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High Court of Australia |
SALEMI v. MACKELLAR (NO. 2) [1977] HCA 26; (1977) 137 CLR 396
Immigration and Aliens
High Court of Australia
Barwick C.J.(1), Gibbs(2), Stephen(3), Jacobs(4), Murphy(5) and Aickin(6) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Immigration and Aliens - Prohibited immigrant - Entry permit - Temporary entry permit - Expiration - Announcement by news release of amnesty by Minister - Whether instrument under hand of Minister exempting prohibited immigrants from requirements relating to entry permits - Deportation - Natural justice - Deportation order made without hearing person affected - Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss. 5 (1), 6, 7, 8 (1) (e), 18.
HEARING
Melbourne, 1977, February 22, 23; May 11. 11:5:1977DECISION
1977, May 11.
2. The submission was that the Minister was bound, before exercising his
power to order the deportation of a prohibited immigrant,
to accord him
natural justice in the form of a hearing, first informing him of the grounds
on which he, the Minister, was considering
ordering deportation. It was
submitted as an aspect of the basic submission that the Minister before
exercising his power under
s. 18 was bound to follow the procedures of s. 14.
As a fall-back submission, it was said that at least the Minister was bound to
afford the prohibited immigrant an opportunity to put forward reasons why his
deportation should not be ordered. In another part
of the argument it was
suggested that, having decided to deport, the Minister was bound to furnish
the prohibited immigrant with
his reasons for making the order. (at p400)
3. These submissions were made generally, that is as universally applicable
in connexion with any exercise of the power to deport
under s. 18.
Alternatively, they were made as applicable only to the applicant because of
the Minister's public offer of amnesty,
and the applicant's situation in
relation thereto. (at p400)
4. The relevant principles on which the propriety of these submissions should
be decided are both fundamental and, in my opinion,
fairly well settled. The
courts have no power of amendment of an Act of the Parliament. They may
interpret its language and perhaps,
in doing so, at times reach a result which
the Parliament may not have contemplated but which, by the terms it has
employed, the
Parliament has effected. The courts have decided in relation to
statutory and consensual powers in various situations that upon
their proper
construction natural justice should be given to persons who may be affected by
the exercise of the power. Here we
are concerned with a "statutory power" so
that I shall confine my remarks to such powers. (at p400)
5. The courts in construing a statute may make express what is implicit in
it. Thus they may decide that the statute requires
those whom it vests with a
power of decision affecting the rights and property of others to adopt
procedures which, in the opinion
of the courts, are necessary to ensure
natural justice. Those procedures are various and stem from the particular
statutory situations
with which the courts have to deal, and at times from the
particular situation of a person likely to be affected by the decision.
It is
in this connexion that the concept of fairness is relevant: that is, once it
is concluded that the power of decision or action
is dependent on the
observance of natural justice, fairness in the particular circumstances will
determine what must needs be done
to satisfy natural justice. The fairness is
what is required of a repository of power when on the proper construction of
the statute
that power is qualified by the need to accord natural justice. But
the basic question is whether the statutory power is so qualified.
Whether it
is to be so qualified is a matter for the Parliament. It is for the courts to
decide in point of construction what the
Parliament has relevantly enacted,
both expressly and implicity. The courts by construction of the statute educe
and make express
the qualification of the granted power inherent in the
statute. Having decided that the statute makes the exercise of the power
contingent on the observance of natural justice, the courts then decide what
is required in the particular circumstances to satisfy
the statute so
construed. But it is fundamental that what the courts do in qualifying the
powers is no more than to construe the
statute. Failure to meet the
qualification of the power, that is to accord natural justice in the manner
which the courts decide
is required in the circumstances, results in
invalidity of the decision or act, because neither is authorized by the
statute as
construed by the courts. (at p401)
6. The obligation to accord natural justice thus disclosed on the proper
interpretation of the statute is universal and not particular
to some
individual or his circumstances: the power is a qualified power. As I have
said, the exercise of the power in any circumstances
without having accorded
natural justice appropriate to the circumstances may be set aside by the
courts as beyond the power given
by the statute. I have emphasized that what
will suffice to perform or satisfy the obligation to accord natural justice
will be
particular to the circumstances which obtain. But the obligation to
accord natural justice does not itself spring from these circumstances:
it
springs from the construction by the courts of the statute, in particular of
the terms in which the power is granted, the nature
of the power of decision
or action, the identity of the donee of the power and of its subject matter.
(at p401)
7. Of course, the Parliament is not bound to provide that natural justice be
accorded. It may enact a power which it intends should
be exercised by its
donee without regard to the demands of natural justice. In such a case, the
courts cannot override the intention
of the Parliament. It is not necessary
that that intention should be expressly stated. Prima facie, the courts will
conclude that
the Parliament does not intend injustice or to authorize it.
However, mere silence on the part of the Parliament does not mean that
the
courts are therefore free to import the obligation to accord natural justice.
It still remains for the courts to find what
I have called the qualification
of the power by construing the statute taking into consideration all the
elements to which I have
referred. It is most important, in my opinion, that
the courts do not transgress the line dividing the judicial from the
legislative
function. To do so is to weaken both functions which ought for the
health of society to retain their mutual independence. (at p402)
8. In Twist v. Randwick Municipal Council [1976] HCA 58; (1976) 136 CLR 106 , I endeavoured
to summarize, without specific reference
to them,
the authorities relating to
the imputation
by construction of an obligation to accord natural justice, so
far as that
matter related
to the circumstances of that case. Having
again
looked at the various decisions, I think that what I then wrote does
represent
the authorities so far as I then had need
to explore them for the resolution
of that case, but that, having regard to
what has been
submitted in this case,
I have formed
the opinion that my formerly expressed remarks should be
supplemented by what
I have now
written, which is in accord with those
authorities. (at p402)
9. To apply the whole of what I have said to the circumstances of the present
case, it is necessary, in my opinion, as part of
the process of construction,
to consider the Act as a whole in order to decide by that examination whether
the Parliament has put
its mind to the question whether the Minister's power
given by s. 18 ought to be qualified by a procedural requirement to accord
to
prohibited immigrants what is generally embraced within the concept of natural
justice. (at p402)
10. It cannot be gainsaid, in my opinion, that the Parliament in enacting the
Act has put its mind to that question, both in relation
to s. 14 and s. 18. My
brother Gibbs has called attention to the marked contrast of s. 14 and its
subject matter and s. 18 and
its subject matter, thus demonstrating the
concern of the Parliament with procedural necessities in the various
situations in which
power to deport is given. Having been concerned with the
matter, the Parliament, understandably as I think, has not expressly qualified
the power given by s. 18 as it has done in the case of the power given by s.
14. It is necessary therefore to consider whether
such a qualification is
implicit in the statute. (at p402)
11. The matter committed to the Minister by s. 18 is the deportation of a
prohibited immigrant. The Parliament, by its legislation,
has determined who
shall fill that description. The Parliament in this legislation is dealing
with a national interest of paramount
importance, namely, the composition of
the nation, determining who shall enter and who shall stay. The decision of
those questions
is not hedged, nor can it be hedged, around with principles of
the kind that the judiciary are wont to consider: nor is it necessary,
or
convenient, or indeed desirable, that reasons be assigned for the
determination of those questions. (at p402)
12. The Act has provided the mechanism by which the particular application of
its provisions will be effected. It gives an officer
authority to grant entry
permits. But, though an officer may grant an entry permit and has a discretion
in that respect in the
sense that he is not obliged to make the grant, he will
be bound, in my opinion, to act in its exercise in accordance with government
policy. He does not have a discretion to be exercised upon principles dictated
by the reasoning of courts of law. The policies
of government in a matter such
as migration into the country and inclusion in its peoples cannot, in my
opinion, be circumscribed
and confined by any such limitations upon the
officer's authority to grant or refuse an entry permit. (at p403)
13. Equally, the Minister, himself a member of the Government and responsible
to the Parliament, needs, in my opinion, no reason
for the exercise of the
power given him by s. 18: nor are there any principles judicially recognizable
by reference to which he
must decide. If he has any discretion to refuse to
exercise the power to deport a prohibited immigrant whilst he remains a
prohibited
immigrant, a matter with respect to which I shall later make an
observation, that discretion must be exercised in conformity with
relevant
government policy and not in conformity to principles laid down by the
judiciary. (at p403)
14. We are not here dealing with the administration of a statute or statutory
instrument which on its proper construction involves
judicially recognizable
limitations upon the discretion confided to the body or official. We are
dealing with the exercise of a
fundamental national power exercisable
according to government policy, for which ultimately there is responsibility
to the Parliament.
(at p403)
15. Section 18 relates to prohibited immigrants who have become such by a
variety of circumstances. If the power to deport is
qualified as suggested, it
must be so qualified as to all such prohibited immigrants. For example, one
such prohibited immigrant
is a person who has entered without an entry permit.
Another such prohibited immigrant is a person whose entry permit has been
cancelled - something which may be done by the Minister in his absolute
discretion. Another is a person to whom s. 8 (3) applies.
It is difficult to
conceive what matters in these instances are relevant to the making of the
order for deportation beyond the
qualification of the person as a prohibited
immigrant. The case of the immigrant whose entry permit has been cancelled
under the
power of cancellation given by s. 7 (1) well illustrates the
impossibility of construing s. 18 as universally qualified by the need
to
accord natural justice. (at p403)
16. Considering the terms of the Act as a whole and the contrast of ss. 14
and 18 in particular, the identity of the person in
whom the power to order
deportation resides and the subject matter of the power - the removal of
prohibited immigrants - I can
find no basis whatever on which I could hold
that the power given by s. 18 can be construed as qualified by the requirement
that
in all circumstances natural justice be accorded the prohibited immigrant
before his deportation is ordered. (at p404)
17. I turn then to the alternative submissions. It is beyond question, in my
opinion, that the applicant has no right to remain
in Australia: indeed by his
very description as a prohibited immigrant he is unlawfully present, liable to
detention under s. 38
of the Act, even though that presence is not visited
with penal consequences. Such a conclusion is in conformity with the rationale
of decisions in relation to aliens and their lack of any relevant right such
as Schmidt v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs
(1969) 2 Ch 149 . It cannot
be said that the power to order deportation is a power to affect a right of
the prohibited immigrant
(at p404)
18. It is said that, none the less, the applicant had a "legitimate
expectation" of being allowed indefinitely to stay in Australia
and that,
therefore, the Minister was bound to accord him natural justice, at least by
giving him an opportunity to make representations
in his own interest why he
should not be deported and at most by furnishing him with the reasons for
which the Minister would not
give him the benefit of the publicized amnesty.
The terms of the Minister's public statement and the applicant's capacity to
fulfil
their requirements were said to give rise to this "legitimate
expectation". (at p404)
19. It is therefore necessary to examine the eloquent phrase "legitimate
expectation" derived as it is from the reasons for judgment
of the Master of
the Rolls in Schmidt v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs. I am bound to say
that I appreciate its literary
quality better than I perceive its precise
meaning and the perimeter of its application. But, no matter how far the
phrase may
have been intended to reach, at its centre is the concept of
legality, that is to say, it is a lawful expectation which is in mind.
I
cannot attribute any other meaning in the language of a lawyer to the word
"legitimate" than a meaning which expresses the concept
of entitlement or
recognition by law. So understood, the expression probably adds little, if
anything, to the concept of a right.
(at p404)
20. It is noteworthy that Lord Denning M.R. illustrates the expression by
reference (1969) 2 Ch, at p 170 to the case of In re
H.K. (An Infant) (1967)
2 QB 617 , a case in which infants of or under a particular age had a right of
entry into England. It was
held that an infant must be given an opportunity to
establish his relevant age. His Lordship refers by way of contrast to an
unreported
case of Ex parte Avtar Singh in which the applicant had no right
and the Minister, an absolute discretion. It was held that there
was no duty
either to hear or to give reasons. (at p405)
21. Again, in Breen v. Amalgamated Engineering Union (1971) 2 QB 175 , where
his Lordship repeats the phrase, the rules of a trade
union were construed to
include an obligation to act fairly; i.e. there existed a matter of right. In
Reg. v. Liverpool Corporation;
Ex parte Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operators'
Association (1972) 2 QB 299 , it was held that the corporation was bound by a
clear undertaking
which it had given so long as that undertaking did not
conflict with statutory duty. The undertaking in terms required the
consultation
of the applicants. It was thus held that the corporation must do
so, that being required as a matter of fairness. Having found the
duty to act
fairly because of the binding undertaking to consult, the court said that to
act in breach of a promise or undertaking
without affording a hearing of
affected interests was to act unfairly. It might be said of this case that it
does not really depend
upon the implication of a duty to accord natural
justice. It could be said to turn upon the terms of an express undertaking.
(at
p405)
22. Where a licence or permit is given for a fixed term in relation to a
subject matter and in circumstances which carry the implication
that if the
licensee or permittee has fulfilled the obligation of the licence he may
expect a renewal of the licence or permit,
the grant will be construed as
importing a term that at least the interests of the existing licensee will be
considered before
a renewal is refused. Such a person thus has a legal basis
for asking for that consideration: and, if so, ought to be heard. Such
a
person might be said to have a lawful expectation of such consideration. (at
p405)
23. We are not here concerned with a case in which it is suggested that the
Minister is using his power for a purpose other than
that of the
implementation of relevant government policy. No question of a purported
exercise of the power for purposes alien to
the Act and what it involves
arises. I might mention, however, that it may well be that a person who is in
fact a prohibited immigrant
would have no standing in such a case. (at p406)
24. The prohibited immigrant has, in my opinion, no claim to the
consideration of his personal circumstances: nor, as I have said,
are there
any principles which the Minister could be compelled to observe in deciding in
his case that the law must be enforced.
As I have observed, though being a
prohibited immigrant is not an offence, the presence of the prohibited
immigrant in Australia
is unlawful. Deportation is the consequence prescribed:
and the Minister has the power to order it. The provisions in s. 18 are
in
reality merely the method by which the process of deportation may be
initiated. (at p406)
25. The Minister can, of course, decide to end the status of prohibited
immigrant by the grant of the requisite permit: see s.
10 but unless the
Minister does cause the status of the prohibited immigrant thus to be altered,
he would be obliged, in my opinion,
to make the order for deportation. He has,
in my opinion, no discretion to allow a prohibited immigrant to remain as such
at large.
His discretion, again dominated by government policy, is to alter
that status by appropriate action under the Act. (at p406)
26. When this is borne in mind, the present applicant in reality, because of
his reliance on the offer of amnesty, is seeking
the grant of such a permit.
That is something this Court could not order: nor could it, in my opinion, in
any sense supervise the
exercise of the Minister's discretion to cause the
necessary permit to issue. In particular, the Act could not be understood as
qualifying the power to grant entry permits by the Minister by the requirement
to accord natural justice to the alien. (at p406)
27. It is, of course, true that the Minister with unguarded and perhaps
unwise generality offered amnesty to prohibited immigrants
of given
characteristics. It must also be accepted on demurrer that the applicant
satisfies the description of those characteristics.
It is regrettable that
because the Minister does not wish to extend the amnesty to the applicant, and
indeed has assigned an untenable
reason for not doing so, he has given ground
for a sense of grievance and disappointment: but that is no basis, in my
opinion,
for saying that the applicant had in the language of the law a
"legitimate expectation" of the grant of an entry permit of indefinite
duration. (at p406)
28. The Minister's statement was no more than a statement of policy.
Statements of policy as a rule do not create legal obligations,
though they
may understandably excite human expectations as distinct from lawful
expectations. Perhaps Australian Woollen Mills
Ltd. v. The Commonwealth (1944)
[1944] HCA 37; 69 CLR 476 well illustrates the proposition. Governments are free to change
policies.
They are
also free not to implement them.
To have decided not to
pursue the Minister's announced policy with respect to amnesty
would not
give
the applicant, or for that
matter any prohibited immigrant, in my opinion, any
right. Doubtless, the statements
were calculated
to excite an expectation of
their performance. But, again in the language of the law, they were not
capable, in
my opinion, of
creating an expectation founded
in or at least
attendant upon legal right. (at p407)
29. Until the actual grant of the appropriate instrument to confer on a
prohibited immigrant a right of residence, finite or indefinite,
the Minister
was undoubtedly free not to fulfil the human expectation which his policy
announcements may well have engendered.
There are no examinable principles by
reference to which he should make or not make a decision so to act: nor is
there any requirement,
in my opinion, for reasons to be assigned for the
course he takes. Whatever may be thought of a ministerial change of front in
his refusal to pursue an announced policy to fruition in an individual case,
it is, in my opinion, quite inappropriate to regard
the applicant as having
some individual claim to consideration of his circumstances, because of the
making of the policy statement.
(at p407)
30. Thus, not only is there no basis, in my opinion, for construing the Act
as containing, albeit implicitly, a universal qualification
of the Minister's
power under s. 18 by requiring the observance of natural justice in all cases
of its exercise, but, if contrary
to my opinion such a qualification could
properly be made by construction on an individual basis, springing out of
particular circumstances,
there is no warrant in the case of the applicant for
making any such qualification. (at p407)
31. Accordingly, I would allow the demurrer. (at p407)
GIBBS J. The plaintiff, an Italian citizen, has brought the present
proceedings against the defendant, who is the Minister for
Immigration and
Ethnic Affairs of the Commonwealth and is the Minister administering the
provisions of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), as amended, ("the Act"), seeking
certain declarations and injunctions, which, briefly described, are intended
to restrain
the Minister from deporting the plaintiff from Australia. The
Minister has demurred to the amended statement of claim and we have
heard
argument on the demurrer. The facts pleaded in the amended statement of claim,
and the documents referred to therein and
set out at length in the demurrer
pursuant to O. 26, r. 6(1) of the Rules of this Court, are as follows. (at
p408)
2. The plaintiff entered Australia on 30th October 1974. When he arrived at
Sydney, his port of entry, he was granted a permit
to enter Australia on 30th
October 1974 and to remain for three months in Australia. The permit was
stamped on an incoming passenger
card which showed that the plaintiff was "a
visitor or temporary entrant" who intended to stay in Australia for three
months and
whose main reason for coming to Australia was "holiday". Within
that period of three months the plaintiff requested that he be granted
a
further entry permit for a period of nine months and he was on 10th February
1975 granted permission to remain in Australia until
30th July 1975. He has
since remained in Australia. Although it was not expressly pleaded it may be
inferred, and was assumed by
both parties in argument, that no further permit
has been issued to him. (at p408)
3. On 25th January 1976, 27th January 1976, 5th February 1976 and 9th April
1976 respectively there were issued documents concerning
what was described as
an "amnesty for prohibited immigrants". Each document was headed: "News
Release From The Minister For Immigration
and Ethnic Affairs The Hon. M. J. R.
MacKellar M.P." It is pleaded in the statement of claim that these documents
were instruments
under the hand of the Minister, but they do not bear the
signature of the Minister unless the heading which is quoted above amounts
to
a signature. It will be sufficient to set out part only of the contents of
these documents. The first, dated 25th January 1976,
included the following
statements:
"'The amnesty for prohibited immigrants foreshadowed by
the Government may be sought by all visitors who were
overstayed at 31 December 1975,' the Minister for Immigration
and Ethnic Affairs, the Hon. M.J.R. MacKellar, announced
today.
'Those who meet the normal standards of health and good
character will be granted resident status,' Mr. MacKellar
said. 'Amnesty will not be granted to people with serious
criminal records or to those who may be the subject of
deportation orders arising from criminal acts.'
Mr. MacKellar said that the amnesty offer would remain
open for a period of 3 months until 30 April 1976.
People seeking amnesty should apply to one of the offices
of the Department of Immigration and Ethnic Affairs in the
States or in Canberra." (at p408)
4. The second document, dated 27th January 1976, extended the offer to
include not only over-stayed visitors but other persons
as well. It included
the following passages:
"Mr. MacKellar again urged overstayed visitors and others
living illegally in Australia who were covered by the terms of
the amnesty offer to come forward.
'This is a genuine offer of amnesty to give security to the
many people currently living under a cloud in this country,'
Mr. MacKellar said.
'They have nothing to fear by coming forward. It is an
open and honest invitation to people to legalise their status in
Australia.'
...
Amnesty could be sought by all visitors who were
overstayed at 31 December 1975. Cases involving persons
other than overstayed visitors would be considered on
individual merit.
Those who met normal standards of health and good
character would be granted resident status, but amnesty
would not be granted to people with serious criminal records
or who might be the subject of deportation orders arising
from criminal acts." (at p409)
5. The document of 5th February 1976 was intended to clarify certain details
of the offer of an amnesty. It included the following
passages:
"'When we say people with serious criminal records will
not be accepted, we are talking about such crimes as violence,
theft, and drug-pushing', Mr. MacKellar said.
'We will not be checking the tax records of people seeking
amnesty. These records are not available to us and we don't
want to know about them.'
'Also, being here illegally as an overstayed visitor will not
disqualify anyone from being granted amnesty.'
...
Mr. MacKellar said that in the case of people illegally in
Australia and applying for amnesty, a medical examination
was required.
'But this does not mean that if they don't pass the tests
satisfactorily, they will automatically have to leave', Mr.
MacKellar said.
'They will be granted temporary residence, which will give
them legal status while their cases are examined.'
'In appropriate cases, where they have a health problem
their stay may be extended to enable them to get full medical
treatment for the condition. When the condition is cleared
up, they will be eligible for permanent residence.'" (at p409)
6. The final document, dated 9th April 1976, commenced by reminding those
concerned that the amnesty would end on 30th April 1976.
It went on as
follows:
"The amnesty basically applied to people who hadAfter repeating the information previously given concerning the necessity for a medical examination, this document continued:
overstayed visitors' visas or entry permits, he added. Only
people with records involving serious crimes such as violence,
drug-pushing, and theft would be refused amnesty."
"Most of those who have sought amnesty come within the
guidelines laid down for the amnesty, but there have been
applications from people such as ship deserters, stowaways,
and students who do not come strictly within its terms.
'There are a great number of formalities to be sorted out
before it can be decided whether these people can be allowed to
stay,' Mr. MacKellar added.
'But at least they have come forward, and their cases will
be looked at sympathetically in the spirit of the amnesty
offer.'
'There must be others in similar situations who have not
had the good sense to come forward - and for them as well as
the many overstayed visitors who have nothing to fear by
seeking the amnesty, the time left for taking advantage of the
Government's offer is very short.'" (at p410)
7. On 1st April 1976 the plaintiff completed an "amnesty application", in the
form provided by the Department of Immigration and
Ethnic Affairs. The
application was for the grant of resident status and, pending determination of
that application, for a temporary
entry permit authorizing the plaintiff to
remain in Australia for three months. (at p410)
8. On 25th May 1976 the Minister wrote a letter in which he said:
"Since Mr. Salemi did not come to Australia on the mostHe added that in re-examining the question he had taken into account the period which the plaintiff had already spent in Australia since the expiration of his temporary entry permit on 30th July 1975. It is pleaded in the statement of claim that the Minister threatens and intends to treat the plaintiff as a prohibited immigrant and to issue a deportation order against him and to deport him. (at p410)
recent occasion as a visitor but entered as a temporary
resident with authority to engage in specified employment, he
does not come within the Amnesty eligibility."
9. The question to be decided is whether on the facts as alleged the Minister
has power to issue a deportation order against the
plaintiff either at all, or
without first acting fairly or in accordance with the rules of natural
justice. (at p410)
10. By s. 6(1) of the Act an immigrant who, not being the holder of an entry
permit that is in force, enters Australia, thereupon
becomes a prohibited
immigrant. By s. 6(2) the power to grant to an immigrant an entry permit is
confided to "an officer", a term
defined by s. 5(1) to mean "an officer of the
Department of Immigration, a person who is an officer for the purposes of the
Customs
Act 1901-1957 or a member of the Police Force of the Commonwealth or
of a State or Territory". An entry permit shall be in a form
approved by the
Minister and shall be expressed to permit the person to whom it is granted to
enter Australia or to remain in Australia
or both (s. 6(3)) and may be granted
to an immigrant before he enters Australia or after he has entered Australia
(s. 6(5)). (at
p411)
11. By s. 6(6) it is provided as follows:
"An entry permit that is intended to operate as a temporaryAn entry permit referred in s. 6 (6) is a "temporary entry permit" - see the definition in s. 5(1). (at p411)
entry permit shall be expressed to authorise the person to
whom it relates to remain in Australia for a specified period
only, and such a permit may be granted subject to
conditions."
12. Section 7(1) empowers the Minister, "in his absolute discretion", to
cancel a temporary entry permit. Section 7(3) provides
as follows:
"Upon the expiration or cancellation of a temporary entryA person who has become a prohibited immigrant by virtue of s. 7(3) ceases to be a prohibited immigrant at the expiration of five years from the time at which he became a prohibited immigrant unless a deportation order in relation to him is then in force (s. 7(4)), or if and when a further entry permit is granted to him (s. 10). (at p411)
permit, the person who was the holder of the permit becomes
a prohibited immigrant unless a further entry permit
applicable to him comes into force upon that expiration or
cancellation."
13. Section 18 provides as follows:
"The Minister may order the deportation of a person who isA person against whom a deportation order is made shall, unless the Minister revokes the order, be deported accordingly (s. 20) and may be arrested and kept in custody in the meantime (s. 39). (at p411)
a prohibited immigrant under any provision of this Act."
14. If it were not for the possible effect of the issue of the four news
releases, there would be no doubt that the plaintiff
is a prohibited
immigrant, and that the Minister is entitled to order his deportation. The
permit issued to the plaintiff on 12th
February 1975 was an entry permit of
the kind referred to in s. 6 (6) , and was a temporary entry permit within the
meaning of
the Act. When it expired, on 30th July 1975, the plaintiff became a
prohibited immigrant (s. 7(3)). Since no further entry permit
has been granted
to him, and five years have not elapsed, he remains a prohibited immigrant (s.
10). The Minister may therefore
order his deportation (s. 18). However the
plaintiff's case is that the issue by the Minister of the four news releases
has radically
changed this situation. On behalf of the plaintiff three
different submissions were advanced as to the effect of the news releases.
Each submission is based on the proposition that the plaintiff was a member of
the class of persons to whom the offer of "amnesty"
was made. That proposition
must be accepted. The class to whom the offer was made included prohibited
immigrants who had come to
Australia as visitors, but who were "over-stayed"
at the 31st December 1975, who met normal standards of health and good
character,
who had no record involving serious crimes and who had made
application in the proper form before the stipulated date. It is pleaded
in
the statement of claim that the plaintiff met these requirements, and for the
purposes of the demurrer that must be taken to
be the case. It need only be
added that the statement in the Minister's letter of 25th May 1976 that the
plaintiff did not come
to Australia as a visitor is at variance with the
indorsements on the incoming passenger card completed by the plaintiff when he
entered Australia, and that the period which the plaintiff has spent in
Australia (which according to the letter the Minister took
into account) was
not a matter which, according to the news releases, was relevant to the
question whether "amnesty" should be
granted. (at p412)
15. It was first contended for the plaintiff that the news releases were
instruments under the hand of the Minister by which he
exempted a class of
persons, including the plaintiff, from the requirements of Div. 1 of Pt II of
the Act relating to entry permits,
under the power given by s. 8(1)(e) of the
Act. Section 8(1) provides as follows:
"Nothing in this Division applies in relation to the entryNo declaration under s. 8(2) is in force in respect of the plaintiff. (at p413)
into Australia of an immigrant being -
(a) a member of the armed forces of the Crown entering
Australia in the course of his duty;
(b) a diplomatic or consular representative or official trade
commissioner of a country other than Australia, or a
member of the staff of such a representative or
commissioner who has been sent to Australia by the
government of that country, or the wife or dependent
relative of such a representative, commissioner or
member;
(c) a person included in the complement of a vessel of the
regular armed forces of a government recognized by the
Commonwealth entering Australia with leave from that
vessel during the vessel's stay in a port, not being a
person in respect of whom a declaration is in force under
the next succeeding sub-section;
(d) a member of the crew of any other vessel entering
Australia with leave from that vessel during the
vessel's stay in a port, where the master of the vessel
has duly complied with the provisions of Division 3 of
this Part that are applicable upon arrival of the vessel
at that port, not being a person in respect of whom a
declaration is in force under the next succeeding
sub-section; or
(e) a person who -
(i) is for the time being exempted, by instrument
under the hand of the Minister, from the
requirements of this Division relating to entry
permits; or
(ii) is included in a class of persons who are for the
time being so exempted,
not being a person in respect of whom a declaration is in
force under the next succeeding sub-section."
16. There are in my opinion a number of reasons why this contention must be
rejected. In the first place the news releases cannot
properly be described as
instruments under the hand of the Minister. Counsel for the plaintiff
submitted that the printed heading
at the top of the news releases, bearing
the name of the Minister, was a sufficient signature by him because he
recognized it as
such. He relied upon cases decided under the Statute of
Frauds, some of which are cited in Neill v. Hewens [1953] HCA 92; (1953)
89 CLR 1, at pp
12-14 , and upon In the Estate of Powe, Dec'd (1956) P 110 where a typed
document, which a solicitor had
checked
and amended in
his own hand, was held
to be "made or produced" by the solicitor "with his own hand" within s. 1(4)
of the
Evidence
Act 1938 (U.K.).
Those cases are however distinguishable. The
meaning of the words "under the hand" must depend upon the
context
in which
they appear,
but in my opinion the expression "instrument under the hand of
the Minister" in s. 8(1)(e) contemplates
a
formal document to which
the
Minister has personally appended his signature. In Electronic Rentals Pty.
Ltd. v. Anderson, Windeyer
J. (with whom Barwick
C.J. and Owen J. concurred)
said [1971] HCA 13; (1971) 124 CLR 27, at p 42 :
"To be under his hand means, I take it, that it must bearIn my opinion an instrument to come within s. 8(1)(e) must be signed by the Minister personally. The importance of the exemption which such an instrument effects, and the need to have such an instrument properly authenticated, no doubt explain why the statute makes this requirement. (at p414)
his signature. At common law one person may authorize
another to sign a document for him.... But when a
document is required by statute to be under a man's hand or
signed by him what is ordinarily meant is that he must
personally sign it, with his name or his mark, by a pen or by
a stamp..."
17. Secondly, the news releases did not purport to exempt any person from the
requirements of Div. 1 of Pt II of the Act relating
to entry permits. That
Division does not in terms impose requirements relating to entry permits
(except as to form - see s. 6 (3)
), but s. 8(1)(e) in my opinion intends to
refer to the requirements that may be inferred from the provisions of s. 6 of
the Act
- in particular the requirement that a person who enters Australia
shall hold an entry permit (see s. 6(1)). The news releases do
not purport to
exempt any person from the requirement that he should hold an entry permit if
he enters Australia (or, if it matters,
from the requirement that he should
hold an entry permit if he remains in Australia). To exempt, in its ordinary
meaning, is to
grant a person immunity or freedom from a liability to which
others are subject. On one view the press releases may be regarded
as granting
an exemption - but the exemption is from the liability to deportation, and not
from the requirement to hold an entry
permit. They are more correctly
described as granting an amnesty in respect of a failure to observe the
requirements of the Act
regarding entry permits than as granting an exemption
from those requirements. They assume that there has been a failure to comply
with the requirements of the Division, and promise to absolve those persons in
default from the consequences of their failure.
They do not purport to free
immigrants from any of the requirements of the Act that they should hold entry
permits. Section 8(1)(e)
refers to the grant of an exemption from the
requirements of the Division relating to entry permits and not to an exemption
from
the consequences of a past failure to comply with those requirements. (at
p414)
18. Thirdly, s. 8(1) has no application to the case of an immigrant who,
having entered Australia as the holder of an entry permit,
remains in
Australia after the permit expires. Although the provisions of the Act already
mentioned show that an "entry permit"
may be a permit issued to an immigrant
who has already entered Australia and may authorize him to remain in
Australia, the word
"entry" is not given a similar extended meaning. Section
8(1)(e) refers to "entry permits" but the governing words of s. 8(1) show
that
the sub-section applies only in relation to the entry of an immigrant into
Australia. Of course persons who fall within the
descriptions contained in s.
8 (1) do not become prohibited immigrants by remaining in Australia (except in
the circumstances mentioned
in s. 8 (3) of the Act); they do not need to hold
entry permits under s. 6 (1) at the time they enter Australia and therefore
can
never come within the provisions of s. 7 (3) which refer to the expiration
or cancellation of permits. However once a person has
entered Australia it
will be irrelevant for the purposes of s. 8 (1) that he subsequently answers
one of the descriptions contained
in that sub-section (for example by
subsequently becoming a diplomatic or consular representative, or by becoming
a member of a
class subsequently exempted by the Minister from the
requirements of the Division relating to entry permits). It was submitted on
behalf of the plaintiff that the opening words of s. 8 (3) would be surplusage
if an exemption granted under s. 8 (1) (e) could
only apply to a person who
had not yet entered Australia. The opening words of s. 8 (3) are as follows:
"(3) Where a person to whom sub-section (1) of this sectionThen the sub-section sets out the circumstances in which such a person becomes a prohibited immigrant including the following:
applies has entered Australia and an entry permit has not
been granted to that person since that entry, that person
becomes a prohibited immigrant - "
"(d) in the case of a person referred to in paragraph (e) ofThe words "and an entry permit has not been granted ... " are consistent with the construction that I have suggested. Sub-section (3) refers to the case of a person who has entered Australia without at that time having, or needing to have, an entry permit and who subsequently answers one of the descriptions contained in the sub-section; in that event the person will become a prohibited immigrant unless an entry permit has been granted to him. (at p415)
that sub-section - if he ceases to be such a person,
whether by his own act, by act of the Minister or
otherwise."
19. For these three reasons, any one of which would be sufficient, the first
contention made on behalf of the plaintiff must fail.
(at p415)
20. It was next submitted that the news releases were instruments by which
the Minister determined that each of the persons falling
within the class
described in the instruments was entitled to the issue of a permit entitling
him to remain in Australia indefinitely.
It was said that this determination
was an exercise of the Minister's discretion to grant, or refuse to grant, a
permit and that
the discretion was thereby exhausted; all that remained to do,
and all that could be done, was to put the decision into execution.
This
argument cannot be supported. It will have been observed that the Minister has
no power himself to grant an entry permit;
that power, as I have already
pointed out, is confided to "an officer". No doubt the Minister has the power
to control the officers
of his department in the execution of their duties,
and could direct any such officer to grant an entry permit. However the fact
that the Minister himself cannot grant a permit makes it impossible to say
that the power to grant a permit has been exercised
once the Minister has
decided that a permit should be granted in a particular case. Further, there
is no principle of law that
requires a Minister, who has decided as a matter
of policy that a permit should be granted to a particular person or to every
person
who is a member of a certain class, to ensure that a permit is granted
to that person or to any person who proves to be a member
of that class. The
Minister is free to change his policy, or his decision in a particular case,
at any time before it is implemented
and a permit is granted. Once a permit is
actually granted, it may be cancelled only if the Act permits that to be done
- we are
not concerned to consider the effect of the Act in that regard. Since
no relevant permit was granted to the plaintiff, the fact,
if it be a fact,
that the Minister had decided that a permit should be granted to every member
of a class which included the plaintiff,
and had announced that decision, did
not entitle the plaintiff as a matter of law to the issue of a permit, and did
not bind the
Minister to ensure that a permit was granted. (at p416)
21. The third submission made on behalf of the plaintiff is that the
Minister, in deciding whether to deport the plaintiff, cannot
exercise an
unfettered discretion, but must act in accordance with the principles of
natural justice, or alternatively in a manner
that would be fair in all the
circumstances. The consequence, according to this submission, is that the
Minister cannot act under
s. 18 at all; if he seeks to deport the plaintiff he
must exercise the powers conferred by s. 14 of the Act. That section, as will
be seen, provides that deportation may be ordered only on a specified ground,
and that the person sought to be deported has the
right to have his case
investigated, and in effect decided, by an independent Commissioner.
Alternatively it was submitted that
the principles of natural justice or of
fairness require that the Minister, before he orders the deportation of the
plaintiff,
must give him an opportunity to be heard on such questions as
whether he was of good character and normal health and was otherwise
within
the class described in the news releases, and whether or not he ought to be
deported. (at p416)
22. The Act contains a number of sections which confer upon the Minister the
power to order the deportation of aliens, immigrants
and prohibited immigrants
respectively. Some sections impose conditions on the exercising of the power.
Section 12 gives the Minister
power to order the deportation of an alien who
has been convicted in Australia of one of the offences specified in that
section.
Section 13 gives the Minister power to order the deportation of an
immigrant who has been convicted in Australia of one of the offences
specified
in that section, if the offence was committed within five years after his
entry into Australia, or the deportation of
an immigrant who is, within five
years after his entry into Australia, an inmate of a mental hospital or public
charitable institution.
Section 14, which deals with the deportation of both
aliens and immigrants, not only imposes conditions on the power, but also
provides for what is in effect an appeal procedure, no doubt because the
conditions prescribed are less certain and objective than
those prescribed by
ss. 12 and 13. Sub-sections (1) and (2) of s. 14 provide as follows:
"(1) If it appears to the Minister that the conduct of anThe section goes on to provide that the Minister shall not order the deportation of a person under the section unless he has first served on that person a notice specifying (inter alia) the ground on which the Minister proposes to order his deportation. The person served with such a notice may request that his case be considered by a Commissioner, who is to be a judge, a former judge, or a barrister or solicitor of not less than five years' standing. If such a request is made the Commissioner is required to make a thorough investigation of the matter and to report to the Minister, who shall not order the deportation unless the Commissioner reports that he considers that the ground specified in the notice has been established. Finally s. 18 gives power to order the deportation of a prohibited immigrant; its terms have already been set out; they do not impose any conditions on the exercise of the power and they do not provide any means of reviewing the Minister's decision. (at p418)
alien (whether in Australia or elsewhere) has been such that
he should not be allowed to remain in Australia, the Minister
may, subject to this section, order the deportation of that
alien.
(2) Subject to the next succeeding section, if it appears to
the Minister that, in the case of an immigrant who entered
Australia (whether before or after the commencement of this
Part) not more than five years previously -
(a) his conduct (whether in Australia or elsewhere) has
been such that he should not be allowed to remain in
Australia; or
(b) he is a person who advocates the overthrow by force or
violence of the established government of the
Commonwealth or of a State or of any other civilized
country or of all forms of law, or advocates the
abolition of organized government or the assassination
of public officials, or advocates or teaches the unlawful
destruction of property, or is a member of an
organization which entertains and teaches any of the doctrines
and practices specified in this paragraph,
the Minister may, subject to this section, order the deportation
of that immigrant."
23. The primary contention made on behalf of the plaintiff, that in the
present case the Minister is obliged to act in accordance
with the procedures
prescribed by s. 14 of the Act, cannot possibly be sustained. Section 18
confers on the Minister, in relation
to prohibited immigrants, wider powers of
deportation than are given by s. 14 in relation to aliens and immigrants who
are not
prohibited immigrants. Let it be assumed (contrary to the opinion I
shall later express) that the Minister, when considering whether
or not he
will order the deportation of a person who is a prohibited immigrant, is under
a duty to act in accordance with the principles
of natural justice, or to act
fairly. That would mean that the Minister could not exercise the power
conferred by s. 18 without
first giving the prohibited immigrant "a full and
fair opportunity" of placing before the Minister his case against the making
of a deportation order. (The words quoted are taken from the judgment of this
Court in Delta Properties Pty. Ltd. v. Brisbane City
Council [1955] HCA 51; (1955) 95 CLR 11,
at p 18 ). It would not mean that he was deprived of the power to act under s.
18 at
all. Counsel for
the plaintiff
properly disclaimed any attempt to argue
that the Minister was estopped from exercising his statutory
powers. He relied
only on
the contention that the Minister was bound to observe the rules of
natural justice or to act fairly.
I need not again refer
separately
to the
contention that the Minister must act fairly. Some judgments suggest that the
duty to
act fairly arises from
a principle
separate from, although analogous
to, the principles of natural justice (see de Smith: Judicial
Review of
Administrative
Action,
3rd. ed. (1973), pp. 208-209) but I would prefer to
regard the duty to act fairly as simply flowing
from the duty to observe
the
principles of natural justice. "Natural justice is but fairness writ large and
juridically. It has
been described as 'fair
play
in action'" (Furnell v.
Whangarei High Schools Board (1973) AC 660, at p 679 ). However, the
principles
of natural justice
govern
the manner in which a power may be
exercised; they do not, and cannot, completely forbid the exercise
of the
power. They
may supplement
the provisions of a statute but may not repeal
them. (at p419)
24. The question then is whether the Minister, before exercising the power
given by s. 18, was bound to afford the plaintiff an
opportunity to be heard.
There is nothing technical about the principles of natural justice. It is
sometimes said, or suggested,
that those principles apply only to proceedings
which are judicial or quasi-judicial, or where there is a duty to act
judicially.
To state the rule in that way seems to me to be unduly restrictive
and misleading. It is at least clear that when the power which
is being
exercised is a statutory one, it is not necessary to be able to find in the
words of the statute itself a duty to hear
the party affected or otherwise to
act judicially. To repeat the well-known words of Byles J. in Cooper v.
Wandsworth Board of
Works [1863] EngR 424; (1863) 14 CB (NS) 180, at p 194 [1863] EngR 424; (143 ER 414, at p
420) , "although there are no positive words in a statute requiring that
the
party shall be heard, yet the justice
of the common law will supply the
omission of the legislature". As Lord Reid said in
Ridge v. Baldwin (1964) AC
40, at p 76 , it
may be possible "to infer a judicial element from the nature
of the power" in the case.
Further, the application of the principles
is not
limited to cases where the power that is exercised affects rights in the
strict
sense: see, e.g., Banks v. Transport Regulation
Board (Vict.) (1968)
[1968] HCA 23; 119 CLR 222 . It may be enough if an interest
or privilege
is affected, or, as
Lord Denning M.R. has said, if a man has a "legitimate
expectation", of which
it would not be
fair to deprive
him without a hearing, or reasons given: Breen
v. Amalgamated Engineering
Union (1971) 2 QB 175, at p 191 ; and
see Schmidt
v.
Secretary of State for Home Affairs (1969) 2 Ch 149, at p 170 . But it
would
be wrong to attempt to give an exhaustive
classification
of the cases
where the principle should be applied: Durayappah v. Fernando
(1967) 2 AC 337,
at p 349 . (at p419)
25. The question whether the principles of natural justice must be applied,
and if so what those principles require, depends on
the circumstances of each
case. In the case of a statutory power, the question will depend on the true
construction of the statutory
provision in light of the common law principles
(cf. Durayappah v. Fernando (1967) 2 AC, at p 350 ). (at p419)
26. In Durayappah v. Fernando, Lord Upjohn, delivering the reasons of the
Privy Council, said that "there are three matters which
must always be borne
in mind when considering whether the principle should be applied or not"
(1967) 2 AC 337, at p 349 . He went
on:
"These three matters are: first, what is the nature of theThere may of course be other matters that will be relevant in deciding whether the principles apply: for example, the nature of the body on which the power is conferred, the language in which the power is conferred, and the presence in the statute of provisions enabling the exercise of the power to be reviewed. It is convenient for present purposes first to discuss the case in the light of the matters mentioned by Lord Upjohn. (at p420)
property, the office held, status enjoyed or services to be
performed by the complainant of injustice. Secondly, in
what circumstances or upon what occasions is the person
claiming to be entitled to exercise the measure of control
entitled to intervene. Thirdly, when a right to intervene is
proved, what sanctions in fact is the latter entitled to impose
upon the other."
27. The relevant status of the plaintiff is that of a prohibited immigrant.
Aliens, including aliens who are immigrants, are,
whilst in Australia,
entitled to the protection of our laws, and the common law would not deny to
them, in appropriate cases, the
application of the principles of natural
justice. However the plaintiff is a prohibited immigrant, and as Barwick C.J.
said in
Reg. v. Forbes; Ex parte Kwok Kwan Lee [1971] HCA 14; (1971) 124 CLR 168, at p 173 :
"By the very description he is not a person
having any title
to remain in the
country." As to the
second of the matters mentioned by Lord Upjohn, s. 18
gives the Minister
an unconditional
right to order the deportation of a
prohibited
immigrant. The section does not limit the circumstances or
occasions
on which the
Minister may exercise the power; he is not required
to
determine any question, or to form any satisfaction or opinion,
before making
the order - the matter is left entirely to his
discretion. In Ridge v. Baldwin
Lord Reid, speaking of servants and
officers of
the Crown who hold offices at
pleasure, said (1964)
AC, at pp 65-66 :
"It has always been held, I think rightly, that such anThis is a field in which it is unwise to generalize, but the fact that the power is conferred quite unconditionally is a circumstance that suggests - not necessarily conclusively - that the principles of natural justice are not intended to apply. These two matters together quite strongly support the view that the power of the Minister under s. 18 is one which he may exercise free from any duty to observe the principles of natural justice. The third consideration - what Lord Upjohn called the sanction - points in the opposite direction, because the power to order deportation, if exercised, may have a seriously adverse effect on the life of the person deported. (at p421)
officer has no right to be heard before he is dismissed, and
the reason is clear. As the person having the power of
dismissal need not have anything against the officer, he need
not give any reason."
28. In my opinion the circumstances as a whole lead to the conclusion that
the Minister is not bound to afford a hearing to a
prohibited immigrant before
ordering his deportation under s. 18. The very security of the nation may
require that the executive
should have the power to decide what aliens shall
be permitted to enter and remain in Australia, and to expel those who have no
right to be in the country. Reasons of security may make it impossible to
disclose the grounds on which the executive proposes
to act. If the Minister
cannot reveal why he intends to make a deportation order, it will be difficult
to afford the prohibited
immigrant a full opportunity to state his case, for
he may not know what it is that he has to answer. This is not to say that it
might not be practicable for the Parliament to provide a procedure for the
review of deportation orders made under s. 18, but the
Parliament has not done
so. The scheme of the Act shows that the Parliament has drawn a sharp
distinction between the deportation
of prohibited immigrants on the one hand,
and of aliens and other immigrants on the other hand. The Act gives to the
Minister in
the case of a prohibited immigrant a power which is on its face
unfettered and which stands in contrast to the conditional and controlled
powers given by ss. 13 and 14. Having regard to all these considerations, I
conclude that the power given by s. 18 is not subject
to an obligation to
observe the principles of natural justice, and that the Minister may issue a
deportation order under that section
without first giving the person affected
an opportunity to be heard. This conclusion is consistent with that reached in
a number
of cases in which it has been held that an alien is not entitled to
be heard before a deportation order is made against him: R.
v. Secretary of
State for Home Affairs; Ex parte Duke of Chateau Thierry (1917) 1 KB 922 ; R.
v. Inspector of Leman Street Police
Station; Ex parte Venicoff (1920) 3 KB 72
; Reg. v. Governor of Brixton Prison; Ex parte Soblen (1963) 2 QB 243 ; Reg.
v. Governor
of Metropolitan Gaol; Ex parte Tripodi (1962) VR 180 ; and Reg. v.
Liveris; Ex parte Da Costa (1962) 3 FLR 249 - the last-mentioned
decision was
given on s. 18 itself. Some of the judgments in these cases proceeded on views
which must be regarded as erroneous
in the light of the decision in Ridge v.
Baldwin [1963] UKHL 2; (1964) AC 40 , as Lord Denning M.R. pointed out in Schmidt v.
Secretary of State
for Home Affairs (1969) 2 Ch, at p 170 . At the
least,
however, it may be said that the earlier authorities warranted
the belief,
when s. 18 was enacted, that a prohibited immigrant
would have no right to be
heard before an order was made under
that section,
and that is, as I have
said, the view which I have
reached independently of these authorities. (at
p422)
29. Counsel for the plaintiff in his argument placed much reliance on the
proposition that the statements contained in the news
releases were such as to
give the plaintiff a legitimate expectation that no deportation order would be
made if he applied for
amnesty within the time allowed for that purpose. It
has already been indicated that a prohibited immigrant as such has no
legitimate
expectation of remaining in Australia. It has been indicated also
that a duty to act in accordance with the principles of natural
justice in
exercising a statutory power must be derived from the statutory provision
which confers the power, read subject to the
common law principles which are
engrafted on to its provisions, and Ridge v. Baldwin (1964) AC, at p 73 and
Durayappah v. Fernando
(1967) 2 AC, at p 350 , have been cited. Once it is
concluded that the Act, so construed and understood, does not impose a duty
to
act in accordance with the principles of natural justice, it is not relevant
that statements made by the Minister may have led
the plaintiff to expect that
he would not be deported; the fact that the plaintiff had acted on the faith
of the Minister's statements
would then only be relevant if there arose an
estoppel or some contractual obligation binding the Minister, and this is not
suggested.
In other words, if the Act confers a power which may be exercised
without regard to the principles of natural justice, the Minister
is entitled
to exercise that power even if the exercise of it appears to be unfair, and to
defeat expectations which his statements
have raised. On the other hand, if
the conclusion had been reached that the Act did require the Minister to act
in accordance with
the principles of natural justice, it might be relevant, in
deciding whether or not he had discharged his duty, to consider the
statements
he had made and the manner in which the plaintiff had acted in reliance on
them. (at p422)
30. It seems right to add that it has not been alleged in the statement of
claim that the Minister has refused to allow the plaintiff
an opportunity to
be heard on the question whether, having regard to the amnesty promised by the
Minister, he should be allowed
to remain in Australia. It may be that in the
circumstances of this case there is no reason why the Minister should not
afford
such an opportunity to the plaintiff and why he should not give full
consideration to the plaintiff's submissions. If the allegations
in the
statement of claim are correct, the plaintiff may well have reason to believe
that he has acted in reliance upon a promise
which the Minister may not keep,
and the Minister may wish to dispel any such belief. However it should be made
clear that on a
demurrer we can form no view of the merits of the case. In my
opinion, the arguments advanced on behalf of the plaintiff fail, and
the
demurrer should be allowed. (at p423)
STEPHEN J. These proceedings come before us upon the defendant's demurrer to
the plaintiff's statement of claim, the defendant
being the Minister for
Immigration and Ethnic Affairs of the Commonwealth. (at p423)
2. The facts alleged by the plaintiff and which for present purposes must be
taken to be admitted are, so far as presently material,
as follows:
1. The plaintiff is an Italian citizen who lawfully entered Australia in
October 1974 and was granted a permit to enter and to
remain in this country
for three months; a subsequently issued permit permitted him to remain until
30th July 1975. These permits
were issued pursuant to s. 6 of the Migration
Act 1958.
2. The plaintiff remained in Australia after that date and continues to
reside here despite the expiry of his permit.
3. Between January and April 1976, the defendant, in his capacity as
Minister, published four news releases announcing to the
public the offer of a
so-called "Amnesty" to prohibited immigrants such as the plaintiff if they met
certain standards of health
and good character and had no record of serious
crime. The offer was to remain open to applicants until 30th April 1976,
acceptance
being by the making of an application for a permit to remain in
Australia.
4. The plaintiff meets the "normal standards of health and good character"
referred to in the releases, does not have a "serious
criminal record" such as
the releases speak of and has not committed any criminal acts while in
Australia; he did make application
to the Minister before 30th April 1976 for
an entry permit permitting him to remain in Australia.
5. It was in reliance upon the contents of the releases that the plaintiff
"came forward and identified himself" to the Minister
and sought the amnesty
which the releases offered.
6. Despite the plaintiff's application for a permit no permit has been
issued to the plaintiff, the alleged amnesty has not been
granted to him and
the Minister threatens and intends to treat him as a prohibited immigrant and
to deport him accordingly pursuant
to s. 18 of the Act. (at p424)
3. The plaintiff seeks to make good upon three distinct grounds his claim for
relief by way of declarations and injunctions. First,
he contends that the
four news releases constitute instruments of exemption such as s. 8 (1) (e) of
the Act refers to, instruments
under the hand of the Minister exempting a
class of persons, which class includes the plaintiff, from the requirements of
Div.
1 of Pt II of the Act relating to entry permits. It follows, he says,
that he is not a prohibited immigrant and the Minister's power
of deportation
conferred by s. 18, the use of which has been threatened, is not applicable to
him. (at p424)
4. Secondly, he contends, in the alternative, that the news releases
themselves constitute or evidence a determination by the
Minister to grant
entry permits of indefinite duration permitting all those who answer a
particular description to remain in Australia.
Once made that determination is
irrevocable and since the plaintiff answers the relevant description he is to
be regarded as entitled
to such an entry permit, the merely ministerial
failure to issue the relevant permit being irrelevant. (at p424)
5. Thirdly, because the Minister by medium of the news releases represented
to the plaintiff that if he came forward and applied
for an entry permit he
would be granted one, the plaintiff has acquired a "legitimate expectation" of
which he cannot now be deprived
without being afforded such an opportunity to
be heard by the Minister on the question of his deportation as the
requirements of
natural justice call for. He will also be entitled to be told
of the grounds of his deportation and these grounds will be examinable
judicially to ensure that they are relevant and proper to the exercise by the
Minister of his power of deportation under s. 18
of the Act. (at p424)
6. Of these three submissions I reject the first two and shall state, as concisely as may be, my reasons for doing so. The third I partially uphold, although not to the extent contended for by the plaintiff; it is with my reasons for doing so that the latter part of this judgment is concerned. (at p424)
The news releases as instruments of exemption.
7. The plaintiff's first ground seeks to rely upon the terms of s. 8 (1) (e)
of the Act, which reads:
"8. (1) Nothing in this Division applies in relation to the
entry into Australia of an immigrant being
(a) ...
(b) ...
(c) ...
(d) ...
(e) a person who -
(i) is for the time being exempted, by instrument
under the hand of the Minister, from the
requirements of this Division relating to entry
permits; or
(ii) is included in a class of persons who are for the
time being so exempted,
not being a person in respect of whom a declaration
is in force under the next succeeding sub-section." (at p425)
8. Let it be assumed for present purposes, without in any way deciding the
point in the plaintiff's favour, that the news releases,
singly or together,
are capable of constituting "an instrument under the hand of the Minister".
That the plaintiff was, on and
after 30th July 1974, a prohibited immigrant is
not in doubt. Section 10 of the Act provides that a person who has become a
prohibited
immigrant ceases to be such "if and when an entry permit or further
entry permit is granted to him, and not otherwise". Section
18 empowers the
Minister to "order the deportation of a person who is a prohibited immigrant".
It follows that unless such an instrument
under the hand of the Minister as s.
8 (1) (e) refers to is effective to rid a person who is a prohibited immigrant
of that status
it will not deprive the Minister of his power under s. 18. (at
p425)
9. In my view s. 8 (1) (e) has no such effect. The opening words of s. 8
describe the function of the entire section; it is concerned,
as its sidenote
suggests, with "Exemptions"; that is, with the granting of exemptions from the
Act's stringent control of entry
into Australia. It is upon this control of
entry into the country that Pt II depends for its effective operation and s. 8
concerns
itself, and concerns itself only, with the exemption of certain
persons from that system of control and, in its later sub-sections,
with the
imposition of qualifications and exceptions upon those exemptions. (at p425)
10. There are features of s. 8 which might suggest that it has a wider reach.
One such may be thought to lie in the wording of
s. 8 (1) (e) (i) which
defines the persons to which its provisions may apply as those "exempted, by
instrument under the hand of
the Minister, from the requirements of this
Division relating to entry permits". These words describe a wider area of
exemption
than that contemplated by the opening words of s. 8, concerned as
they are only with entry into Australia. The words of par. (e)
appear to
contemplate some power in the Minister to grant a general exemption from the
"requirements of this Division relating
to entry permits", a power which
appears to be nowhere expressly conferred. Again s. 8 (2), which contemplates
that a person falling
within one of the exempted classes referred to in pars
(c), (d) or (e) (ii) of s. 8 (1) may by express declaration be excluded from
such class, is so worded as to be applicable not only to persons entering
Australia but also to those already here and who seek
to remain here. (at
p426)
11. Despite these, and possibly other, indications of a similar character,
the clear words of the opening part, which is also
the operative part, of s. 8
(1), coupled with the apparent role which the section plays in the general
scheme of Div. 1 of Pt II
of the Act, must prevail. The effect of par. (e)
(ii) is, I think, only to render inapplicable in appropriate cases the
statutory
system of control over entry into Australia. It will operate in this
way in the case of an immigrant who is a member of a class
to which the
Minister has, by instrument under his hand, granted the exemption referred to.
The preceding paragraphs, (a) to (d)
of s. 8 (1), have a similar operation;
they too deal with particular categories of persons, members of the armed
forces of the
Crown, diplomats and the like and their dependants, and the
crews of foreign naval vessels and of merchant vessels. To none of them
will
the system of control on entry apply and this for reasons obvious from the
description of the classes of persons in question.
Sub-section (2) then
confers a power to exclude particular individuals from such classes, and
sub-s. (3) deals with exempted persons
after their entry into Australia and
after they have, as it were, shed their specially privileged position; for
example, by ceasing
to be a diplomat or a member of the armed forces of the
Crown or, if a seaman, by jumping ship. Unless an entry permit has been
granted to such a person the sub-section provides that he thereupon becomes a
prohibited immigrant. I note in passing that one
reason for the reference in
sub-s. (2) (to which I have earlier referred) to an immigrant remaining in, as
well as entering, Australia
may lie in sub-s. (3) and its treatment of persons
such as seamen on shore leave; the Minister may decide to make a declaration
under sub-s. (2) in respect of such a person and if he does so the declaration
will necessarily refer not to that person's entry
into Australia (he is
already here) but rather to his remaining in this country. (at p426)
12. The only effect of the exemption conferred by s. 8 (1) (e) is, in my
view, to prevent an immigrant's entry into Australia
without an entry permit
from giving rise to the status of a prohibited immigrant. Those who fall
within one or other of its provisions
will need no entry permit since nothing
in Div. 1 applies in relation to their entry into Australia. Once within
Australia the
want of an entry permit is again of no concern to them (so long
as they retain their privileged character under s. 8 (1) for it
is not
presence in Australia without a permit that gives rise to the status of
prohibited immigrant under Div. 1 but only entry
without a permit (s.6 (1) )
or the expiration or cancellation of a temporary entry permit (s. 7 (3) ) or
the loss of a privileged
character (s. 8 (3) ). (at p427)
13. With the position of those for whom s. 8 legislates may be contrasted
that of the plaintiff. Unlike them the plaintiff was
obliged to, and did,
obtain an entry permit upon his arrival in Australia; again unlike them, his
presence in Australia without
a valid permit resulted in his becoming a
prohibited immigrant because it was due not to any privileged entry under s. 8
but to
the expiration of the term of the permit which had been granted to him.
The quite limited ambit of the exemption capable of being
conferred by such an
instrument as that referred to in s. 8 (1) (e) reveals that that paragraph
was never capable of being made
applicable to the plaintiff once he entered
Australia and obtained his first entry permit. (at p427)
14. It follows that the plaintiff cannot call in aid the provisions of s. 8
(1) (e) of the Act. Even were he in some way able
to do so he must, for that
purpose, point to some instrument answering the description contained in par.
(e). Nothing appearing
in the four news releases is, in my view, such as would
enable any one or more of them to be treated as such an instrument. The
character which par. (e) requires of such an instrument is that it should
exempt a person or persons "from the requirements of
this Division relating to
entry permits". Whatever may be the precise character of the "Amnesty" to
which the news releases refer,
it involved no exemption from the requirements
of Div. 1. On the contrary, those requirements were to remain in full vigour
but
the Minister indicated, some would say promised, that those prohibited
immigrants who satisfied certain criteria would have issued
to them permits
entitling them lawfully to remain in Australia. Thus even if the news releases
were to be regarded as instruments
under the Minister's hand and as of
immediate operative effect (rather than as doing no more than foreshadowing
what the Minister
would do in individual cases) they would not answer the
description called for by s. 8 (1) (e). (at p427)
15. For these reasons the plaintiff's first contention must fail. (at p428)
The news releases as a grant of entry permits.
16. This submission depends for its success upon the proposition that the
grant of entry permits is preceded by some decision
made by the Minister
which, in the case of permits other than temporary entry permits, may not,
once made, thereafter be revoked
and which is effective, without more, to rid
a prohibited immigrant of that particular status. This is not, however, the
scheme
of the Act. The Minister plays no necessary part in the grant of such
permits, they are instead granted by an "officer" as defined
in s. 5. It was
conceded that the Minister did not fall within the terms of that definition.
Upon grant a grantee (and his wife
or children if deemed to be included in it)
becomes the holder of a permit - s. 5 - and it is his status as holder that
prevents
him from becoming a prohibited immigrant upon his entry into
Australia - s. 6 (1). In the present case there has been no grant of
a permit
by any officer, the plaintiff has not, since July 1975, become the holder of a
permit. It is not disputed that the plaintiff
became a prohibited immigrant
when the term of his entry permit expired on 30th July 1975 and s. 10 is
explicit in providing that
only "if and when an entry permit or further permit
is granted to him, and not otherwise" will he cease to be burdened with that
status. (at p428)
17. Accordingly, no decision by the Minister can be effective for the purpose
for which the plaintiff seeks to use it, that is,
to remove from him his
status as a prohibited immigrant to whom the Minister's power of deportation
under s. 18 applies. This is
enough to dispose of the plaintiff's second
submission but in saying no more as to it I am not to be taken as accepting
the view
that a decision by the Minister, once made, is irrevocable or, still
less, the view that the contents of the news releases are capable
of
constituting or evidencing any presently effective decision to grant any
particular permits. (at p428)
The plaintiff's entitlement to, and the denial to him of, natural justice
18. The plaintiff's third submission is that the Minister may not, at all
events in the particular circumstances of this case,
exercise the power to
deport conferred by s. 18 without first giving to the plaintiff an opportunity
to put before the Minister
for his consideration reasons why the power should
not be exercised. The plaintiff contends that the announcement of the amnesty,
coupled with the plaintiff's response to it, operated to confer upon him some
right, or at the least some legitimate expectation
of being accorded a right,
to remain in Australia. This, it is said, is enough to impose upon the
Minister an obligation to act
fairly towards the plaintiff having regard to
the requirements of natural justice. This in turn obliges the Minister to give
to
the plaintiff the opportunity of presenting for his consideration reasons
why he should no exercise his power of deportation. (at
p429)
19. The plaintiff's submission does, indeed, go much further; there must, he
says, be a hearing before a Commissioner appointed
under s. 14 of the Act and
the Minister may only act after considering the outcome of that hearing.
Alternatively the Minister
must himself afford the plaintiff a hearing. In
either event the Minister must inform him of the reasons for arriving at any
decision
adverse to him. Those reasons will then be examinable in the courts.
Some variations of and modifications upon these submissions
were also the
subject of argument in the course of the hearing. (at p429)
20. The particular power to deport which the Minister intends to exercise in
relation to the plaintiff is that conferred by s.
18, which reads:
"18. The Minister may order the deportation of a personBut this is only one of a number of grants of the power to deport, all contained in Div. 2 of Pt II. (at p429)
who is a prohibited immigrant under any provision of this
Act."
21. A proper understanding of the nature of the power conferred by s. 18 requires some examination of the whole of the Division of which it forms an integral part. Such an examination discloses a coherent and consistent scheme by which persons who may be deported are classified depending upon national status and upon the circumstances in which they first entered or now remain in Australia. The Act then prescribes different circumstances applicable to each such classification which determine whether, and by what procedure, a person within any classification may be deported. (at p429)
The scheme of the Act.
22. There are three distinct classifications, immigrants, aliens and
prohibited immigrants. There is a degree of overlap between
aliens and other
classes; the distinguishing feature of an alien is only that he is not a
British subject, an Irish citizen or
a protected person and one may be both an
alien and an immigrant or prohibited immigrant. By correlating particular
categories
of persons and particular conduct a complex pattern may be seen to
emerge which, in broad outline, is as follows. (at p429)
23. Prohibited immigrants may be deported under s. 18 without reference to
their conduct save that the very acquiring of that
status involves certain
conduct, for example, entry into Australia without a permit or remaining in
Australia after cancellation
or the expiration of a temporary entry permit.
(at p430)
24. Aliens who are not prohibited immigrants but have been convicted of
crimes of violence or of any crime involving a sentence
of imprisonment for a
year or more may be deported under s. 12. An alien may also be deported if it
appears to the Minister that
his conduct, in or out of Australia, has been
such that he should not be allowed to remain in Australia - s. 14 (1), but
only if
he is first afforded the opportunity of having his case considered and
reported upon by a Commissioner appointed under s. 14 (5).
(at p430)
25. Immigrants (not being either prohibited immigrants or aliens) may be
deported under s. 13 if convicted of an offence punishable
by death or by
imprisonment for one year or longer or of prostitution or of procuring or of
living on the earnings of prostitution,
but only if such offence was committed
within five years after entry into Australia. Being an inmate of s mental
hospital or public
charitable institution within those five years is also a
ground for deportation - s. 13 (c). Again, like the alien and subject to
the
same safeguard as to report by a Commissioner, an immigrant of less than five
years' standing may be deported if it appears
to the Minister his conduct in
or out of Australia has been such that he should not be allowed to remain in
Australia - s. 14 (2)
(a). He may also be deported, but subject again to a
Commissioner's report, if it appears to the Minister that he falls within any
of the descriptions of persons appearing in s. 14 (2) (b), which is a
paragraph describing a variety of persons who advocate what
may be described
as the subversion of government. (at p430)
26. It will be seen that an immigrant (not being an alien or prohibited
immigrant) who has resided for more than five years in
Australia without
conviction for the abovementioned offences becomes immune from deportation. In
this sense, by the effluxion of
time, he attains a status secure from
deportation. (at p430)
27. Not so the alien, who, so long as the immigration power reaches him, always remains liable to deportation in accordance with ss. 12 and 14 (1) . However alien and immigrant alike will be immune from summary deportation so long as they avoid criminal conviction; if they do so they will then only be liable to deportation if, having been served with a notice of the Minister's intention to deport upon one of the grounds specified in s. 14 (1) or (2) , and having availed themselves of their rights under s. 14 (3) , a Commissioner, after "a thorough investigation" (s. 14 (7) ), reports that he considers that the specified ground has been established - s. 14 (8) (c). (at p431)
The statutory position of prohibited immigrants.
28. With all this may be contrasted the situation of the prohibited
immigrant. The Act does not make expressly relevant to his
deportation the
commission of crimes by him or the formation by the Minister of views
concerning him. Instead, after dealing in
detail with the cases of other
immigrants and aliens, the Act merely states, in the language of s. 18, that
the Minister "may order
the deportation" of a prohibited immigrant. (at p431)
29. It now becomes necessary to examine more closely the precise position of
the prohibited immigrant and, in particular, one
such as the plaintiff who has
become a prohibited immigrant by "overstaying" the limited duration of his
temporary entry permit.
He does not thereby commit any one of the numerous
offences which the Act creates as, for example, by s. 27 and s. 30; in this
respect his position differs from the immigrant who enters without a permit
(s. 27 (1) (a)) or with forged papers (s. 27 (1) (c))
and also, and perhaps
surprisingly, from the person who does no more than "knowingly harbour a
prohibited immigrant" (s. 30 (2)
(b)), each of whom does commit an offence.
However by "overstaying" and thus becoming a prohibited immigrant a person
becomes
subject to arrest without warrant and to detention in custody - s. 38.
If a deportation order is made the prohibited immigrant then
becomes a
deportee and the more stringent provisions as to detention which are provided
for in s. 39 become applicable to him.
(at p431)
30. The provisions of s. 38 (3), as well as the absence of any offence of being a prohibited immigrant, throw some light upon the function of the Minister in exercising the power conferred by the words "may order the deportation" in s. 18. Under s. 38 (3) a prohibited immigrant who has been arrested is to be brought before a prescribed authority who inquires as to his status and, if satisfied of reasonable grounds for supposing him to be a prohibited immigrant, may authorize his detention "for such period, not exceeding seven days from the date of the authorization, as the prescribed authority is satisfied is reasonably required in order to enable the Minister to consider whether that person is a prohibited immigrant and whether a deportation order should be made in respect of him". A prescribed authority may extend this period of detention (s. 38 (4) ) but at the end of the period the person so detained must be released (s. 38 (5) ) unless in the meanwhile he is informed that a deportation order has been made against him - s. 38 (6). (at p431)
31. Certain conclusions follow from this examination of the Act. The terms of
s. 38 (3) clearly contemplate that deportation is
not to be the inevitable
consequence of the apprehension of a prohibited immigrant. The Minister is to
be given time to consider
"whether a deportation order should be made in
respect of him"; and that consideration will not be affected by any fear that
in
failing to order deportation the Minister will be countenancing a
continuing offence - being a prohibited immigrant is no offence.
However one
might suppose that if the Minister decides against deportation, he will
usually then issue at least a temporary entry
permit rather than leave the
immigrant in question in the limbo represented by the status of an undeported
but prohibited immigrant.
(at p432)
32. Another conclusion may, I think, be drawn. The elaborate provisions for
investigation and report by a Commissioner before
the making of any
deportation order, to be found in s. 14 of the Act but made applicable only to
certain categories of persons
and in carefully specified circumstances,
strongly suggest that their absence in all but these cases evidences a
deliberate legislative
intent not generally to interpose between an immigrant
and the Minister's exercise of his power of deportation any formal hearing
process. (at p432)
33. In short, I conclude that, in the case of an "overstayed" prohibited
immigrant such as the plaintiff, the Act recognizes that
deportation will not
be the automatic sequel to apprehension but that, on the contrary, there will
be cases in which the Minister
will decide not to deport, despite the
existence of the status of prohibited immigrant. The Act requires that in each
case the
Minister should give consideration to whether or not in all the
circumstances the prohibited immigrant should be deported but does
not
contemplate any form of independent inquiry nor any actual hearing before the
Minister himself. (at p432)
34. If, then, it be the task of the Minister to consider for himself the circumstances of the case and to form his own conclusion as to whether or not a deportation order should be made, it might be supposed that the Minister would not consciously deny himself access to information bearing upon that question which a prohibited immigrant was anxious to supply and of some at least of which the Minister might be unaware. The information which might thus be furnished by the prohibited immigrant would, no doubt, be likely to be limited to his own personal situation; to the particular effect upon him of the making of a deportation order, perhaps involving some feature of special hardship. But there is no reason to suppose that matters such as these are not proper for the Minister to pay regard to, together with others, in arriving at the decision which the Act calls on him to make. Be that as it may, it is against this statutory background that the consequences of the Minister's action in announcing an amnesty are to be viewed. Before considering the effect of the amnesty the position apart from amnesty may be looked at. (at p433)
The position in the absence of any amnesty.
35. But for the amnesty the plaintiff's case might be thought to be governed
by a body of authority said to establish that the
decision to deport may
lawfully be made without affording to the deportee either a hearing or any
other opportunity for the making
of representations. This was, indeed, the
tenor of the submissions which were made on the Minister's behalf. (at p433)
36. The principle embodied in these cases is not easy to discern nor do they,
on examination, provide clear support for the proposition
they are said to
establish. Some were cases in which no question of any hearing was in issue,
concepts of natural justice being
neither urged in argument nor dealt with in
the judgments: R. v. Home Secretary; Ex parte Duke of Chateau Thierry (1917) 1
KB 922
, a First World War case, provides such an instance. There no question
arose as to natural justice or as to procedural safeguards
for the deportee.
Others turned largely, if not exclusively, upon the fact, no longer regarded
as at all decisive, that the making
of the decision was not a judicial act or
function. Thus in R. v. Inspector of Leman Street Police Station; Ex parte
Venicoff (1920)
3 KB 72 the decision turned upon what was thought to be the
critical difference between the decision of an executive officer and
that of a
judicial tribunal (1920) 3 KB, at pp 80, 81 . The same may be said of Reg. v.
Governor of Metropolitan Gaol; Ex parte
Tripodi (1962) VR 180, esp at p 183 .
In Reg. v. Governor of Brixton Prison; Ex parte Soblen (1963) 2 QB 243, at p
298 , Lord Denning
recognized that "the tenor of the decisions of these courts
for nearly a hundred years" had been that a person should not be deprived
of
liberty or property without a hearing but concluded that the case of
deportation formed an exception, the existence of which
was established by
Venicoff's Case (1920) 3 KB 72 in 1920 and was confirmed by the fact that
when a new Aliens Order was made
in 1953 employing the same wording as had
given rise to the decision in Venicoff, Parliament's failure to disallow the
Order was
to be taken as an approval of that decision. His Lordship also
called in aid the consideration that were an alien to be given advance
notice
of a hearing he might then disappear, defeating the purpose of the
legislation. Donovan L.J. took a somewhat similar view
but also concluded that
Venicoff's Case was, in any event, correct (1963) 2 QB, at pp 305-306 .
Pearson L.J. did not pass expressly
upon Venicoff's Case but was much
influenced by particular features of the wording of the Order and otherwise
expressed views similar
to those of Lord Denning. (at p434)
37. The considerations which affected their Lordships in Soblen's Case (1963)
2 QB 243 are largely inapplicable to the present
case even were there here no
question of an amnesty. Soblen's Case was decided before Lord Reid's momentous
speech in Ridge v.
Baldwin [1963] UKHL 2; (1964) AC 40 , since which emphasis upon the
distinction between judicial and non-judicial decisions is
no longer good law.
Moreover
this is not a case in which we are concerned with legislation having
such a history as that of the
U.K. Aliens Order;
nor under
the Australian
legislation is there any risk that anything in the nature of a hearing will
afford
an opportunity for
evasion, the
prohibited immigrant may be arrested
and detained pending consideration of his fate by the Minister
should there be
thought to
be any risk that he will disappear. (at p434)
38. One further comment on Soblen's Case (1963) 2 QB 243 is called for which
is directly related to this power under the Australian
legislation to keep
prohibited immigrants in custody pending a decision upon deportation.
Immediately following upon his remarks
concerning the ability of an alien to
defeat the purpose of the legislation by disappearing if given advance warning
of an impending
deportation hearing, Lord Denning said, "I think, therefore,
that there is no right to be heard before a deportation order is made".
His
Lordship then proceeded as follows (1963) 2 QB, at pp 298-299 :
"I reserve my opinion, however, on the following point: it
may be a question whether, after a deportation order is made
and before it comes to be executed (by his being expelled from
the realm), an alien may not in some circumstances have a
right to be heard". (at p434)
39. The significance of this passage only emerges when read in the light of a
subsequent decision of the Court of Appeal, six
years later, in which his
Lordship was silent as to the mode of exercise of the power to deport but in
which the two other members
of the Court spoke in terms not wholly dissimilar
from what appears in this passage. Before coming to it I should first deal
briefly
with another case forming part of the body of authority to which I
have earlier referred. It is Reg. v. Liveris; Ex parte Da Costa
(1962) 3 FLR
249 , in which Bridge J. had to consider the present Australian Act. It seems
apparent from the careful enumeration
and consideration by his Honour of the
numerous submissions made in that case that no question was there raised of
any entitlement
to a hearing before the making of the deportation orders. The
case was concerned with a wide variety of other issues and although
in the
course of it his Honour did discuss the nature of the power conferred by s. 18
of the Act (1962) 3 FLR, at p 257 he did
so only to reject a submission that,
once exercised, the exercise was subject to judicial review "on grounds based
on claims by
the applicants to political asylum". In other words, his Honour
was concerned with substantive law and with a challenge to the substantive
correctness of the deportation orders and not with any question of procedural
rights. The Liveris Case, in my view, throws no light
upon the present case.
(at p435)
40. Although not itself concerned with deportation, one aspect of the case of
Schmidt v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs (1969)
2 Ch 149 is here
relevant. The case was concerned with the refusal of the Minister to extend
the period during which the plaintiffs
might remain in the U.K. In denying the
plaintiffs the relief they sought Lord Denning M.R. said nothing about the
mode in which
the distinct power to deport should be exercised. However
Widgery L.J., who also denied the plaintiffs relief, after pointing out
that
he was concerned only with a claim to renewal of a right of residence and not
with the plaintiffs' deportation, went on to
say (1969) 2 Ch, at pp 173-174 :
"Of course, very different considerations may arise on theRussell L.J. was a dissentient in Schmidt's Case and would have upheld Schmidt's appeal against the summary dismissal of his action. He may perhaps have shared the views of Widgery L.J. as to deportation since he said (1969) 2 Ch, at p 172 :
making of a deportation order. An alien in this country is
entitled to the protection of the law as is a native, and a
deportation order which involves an interference with his
person or property may raise quite different
considerations; but a deportation order is not the matter with
which we are concerned and I forbear to say more about it".
"What will happen if these students who are here stay untilThese two passages may give added significance to the passage from Lord Denning's judgment in Soblen's Case (1963) 2 QB, at pp 298-299 which I have quoted above. (at p436)
the point of deportation I do not know; nor do I know
whether it will be felt that considerations in connection with
a deportation order are different from the considerations
applicable to the question as to whether a limited permission
to stay should not be renewed".
41. This brief examination of authority leads me to conclude that it is by no
means clear that, in the absence of an amnesty,
s. 18 should, in the present
state of development of the law, be regarded as empowering the Minister
summarily to deport an "overstayed"
prohibited immigrant such as the plaintiff
without first affording him the opportunity of making submissions on his own
behalf.
I note, however, that dicta in the judgment of Quillam J. in the New
Zealand case of Pagliara v. Attorney-General (N.Z.) (1974)
1 NZLR 86 favour
the contrary view. (at p436)
42. It is unnecessary for me to express any concluded view on the matter. It was not the subject of detailed argument since the plaintiff was content to concede that, but for the amnesty, he must fail. It was upon the effect of the amnesty that he relied and it is to that that I now turn, my examination of the foregoing cases serving only to dispel any impression that it is upon some situation of clearly acknowledged summary power possessed by the Minister that the amnesty is to be overlaid. (at p436)
The terms of the amnesty.
43. First, as to the terms of the amnesty: I accept without hesitation the plaintiff's submission that, since this demurrer must be determined upon the footing that the plaintiff is in good health and of good character and has not committed any serious crime, the plaintiff was entitled to expect that the Minister would act as he said he would. I do so because of the explicit terms in which the offer of amnesty is couched. The amnesty, as announced in the Minister's news releases, contains a clear statement of intent which expressly promises, to that class of prohibited immigrant to which the plaintiff must, for present purposes, be treated as belonging, lawful residential status in Australia so long as, by the due date, whereabouts are disclosed to the authorities and an appropriate application is made. (at p436)
The effect of the amnesty.
44. For the plaintiff the amnesty is said to have conferred upon the
plaintiff a reasonable or legitimate expectation that he
would not be deported
but would, instead, be granted a right to reside in Australia. The possession
of this expectation is said
to entitle him to require, by process of law, that
the Minister observe the requirements of natural justice when considering his
deportation, the legislation not being in terms inconsistent with the
imposition of such a requirement upon the Minister. (at p437)
45. The concept that possession of a legitimate expectation carries with it
this consequence has, of recent years, been much in
evidence in the English
decisions. In Schmidt's Case (1969) 2 Ch 149 it is treated both by Lord
Denning M.R. and by Widgery L.J.
as sufficient to confer such entitlement. In
Breen v. Amalgamated Engineering Union (1971) 2 QB 175 it was the appellant's
legitimate
expectation of approval by the district committee, an expectation
founded upon his election as shop steward by his fellow workers,
that was the
foundation of Lord Denning's judgment (1971) 2 QB, at p 191 ; although in the
outcome his Lordship was in the minority,
Edmund Davies L.J. makes it clear
(1971) 2 QB, at p 195 , that on this issue of Breen's entitlement to be
accorded natural justice
he is at one with the Master of the Rolls, and see
per Megaw L.J. (1971) 2 QB, at p 200 . In Reg. v. Liverpool Corporation; Ex
parte Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operators' Association (1972) 2 QB 299, at p 304 ,
Lord Denning referred, in argument, to a "settled
expectation" as a thing of
value, conferring rights. Professor de Smith, in his work Judicial Review of
Administrative Action,
3rd ed. (1973),p. 197, in treating of the discretionary
renewal of licences, speaks of the implication of "a duty to hear before
a
decision not to renew when there is a legitimate expectation of renewal, even
though no such duty is implied in the making of
the original decision to grant
or refuse the licence", a passage which, in Reg. v. Barnsley Metropolitan
Borough Council; Ex parte
Hook (1976) 1 WLR 1052, at p 1058; (1976) 3 All ER
452, at p 457 , Scarman L.J. cites in extenso, adding that although the
learned
author there deals only with non-renewal of licences, "everything that
he says about non-renewal applies with even greater force
to revocation". (at
p437)
46. Reverting to Schmidt's Case, Lord Denning M.R. describes an
administrative body as being bound, in proper cases, to give a
person affected
by its decision an opportunity of making representations if, although lacking
any right or interest, that person
yet possesses "some legitimate expectation,
of which it would not be fair to deprive him without hearing what he has to
say" (1969)
2 Ch at p 170 . By way of illustration his Lordship contrasts the
case of an alien whose residence permit has expired with that
of another whose
permit is revoked before its expiry date; the latter possesses a legitimate
expectation of being allowed to stay
for the full term of the permit, and he
alone has, in consequence, a legal right, in accordance with the principles of
natural
justice, to insist that his representations be considered before the
making of any decision upon his deportation. Two passages from
his Lordship's
judgment are particularly in point. In the first, Lord Denning points to the
role played by the possession of a
legitimate expectation (1969) 2 Ch, at p
170 :
"The speeches in Ridge v. Baldwin [1963] UKHL 2; (1964) AC 40 show that anThen his Lordship indicates how this is to be applied in the case of an alien. He says of such a person (1969) 2 Ch, at p 171 :
administrative body may, in a proper case, be bound to give a
person who is affected by their decision an opportunity of
making representations. It all depends on whether he has
some right or interest, or, I would add, some legitimate
expectation, of which it would not be fair to deprive him
without hearing what he has to say."
"He has no right to enter this country except by
leave: and, if he is given leave to come for a limited period,
he has no right to stay for a day longer than the permitted
time. If his permit is revoked before the time limit expires,
he ought, I think, to be given an opportunity of making
representations: for he would have a legitimate expectation
of being allowed to stay for the permitted time. Except in
such a case, a foreign alien has no right - and, I would add,
no legitimate expectation - of being allowed to stay. He can
be refused without reasons given and without a hearing." (at p438)
47. In Schmidt's Case Widgery L.J. also speaks of the special position of a
person having a reasonable or legitimate expectation,
for this purpose
distinguishing between the first applicant for a licence and the case where an
existing holder of a licence might
regard a refusal of renewal as "tantamount
to the withdrawal of a right which the applicant legitimately expected to
hold" (1969)
2 Ch, at p 173 . I note in passing the discussion of this view of
the renewal of a licence by Sugerman J., with whom Herron C.J.
and Walsh J.
agreed, in Ex parte Fanning; Re Commissioner for Motor Transport (1964) NSWR
1110, at p 1112 . (at p438)
48. So far as I am aware there exists no detailed judicial consideration of
the basis upon which the possession of a legitimate
expectation gives rise to
a right to be accorded natural justice. It stems, no doubt, from the same
fertile source as has nourished
the concept that those who possess rights and
interests should not, in the absence of express enactment, be deprived of them
by
the exercise of an arbitrary discretion and without observance of the rules
of natural justice; Byles J. remarked in Cooper v. Wandsworth
District Board
of Works [1863] EngR 424; (1863) 14 CB (NS) 180, at p 194 [1863] EngR 424; (143 ER 414, at p 420) that in such
a case "the justice of the common
law will supply the omission of the
legislature". To accord
to a well-founded expectation the same protection as
the law will in
such a case give to some right of property is to reflect what
Megarry J. said in John v. Rees (1970) 1 Ch 345 when, in dealing with
a
plaintiff's loss of honorary office in a branch of a political
party, he
rejected the notion "that the right to natural justice
depends upon the right
to a few pieces of silver" (1970) 1 Ch,
at p 398 . When the discretionary
grant of a licence, permit or
the like carries with it a reasonable
expectation of, although
no legal right to, renewal or non-revocation,
summarily to disappoint
that expectation is seen as unfair; hence the
requirement
that the expectant person should first be heard and this no doubt
as
much to aid those who exercise discretions in pursuing the
goal of a just
result as to safeguard the interests of the expectant
party. In the Liverpool
Corporation Case, Roskill L.J. adverted
to this aspect when he said, in
disposing of a submission that
the exercise of a statutory discretion was
being fettered, that
to require a municipal council to hear representations
before making
a decision would "assist the council to perform rather than
inhibit the performance of its statutory duties" (1972) 2 QB, at p 310
. (at
p439)
49. In the present case the plaintiff's expectation does not arise in
connexion with any unexpected revocation or non-renewal
of a licence or
permit. His position is a fortiori. His expectation is not founded upon some
implication as to non-revocation or
as to renewal. Instead, as in the
Liverpool Corporation Case (1972) 2 QB 299 , it is upon an express assurance
that the expectation
is based: an assurance given by a Minister of the Crown
as to the way in which the discretionary power conferred upon him by statue
would be exercised. Any fair reading of the news releases leads to the
inference that that assurance was given so as to induce
this very expectation
in the minds of prohibited immigrants such as the plaintiff, so that they
might come forward and reveal to
the authorities their whereabouts and the
details of their continued presence in Australia, a presence which did not in
itself
involve the commission of any offence. By doing so they would
ordinarily run the risk of arrest and deportation. They were invited
to rely
upon the Minister's statement that the risk would not in fact be run because
the Minister had determined not to deport
but instead to permit future lawful
residence. (at p439)
50. If it be correct to say, as did Lord Denning in the Liverpool Corporation
Case, of those exercising an administrative function
that "in our modern
approach, they must act fairly" (1972) 2 QB, at p 308 : if, as Lord Parker
C.J. said in In re H.K. (1967) 2
QB 617, at p 630 , good administration
requires that the administrator act fairly, the rules of natural justice
involving a duty
to act fairly: if all this be so, the present case appears to
me to be pre-eminently one in which a court should not be slow to
recognize
the plaintiff's right to be accorded natural justice in support of the
expectation, engendered in him by the Minister,
that he would not be deported
but would be granted resident status if he responded to the Minister's amnesty
offer. (at p440)
51. If the Minister is now to depart from the terms of the assurance which he
gave he will be free to do so, as was the council
in the Liverpool Corporation
Case. But, as Roskill L.J. there observed, while it was for the council to
make up its own mind as
to what policy it wished to follow, it was not at
liberty, having given an undertaking as to policy intentions, to depart
therefrom
except "after due and proper consideration of the representations of
all those interested" (1972) 2 QB, at p 311 . (at p440)
52. If a plaintiff is successfully to invoke the rules of natural justice it
is not, of course, enough that he should possess
a right or interest which is
threatened by, or a legitimate expectation which is to be disappointed by, the
exercise of discretionary
power. For those rules to apply their effect must
not be inconsistent with or destructive of the apparent purpose of the
legislation
which confers the discretionary power. In Wiseman v. Borneman
(1971) AC 297, at p 308 , Lord Reid said that it must clearly appear
that the
statutory procedure is insufficient to achieve justice and that to require
additional steps will not frustrate the apparent
purpose of the legislation.
However, although the rules of natural justice are always subject to a
sufficient indication of an
intent of the legislature to the contrary, "such
an intention is not to be assumed nor is it to be spelled out from indirect
references,
uncertain inferences or equivocal considerations" (Commissioner of
Police v. Tanos [1958] HCA 6; (1958) 98 CLR 383, at p 396 ,
per Dixon C.J.
and Webb J.). In
citing this passage from Tanos' Case Lord Wilberforce, in Wiseman
v. Borneman
said that it has
always been insisted
that any exclusion of the rules of
natural justice must be done clearly and expressly
(1971) AC, at p 318 .
Lord
Salmon again stressed
this requirement in Pearlberg v. Varty (1972) 1 WLR 534,
at p 551; (1972) 2 All
ER 6, at p 21 . (at
p440)
53. The provisions of the Migration Act contain no clear or express exclusion
of the rules of natural justice in relation to the
power conferred by s. 18
nor can any inference to that effect be extracted from the scheme of the Act.
I shall refer later to the
significance of s. 14
with its requirement of
hearings before a Commissioner, stipulated for in certain cases but not
applicable
to s. 18 deportations.
For present purposes it is enough to say
that in my view it does not give rise to any implied exclusion from
s. 18
deportations
of the entire concept of natural justice. The Act is wholly
silent as to procedure in the case of deportations
ordered under s.
18; the
legislation may, in this sense, be said to be the very antithesis of such a
"detailed and elaborate code
which prescribes
the procedure to be followed" as
their Lordships encountered in Furnell v. Whangarei High Schools Board (1973)
AC 660, at p 679
, and which required them to consider in some detail and with
extensive citation of authority this whole question
of when the existence
of
such a code may compel the conclusion that there is no room for the
application of the rules of natural
justice. (at p441)
54. Their Lordships observed in Durayappah v. Fernando (1967) 2 AC 337, at p
349 that "no general rule can be laid down as to
the application of the
general principle in addition to the language of the provision". In the
well-known passage which then follows
their Lordships drew attention to three
matters to be borne in mind when considering whether the principle should be
applied. When
applied to the facts of the present case these three matters
may, I think, be described as consisting of the nature of the status
enjoyed
by the plaintiff, the circumstances in which and occasion upon which the
Minister's discretion became exerciseable and,
lastly, the nature of the
sanction which the Minister might impose. (at p441)
55. As to the first, the status of the plaintiff is transformed by the
amnesty. From being a mere prohibited immigrant, under
obvious threat of
deportation, the plaintiff becomes one who has every reason to believe that he
will be immune from deportation
and will on the contrary be granted lawful
resident status. As to the second, the amnesty is again significant; by its
terms the
Minister defined criteria, those of good health, good character and
lack of serious criminality, by which he would guide the exercise
of his
discretion. In effect he purported, in the case of "over-stayed" prohibited
immigrants, to supply criteria not found in
the bare words of s. 18. A
decision to deport the plaintiff, an "over-stayed" prohibited immigrant, can
thus be seen to carry with
it a grave imputation; if not in ill health he will
be stamped as a person of bad character or a criminal. This is just such a
circumstance as their Lordships spoke of when, in relation to this second
matter, they said that it was "plain and obvious that
the principle audi
alteram partem must apply" (1967) 2 AC, at p 351 . The third matter, the
nature of the sanction, points in a
like direction. There will be few
sanctions more drastic than the deportation of a person originally found
suitable for temporary
residence in this country, who has in fact resided here
for some years and who is to be taken as possessing all those characteristics
which the Minister has, by the terms of the amnesty, described as qualifying
for permanent lawful residence in Australia. (at p442)
56. In the light of these considerations I regard the plaintiff not only as possessed of a sufficient interest to invoke the assistance of the courts but also as so circumstanced in relation to the threatened action of the Minister as to be entitled to the observance of the rules of natural justice. (at p442)
Natural justice as a matter of procedure.
57. It is important clearly to distinguish between matters procedural and
those which relate to substantive law. The rules of
natural justice are "in a
broad sense a procedural matter" (Tanos' Case (1958) 98 CLR, at p 396 ). What
the present plaintiff seeks
initially is no more than the observance of proper
procedure. To require that the Minister should, in exercise of his powers
under
s. 18, observe the rules of natural justice involves no encroachment
upon the breadth of his discretionary power to order deportation.
Instead it
merely ensures that he will bring to the exercise of that power a due
observance of long-established patterns of procedural
fairness. To do so will
not fetter the exercise by the Minister of the power conferred upon him by s.
18; it will, on the contrary,
positively assist him towards a fair and just
exercise of that power, precisely such an exercise as the legislature must be
taken
to have intended. Whatever may be the correct view of the present state
of the authorities as to the ability of one endowed with
statutory powers
effectively to limit, by contract or representation, his future exercise of
those powers - as to which see Robertson
v. Minister for Pensions (1949) 1 KB
227 ; Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction Ltd. (1951) AC 837 ; Wells v.
Minister of Housing
and Local Government (1967) 1 WLR 1000; (1967) 2 All ER
1041 ; Lever Finance Ltd. v. Westminster (City) London Borough Council (1971)
1 QB 222 and the Liverpool Corporation Case (1972) 2 QB 299 . No such
question arises in the present case. The plaintiff cannot
by these proceedings
seek to hold the Minister to his promise not to deport and instead to grant
resident status; he may however
point to that promise as having given rise to
such an expectation on his part as will entitle him to complain of a want of
natural
justice unless he be accorded an opportunity to put his case to the
Minister. What was said by Roskill L.J. in the Liverpool Corporation
Case is
in point. His Lordship said in answer to a submission that some fettering of
power would be involved if the applicants
were there granted relief, that it
was for the council to make up its own mind what policy it wished to follow
but, having given
an undertaking as to policy intentions, if it were to depart
from that policy "it must do so after due and proper consideration
of the
representations of all those interested" (1972) 2 QB, at p 311. To give the
relief there sought would not, his Lordship
had earlier said, "prevent the
council validly using those powers which Parliament has conferred upon it".
(at p443)
58. That the Minister's news releases concerning the intended mode of exercise of his discretion, although directed exclusively to substantive matters, serve to confer upon the plaintiff procedural rather than substantive rights is because, while the news releases and the plaintiff's response to them gave rise to an expectation which the law recognizes as entitling to procedural protection, nevertheless the law will give full effect to the intent apparent in s. 18 of the Act, not interfering with the full exercise of the discretion which it confers upon the Minister but only ensuring that in its exercise appropriate procedural safeguards are observed. (at p443)
The absence of any duty to give reasons.
59. Before turning to the requirements of natural justice as they should be applied in the present case I should refer briefly to the absence of any duty imposed upon the Minister to give reasons for a decision to deport. The Act imposes no such duty either expressly or by implication and the common law will not itself remedy this omission: see de Smith, op. cit., pp. 128-130. It might be thought, from what was said by Lord Reid in Ridge v. Baldwin (1964) AC, at pp 65-66 , that the absence of any right to be heard is always a necessary concomitant of the absence of a duty to give reasons. However in the later case of Malloch v. Aberdeen Corporation (1971) 1 WLR 1578, at p 1582; (1971) 2 All ER 1278, at p 1282 his Lordship expressly denied any necessary inconsistency between the right to determine at pleasure the tenure of an office (that being the particular instance of the absence of a duty to give reasons with which he was concerned) and the obligation, nonetheless, to hear the office holder before so acting. His Lordship went on to say that the absence of an obligation to formulate reasons for so acting did not necessarily predicate the absence of an obligation to afford a hearing, a right which his Lordship described as "the most elementary protection of all"; and see per Lord Wilberforce (1971) 1 WLR, at p 1597; (1971) 2 All ER, at p 1295 and Lord Simon of Glaisdale (1971) 1 WLR, at p 1599; (1971) 2 All ER, at pp 1297-1298 . (at p444)
The variable content of the rules of natural justice.
60. It is, no doubt, now a truism that in cases in which the rules of natural justice are applicable the procedural consequences will not necessarily be uniform. On the contrary they will depend upon what Kitto J. describes, in Mobil Oil Australia Pty. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1963) 113 CLR 475, at p 504 , as "the particular statutory framework" within which they are to apply. But not only will their effect and application thus vary depending upon the character and function of the particular statutory tribunal or person in relation to whose deliberations they are invoked (Ridge v. Baldwin per Lord Reid (1964) AC, at pp 65, 72 ), they may also vary from case to case although each be conducted before one and the same tribunal or person. Kitto J. gave recognition to this fact in the course of his reasoning in the Mobil Oil Case (1963) 113 CLR, at p 504 . In Durayappah v. Fernando their Lordships' reference to particular instances in which the existence of great urgency would require the limitation, "timeously, perhaps severely", of the right to be heard, although never justifying a denial of that right (1967) 2 AC at p 346 , emphasizes how much the concept of fairness, inherent in the audi alteram partem rule, may require to be moulded to the particular circumstances of the case. In Furnell's Case (1973) AC, at p 679 , their Lordships cited with approval what was said by Tucker L.J. in Russell v. Duke of Norfolk (1949) 1 All ER 109, at p 118 , that "the requirements of natural justice must depend on the circumstances of each particular case and the subject matter under consideration". (at p444)
Its content in the case of s. 18.
61. What will be the requirements of natural justice in the case of s. 18 is
substantially to be determined by what may be learned
of the legislative
intent both from the elaborate provisions for oral hearings found in s. 14 of
the Act, provisions which have
not been made applicable to s. 18 deportations,
and from the fact that where these express provisions have been made for oral
hearings
the burden of conducting them has not been cast upon the Minister but
instead upon commissioners appointed under s. 14 and who are
charged with the
duty of reporting to the Minister. As was said by Barwick C.J., albeit in a
rather different context, in Brettingham-Moore
v. St. Leonards Municipality
[1969] HCA 40; (1969) 121 CLR 509, at p 524 , in a passage approved of by their Lordships in
Furnell's
Case (1973)
AC, at p 679 , "the legislature
has addressed itself to
the very question"; it has provided a procedure for hearings
where thought
appropriate, and this by commissioners
appointed for the purpose. To require
that in s. 18 deportations there should
be oral hearings
by the Minister would
be to distort
the legislative pattern manifest in the terms of the Act itself;
it would
be no less unjustifiable
to seek to apply to such deportations
the
procedure of oral hearings by commissioners and subsequent reports
to the
Minister, reserved
by the Act for other cases. (at
p445)
62. Concerned, as I am, with the threatened deportation of an "overstayed"
prohibited immigrant who is to be assumed to satisfy
the amnesty criteria
announced by the Minister, I must regard him as one whom the Minister
contemplates deporting in disregard
of the amnesty. The Minister must be
assumed to be contemplating an exercise of his wide discretionary powers under
s. 18, powers
which no prior self-denying announcement by him may diminish.
There will, in effect, be a revocation of the amnesty pro tanto and
the
prohibited immigrant will be in no better case than if there had been no
amnesty applicable to him save only that he will clearly
be entitled to the
observance of natural justice. He will be entitled to know precisely and in
detail what is the ground upon which
the Minister is contemplating his de
facto exclusion from the amnesty and his deportation. Since natural justice is
"but fairness
writ large and juridically", what has been called "fair play in
action" (Furnell's Case (1973) AC, at p 679 ), the Minister must
make such
disclosure to the plaintiff as will enable him properly to present his case.
Much of what was said by Lord Denning, with
whom Lord Wilberforce and
Phillimore L.J. agreed, in Reg. v. Gaming Board for Great Britain; Ex parte
Benaim and Khaida (1970)
2 QB 417, at pp 430-431 will be in point, allowance
being made for the different functions of the Minister and of the Board with
which their Lordships were there concerned. While the prohibited immigrant
must be placed in a position to know of and correct
any misapprehensions on
the part of the Minister "chapter and verse" need not be quoted to him by the
Minister nor, in general,
need the sources of the Minister's information be
disclosed if to do so would prejudice security or otherwise be contrary to the
national interest. But, as Lord Denning observed (1970) 2 QB, at p 431 , the
Minister:
"ought in every case to be able to give to the applicant"
(here, the prohibited immigrant) "sufficient indication of the
objections raised against him such as to enable him to
answer them. That is only fair. And the board" (here, the
Minister) "must at all costs be fair. If they are not, these
courts will not hesitate to interfere". (at p446)
63. Without knowing the nature of the Minister's reasons for contemplating
deportation no more precise statement can be made about
the duty of the
Minister. It will, in this as in other cases, be for the Minister to determine
how, in all the circumstances, he
can best fulfil the requirements of fairness
imposed upon him. It may be that after the making of proper disclosure and the
receipt
of submissions from the plaintiff an investigation of them results in
further material by way of rebuttal coming to the Minister's
notice from other
sources; if it be material which unless explained by the plaintiff will prove
adverse to his case it too, or
its substance, should be disclosed so that he
may explain it if he can. (at p446)
64. In what I have said I have assumed, as I must on this demurrer, that it
is for reasons other than non-compliance with the
amnesty criteria that
deportation is contemplated. If this action should go to trial and this
assumption prove to be incorrect,
it being for non-compliance with one of the
amnesty criteria that deportation is contemplated, the duty of the Minister
will be
no different in principle. If, for instance, it should turn out that
the Minister is in possession of information suggesting that
the plaintiff is
not in good health or has a criminal record, adequate particulars will have to
be supplied so that the plaintiff
may know exactly what is alleged and thus
have an adequate opportunity of showing that the information is false. (at
p446)
65. Whatever the ground be upon which the Minister is proceeding the
plaintiff may, in addition to attacking that ground, also
desire to refer to
any matters of special hardship which his deportation will impose upon him and
he should be invited to do so.
(at p446)
66. If, having done all this, the Minister then gives consideration to the
plaintiff's submission the requirements of natural
justice will have been
satisfied and it will be for the Minister to make his decision whether or not
to order deportation, in exercise
of the wide discretion conferred upon him by
s. 18. (at p446)
67. He need give no reasons for his decision and unless it can be made to
appear that he must have arrived at that decision for
reasons extraneous to
the exercise of the power of deportation his decision will not be examinable
in the courts. The courts will
have no occasion to restrict in anyway the
exercise of the wide discretionary powers conferred upon the Minister by the
legislation;
their concern will only be to ensure its proper exercise and the
observance of the rules of natural justice. (at p447)
68. It follows that I would overrule the demurrer. (at p447)
JACOBS J. The plaintiff is a citizen of Italy. He arrived in Australia on
30th October 1974. He made out his Incoming Passenger
Card describing himself
as a visitor or temporary entrant and stating that he intended to stay in
Australia for three months. He
was given a temporary entry permit for three
months as a visitor by an Immigration Officer at his port of entry, Sydney
airport.
On 10th February 1975 the plaintiff was given a permit to remain in
Australia until 30th July 1975. He did not leave before that
day and thereupon
became a prohibited immigrant pursuant to s. 7 (3) of the Migration Act 1958
(Cth). (at p447)
2. The plaintiff remained in Australia. No deportation order was made against
him under s. 18 of the Act. He was one of a large
number of prohibited
immigrants in Australia who had arrived as visitors and who had overstayed
their temporary entry permits.
The Australian Government was concerned. It
realized that many people who were potentially good citizens had come to
Australia
as visitors in the mistaken hope that it would be easy to obtain
residence status once they were here. Mr. MacKellar, the Minister
for
Immigration and Ethnic Affairs, announced the Government's attitude on 25th
January 1976. In a news release he said "the Government
has recognised their
problem and has acted humanely to resolve it". In the news release it was
stated:
"The amnesty for prohibited immigrants foreshadowed byThe Minister announced that the amnesty offer would remain open for a period of three months until 30th April 1976 and that people seeking amnesty should apply to one of the officers of the Department of Immigration and Ethnic Affairs in the States or in Canberra. (at p447)
the Government may be sought by all visitors who were
overstayed at 31 December 1975. Those who meet the normal
standards of health and good character will be granted
residence status. Amnesty will not be granted to people with
serious criminal records or to those who may be the subject of
deportation orders arising from criminal acts."
3. A day or so later there was a further news release in which Mr. MacKellar
again urged overstayed visitors and others living
illegally in Australia who
were covered by the terms of the amnesty offer to come forward. He stated:
"'This is a genuine offer of amnesty to give security to the
many people currently living under a cloud in this
country. They have nothing to fear by coming forward. It is an
open and honest invitation to people to legalise their status in
Australia.'... Those who met normal standards of health
and good character would be granted residence status, but
amnesty would not be granted to people with serious criminal
records or who might be the subject of deportation orders
arising from criminal acts." (at p448)
4. There was a further news release on 5th February 1976 amplifying but not
departing from what had been earlier stated. There
was a further news release
on 9th April 1976. (at p448)
5. On 1st April 1976 the plaintiff completed the form which had been prepared
within the Department of Immigration and Ethnic
Affairs and which was entitled
"Amnesty Application". He gave his name and address and other particulars and
stated in terms of
the form "I hereby apply for the grant of resident status
and pending determination of my application I request a temporary entry
permit
authorising me to remain in Australia for three (3) months". (at p448)
6. The plaintiff was not given resident status or a temporary entry permit.
The Minister formed what is described in the defence
as a conditional
intention to issue a deportation order against him. The Minister wrote saying
that the plaintiff did not come
to Australia on the most recent occasion as a
visitor but entered as a temporary resident with authority to engage in
specified
employment and therefore did not come within the amnesty
eligibility. It is not argued that this ground correctly stated the effect
of
the amnesty announcement in its application to the plaintiff. However, it
should be noted that the Minister says in the defence
that he has acted fairly
to the plaintiff and in accordance with the rules of natural justice. At the
same time he denies that
he is under any legal obligation to do so. The latter
but not the former is an issue which can be determined on this demurrer. (at
p448)
7. The plaintiff in his statement of claim alleges two grounds upon which he
is entitled to the relief which he seeks. First,
he says that he is not a
prohibited immigrant. He says that the press releases were instruments under
the hand of the defendant
Minister whereby the defendant Minister exempted a
class of persons, of whom the plaintiff is one, from the requirements of Div.
1 of Pt II of the Migration Act 1958 relating to entry permits. He also says
that the press releases operated in effect as a permit
to him under s. 7(2) to
remain in Australia. Secondly, the plaintiff claims that in the circumstances
the defendant Minister is
obliged to act fairly
or in accordance with the
rules of natural justice in determining whether or not the amnesty referred to
in the press releases
should be granted to the plaintiff and whether or not to
issue a deportation order against him, and that the
defendant has not done
so.
The defendant demurs to the statement of claim. (at p449)
8. The plaintiff does not, in my opinion, fall within the exemption contained
in s.8 (1) (e). Section 8(1) provides that nothing
in "Division 1- Entry
Permits" applies in relation to the entry into Australia of an immigrant being
a person
described in pars
(a) to (e) of the sub-section. Paragraph (e) refers
to a person who is included in a class of persons who are
for the time being
exempted, by instrument under the hand of the Minister, from the requirements
of the Division relating to entry
permits. The requirements
of the Division
relating to entry permits are of two kinds. First, by s. 6(1), an immigrant
who enters Australia, not being the
holder of an entry permit that is in
force, thereupon becomes a prohibited immigrant.
Secondly, by s. 7(3), upon
the expiration
(or cancellation) of a temporary entry permit, a person becomes
a prohibited immigrant unless a further entry
permit comes into
force upon
that expiration (or cancellation). By s. 10 a person who has become a
prohibited immigrant only ceases to be a prohibited
immigrant if and when an
entry permit or further
entry permit is granted to him. Section 7 (4)
constitutes an exception to the
latter provision whereby a person who has
become a prohibited immigrant by expiration (or cancellation)
of an entry
permit ceases
to be a prohibited immigrant five years from the time when he
became a prohibited immigrant unless at
the expiration of the five
years a
deportation order in relation to him is in force. (at p449)
9. For the plaintiff it is submitted that s. 8 (1) (e) envisages an instrument under the hand of the Minister whereby a person or class of persons is exempted from the requirements of Div. 1 of Pt II relating to entry permits in general, i.e. permits to enter into Australia and "entry permits", so called in the Division, which are permits not to enter but to remain in Australia. Yet s. 8 commences with the words "Nothing in this Division applies in relation to the entry into Australia of an immigrant being - ". Therefore, argues the plaintiff, the word "entry" in these opening words means not physical entry but entry or remaining in Australia as the case may be and thus the plaintiff although he required and received an entry permit on his physical entry into Australia does not require a permit to remain in Australia if he is a member of a class exempted under s.8 (1) (e) from the requirements of Div. 1 relating to entry permits. (at p449)
10. In my opinion the argument cannot be sustained. On this construction s. 8
would in effect provide that nothing in Div. 1 applies
in relation to the
entry into or remaining in Australia of an immigrant
(being a person of the
kinds described). Except in the
phrase "entry permit" the word "entry" or
"enter" is used throughout Div.
1 in its proper sense of physical entry. See
particularly
s. 6 (1) (3) (5) (7) (8) ; s. 8 (1) (a) (c) (d) (2) (3) .
Section 8(1) (e) is phrased as it is because the occasion does not arise
for a
permit to remain in Australia if a permit was not required to
enter Australia
- unless the particular provisions of s. 8
(3) become applicable. Therefore an
exemption of a person from the requirements of Div. 1 relating to entry
permits was a sufficient
expression of the person or class of persons in
relation to whose entry into Australia a permit was not required. To have
limited
the words "entry permits" in s.8 (1) (e) to "entry permits on entry
into Australia" would have been otiose. (at p450)
11. This conclusion is sufficient to dispose of the argument based on s. 8
(1) (e). I prefer not to express a concluded opinion
on the question whether
in other circumstances a written document bearing
the name of the Minister at
his direction and published
at large with his consent would not be an
instrument under his hand which
could operate as an exemption from the
requirements of
Div. 1. What if in different circumstances such a document
announced exemption
of a class of persons physically entering Australia
and
what if a person of that class were then allowed to enter without a permit?
Would such a person be a prohibited immigrant?
I very much doubt it. But that
is a different case. (at p450)
12. It was also submitted that the press releases operated as a decision to
grant a further entry permit under s. 7 (2) and operated
in effect as an entry
permit. The submission fails because the Minister has no power under the Act
to grant an
entry permit. Only
an "officer" as defined in s. 5 (1) has that
power. The Minister can under s. 6 (3) approve forms of entry permit
but no
more.
It is curious that the Act is wholly silent on the matters to be taken
into account by an officer in deciding whether
or not to
grant an entry
permit. An officer under the Act is not a mere delegate of a discretion
reposed in the Minister or the
Commonwealth
Crown, if for no other reason,
because the word "officer" includes persons not under the direction of the
Minister
or the Commonwealth
Crown. The officer must exercise his own
discretion. There is nothing in the Act to indicate how he should exercise
it.
It would
be otherwise if there were provision for policy directions or rules
stated by the Minister as there is in s. 3 (2)
of the United
Kingdom
Immigration Act, 1971, where provision is also made for laying the statement
before the Parliament and for
disapproval
thereof. The Migration Act 1958
(Cth) is seriously deficient in this respect and required urgent legislative
attention. (at p451)
13. I turn now to the question whether any, and if so what, rules of natural
justice may apply to the exercise of the power of
the Minister under s. 18 to
order the deportation of a prohibited immigrant. There is no apparent
limitation placed by the Act
upon his exercise of the
power. However, it would
be misconceived to place any primary emphasis upon this circumstance. (at
p451)
14. It is not a question whether s. 18 manifests a positive intention that
the Minister, in taking action under the section, will
act in accordance with
the principles of natural justice. In my opinion little or no assistance is to
be got from the presence
in the Act of express provision for the deportation
of aliens after notice to the alien of the grounds thereof and after
investigation
by a duly appointed Commissioner (s.14). The question is whether
the legislature has manifested an intention to negate the necessity
in any
circumstances for the Minister, in taking action under s. 18, to observe the
principles of natural justice. I accept that
in the case of statutory
provisions it is always a matter of discovering the intention of the
legislature. But that does not carry
us very far. The legislature is assumed
by the courts to be aware of the principles of natural justice which are a
part of the
common law. The application of those principles depends on the
circumstances of the case. It is seldom possible to say in the case
of the
exercise of any particular statutory power "All the principles which have ever
been applied in ensuring natural justice
will here apply" or on the other hand
"Natural justice was intended to be wholly excluded". The questions which must
be asked are
- in particular circumstances such as exist in this case did the
legislature intend that the principles of natural justice should
be wholly
excluded? If not, what particular principles should be applied? I recognize
that the search for legislative intention
can be described as somewhat
artificial. What the courts do in the absence of express legislative intention
is to ensure that power,
whether it be judicial or quasi-judicial or
executive, be exercised fairly, weighing the interests of the individual and
the interests
of society as a whole. (at p451)
15. The way in which the applicability or non-applicability of rules of
natural justice depends upon varying circumstances all
of which may
nevertheless be comprehended within the general words of a legislative
provision is exemplified in the distinction
which has been drawn between the
grant and the renewal of an annual licence. A statute may provide for the
grant of annual licences
to do this or that. Technically, therefore, there are
new licences each year. A person may apply for a licence and it may be
refused;
yet he may not be entitled to be heard before the refusal unless the
licence be a statutory requirement in order to carry on an
existing business
(Reg. v. Gaming Board for Great Britain; Ex parte Benaim (1970) 2 QB 417 ).
But on the same statutory provision,
if he has been granted a licence in the
previous year, he may be entitled to be heard and otherwise to have the rules
of natural
justice applied before he is refused a new licence for the next
year. Cf. de Smith, Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 3rd
ed. (1973),
p. 197. Cf. however Ex parte Fanning; Re Commissioner for Motor Transport
(1964) NSWR 1110 . Such a person may have
what in another context has been
felicitously described, first I think by Lord Denning M.R. in Schmidt v. Home
Secretary (1969)
2 Ch 149, at p 170 as a "legitimate expectation". That does
not mean that the expectation is itself the right. The right is the
right to
natural justice in certain circumstances and a "legitimate expectation" is one
of those circumstances. (at p452)
16. Though the principles of natural justice extend to executive or
administrative acts, it is necessary to bear in mind that
the kind of act here
referred to is the act which directly affects the person (or corporation)
individually and not simply as a
member of the public or a class of the
public. An executive or administrative decision of the latter kind is truly a
"policy" or
"political" decision and is not subject to judicial review. This
is a distinction which I had occasion to point out in Mutton v.
Kuring-gai
Municipal Council (1973) 1 NSWLR 233, at pp 241-243 . (at p452)
17. I can discern no legislative intention from s. 18 in its context in the
Migration Act 1958 wholly to exclude the application
of the principles of
natural justice. It is of no assistance to refer to the ancient prerogative
powers of the Crown to deport
aliens at will. Section 18 applies not only to
aliens but also to British subjects. It just happens that in the present case
the
plaintiff is an alien. The
legislature by using the general language of s.
18 has left it to the courts to decide when and how the
principles of natural
justice
should be applied in the exercise of the executive power of
deportation. The subject matter is such
that it would seldom be necessary
to
apply the principles. In the ordinary case the immigrant will be made the
subject of a deportation
order because he is a prohibited
immigrant. His being
a prohibited immigrant will not merely be the occasion for the exercise by
the
Minister of his power under
s. 18, the source of power, but will be the reason
for the exercise of the power. (at p453)
18. But that does not appear to be so in the present case. An "amnesty" was
offered to visitors whose temporary entry permits
had expired and who had
thereby become prohibited immigrants by virtue of s. 7 (3) provided that they
came forward and provided
they met conditions of health and good character.
"Amnesty" could under the Act
take one of two forms. A person could either be
given a permanent entry permit or could be spared the making of a deportation
order
against him and the making of any requirement
and the taking of any
proceedings under s. 7 (5) or s. 38. In the latter case, after
five years from
the time of becoming a prohibited
immigrant, the person would cease to be a
prohibited immigrant - only if a deportation
order had not been made and was
not in force
(s.7(4)). So "amnesty" was at the least a promise that a
deportation order would not
be made against a qualifying person within
the
time during which he was a prohibited immigrant. (at p453)
19. The plaintiff was a prohibited immigrant and he was on the facts assumed
for the purposes of the demurrer a qualifying person.
However, on those
assumed facts the Minister is threatening to make a deportation order against
him without according to him natural
justice. I can see no legislative
intention that in these circumstances the principles of natural justice should
be wholly excluded.
It is, it would appear, not because he is a prohibited
immigrant that the Minister is on the assumed facts threatening to make a
deportation order against him. The amnesty was expressed to be, and I have no
reason to doubt was, "a genuine offer", "an open
and honest invitation", which
gave those to whom it was addressed "nothing to fear by coming forward". There
must be another reason.
The plaintiff is, in the fairness which underlies the
application of the principles of natural justice, entitled to know that
reason,
and to present submissions to the Minister which he thinks may
displace that reason and any facts upon which it may be based. The
extent of
the reasons provided to him cannot be predicated. If the reason were national
security, he could hardly expect to know
more; but if the reasons were
personal to him, he could expect to know more so that he would have the
opportunity to rebut them.
If it is considered that he does not fall within
the offer of amnesty he should be told the how and why, so that he can present
arguments to the contrary. If there is an intention to depart from the terms
of the offer of amnesty he should be told, so that
he could present arguments
against such a departure. (at p453)
20. I would overrule the demurrer. (at p453)
MURPHY J. The plaintiff, who came as a visitor to Australia, became a
prohibited immigrant (by overstaying a temporary entry permit
which expired on
30th July 1975). He claims that the defendant Minister for Immigration and
Ethnic Affairs announced an offer of
amnesty to prohibited immigrants against
prosecution and deportation in terms which covered him, that he accepted the
offer, and
that the Minister reneged on the offer. He seeks relief including a
declaration that he is not liable to be deported as a prohibited
immigrant
under s. 18 of the Migration Act 1958, or alternatively, a declaration that,
in exercising his discretion to order the
plaintiff to be deported as a
prohibited immigrant,
the Minister must act fairly and in accordance with the
principles of natural
justice, in particular by giving the plaintiff an
opportunity to be heard. The defendant has demurred, contending that, in law,
the plaintiff is a prohibited immigrant and that
the Minister may order his
deportation without giving him an opportunity to be
heard. (at p454)
2. The Minister's press release of 25th January 1976 announced "An Amnesty
for Prohibited Immigrants", made the offer that any
prohibited immigrant who
came forward before 30th April 1976 would not be prosecuted or deported and
stated that:
"Those who meet the normal standards of health and goodIn a press release dated 27th January 1976 and headed "First Day Response to Amnesty", the Minister announced:
character will be granted resident status. Amnesty will not
be granted to people with serious criminal records or to those
who may be the subject of deportation orders arising from
criminal acts."
"'This is a genuine offer of amnesty to give security to theIn press releases headed "Amnesty Details Clarified" and "Amnesty for Illegal Immigrants ends this Month", the Minister stressed that "good character" referred to those without previous criminal records for crimes such as violence, theft and drug-pushing. (at p454)
many people currently living under a cloud in this
country. They have nothing to fear by coming forward. It is an
open and honest invitation to people to legalise their status in
Australia. There is bound to be some hesitation at first, but
this will be overcome as people come to recognise the offer for
what it is - a genuine and sympathetic bid to help them.'
Amnesty could be sought by all visitors who were
overstayed at 31 December 1975. Cases involving persons
other than overstayed visitors would be considered on
individual merit."
3. In reliance upon the representations of the Minister, the plaintiff came
forward, identified himself, and sought the amnesty
(on 1st April 1976). The
Minister therefore offered a conditional amnesty which the plaintiff accepted.
For the purposes of this
demurrer it is assumed the plaintiff satisfied the
conditions of health and character. (at p455)
4. The word "amnesty" comes from the Greek 'amnestia' (forgetfulness,
oblivion). It is an act of a sovereign power granting forgiveness
for an
offence or neglect. (at p455)
5. Amnesty has an honourable history in European civilization dating back to
404 B.C. In England, amnesty was granted in 1651
after the Civil War, in 1660
after the Restoration by Charles II and in 1902 after the Boer War. In the
United States of America
under the Presidentail power to grant pardons for
offences against the United States, amnesties were granted by Presidents
Washington,
Jefferson, Madison, Jackson, Lincoln, Johnson, T. Roosevelt,
Wilson, Coolidge, F. Roosevelt and Truman.
"Amnesty has been used to erase treason, insurrection,(See also Weisman "A History and Discussion of Amnesty", Columbia Human Rights Law Review, vol. 4 (1972), p. 530). In recent years, amnesties have been granted by the executive governments of many countries operating under various legal systems. (at p455)
attempted political overthrow, tax refusal, civil and racial
strife, draft avoidance, army desertion, disloyalty, espionage,
and even bigamy, polygamy, and murder ..." ("An
Historical Justification and Legal Basis for Amnesty Today",
Freeman, Law and Social Order (1971), at p. 531).
6. Amnesty may be directed generally to all persons or particularly to
certain groups. It may be conditional or unconditional.
It has been regarded
as a species of pardon (United States v. Klein [1871] USSC 137; (1872) 80 US 128, at p 147 (20
Law Ed 519, at p 526) ), although
"(t)he distinction between them is one of
philological interest
rather than of legal importance". (Knote v. United
States [1877] USSC 124; (1877)
95 US 149, at p 153 [1877] USSC 124; (24 Law Ed 442, at p 443) ). (at p455)
7. Amnesty was described as:
"The one" (amnesty) "overlooks offense; the other"
(pardon) "remits punishment. The first is usually addressed
to crimes against the sovereignty of the State, to political
offenses, forgiveness being deemed more expedient for the
public welfare than prosecution and punishment. The
second condones infractions of the peace of the
State. Amnesty is usually general, addressed to classes or
even communities, a legislative act or under legislation,
constitutional or statutory, the act of the supreme
magistrate." (Burdick v. United States
[1915] USSC 28; (1915) 236 US 79, at p 95 [1915] USSC 28; (59 Law Ed 476, at p 482) ).
"Amnesty ... its effect is to obliterate the past, to leave no
trace of the offence and to place the offender exactly in the
position which he occupied before the offence was committed,
or in which he would have been if he had not committed the
offence." (Ex parte Garland (1867) 71 US [1866] USSC 33; (4 Wall) 333,
at p 351 (a8 Law Ed 366). ). (at p456)
8. The power to amnesty or pardon is an executive power (see Groenvelt's Case
[1792] EngR 714; (1697) 91 ER 1038 ; United States v. Wilson [1833] USSC 33; (1833)
32 US 150, at p 160 (8 Law
Ed 640, at p 643) , per Marshall C.J. It falls within Ch. 2 of the
Constitution - "The Executive Government". The Minister is an officer of the
Executive Government and administers the relevant Department of
State of the
Commonwealth (s. 64 of the Constitution). In our system of responsible
government, on a matter such as this, the Minister speaks on behalf of the
Executive Government.
He has not been repudiated by the Executive Government.
In these circumstances the announced amnesty should be regarded as emanating
from the Executive Government duly exercising its power. The effect of this
conditional amnesty is that the persons who fulfil
its conditions are not to
be treated as prohibited immigrants, not to be prosecuted, and not to be
deported on that account. If
any question arises whether the plaintiff fulfils
the conditions, that can, if necessary, be determined by the court (but it is
assumed in his favour on this demurrer). Every court is bound to take account
of and give effect to the amnesty (see Armstrong
v. United States (1872) 80 US
154, at p 156 [1871] USSC 4; (20 Law Ed 614, at p 615) ). The Minister may not order the
plaintiff to be deported
under s. 18 of the Act because the effect
of the
amnesty is that the plaintiff is not a prohibited immigrant. The offence or
neglect
is legally forgotten as well as forgiven.
(at p456)
9. It is not necessary to deal with the other contentions, but because of its
importance, I will briefly state my view on the
question whether the power to
deport in s. 18 of the Migration Act is conditioned by rules of natural
justice. (at p456)
10. Section 18 of the Act states: "The Minister may order the deportation of
any person who is a prohibited immigrant under any
provision of this Act". An
order has serious consequences for the person against whom it is made. He
becomes liable to be taken
and imprisoned and deported. It prevents the
operation of the prescription under s. 7 (4) of the Act which provides that a
person
ceases to be a prohibited immigrant five years after he becomes one
unless a deportation order against him is then in force. I do
not read s. 18
as enabling a Minister to exercise his discretion (to order deportation) in
bad faith, without regard to the interests
of the person affected, and in a
manner which denies natural justice. The power to deport, like other powers,
is to be exercised
bona fide, for the purposes for which it was created and
with due regard to the interests of persons affected by its exercise. The
power must be exercised in accordance with the principles of natural justice.
Unless circumstances make it impracticable, the person
against whom the order
is contemplated must be given the opportunity to contend that the order should
not be made. Notice of intention
to make the order and of opportunity to be
heard can be given personally or by some form of substituted service (such as
public
notice or advertisement). It was argued that it is pointless to hear a
prohibited immigrant because the fact that he is a prohibited
immigrant is the
ground for deportation, and no submission can affect it. But the power is
conferred in discretionary terms. The
Minister may (but need not) order
deportation. The person may and no doubt often will, wish to put facts to the
Minister and make
submissions why the Minister should not exercise the power
because of, for example, hardship to the person or others or suitable
undertakings. The requirements of natural justice depend on the circumstances.
Ordinarily, at least the person should be informed
of any matter being taken
into account which would affect the exercise of the Minister's discretion
adversely to him. If the Minister
orders deportation without giving the person
an opportunity to put his case, the order should be set aside. (at p457)
11. The demurrer should be overruled. (at p457)
AICKIN J. The facts out of which this action arises are stated in the
judgment of Gibbs J. and need not be repeated here. Two
questions arise for
consideration, the first is whether the plaintiff was at the date of the
commencement of these proceedings
a "prohibited immigrant" within the meaning
of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), as amended, and the second is whether, in the
exercise of his powers under s. 18 to "order the deportation of a person who
is a prohibited immigrant under any provision of this Act", the Minister is
obliged to
act in accordance with the principles of natural justice. (at
p457)
2. There is no doubt that upon the date of the expiration of his "entry
permit", 31st July 1975, the plaintiff (an Italian citizen)
became a
"prohibited immigrant". His "temporary entry permit" expired by virtue of s. 7
(3) of the Act and no further entry permit
was granted to him. His claim not
to be a prohibited immigrant is based upon his contention that he is a member
of a class of persons
"who are for the time being exempted, by instrument
under the hand of the Minister, from the requirements of this Division
relating
to entry permits" within the meaning of s. 8 (1) (e) of the Act. That
claim is based upon the instruments issued by or by direction
of the Minister
as referred to in the judgment of Gibbs J. With respect to those instruments
two points arise. The first is whether
any of them is an "instrument under the
hand of the Minister", and the second is whether such instruments or any of
them produce
the result that persons in the class there referred to are not
prohibited immigrants, it being assumed for the purpose of these
proceedings
that the plaintiff satisfies the various requirements referred to in those
instruments. The documents incorporated
in the pleadings show that he
physically entered the country as a visitor for the purpose of a holiday and
received an entry permit
expressed to authorize him to remain in Australia for
a specified period only, i.e. for a period of three months, and that
subsequently,
while still in Australia, he was issued with a further temporary
entry permit for a period ending 31st July 1975. (at p458)
3. I am disposed to think that these instruments do answer, or are capable of
answering, the description "instruments issued under
the hand of the
Minister", but a demurrer is scarcely a suitable proceeding for deciding that
point because the statement of claim
reveals nothing as to the circumstances
of their issue. In earlier proceedings some details of the circumstances were
placed before
the Court but they are not technically before us in these
proceedings and we have no means of knowing whether they are complete.
I do
not find it necessary to decide this point because I am satisfied that, even
if the instruments were issued under the hand
of the Minister, they do not
produce the result that the class of persons referred to therein, i.e. holders
of temporary entry
permits who have remained in Australia after the expiration
thereof, and who satisfy normal requirements as to health and character,
thereby cease to be prohibited immigrants. There are two reasons for this
conclusion. The first is that the opening words of s.
8 (1), i.e. "Nothing in
this Division applies in relation to the entry into Australia of an immigrant
being" a member of one of
the classes of persons referred to in pars (a) to
(e), appear to me to indicate that the section is concerned with the physical
entry into Australia, and not with persons who, having entered Australia, have
by reason of the expiration of their entry permits
become prohibited
immigrants. It is true that under the Act an entry permit may be issued, not
only before or at the time of physical
entry but also, after physical entry
(see s. 6(5)) but that does not alter the meaning of the word "entry" which is
defined to
include "re-entry". A person who has physically entered Australia
by virtue of a temporary entry permit is not by any provision
of the Act
deemed to "re-enter" when after the expiration of his temporary entry permit
he is granted a further "entry permit".
Accordingly, in the opening words of
s. 8(1) the word "entry" bears its ordinary meaning, i.e. physical entry into
the country.
(at p459)
4. Accordingly, the Minister has no power under s. 8(1) to exempt persons who
are already in Australia "from the requirements
of this Division relating to
entry permits". The terms of pars (a) to (d) inclusive of that sub-section are
plainly concerned only
with persons at the point of physical entry,
consistently with the opening words of the sub-section, and there is nothing
in the
words used in par. (e) to indicate an intention to deal with a
situation other than that covered by the opening words. (at p459)
5. My second reason for rejecting this argument is that in my opinion the
instruments upon their face show that they are not,
and are not intended to
be, instruments exempting persons from the requirements relating to entry
permits. An examination of the
content of the instruments shows that they are
of a political and not legal character and that what they do is to state the
policy
of the Minister with respect to the issue of entry permits, not being
temporary entry permits, to a class of persons there referred
to. They are on
their face promises intended to be acted upon, in the sense of intended to
induce prohibited immigrants of the
kind described, to come forward and
identify themselves and to make application for entry permits entitling them
to remain in Australia
indefinitely. A reading of the instruments issued by
the Minister demonstrates that they were not intended to be self-executing,
but were intended to induce persons to make applications for entry permits
which were in effect "promised" to all those who met
the requirements stated
in the documents. That however was a political and not a legal promise, not an
offer capable of acceptance
so as to produce some legal result. The first
announcement included the statement "people seeking amnesty should apply to
one of
the officers of the Department", the second stated that "amnesty could
be sought by all visitors who were over-stayed at 31st December
1975" and that
"those who met normal standards of health and good character would be granted
resident status", the third instrument
included the statement "also being here
illegally as an over-stayed visitor will not disqualify anyone from being
granted amnesty"
and that "in the case of people illegally in Australia and
applying for amnesty a medical examination was required". Each of these
statements conveys that the persons concerned must come forward and make an
application, which the document states will be granted
if they fall within the
stated categories. There is nothing in the context of the statements from
which I have quoted to indicate
that the instruments did more than urge, or
endeavour to induce, prohibited immigrants to come forward and apply for entry
permits
with a clear indication that if they fell within the category such
permits would be granted. The terms of s. 8 (1) (e) make it clear
that to fall
within it the instrument must of necessity be one which is self-executing and
immediately operative to produce a legal
consequence. For the reasons stated
the documents do not satisfy that requirement. (at p460)
6. There is an independent argument that the instruments issued by or with
the authority of the Minister constituted an exercise
of the Minister's power
to grant an entry permit and that all that remained to be done was simply the
formal issue of an appropriate
document, the discretion to issue or to refuse
a permit being exhausted. I agree with Gibbs J. that this argument must fail
for
the reasons given by him. Accordingly, I am satisfied that the plaintiff
is not entitled to succeed in his submissions that he is
not a prohibited
immigrant. (at p460)
7. The remaining question is whether the Minister is obliged to act in
accordance with the principles of natural justice in exercising
the power
granted by s. 18, which is as follows:
"The Minister may order the deportation of a person who isOn that question I agree with what Gibbs J. has said with respect to the general principles governing the matter and their application to the present case, and with his conclusion that the power given by s. 18 is not limited by any requirement for the observation of the principles of natural justice and that there is no requirement that the Minister should provide some opportunity for a prohibited immigrant to be heard before making a deportation order. There is nothing that I would need to add to what Gibbs J. has said. (at p460)
a prohibited immigrant under any provision of this Act."
8. I am therefore of opinion that the demurrer should be allowed. (at p460)
ORDER
Demurrer allowed with costs.Action dismissed with costs.
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