Materiality
43 However, "an error will only be jurisdictional if the error was material to the decision that was made in fact, in the sense that there is a realistic possibility that the decision that was made in fact could have been different if the error had not occurred": LPDT at [7] (per Gageler CJ, Gordon, Edelman, Steward, Gleeson and Jagot JJ).
44 The plurality in LPDT described the threshold of materiality at [14]-[16]. It is worthwhile setting out those paragraphs in full:
[14] The question in these cases is whether the decision that was in fact made could, not would, "realistically" have been different had there been no error. "Realistic" is used to distinguish the assessment of the possibility of a different outcome from one where the possibility is fanciful or improbable. Though the applicant must satisfy the court that the threshold of materiality is met in order to establish that the error is jurisdictional, meeting that threshold is not demanding or onerous.
[15] What must be shown to demonstrate that an established error meets the threshold of materiality will depend upon the error. In some cases, it will be sufficient to show that there has been an error and that the outcome is consistent with the error having affected the decision. Where the error is a denial of procedural fairness arising from a failure to put the applicant on notice of a fact or issue, the court may readily be able to infer that, if fairly put on notice of that fact or issue, the applicant might have addressed it by way of further evidence or submissions, and that the decision-maker would have approached the applicant's further evidence or submissions with an open mind. In those cases, it is "no easy task" for the court to be satisfied that the loss of such an opportunity did not deprive the person of the possibility of a successful outcome. Importantly, a court called upon to determine whether the threshold has been met must be careful not to assume the function of the decision-maker: the point at which the line between judicial review and merits review is crossed may not always be clear, but the line must be maintained. This case affords an example.
[16] In sum, unless there is identified a basis on which it can be affirmatively concluded that the outcome would inevitably have been the same had the error not been made, once an applicant establishes that there has been an error and demonstrates that there exists a realistic possibility that the outcome of the decision could have been different had that error not been made, the threshold of materiality will have been met (and curial relief will be justified subject to any issue of utility or discretion).
45 The Tribunal at [82]-[83] engaged in the evaluative assessment of weighing the relevant mandatory considerations with other relevant considerations provided in the Direction. The Tribunal said at [82] that the "primary considerations of the protection and expectations of the Australian community and, to a lesser extent, family violence weigh in favour of not revoking the cancellation decision". Other than this reference to family violence, the Tribunal's evaluative assessment did not mention the mandatory consideration of family violence but focussed entirely on the applicant's history of violent offending and consequent risk of harm to the community as the primary consideration that weighed in favour of not revoking the cancellation decision.
46 Para 8.1(1) of the Direction notes that the Government's concerns in relation to family violence is "proportionate to the seriousness of the family violence engaged in by the non-citizen". All acts of violence against women are serious and contemptable. However, kicking a pregnant woman in the tummy is a particularly serious form of violence given the potential consequences. The Tribunal said at [42] that it gave the consideration of family violence "less weight because it was an isolated incident and he accepted responsibility and understood the impact of his behaviour". The Tribunal could hardly have been more generous to the applicant in assigning the weight that it did to this consideration given the evidence before it of the applicant's history of violence against women.
47 Nonetheless, the Tribunal's comment that it gave Primary Consideration 2 "less weight" cannot be taken to mean that it gave this consideration minimal weight or no weight at all. "Less" is a relative concept. When this paragraph is read in context with the Tribunal's conclusion immediately above at [39] that "the protection of the Australian community is a factor that weighs heavily against the applicant", it is clear that the Tribunal means that Primary Consideration 2 is given "less weight" than Primary Consideration 1 (protection of the Australia community).
48 Ultimately, I do not consider that the Tribunal's error was material.
49 The applicant contends that the error was material because the Tribunal wrongly concluded that para 8.2 was engaged when it was not and therefore it included a mandatory consideration in its evaluative assessment that was not relevant. That contention depends on the applicant's submission that the incident in 2009 in Brisbane which led to the protection order by the Magistrates Court cannot be characterised as family violence because the victim was not the applicant's romantic partner. I have rejected that submission above.
50 The Tribunal correctly found that the applicant had engaged in family violence and therefore did not err in finding that para 8.2 was enlivened and relevant to its evaluative assessment. The Tribunal's error was in identifying the particular act of domestic violence and assessing the seriousness of that incident of domestic violence.
51 As the plurality said in LPDT at [34], "the Tribunal regarded the consideration [in para 8.1.1(1)(g)] as directly relevant when there was no evidence before the Tribunal showing that it did apply". The error of the Tribunal in LPDT was identifying mandatory considerations as relevant to its exercise of discretion where those considerations were not relevant. Further, the Tribunal in LPDT had made three errors in construing the Direction.
52 In assessing materiality, I cannot "attempt to discern how the Tribunal would have reasoned if it had not departed from the required process of reasoning": LPDT at [36]. However, the Tribunal's error only went to the weight to be given to Primary Consideration 2 not whether the consideration was relevant at all. This makes the Tribunal's error very different to the errors of the Tribunal in LPDT.
53 Had the Tribunal in this case simply accepted the applicant's admission that he either kicked AW in the tummy or the mouth, rather than finding that he kicked his pregnant partner in the tummy, the Tribunal would still have been entitled to find that para 8.2 was relevant to the exercise of its discretion and given it some weight. The Tribunal's assessment at [82] that the primary consideration of "family violence weigh[s] in favour of not revoking the cancellation" would have applied had it not made the error. It may have given it lesser weight, but it cannot have given it no weight at all.
54 The Tribunal found that there had been one act of domestic violence, being the domestic violence the subject of the protection order. In relation to that act of domestic violence, the Tribunal stated:
I take into account that this was an isolated event and that he has expressed appropriate remorse for his conduct. He appears to have insight into the harm that is caused by domestic violence. Nevertheless, the Government has serious concerns about those who engage in family violence, and I consider that this is a factor that weighs against revoking the cancellation decision. I give less weight to it because it was an isolated incident and he accepted responsibility and understood the impact of his behaviour.
(Emphasis added.)
55 Given the violence towards women conceded by the applicant as set out above and the applicant's admission to the Tribunal that he kicked AW, I consider that the possibility that the Tribunal would have reached a more favourable conclusion than it did (as bolded above) with respect to Primary Consideration 2 is improbable and bordering on fanciful.
56 The Tribunal found that Primary Consideration 1 (protection of the Australian community) weighed "heavily" in favour of non-revocation (at [39]) and Primary Consideration 2 was given an unspecified, but lesser, weight. Had the Tribunal not erred, Primary Consideration 2 would still have been given weight but a weight that was lesser than Primary Consideration 1.
57 Therefore, I do not consider that there was a "realistic possibility" that the Tribunal's decision "could have been different if the error had not occurred": LPDT at [7].