marital problems, and that he is
reported to have shown remorse particularly
with respect to the sexually based
offending.
Risk that the conduct may be repeated
13. I have noted that Mr CUNLIFFE did not have an extensive criminal history
prior to the offences committed in May 1999.
14. I further noted that there is no record that he has breached any judicial
orders.
15. I have noted that in the appeal judgment of 18 August 2000, the judge
remarked that in custody Mr CUNLIFFE was regarded as suicidal
and that prison
reports list an incident of self harm.
16. I note claims made by Mr CUNLIFFE's legal representative that
Mr CUNLIFFE is a low risk of re-offending because of his employment
history, family support and insight he has shown into his offending behaviour
through ongoing counselling whilst in custody.
17. I have taken into account the psychological assessment of Mr CUNLIFFE,
the various supporting statements from Mr CUNLIFFE as
well as evidence of
work and educational courses that Mr CUNLIFFE has
completed.
Age on commencing residence in Australia
18. As Mr CUNLIFFE commenced residence in Australia at the age of 19, this
consideration is not relevant in this case.
Length of residence in Australia
19. I have noted that Mr CUNLIFFE has lived in Australia for over 43 years.
I further noted that 11 years and six months of that
period have been spent
in prison. I noted that his first offending occurred in 1974, seven years after
arriving in Australia and
that he did not offend again until May
1999.
20. I have noted that Mr CUNLIFFE has been gainfully employed and has operated
his own business prior to his custodial term. I have
also noted that he has
found employment since his release in April 2011.
International Obligations
Best Interests of the Child
21. I have noted that Mr CUNLIFFE has a grandson and indicated that he is very
close to him and helped to raise him for about five
years while his daughter was
unable to care for her child due to a drug addiction. I note further that his
grandson has been in
the care of his biological parents since the late
1990s.
22. The evidence available to me does not indicate that there are any other
minor children whose best interests may be significantly
affected by the
cancellation of Mr CUNLIFFE's visa.
Other International Obligations
23. I note that Mr CUNLIFFE has not made any claims which require assessment in
relation to Australia's international non-refoulement
obligations, nor does the
other available evidence indicate that such an assessment is appropriate in this
case.
24. I also note the submissions dated 27 May 2011 made on Mr CUNLIFFE's
behalf by his legal representative in relation to the International
Convention
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). However, I do not consider that the
claims support a finding that Australia is
at any risk of breaching its
international non-refoulement obligations under the ICCPR or the Convention
Against Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
(CAT).
Other (non-primary) Considerations
25. I note that Mr CUNLIFFE is divorced and not in a relationship at present,
though he is on amicable terms with his ex-wife, who
has provided supporting
statements on his behalf. I also note that he has two Australian citizen
daughters aged 33 and 36, as well
as three other grandchildren in addition to
the grandson mentioned above and I take in account one daughter's plea for his
visa not
to be cancelled.
26_ I noted that Mr CUNLIFFE has other family in Australia including his elderly
mother, a brother and a sister who have provided
letters of support as well as
several uncles, aunts, cousins, nieces and
nephews.
27. I noted that Mr CUNLIFFE has undertaken to provide primary care for his
elderly mother upon his release from prison. I noted
further that at
present Mr CUNLIFFE is resident in a suburb of Melbourne while his mother lives
in Corio, a suburb of Geelong.
28. I have taken into account that Mr CUNLIFFE is 63 years old and suffers from
"chronic dysthymia" and that he indicates that he
is on prescription medication
for depression and asthma, and that he receives weekly psychological
counselling. I have also noted
that Mr CUNLIFFE has a history of
mental health issues, amongst them self harm and suicide
attempts.
29. Mr CUNLIFFE indicates that he no longer knows of or has "any friends and
relatives of any kind in the UK", and that he "will
have no where to stay, no
income and no way of getting medical assistance for my asthma", should he be
removed to his country of
nationality.
30. I note that, prior to the decision of my delegate on 10 February 2011 to
warn Mr CUNLIFFE about his conduct in relation to subsection 501(2), Mr CUNLIFFE
had not previously been formally advised about the consequences of his conduct
for migration purposes.
CONCLUSION
31. I have considered all relevant matters including (1) an assessment against
the character test as defined by subsection 501(6) of the Act, (2) whether
cancelling Mr CUNLIFFE's visa is in the national interest, (3) whether to
exercise my discretion to set aside
my delegate's decision and to cancel Mr
CUNLIFFE's visa, (4) Ministerial Direction 41 under section 499 of that Act, as
I considered appropriate, and (5) all other evidence available to me, including
evidence provided by, or on behalf
of Mr CUNLIFFE.
32. In reaching my decision, I concluded that it was in the national interest to
cancel Mr CUNLIFFE's visa. This was primarily because
of the particularly
serious nature of the relevant offences and the circumstances in which they
occurred, and bearing in mind that,
while there are indications that the risk of
Mr CUNLIFFE re-offending probably is low, the consequences of any further
offending
of a similar nature to that he has already committed would be
extremely grave. In particular, I bore in mind that Mr CUNLIFFE's
crimes
created fear and abhorrence as well as general revulsion in the community. I
find that the national interest considerations
outweigh Mr CUNLIFFE's family and
other links with Australia formed during his over 43 years of residence in this
country, and any
other countervailing factors identified
above.
33. Having given full consideration to all of these matters, I decided to
exercise my discretion to set aside my delegate's decision
of 10 February 2011
and to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE's Class BF Transitional (Permanent) visa under
subsection 501A(2).
- The
applicant was notified of the Minister’s decision by a letter dated and
hand-delivered on 16 June 2011.
RELEVANT LEGISLATION
- Section
501A of the Act provides:
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a delegate of the Minister; or
(b) the Administrative Appeals Tribunal;
makes a decision (the original decision):
(c) not to exercise the power conferred by subsection 501(1) to refuse to grant
a visa to the person; or
(d) not to exercise the power conferred by subsection 501(2) to cancel a visa
that has been granted to a person;
whether or not the person satisfies the delegate or Tribunal that the person
passes the character test and whether or not the delegate
or Tribunal reasonably
suspects that the person does not pass the character test.
Action by Minister—natural justice applies
(2) The Minister may set aside the original decision and:
(a) refuse to grant a visa to the person; or
(b) cancel a visa that has been granted to the person;
if:
(c) the Minister reasonably suspects that the person does not pass the character
test (as defined by section 501); and
(d) the person does not satisfy the Minister that the person passes the
character test; and
(e) the Minister is satisfied that the refusal or cancellation is in the
national interest.
Action by Minister—natural justice does not apply
(3) The Minister may set aside the original decision and:
(a) refuse to grant a visa to the person; or
(b) cancel a visa that has been granted to the person;
if:
(c) the Minister reasonably suspects that the person does not pass the character
test (as defined by section 501); and
(d) the Minister is satisfied that the refusal or cancellation is in the
national interest.
(4) The rules of natural justice, and the code of procedure set out in
Subdivision AB of Division 3 of Part 2, do not apply to a decision under
subsection (3).
(4A) Under subsection (2) or (3), the Minister may cancel a visa that has been
granted to a person even if the original decision
under subsection (1) was a
decision not to exercise the power conferred by subsection 501(1) to refuse to
grant a visa to the person.
Minister’s exercise of power
(5) The power under subsection (2) or (3) may only be exercised by the Minister
personally.
(6) The Minister does not have a duty to consider whether to exercise the power
under subsection (2) or (3) in respect of the original
decision, whether or not
the Minister is requested to do so, or in any other circumstances.
Decision not reviewable under Part 5 or 7
(7) A decision under subsection (2) or (3) is not reviewable under Part 5 or 7.
- Section
476A of the Act relevantly provides:
(1) Despite any other law, including section 39B of the Judiciary Act
1903 and section 8 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act
1977, the Federal Court has original jurisdiction in relation to a migration
decision if, and only if:
...
(c) the decision is a privative clause decision, or purported privative clause
decision, made personally by the Minister under section
501, 501A, 501B or 501C;
or
...
(2) Where the Federal Court has jurisdiction in relation to a migration decision
under paragraph (1)(a), (b) or (c), that jurisdiction
is the same as the
jurisdiction of the High Court under paragraph 75(v) of the
Constitution.
DISCUSSION
- It
was common ground that, on the basis of the High Court decisions in
Plaintiff S157/2002 v Commonwealth of Australia (2003) 211 CLR 476
and Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs; Ex
parte Applicants S134/2002 [2003] HCA 1; (2002) 211 CLR 441, a decision that involves the
failure to comply with the principles of natural justice is not a privative
clause decision because
it is not a decision made “under” the Act.
However, pursuant to s 476A(1)(c), the Federal Court has original
jurisdiction
in relation to a purported privative clause decision made,
relevantly, under s 501A. It was not disputed that in the present case,
if the
Minister failed to afford procedural fairness, the relevant decision would be a
purported privative clause decision affected
by jurisdictional error, on
the basis of which a writ of prohibition may issue.
- Where
the applicant has established an entitlement to the grant of prohibition,
certiorari can be granted as an ancillary remedy
to a grant of relief under
s 75(v) of the Constitution (see Construction, Forestry, Mining and
Energy Union v Australian Industrial Relations Commission [2007] FCAFC 32; (2007) 157 FCR 260
at 278).
Parties’ submissions
- The
applicant submitted that:
A Commonwealth officer who denies procedural fairness in the exercise of a
statutory power exceeds jurisdiction in a manner that
is capable of attracting
the constitutional writ of prohibition (Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex Parte
Aala [2000] HCA 57; (2000) 204 CLR 82). When a statute confers power upon a public
official to destroy, defeat or prejudice a person’s rights, interests or
legitimate
expectations, the rules of natural justice regulate the exercise of
that power unless they are excluded by plain words of necessary
intendment
(Annetts v McCann [1990] HCA 57; (1990) 170 CLR 596). The exercise of the
Minister’s power under s 501A(2) is conditioned upon the observance
of procedural fairness.
- The
respondent expressly accepted the above principles, including the submission
that the power conferred by s 501A(2) is qualified
by the requirement to
afford procedural fairness. The respondent also accepted that if want of
procedural fairness were established,
the applicant should not be refused relief
on discretionary grounds.
- It
was common ground that the applicant had not passed the character test defined
in s 501(6) and (7) of the Act. Nor did the applicant
contend that it was
not open to the Minister to be satisfied that it was in the national interest to
cancel his visa. The applicant
acknowledged that the court, in the context of
judicial review, was not concerned with the merits of the decision and that, as
stated
in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZJSS (2010) 243 CLR
164 (“SZJSS”) at [36], the legal principles concerning
procedural fairness operate only to ensure that the process of decision-making
is
fair.
- The
applicant alleged that he was denied procedural fairness in the treatment of
three particular submissions made on his behalf.
Each particular complaint is
underpinned by the applicant’s fundamental contentions on the requirements
for a fair and unbiased
hearing consonant with procedural fairness for a
decision under s 501A of the Act.
- The
applicant’s case, as presented at the hearing, amplified and in some
respects diverged from that advanced in written submissions.
In the written
submissions, the applicant contended that a fair and unbiased hearing, as an
essential element of procedural fairness,
required not only an opportunity to be
heard, but also required the decision-maker both to consider and to understand
the claims
and submissions of the affected person.
- The
applicant submitted that, even where an opportunity to make submissions was
afforded, procedural unfairness, and hence, jurisdictional
error, would result
if the decision-maker misconceived or misunderstood the applicant’s
submissions, which was tantamount to
denial of a hearing; or alternatively
(although no misunderstanding by the decision-maker were established) if the
procedure entailed
a substantial risk of such a misunderstanding or
misconstruction and the decision-maker provided no satisfactory explanation of
how
that risk was overcome.
- The
applicant conceded that in the present case, he was invited and afforded the
opportunity to make submissions, that all the relevant
submissions were provided
to the Minister attached to the Issues Paper, and that the Minister expressly
stated that he had considered
“all relevant matters” and “all
evidence before me, including that provided by, on behalf of, or in relation
to”
Mr Cunliffe in connection with the possible cancellation of his visa.
The applicant also conceded that the Minister was not obliged
to accept his
submissions nor to deal with every non-substantial submission in his statement
of reasons.
- At
the hearing, counsel for the applicant submitted, however, that procedural
unfairness and hence jurisdictional error were established
in relation to three
specified submissions on one or more of the following bases:
(a) The
Minister’s reasons demonstrated his misunderstanding of (or failure to
consider) some of the applicant’s substantive
submissions.
(b) The Issues Paper contained distortions, mischaracterisations or
misunderstandings of some of the applicant’s submissions
and, as the
Issues Paper was not a mere competing submission, but rather, served “an
elevated purpose” of purporting
impartially to synthesise and analyse
material, the Issues Paper in this case effectively disabled the Minister from
adequately or
properly considering the applicant’s submissions.
(c) Alternatively, irrespective of whether the applicant could establish that
the Minister misunderstood or misconceived the relevant
submissions or that the
Issues Paper, by its mischaracterisations, disabled him from properly
considering them, there was a sufficiently
substantial risk of such
misunderstanding or disablement. That risk was not addressed by providing the
original submissions to the
Minister or by the Minister’s statement that
he had considered all evidence on behalf of the applicant.
- Before
me, counsel for the applicant did not contend that the use of an Issues Paper in
itself constituted, contrary to procedural
fairness, a “disabling”
impediment to the Minister’s consideration of submissions, or that it
would be necessary
to provide the applicant with an Issues Paper for comment
prior to the decision in every case. Counsel nevertheless submitted that
the
failure to provide the Issues Paper to the applicant for comment in this case
was an additional instance of procedural unfairness,
as it contained adverse
material which the applicant had no opportunity to address.
- Section
501G of the Act relevantly
provides:
(1) If a decision is made under subsection 501(1) or (2) or 501A(2) or section
501B or 501F to:
(a) refuse to grant a visa to a person; or
(b) cancel a visa that has been granted to a person;
the Minister must give the person a written notice that:
...
(e) sets out the reasons (other than non-disclosable information) for the
decision;
...
- It
was not, however, a ground of complaint, and the applicant did not allege, that
the Minister’s reasons were inadequate.
Indirectly, however, the
necessary content and quality of reasons under s 501G were relevant, as the
applicant contended that statements
and omissions in the reasons supported the
inference that the Minister did not consider or understand and hence hear his
submissions,
or alternatively, established that the risk thereof could not be
excluded.
- The
applicant contended that the Minister’s assertion that he had considered
the applicant’s evidence could not be taken
at face value, as the reasons
indicated that he had considered the mischaracterisations of the
applicant’s submissions allegedly
contained in the Issues Paper or in
other instances had otherwise misunderstood or failed altogether to consider
them.
- At
the hearing, counsel for the applicant conceded that the Minister’s
reasons need not address every minor aspect of an applicant’s
submissions,
but at one point, apparently contended that the Minister must deal or grapple
with all substantial submissions in such
a way as to satisfy the reader that he
had actually considered them. Counsel submitted that the Minister was obliged,
“having
received the submissions, to deal with [their] substance”,
and the applicant was entitled to have his case decided on the basis
on which he
presented it.
- Ultimately,
and perhaps inconsistently, counsel for the applicant conceded that the
Minister, pursuant to the broad discretion under
s 501A, was not obliged to
take into account any particular factor, nor expressly to state that he had
taken into account a particular
submission but had decided that it was not
relevant, and could give it no weight. Counsel submitted that the Minister
at least had
to turn his mind to a submission in the sense of hearing it.
- The
respondent, while acknowledging that procedural fairness required the Minister
to hear and to consider the applicant’s
submissions, contended that it did
not oblige the Minister to understand them. While a failure to understand a
particular submission
might, in some circumstances, constitute error, it would
not amount to a breach of procedural fairness. The respondent also disputed
that an applicant was entitled to have a case decided under s 501A on the
grounds he or she presented. To the contrary, in the respondent’s
submission, the Minister was entitled, subject to affording procedural fairness,
to exercise the power under s 501A on such basis
as he chose.
- The
only two mandatory matters to be considered as a precondition of the power were
an unsatisfied reasonable suspicion that the
applicant did not pass the
character test and satisfaction as to the national interest. The respondent
submitted that in such a
context, the Minister’s reasons were required
only to record the matters he regarded as relevant to, and operative in, his
decision, which would not necessarily include any matters relied on or submitted
by the applicant. In particular, the Minister was
not obliged to take
particular submissions into account, to grapple or engage with them, or to
demonstrate that he had done so in
his reasons, by, inter alia,
explaining any rejection.
- Alternatively,
the respondent submitted that the applicant failed, in any event, to establish
procedural unfairness in this case,
because the alleged mischaracterisations,
misconstructions or distortions in the Issues Paper could not be established,
and there
was no basis in the Minister’s reasons or otherwise to infer
that he had not considered the applicant’s submissions in
accordance with
his statement or had failed to understand them.
- The
applicant conceded that the use of Issues Papers was well-established and did
not in itself amount to procedural unfairness.
The respondent submitted that it
could not be tenably contended that the Issues Paper in this case (even if it
did mischaracterise
the relevant submissions) either disabled the Minister from
considering or understanding the applicant’s submissions or posed
a risk
thereof, because the primary material was provided to the Minister in full, was
specifically referred to in the sections of
the Issues Paper containing the
alleged mischaracterisations, and the Minister stated that he had considered the
material.
Relevant authorities
- The
applicant cited no direct authority to support his submission that procedural
fairness required the Minister, in making a decision
under s 501A of the Act, to
hear, understand and respond to the applicant’s submissions. The
applicant relied principally
on statements of Gummow and Callinan JJ in
Dranichnikov v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003)
197 ALR 389 (“Dranichnikov”), which although decided in
relation to a different statutory regime, were submitted to apply equally to a
decision under
s 501A of the Act.
- In
Dranichnikov, the applicant claimed refugee status on the ground of a
well-founded fear of persecution due to his claimed membership of a group
of
businessmen in Russia who publicly criticised law enforcement authorities for
failing to take action against crime or criminals.
The Refugee Review Tribunal
found against the applicant, as he could not establish that any persecution was
based on his membership
of the social group of businessman in Russia
generally.
- In
Dranichnikov, the High Court majority held that the applicant was
entitled to discretionary relief under s 75(v) of the Constitution, as the
tribunal’s failure to decide a question necessary for its task had denied
him natural justice and was a constructive
failure to exercise
jurisdiction.
- Gummow
and Callinan JJ (with whom Hayne J agreed) held that the tribunal misstated and
failed to deal with the case presented to
it.
- Their
Honours did not, in terms, state that natural justice required the tribunal to
understand the applicant’s claim or that
a misunderstanding of the basis
on which the claim was put would constitute procedural unfairness. Rather, they
stated that a failure
to respond to a substantial argument was a failure to
accord natural justice, as follows (at
[24]):
To fail to respond to a substantial, clearly articulated argument relying upon
established facts was at least to fail to accord Mr
Dranichnikov natural
justice.
- Their
Honours stated that although a “failure to accord natural justice did not
provide a statutory basis for a review of a
decision of the tribunal”,
what occurred amounted to a constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction (at
[24]-[25]).
- They
described the tribunal’s task as entailing a number of steps, including
determination of an initial question whether the
class to which the applicant
claimed to belong was capable of constituting a social group for the purposes of
the Convention. Their
Honours identified the tribunal’s error as follows
(at [27]):
The tribunal failed to decide the first question. It decided another question,
whether Mr Dranichnikov’s membership of a social
group, namely, of
“businessmen in Russia” was reason for his persecution and
relevantly nothing more.
- Hayne
J stated that the tribunal failed to exercise jurisdiction because “it did
not consider the claim which the applicant
was then making, and had earlier
made, for protection” (at [95]).
- As
the respondent submitted, under the statutory regime at issue in
Dranichnikov, it was mandatory for the Refugee Review Tribunal to
consider each basis of a person’s claim to have a well-founded fear of
persecution. As Finkelstein J subsequently explained in SZDGC v
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship and Anor [2008] FCA 1638; (2008) 105 ALD 25
at [14], the approach of Gummow and Callinan JJ in Dranichnikov
was:
consistent with several previous decisions in the Federal Court. For example in
Htun v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 1802; (2001) 194 ALR
244 at [42], Allsop J (with whom Spender J agreed)
said:
[42] The requirement to review the decision under s 414 of the Act requires the
tribunal to consider the claims of the applicant.
To make a decision without
having considered all the claims is to fail to complete the exercise of
jurisdiction embarked on. The
claim or claims and its or their component
integers are considerations made mandatorily relevant by the Act for
consideration ...
It is to be distinguished from errant fact finding. The
nature and extent of the task of the tribunal revealed by the terms of the
Act
... make it clear that the tribunal’s statutorily required task is to
examine and deal with the claims for asylum made
by the
applicant.
- In
contrast, the claims advanced by an applicant are not mandatory considerations
in the Minister’s exercise of the power conferred
by s 501A(2) of the Act.
In Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v
Nystrom [2006] HCA 50; (2006) 228 CLR 566 at [126] (citing Deane J in Sean Investments
Pty Ltd v MacKellar (1981) 38 ALR 363 at 375), Heydon and Crennan JJ, with
whom Gleeson CJ also agreed, stated as follows in relation to the analogous
discretion to cancel
a visa under s 501(2) of the
Act:
[W]here relevant considerations are not specified, it is largely for the
decision-maker, in the light of the matters placed before
him by the parties, to
determine which matters he regards as relevant and the comparative importance to
be accorded to matters which
he so regards.
- Their
Honours (at [127]) approved a decision of the Full Court of this court in
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Huynh
[2004] FCAFC 256; (2004) 139 FCR 505, which held that:
[G]iven the breadth of 501, it is not possible to imply into the Act “some
obligation on the Minister’s part to consider
specific factors, personal
to the visa holder, such as the circumstances surrounding the offences they have
committed.”
Parliament has left it to the Minister to decide the matters which are relevant
to whether a person who fails the character test
should be permitted to remain
in Australia.
- In
such a context, I am not persuaded that the Minister is obliged to “deal
with” all the applicant’s substantive
submissions in relation to the
exercise of that power, including matters the Minister has decided not to rely
upon and to refer to,
and explain reasons for any rejection of, all
non-peripheral submissions. Although the Minister must consider any submissions
that
are made, he or she is not required to address matters that are not
considered relevant.
- Therefore,
it does not follow from the statement of Gummow and Callinan JJ in
Dranichnikov that the failure of the Refugee Review Tribunal reviewing a
decision under s 414 of the Act “to respond to a substantial,
clearly articulated argument relying on established facts was at least to fail
to accord [natural
justice]” that procedural fairness requires the
Minister, exercising power under s 501A(2) of the Act, to understand the
applicant’s
submissions, to set them out accurately or at all in the
reasons, or to respond to them, including by assigning reasons for rejection.
- The
applicant submitted that the principle in Dranichnikov was not restricted
to statutory regimes where the decision-maker was required to address mandatory
considerations, but had been applied
by the High Court in Plaintiff M61/2010E
v The Commonwealth (2010) 243 CLR 319 (“Plaintiff
M61”), in relation to s 46A(2) of the Act, which conferred
a power which, like s 501A(2), was discretionary both in its exercise and
the consideration of whether to exercise
it.
- For
the purposes of consideration of the exercise of the Minister’s power
under s 46A(2) of the Act a “non-statutory”
process was
established whereby the Department assessed whether Australia owed protection
obligations to an applicant under the Refugees
Convention, subject to a review
by an independent contractor. If it were concluded that Australia owed
protection obligations, the
Department prepared a submission to the Minister for
consideration of the exercise of power under either s 46A or s 195A(2)
of the
Act. In Plaintiff M61, a reviewer considered only one set of
claims on which one plaintiff claimed refugee status, and did not refer to
another set of
claims.
- The
High Court observed that exercise of the power to “lift the bar”
under s 46A “on the footing that Australia
owed protection
obligations to the plaintiff would be pointless unless that determination was
made according to the criteria and
principles identified in the Migration
Act, as construed and applied by the courts of Australia” (at
[88]). It concluded at [90], citing Dranichnikov, that failing to
address one of the plaintiff’s claimed bases for his fear of persecution
was a denial of procedural fairness,
because “the Minister was not
informed about a matter that bore upon the question that the Minister had asked
to be considered:
whether Australia owed the plaintiff protection
obligations”.
- As
the respondent submitted, the process of evaluation of claims and review in
Plaintiff M61 paralleled the process at issue in Dranichnikov, and
the Minister’s decision was predicated on implied, if not express,
relevant considerations, about which he had sought
to be informed. The decision
in Plaintiff M61 was not therefore a persuasive basis for holding that
statements in Dranichnikov apply to decisions under s 501A(2) of the
Act by requiring the Minister, as a matter of procedural fairness, to address
all of an applicant’s substantive claims
and in such manner as to
demonstrate that they were accurately understood.
- The
respondent submitted that if the reasoning in Dranichnikov applied in
this context, the Minister’s failure to understand and hence respond to
particular submissions (if established)
would not amount to jurisdictional
error, because it was not a “fundamental mistake at the threshold”
or a “basic
misunderstanding” of the case (Dranichnikov at
[87]-[88]).
- The
respondent relied on Kirby J’s statement in Dranichnikov at [88]
that:
it is not every mistake in understanding the facts, in applying the law or in
reasoning to a conclusion that will amount to a constructive
failure to exercise
jurisdiction. But where, as here, the mistake is essentially definitional, and
amounts to a basic misunderstanding
of the case brought by an applicant, the
resulting flow is so serious as to undermine the lawfulness of the decision in a
fundamental
way.
- The
applicant submitted that Kirby J’s statement was in conflict with
McHugh J’s approach in SAAP v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] HCA 24; (2005) 228 CLR 294 at [83], where his
Honour stated:
[W]here the relevant breach is the failure to observe fair decision-making
procedures, the bearing of the breach upon the ultimate
decision should not
itself determine whether the constitutional writs of certiorari and mandamus
should be granted. If there has
been a breach of the obligation to accord
procedural fairness, there is jurisdictional error for the purposes of s
75(v)...
- McHugh
J’s statement was directed to whether discretionary relief should be
withheld for a breach of s 424A(1) of the Act by failing to provide
information to an applicant. While it was conceded that a breach of
s 424A(1) of the Act was jurisdictional error, the respondent
claimed that a merely technical breach, that could not affect the outcome, had
occurred.
- In
contrast, Kirby J’s statement in Dranichnikov was directed at
the antecedent issue of distinguishing an error of law within jurisdiction from
a jurisdictional error. I was not
persuaded that the relevant observations were
in conflict.
- As
I have found, for reasons set out in detail below, that the applicant has failed
to establish that the Minister misunderstood
the relevant submissions, it is
unnecessary to determine whether the alleged misunderstandings,
mischaracterisations or omissions
amounted to a fundamental error in defining
the applicant’s case, sufficient, in Kirby J’s terms, to
constitute jurisdictional
error.
- The
applicant also relied particularly on NAIS v Minister for Immigration and
Multicutural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 228 CLR 470
(“NAIS”) in contending that, in the present case,
mischaracterisations in the Issues Paper amounted to a defect in procedure,
which
either thwarted the Minister’s consideration of some of the
applicant’s submissions or constituted a substantial risk
which was not
overcome, but rather, was reinforced by the content of the reasons.
- In
NAIS, the Refugee Review Tribunal rejected the applicants’
application for protection visas. The tribunal held oral hearings in
1998 and
2001 and handed down its decision in 2003. It made some findings adverse to the
applicants’ credit, apparently based
on their demeanour. A majority
(Gleeson CJ, Callinan and Heydon JJ) of the High Court held that the
tribunal’s decision was
affected by jurisdictional error.
- Gleeson
CJ observed that four and a half years which elapsed between the
tribunal’s observations of the applicants’ demeanour
and its adverse
credit findings thereon amounted to inordinate delay. As the tribunal’s
reasons ignored the question of the
time elapsed between the taking of evidence
and its final assessment, the impact of the delay could not be known.
- His
Honour stated at [9]: “[w]hat must be kept in mind is that the question
concerns the fairness of the procedure that was
followed”.
- Gleeson
CJ further stated at [10] and [11]:
In a case of failure to give a hearing when a hearing is required, the person
complaining of denial of procedural fairness does not
have to demonstrate that,
if heard, he or she would have been believed. The loss of an opportunity is
what makes the case of unfairness.
The appellants in this case do not have to
demonstrate that the Tribunal’s assessment of them probably would have
been more
favourable if made reasonably promptly. What they have to demonstrate
is that the procedure was flawed; and flawed in a manner that
was likely to
affect the Tribunal’s capacity to make a proper assessment of their
sincerity and reliability. The procedures
required by the Act were designed to
give the appellants a reasonable opportunity to state their claims and to have
those claims
competently evaluated. If the Tribunal, by its unreasonable delay,
created a real and substantial risk that its own capacity for
competent
evaluation was diminished, it is not fair that the appellants should bear that
risk. The delay on the part of the Tribunal
in the present case was so extreme
that, in the absence of any countervailing considerations advanced in the
reasons of the Tribunal,
it should be inferred that there was a real and
substantial risk that the Tribunal’s capacity to assess the appellants was
impaired. That being so, the appellants did not have a fair hearing of their
claims by the Tribunal.
The fact that the impairment resulted from the default of the Tribunal is
important. Many events, outside the control and influence
of the Tribunal,
might occur to make it more difficult to evaluate the claims of an applicant.
That does not make the procedure
unfair. On the other hand, when the Tribunal,
exercising the control over its own procedures given to it by the Act, without
explanation
or justification, and without any fault of an applicant for review,
draws out those procedures to such an extent that its capacity
to discharge its
statutory obligations is likely to be materially diminished, and there is
nothing in the Tribunal’s reasons
to displace that likelihood, then a case
of procedural unfairness arises.
- Callinan
and Heydon JJ discussed the applicable statutory framework and observed (at
[171]) that, as the respondent conceded, s 425(1) of the Act “by
implication, refers to a hearing where the evidence given is to be given proper,
genuine and realistic consideration
in the decision subsequently to be
made...”
- In
response to the argument that delay would breach the principles of natural
justice only where it denied an interested party a
proper opportunity to present
its case, their Honours stated (at [172] and
[173]):
The answer to these arguments is that unfairness can spring not only from a
denial of an opportunity to present a case, but from
denial of an opportunity to
consider it. Failure by the Tribunal to consider a case can arise not only from
obstruction by the Tribunal
of its presentation but also from self-disablement
by the Tribunal from giving consideration to that presentation by permitting
bias
to affect its mind: either way the case is prevented from having a fair
impact on the Tribunal’s mind. Another way in which
the Tribunal can
disable itself from giving consideration to the presentation of a case arises
where it permits so much time to pass
that it can no longer assess the evidence
offered. That is what happened here. The first respondent contended that the
appellants
could not succeed in the absence of findings that “delay by the
Tribunal actually resulted in a material failure to analyse
the oral evidence of
the Appellants”. That finding ought to be made because it can be inferred
from the delay that, in the
absence of contrary evidence, the Tribunal had
deprived itself of its capacity to do so, and there is no contrary
evidence.
The circumstances of this case are specific to the Refugee Review
Tribunal.
- Their
Honours also observed that “[t]his is in our opinion a very exceptional
case” (at 174]).
- The
applicant submitted that in the present case, the mischaracterisation in the
Issues Paper was a defect in the process that, as in NAIS, impeded
or obstructed the Minister from considering the relevant submissions.
- The
applicant nevertheless acknowledged that:
Some caution must attach to the use of the phrase ‘consideration’ to
avoid ‘a slide into impermissible merits review’.
What is of
concern is whether there was some failure of process that impeded or
prevented the hearing of the submissions, such that in effect they weren’t
heard at all. That might be because
the decision-maker misunderstood the
submission or asked themselves the wrong question (as in Dranichnikov);
or failed to hear the submission at all; or because of some other procedural
issue (such as the delay in NAIS).
- In
NAIS, while the majority held that a jurisdictional error had been made,
each of the majority judgments identified, as central to a denial
of procedural
fairness, an error, flaw or “self-disablement” in the process
followed by the tribunal. Callinan and Heydon
JJ recognised that whether the
delay had vitiated the decision depended on “the statutory framework under
which the decision
is to be made” (at [156]). Their specific observation
was grounded in the acknowledged requirements of a hearing under s 425(1)
of the Act. Gleeson CJ said (at [9]): “What must be kept in mind is that
the question concerns the fairness of the procedure
that was followed.”
His Honour continued (at [10]): “What they [the applicants] have to
demonstrate is that the procedure
was flawed; and flawed in a manner that was
likely to affect the Tribunal’s capacity to make a proper assessment of
their sincerity
and reliability”. Kirby J also emphasised that
procedural fairness is not concerned with the merits of the decision and stated
that “the “decision” was not reached by a process that was
procedurally fair and just to the appellants”
(at [102]).
- The
respondent submitted that:
- The
reference by Callinan and Heydon JJ to the “denial of an opportunity to
consider” the case does not go so far as to
suggest that a
misunderstanding of a submission is sufficient to constitute a denial of
procedural fairness, unless that misunderstanding
is a direct result of a
procedural failure.
- Furthermore,
their Honours’ formulation was not adopted by any other member of the
Court in NAIS, and caution has subsequently been expressed about the
language used.
- In
Swift v SAS Trustee Corp [2010] NSWCA 182, Basten JA (with whom Allsop P
agreed) observed that the origins of the phrase “proper, genuine and
realistic consideration”
used by Callinan and Heydon JJ in NAIS lay
in merits review, and observed at [47] that “[t]he use of such
language in administrative law is not common, no doubt in
large part because of
the risks of misapplication.”
- Basten
JA stated at [45]:
The language of “proper, genuine and realistic consideration” was
introduced into administrative law in Khan v Minister for Immigration, Local
Government and Ethic Affairs [1987] FCA 457; (1987) 14 ALD 291 and Broussard v Minister
for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1987) 21 FCR 472 at 483 (Gummow J).
That which had to be properly considered was “the merits of the
case”. Taken out of context and
without understanding their original
provenance, these epithets are apt to encourage a slide into impermissible merit
review: Kindimindi Investments Pty Ltd v Lane Cove Council [2006] NSWCA
23; 143 LGERA 277 at [79] ... Where a decision-maker does address the claim, by
reference to the correct power, asking whether he or she did so
“properly”
or “genuinely”, or
“realistically” may be taken, inappropriately, as an invitation to
assess the correctness
of the result, rather than the legality of the
process.
- In
SZJSS, the High Court reiterated Bastan JA’s caveat, in recognising
that the Federal Court had “employed the language”
of the need for a
“proper, genuine and realistic consideration” to register its
emphatic disagreement with the tribunal’s
factual findings, rather than
the process by which it arrived at its conclusions (at [36]).
- In
the context of a decision under s 501A of the Act, insistence on the
Minister’s “proper, genuine and realistic consideration” of
the applicant’s
submissions should not extend to a requirement that the
Minister demonstrate accurate understanding of the submissions, and thus
provide
the basis for a merits review.
- In
my opinion, the recognition in NAIS that a procedural defect within the
decision-maker’s control, which denies, or poses a substantial risk of
denial of, an opportunity
to consider an applicant’s submission, was not
restricted to any particular statutory regime, and could potentially apply to
a
decision under s 501A of the Act. For the reasons set out below, however,
no such procedural flaw was established in this case.
Ground 1
The respondent’s decision is affected by
jurisdictional error because the respondent failed to afford procedural fairness
to
the applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s
submissions about the best interests of each of the applicant’s
four
grandchildren when he took into account relevant international obligations
arising under the Convention on the Rights of the
Child in relation to one
grandchild only.
- It
was not disputed that:
(a) the evidence before the Minister
indicated that (which was uncontested) the applicant had four grandsons, aged
between 5 and 18,
the eldest of whom, Joe Dean, had been cared for by the
applicant and his wife; and
(b) the applicant’s daughter, the mother of the children, asserted that
all the four children would suffer from his absence
were he to be deported and
would be deprived of the chance to build a family relationship with him.
- The
Minister, in his statement of reasons, referred to the circumstances of Joe Dean
and then stated that “the evidence available
to me does not indicate that
there are any other minor children whose best interests may be significantly
affected by the cancellation
of Mr CUNLIFFE’s visa”.
- The
applicant submitted that:
7.5. In making his finding that the evidence available to him did not indicate
that there are any other minor children, other than
Joe-Dean, whose interests
were to be considered when considering Australia’s CROC obligations, the
Respondent either:
7.5.1. misunderstood or misapplied the law, or applied it in a manner that was
inconsistent with the Applicant’s legitimate
expectation;
7.5.2. failed to deal with or otherwise misunderstood the Applicant’s
claim that the Respondent was obliged to consider, pursuant
to Australia’s
CROC obligations, the best interests of all four of his grandchildren who would
be adversely affected by his
removal...
- Alternatively,
the applicant submitted that the Minister was mistaken as to a relevant factual
matter, because he was not aware that
there were a number of minor children
(rather than Joe Dean only) who were liable to be affected by his decision.
The applicant was
thus denied procedural fairness because his submissions in
relation to those other children were not dealt with at all.
- Alternatively,
the applicant submitted that if the Minister understood that there were other
minor children, he elected “in
a manner inconsistent with
expectation” not to take their interests into account, which resulted in
real, practical unfairness,
as the applicant was denied an opportunity to be
heard on it.
- I
reject those submissions. On a fair reading of the reasons, there was no
indication that the Minister mistakenly considered that
Joe Dean was the
applicant’s only grandchild. To the contrary, the Minister, having
referred to Joe Dean in paragraph 21,
then stated in paragraph 22 that
the evidence did not indicate that there were any other minor children whose
best interests may
be significantly affected, and in paragraph 25 stated that
the applicant had “three other grandchildren in addition to the
grandson
mentioned above”. The Minister’s reasons thus clearly evidence
his awareness of the existence of the additional
grandchildren.
- Further,
the Minister was not required, as a mandatory consideration in the exercise of
his statutory power of cancellation of the
visa, to have regard to the best
interests of the child, and any failure expressly to refer to or discuss in
detail the best interests
of the other grandchildren would not indicate that he
failed to consider or indeed understand the applicant’s submissions on
that question, or that he dealt with them contrary to any legitimate
expectation.
- Nevertheless,
the reasons indicate that the Minister considered whether the best interests of
the grandchildren were significantly
affected but concluded that this was not
established by the evidence.
- In
my opinion, the allegations in ground 1 were not
established.
Ground 2
The respondent’s decision is affected by
jurisdictional error because the respondent failed to afford procedural fairness
to
the applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s
submissions in relation to the International Covenant of Civil
and Political
Rights.
- The
applicant did not, under this ground, complain of the Issues Paper’s
treatment of his ICCPR submissions. Rather, he submitted
that the statement of
reasons demonstrated that the Minister, as in Dranichnikov, misstated and
misunderstood his ICCPR submissions, and by consequently failing to take it into
account, denied him procedural fairness.
- The
applicant submitted:
6.5.1. The Respondent failed to deal with the ICCPR submission at all;
6.5.2. If he did purport to deal with the submission, he misunderstood it and
asked himself a question (namely, whether deportation
of the Applicant would
result in a breach of international non-refoulement obligations) that was
different from the question raised
by the ICCPR submission;
6.5.3. The substance of the ICCPR submission was dealt with in an unexpected
manner, and the Applicant was denied an opportunity
to be heard on
it.
- The
applicant’s submission dated 27 May 2011 (“ICCPR submissions”)
stated that:
In so far as the ICCPR and Human Rights Committee jurisprudence applies, Mr
Cunliffe under Article 12(4) is entitled to call Australia
his ‘own
country’, especially because he has integrated here fully over 44 years
and has lived nowhere else. He is totally
and inextricably tied into this
country as the only place he has lived his life.
I further draw attention to Article 7 of the ICCPR and note that it may well be
considered to be cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
to remove a person, who
has been punished already, from his own country where he has lived a good and
constructive life (but for
one terrible week) over so many years, especially
where there are so many family ties here, and none elsewhere. Indeed such
removal
or deportation may also breach Article 14 of the ICCPR in a particular
case, such as this one, because it would amount in so many
ways to further
punishment. It is not merely an administrative step in the circumstances of
this case. Further the separation of
Mr Cunliffe from his family after so many
years, and four generations of family living, is an entirely disproportionate
step in these
circumstances.
- The
Minister’s statement of reasons relevantly
stated:
Other International Obligations
23. I note that Mr CUNLIFFE has not made any claims which require assessment in
relation to Australia's international non refoulement
obligations, nor does the
other available evidence indicate that such an assessment is appropriate in this
case.
24. I also note the submissions dated 27 May 2011 made on Mr CUNLIFFE's behalf
by his legal representative in relation to the International
Convention on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR). However, I do not consider that the claims
support a finding that Australia is
at any risk of breaching its international
non refoulement obligations under the ICCPR or the Convention Against Torture
and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
(CAT).
- The
Issues Paper stated:
Obligations under the Refugees Convention and other relevant international
obligations
74. Paragraph 10.4.2 of the Direction states that:
In cases where issues of protection pursuant to the Refugees Convention are
raised by the person or are clear from the facts of the
case, they must be given
consideration.
- Paragraph
10.4.3 of the Direction indicates that Australia also has non-refoulement
obligations under the International Convention
on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) and the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment
(CAT), which must be considered where relevant.
- Mr
CUNLIFFE has not made any claims which require assessment in relation to
Australia's international non-refoulement obligations,
nor does the other
available evidence indicate that such an assessment is appropriate in this
case.
- However,
Mr CUNLIFFE's legal representative has stated the following in his submission
dated 27 May 2011 (Attachment NN pages 10-11):
‘In so far as the ICCPR and Human Rights Committee jurisprudence
applies, Mr Cunliffe under Article 12(4) is entitled to call
Australia his 'own
country', especially because he has integrated here fully over 44 years and has
lived nowhere else. He is totally
and inextricably tied into this country as
the only place he has lived his life.
I further draw attention to Article 7 of the ICCPR and note that it may well
be considered to be cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
to remove a person,
who has been punished already, from his own country where he has lived a good
and constructive life (but for
one terrible week) over so many years, especially
where there are so many family ties here, and none elsewhere. Indeed such
removal
or deportation may also breach Article 14 of the ICCPR in a particular
case, such as this one, because it would amount in so many
ways to further
punishment. It is not merely an administrative step in the circumstances of
this case. Further the separation of
Mr Cunliffe from his family after so many
years, and four generations of family living, is an entirely disproportionate
step in these
circumstances.’
- As
the applicant submitted, the substance of the ICCPR submissions was that his
deportation might constitute a breach of one or more
of articles 7, 12 and 14 of
the ICCPR. The applicant alleged that the Minister’s reasons indicated
that the Minister had or
may have misconstrued the ICCPR submissions as alleging
that the applicant’s deportation might breach any non-refoulement
obligations
by exposing him to the risk or threat of torture or cruel treatment
in the country to which he was to be returned.
- The
Issues Paper, however, identified primary considerations having regard to
Direction 41, including Australia’s international
obligations under
the Refugees Convention and the ICCPR. The Issues Paper quoted
extensively from the applicant’s submission, referred the Minister to the
relevant pages
and attached it in its entirety.
- The
applicant did not contend that the Minister was obliged to have a decision made
in accordance with any obligations under the
ICCPR, the Convention Against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, or any
other international treaty
not incorporated into Australian domestic law.
- The
Minister, in his reasons, noted the applicant’s submissions and stated
that he did not consider that there was a breach
of the ICCPR or other
non-refoulement obligations. Read in the light of the discussion in the Issues
Paper, and given that the Minister
is not obliged to address or explain
rejection of matters raised by applicants which are not considered relevant, the
Minister’s
reasons are consistent with addressing whether the
applicant’s removal to the United Kingdom would contravene
Australia’s
non-refoulement obligations under any treaty, as raised by
Direction 41, and noting that he had considered, without
regarding it as relevant to his decision, the applicant’s submission that
his deportation might breach Articles 7, 12
and 14 of the ICCPR, which was
extracted verbatim in the Issues Paper.
- The
applicant was afforded a reasonable opportunity to make submissions in relation
to the way in which the Minister should take
account of Australia’s
obligations under the ICCPR, and the submissions were made, provided to the
Minister in their entirety
in an unaltered form and indeed drawn to the
Minister’s attention by the Issues Paper. While I am not persuaded that
procedural
fairness required the Minister to understand the ICCPR submission,
his statement of reasons does not establish that he failed to
consider or
misunderstood it.
- In
my opinion, the allegations in ground 2 are not made
out.
Ground 3
The respondent’s decision is affected by
jurisdictional error because the respondent failed to afford procedural fairness
to
the applicant.
Particulars
The respondent misunderstood or failed to hear the applicant’s
submissions in relation to the unfairness caused to the applicant
by the conduct
of the respondent, his delegates or department, who failed to correct advice
given to the applicant in 2002 that the
respondent had no power to cancel the
applicant’s visa, notwithstanding that they knew since 2003 that the
advice was no longer
correct.
- The
“unfairness submission” was contained in the submission of Mr
McMahon dated 13 July 2010 under the heading “Noteworthy
legal
events” as follows:
But for his crime in 1999, it is clear that the decision had been made by Mr Lee
on 18 May 1999 to grant Mr Cunliffe citizenship.
However the Decision
Record dated 21 May 1999 shows that the application was refused as a
result of the fact that Mr Cunliffe was then in custody.
By letter dated 28 August 2000 the department advised Mr Cunliffe that it was
considering cancelling his visa.
By letter dated 18 February 2002 the department advised Mr Cunliffe that,
following a recent High Court decision, the department
would no longer consider
cancelling his visa. The department advised that it did not have the power to
deport Mr Cunliffe.
The effect of that letter dated 18 February 2002 was to cement in Mr
Cunliffe’s mind that he would now be spending the rest
of his life in
Australia. He was relieved from the fear and anxiety that he may be deported.
Naturally, in the 8 years since that
letter, he has developed all of his family
relationships on that understanding.
The department has now advised by letter dated 4 June 2010 that it is once again
considering cancelling his visa. Not only is the
reversal of the
department’s position a terrible shock to Mr Cunliffe and his family, it
appears that the department has known
since 2003 that it was free to consider
the cancellation of Mr Cunliffe’s visa, despite having told him in 2002
that it no
longer had any power to do so.
In other words, having told him in 2002 that he would not be deported, and
having allowed him to live and develop all his relationships and life on
that
basis for the subsequent 8 years, it appears from the letter dated 4 June 2010
that the department has known that this was potentially
incorrect for the last 7
years.
Putting aside any legal implications arising from this chain of events, it is
clearly a situation of terrible unfairness.
This unfairness should be taken into consideration by the delegate in this
application given the otherwise excellent merits of this
application.
(emphasis added)
- The
Issues Paper, under the heading “Part A: Immigration Background”,
stated:
- Mr
CUNLIFFE’s legal representative has presented a section called
‘Noteworthy Legal Events’ in his submission dated
13 July 2010,
discussing the history of character processing in Mr CUNLIFFE’s case. In
summary, he states that Mr CUNLIFFE
was sent a Notice of Intention to consider
Cancellation of a visa on 28 August 2000 and that on 18 February 2002 he was
further advised
in writing that he would not be deported due to a court case.
Mr CUNLIFFE’s representative states he then heard from the department
again in 2010, some eight years on, despite the department
knowing Mr CUNLIFFE
could be deported in 2003 (Attachment T).
- On
18 February 2002, Mr CUNLIFFE was advised that the department would no longer be
considering his liability to section 501 visa cancellation. This action was
based upon the decision of the High Court of Australia that certain British
subjects who arrived
in Australia prior to 1973 were not ‘aliens’
and could not be deported or removed under the Act.
- However,
the High Court in Shaw v MIMIA [2003] HCA 72 later held that British
subjects who arrived after 26 January 1949 and have not become citizens are
‘aliens’ for the
purposes of the Act. Consequently, it was open to
re-consider whether to cancel Mr CUNLIFFE’s visa under section 501 of the
Act. Mr CUNLIFFE’s case was re-opened in June 2010, closer to his
expected date of release.
(emphasis added)
- As
the applicant submitted, in substance, the unfairness submission was that it
would be unfair now to deport him because he had
lived his life and conducted
his relationships from 2002 to 2010 on the belief that he could never be
deported from Australia, as
he had not been advised in 2003 of the effect of
Shaw. The applicant submitted that the Issues Paper misunderstood,
misstated and wrongly characterised the unfairness submission as a
question
whether the Minister had power to cancel his visa. The applicant
contended that the Issues Paper thus functioned as a procedural flaw that
thwarted the Minister’s
opportunity to consider, or posed a substantial
risk that the Minister would not consider, the unfairness submission.
- The
applicant submitted that as the Minister neither referred to the unfairness
submission nor identified error in the Issues Paper’s
characterisation
thereof, the risk that he had misapprehended or failed to consider it was not
addressed. Nor did the Minister’s
reasons indicate that he had considered
the unfairness submission.
- The
applicant submitted that:
5.6. The Applicant was therefore denied procedural fairness
because:
5.6.1. The Respondent:
5.6.1.1. failed to deal with the unfairness submission at all; or
5.6.1.2. if he did purport to deal with the submission, misunderstood it, having
been misled as to its substance by the Department’s
issues paper, and
asked himself a question (namely, whether or not he had power to deport the
Applicant) that was different from
the one raised by the unfairness
submission;
5.6.2. There was a real risk that the Respondent would misunderstand the
unfairness submission because of its mischaracterisation
in the
Department’s issues paper, and in the absence of any explanation by the
Respondent as to how he overcame that risk,
there can be no satisfaction that
the Respondent did, in fact, consider the submission;
5.6.3. The substance of the unfairness submission was dealt with in an
unexpected and adverse manner (namely the Department’s
(incorrect)
suggestion that the submission was about whether the Minister did or did not
have power to cancel the visa, rather than
about the unfairness flowing from the
2002 letter), and the Applicant was denied an opportunity to be heard on
it.
- I
reject those submissions. The applicant’s case, that the Issues Paper
mischaracterised the unfairness submission as questioning
the existence of the
power to cancel the applicant’s visa, depended on the associated assertion
that it misleadingly purported
to summarise the entire contents of the section
of the submissions dated 13 July 2010 entitled “Noteworthy Legal
Events”,
in which the unfairness submission appeared. The applicant
submitted, perhaps implicitly, that the Issues Paper thus deterred the
Minister
from considering the submissions directly (despite his assertions to the
contrary) or posed such a risk thereof as to constitute
a procedural defect that
denied the Minister, as decision-maker, the opportunity to consider the
unfairness submission.
- In
my opinion, the Issues Paper did not mischaracterise the unfairness submission
by the oblique process alleged of purporting exhaustively
to summarise the
entire contents of the section entitled “Noteworthy Legal Events”,
omitting any reference to the unfairness
or any other submission, and by
asserting the existence of the power to cancel the visa, thus indicating that
the only content of
or submission in the relevant section was a questioning of
that power.
- The
impugned paragraphs of the Issues Paper claimed to set out “in
summary” only “the history of character processing”
discussed
in the submissions, which it identified as the notice and correspondence.
- The
phrase “history of character processing” suggests a neutral
chronology of events or dealings, rather than an advocate’s
substantive
submissions. The Issues Paper does not expressly or implicitly purport
comprehensively to summarise the contents of
all or any of the applicant’s
written submissions or any part thereof, or suggest that the Minister could rely
on the Issues
Paper rather than considering the applicant’s submissions,
which it specifically referred to and attached.
- The
impugned paragraphs do not refer to any arguments advanced on the
applicant’s behalf, whether challenging the power to
issue a visa or
otherwise. Rather, they refer only to the applicant’s factual assertions
as to dates and contents of communications
from the Department.
- In
my view, the Issues Paper neither literally set out nor implicitly embodied a
misunderstanding, mistake or mischaracterisation
of the unfairness submission.
- If,
contrary to that conclusion, the Issues Paper mischaracterised the unfairness
submission as relating to power to cancel the visa,
in my opinion, it would not
suffice to establish procedural unfairness, in the sense of a
“self-disabling” procedural
flaw in the process controlled by the
decision-maker, which denied the Minister the opportunity to consider it or
posed a substantial
risk that he would fail to do so. The written submissions
containing the unfairness submission were provided in full and without
any
alteration to the Minister. As stated above, the Issues Paper did not state or
suggest that it was unnecessary to refer to the
applicant’s written
submissions but specifically referred the Minister to them. Moreover, the
Minister stated that he had
considered all relevant matters and all the evidence
before him, including that provided by or on behalf of the applicant.
- The
Minister, in the context of exercising his power, was not required to address
all arguments raised in the applicant’s submissions
or explain why he
considered them irrelevant. It cannot be inferred from the absence of
discussion of the unfairness submission
in the statement of reasons that the
Minister, contrary to his express assertion, failed to consider it or
misunderstood it.
- In
my opinion, the allegations in ground 3 are not
established.
CONCLUSION
- The
relief sought in the amended application dated 2 September 2011 should be
refused.
I certify that the preceding one hundred and
thirty-five (135) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for
Judgment herein
of the Honourable Justice Dodds-Streeton.
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Associate:
Dated: 13 February 2012
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2012/79.html