Consideration
55 I am satisfied that Mr Bethell is not unlawfully detained, such as to support the issue of a writ of habeas corpus.
56 Further, and noting previous decisions of this Court, both at first instance and at appellate level, I am satisfied that abuse of process principles can be applied in respect of repeated applications for the issue of writs of habeas corpus within a short time frame. I do not accept the submission of Mr Bethell in this case that there is no limitation on his ability to bring such repeated applications.
57 I have made these findings for the following reasons.
58 First, I accept that principles referable to the illegality of unlawful detention in Australia are part of the law of this country. As Gummow J noted in Plaintiff M47 v Director-General of Security [2012] HCA 46 at [108],
… subject to any relevant statutory procedures, there is applicable in Australia the proposition, recently affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, that habeas corpus is available to every individual detained in this country without legal justification. Secondly, it has long been settled that in a matter in which the Court is seized of original jurisdiction, the powers of the Court include the power conferred by s 33(1)(f) of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) to direct the issue of a writ of habeas corpus…
(footnotes omitted)
59 Mr Bethell invoked, inter alia, the Habeas Corpus Act 1679 (Imp). Provisions of this Act have been retained in State statutes. For example, Thomas J in Re Jenkin [1994] 1 Qd R 266 at 269 observed in respect of detention in the context of the criminal law of Queensland:
We were also referred to a number of decisions and dicta concerning the effect of s. 6 of the Habeas Corpus Act 1679. That section was no doubt the forerunner to s. 590 of the Criminal Code. It may be that that Act continues to apply in Queensland, because the effect of s. 5 of the Imperial Acts Application Act 1984, along with the first schedule thereto, provides that the Habeas Corpus Act shall "continue to have the same force and effect, if any, as it had in Queensland immediately prior to the commencement of this Act". It is unnecessary to pursue this question further, because the criminal practice in force in Queensland by reason of later enactments, including the Criminal Code allows no further room for its effective independent operation (cf. Clarkson v. Director-General of Corrections [1986] V.R. 425).
60 I also note such cases as Jago v District Court (NSW) (1989) 168 CLR 23, where the High Court of Australia discussed the application of principles in the Habeas Corpus Act 1679 (Imp) and their application to modern criminal law in Australia.
61 However, second, I note that Rangiah J - less than four weeks ago - found in Bethell v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 661, as a factual matter, that Mr Bethell was not unlawfully detained. In doing so His Honour carefully examined Mr Bethell's claims of unlawful detention and rejected them. No factual matters have been demonstrated which have changed in that short passage of time.
62 In Tomlinson v Ramsey Food Processing Pty Limited [2015] 256 CLR 507; [2015] HCA 28 French CJ, Bell, Gageler and Keane JJ said:
20. An exercise of judicial power, it has been held, involves "as a general rule, a decision settling for the future, as between defined persons or classes of persons, a question as to the existence of a right or obligation, so that an exercise of the power creates a new charter by reference to which that question is in future to be decided as between those persons or classes of persons". The rendering of a final judgment in that way "quells" the controversy between those persons. The rights and obligations in controversy, as between those persons, cease to have an independent existence: they "merge" in that final judgment. That merger has long been treated in Australia as equating to "res judicata" in the strict sense.
(emphasis added, footnotes omitted)
63 I also note observations of the Full Court of the Federal Court in Zetta Jet Pte Ltd v The Ship "Dragon Pearl" (No 2) (2018) 265 FCR 290; [2018] FCAFC 132 at [16].
64 In my view the principle of res judicata applies in respect of the question whether Mr Bethell is presently unlawfully detained. That issue was decided by Rangiah J, against Mr Bethell.
65 Third, as Jackson J observed in Bethell v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 727:
40. If this proceeding continues to its conclusion there is also a risk that there will be inconsistent decisions, which may erode public confidence in the administration of justice by generating conflicting decisions on the same issue: see Rogers v The Queen (1994) 181 CLR 251 at 256-257 (Mason CJ), 280 (Deane and Gaudron JJ). Mr Bethell submitted that they would not be inconsistent because he was seeking to pursue different grounds to those he pursued before Rangiah J. But ultimately, on the present hypothesis, this court will have made two decisions about the same issue - the lawfulness of Mr Bethell's detention - when no relevant circumstances could possibly have changed.
(emphasis added)
66 I respectfully adopt the observations of Jackson J. I, too, consider that for me to find that Mr Bethell is not lawfully detained, when it appears that nothing of substance (or even lacking in substance) has altered since the hearing before Rangiah J, would potentially erode public confidence in the administration of justice by generating conflicting decisions on the same issue.
67 Fourth, even if I am wrong in respect of the application of principles of res judicata and the erosion of public confidence in the administration of justice, I note that the Full Court in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Al Masri [2003] FCAFC 70; (2003) 126 FCR 54 at 97 [176] found that it is for an applicant to adduce evidence that puts in issue the legality of detention, and then the burden shifts to the respondent to show that detention is lawful, and may be discharged on the balance of probabilities. In this case as Ms Spottiswood for the Minister submitted:
Sections 13 and 14 of the Migration Act cumulatively define an unlawful non-citizen as a non-citizen who does not hold a visa. Mr Bethell's original visa was cancelled pursuant to s 116 (1)(e)(ii) of the Migration Act, and his bridging visa cancelled pursuant to s 133C of the Migration Act. There is no evidence before the Court that Mr Bethell sought revocation of the first decision of the Minister, although there is some evidence before the Court that in June 2021 he sought revocation of the cancellation of his bridging visa.
Section 82 (1) of the Migration Act provides that a visa that is cancelled ceases to be in effect on cancellation.
Section 189 of the Migration Act requires an officer who knows or reasonably suspects that a person in the migration zone (other than an excised offshore place) is an unlawful non‑citizen to detain the person. While not conclusive, I note, and accept, evidence of Ms Natalie Jackson in her affidavit affirmed 13 July 2021 referable to s 189 of the Migration Act, in particular:
4. On 25 June 2021, I became the Status Resolution Officer (SRO) for the applicant, taking over this role from Wayne Ruttley.
The role of an SRO
5. As an SRO, part of my role is to consider whether individuals in detention assigned to me are unlawful-non citizens for the purposes of section 189 of the Migration Act 1958 (the Act). If I know or hold a reasonable suspicion that a person is an unlawful non-citizen, I must detain that person or cause someone else to detain that person.
6. As the applicant's SRO, I am required to maintain reasonable suspicion or knowledge that the applicant is an unlawful lnon-citizen to continue his lawful detention under s 189 of the Act. If I was no longer to hold such a reasonable suspicion or knowledge, I am required to take steps to have the applicant released from immigration detention.
Section 196 (1) of the Migration Act provides that an unlawful non-citizen detained under s 189 must be kept in immigration detention until he or she is removed from Australia (s 196 (1)(a)), or an alteration is made in respect of residence determination (s 196 (1)(aa)) or he or she is deported (s 196 (1)(b)) or he or she is granted a visa (s 196 (1)(c)). Mr Bethell's position is clearly covered by s196 (1).
Regardless of whether an unlawful non‑citizen has made a valid application for a bridging visa, s 198 (5) of the Migration Act provides that an officer must remove the non-citizen from Australia as soon as reasonably practicable if the non‑citizen is a detainee. On the evidence before me I am satisfied that Mr Bethell falls into this category.
68 Mr Bethell has advanced no arguments, and provides no material, to negate any of these propositions. It is clear that Mr Bethell is currently detained. However, such material as is before the Court supports a finding that Mr Bethell has not discharged the onus of proof that he is unlawfully detained.
69 Fifth, I also note the recent decision of the High Court in Commonwealth of Australia v AJL20 [2021] HCA 21, in particular where the plurality of Kiefel CJ and Gageler, Keane and Steward JJ said:
61. In contrast, ss 189 and 196 of the Act require the segregation of unlawful non-citizens, both before they are admitted pursuant to a visa and in order to facilitate their removal if a visa is not granted. Given this statutory requirement, it matters not why an officer of the Executive might detain a person because, provided that person is in fact an unlawful non-citizen, the Parliament has required that he or she be detained. Because the evident intention of the Act is that an unlawful non-citizen may not, in any circumstances, be at liberty in the Australian community, no question of release on habeas can arise. As Hayne J, with whom McHugh and Heydon JJ relevantly agreed, said in [Al-Kateb v Godwin (2004) 219 CLR 562; [2004] HCA 37]:
"The questions which arise about mandatory detention do not arise as a choice between detention and freedom. The detention to be examined is not the detention of someone who, but for the fact of detention, would have been, and been entitled to be, free in the Australian community."
62. It is also convenient to note here a statement of the Full Court of the Federal Court (Black CJ, Sundberg and Weinberg JJ) in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Al Masri, in the course of reasoning to a conclusion disapproved by this Court in Al-Kateb. After correctly stating that "[i]f the Minister were not fulfilling his duty under s 198(1) to remove as soon as reasonably practicable the detention would ... still be lawful and the appropriate remedy would be an order in the nature of mandamus to compel the Minister to take the steps required for the performance of his duty", the Full Court went on…
70 While not argued before me, I consider that a serious question arises from findings in AJL20 as to whether an application for habeas corpus by Mr Bethell, an unlawful non-citizen in lawful detention under the Migration Act, is competent at all. In any event however, as Jackson J observed, the effect of AJL20 is that s 189 of the Migration Act requires an unlawful non-citizen to be detained until one of the events specified in s 196 (1) occurs, and that provision overrides any common law doctrines referable to habeas corpus.
71 Sixth, notwithstanding Mr Bethell's submissions that he has been "tortured and drugged" while in detention, such material as is before the Court does not persuade me that Mr Bethell has been tortured and drugged within the meaning of the Convention. Rather, such material as is before me indicates that Mr Bethell had undergone a colonoscopy (with his consent), and that for unknown reasons he attended a psychiatrist on or about the same day. I am not persuaded on the state of the material that there was anything sinister associated with his attendance on a psychiatrist. I also do not accept that he has been refused medical treatment in respect of his allegedly broken little fingers to ensure that he is able to be deported without risk of suffering deep vein thrombosis.
72 Seventh, Mr Bethell's complains that the cancellation decision(s) of the Minister in respect of his visa (potentially - one or both of the decision to cancel his Temporary Worker Visa on 10 November 2016, and the decision to cancel his bridging visa on 23 February 2021) were flawed because they were based on incorrect assumptions on the part of the Minister relating to his alleged criminality. However, the application before the Court is not, for example, an application for judicial review of a cancellation decision of the Minister made pursuant to s 501BA (2) or s 137K of the Migration Act. The reasons of the Minister for cancelling Mr Bethell's visas are not in issue in the present case, they are not presently subject to judicial review, and they are not relevant. I note that a similar observation was made by White J in Bethell v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 756.
73 Eighth, I note Mr Bethell's concerns that he is a litigant in person, dealing with difficult legal issues. He also submitted that he had had inadequate time to prepare for the hearings before me, and felt "bullied". However:
I note that Mr Bethell appeared before White J, Jackson J and Logan J, unrepresented, and, while unsuccessful, appeared able to articulate arguments before the Court referable to habeas corpus.
I note that Mr Bethell has advanced similar arguments before me that he advanced before other Judges of this Court, including in respect of the unlawfulness of his detention, the conduct of the Department, his right to make habeas corpus applications, and the application of the Habeas Corpus Act 1679 (Imp).
As I explained to Mr Bethell, it is appropriate for an applicant for a writ of habeas corpus to be brought promptly before the Court for hearing. Noting that Mr Bethell is due to be deported next week, it was urgent for his habeas corpus applications to be heard and determined as a matter of priority.
Mr Bethell filed two sets of written submissions in these proceedings, to which I have had regard.
I gave leave to Mr Bethell to make further submissions this morning, notwithstanding that judgment had already been reserved.
74 I am satisfied that Mr Bethell has been accorded natural justice in these proceedings. I also reject the proposition that his arguments have been ignored. The fact that I do not accept his arguments does not mean that I have failed to have regard to them.
75 Ninth, while Mr Bethell has complained about the conduct of the Minister and the Department:
His submissions concerning the alleged unlawfulness of his repatriation to the United Kingdom have already been considered, and determined unfavourably to him, by White J, Jackson J, and Logan J in refusing his urgent interlocutory injunctions restraining his deportation.
His submissions concerning the alleged disregard by the Minister of his application for reconsideration of the cancellation of his bridging visa are not substantiated. I also in this respect note relevant comments of White J.
76 Finally, I respectfully adopt the observations of Jackson J in Bethell v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 727 concerning repeated applications for writs of habeas corpus within a short time frame, where no relevant circumstances have changed. In my view Vasiljkovic v The Honourable Brendan O'Connor (No 2) [2011] FCAFC 125 is authority, binding on me, for the proposition that re-agitation of the same matter previously raised - including a claim of unlawful detention and the seeking of the issue of a writ of habeas corpus - can constitute an abuse of process. I am not persuaded that I am bound by historical authority, including Eshugbayi Eleko v The Government of Nigeria (Officer Administering) [1928] AC 459, as submitted by Mr Bethell.
77 As I have already observed, in this case Mr Bethell's claim of unlawful detention, and an application for the issue of a writ for the issue of habeas corpus, have already been considered and determined by Rangiah J. As Mr Bethell noted at the hearing before me, Mr Bethell had the benefit of pro bono Senior Counsel acting on his behalf before Rangiah J in respect of his habeas corpus application. It cannot be said that Mr Bethell has not already fully argued the issue before another Judge of this Court.
78 As matters stand, it is evident that Mr Bethell filed another two applications, seeking the same relief in respect of which he had been unsuccessful before Rangiah J, almost immediately following the decision of Rangiah J. I note that:
Justice Rangiah delivered judgment on 17 June 2021 in Bethell v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 661;
Mr Bethell filed his originating application in QUD 192 of 2021 on 18 June 2021; and
Mr Bethell filed his originating application in QUD 211 of 2021 on 29 June 2021.
79 An application for habeas corpus is a serious matter. However I reject Mr Bethell's submission that he is entitled to "go from court to court, judge to judge" in the present circumstances. I consider that his applications for writs of habeas corpus in both QUD 192 of 2021 and QUD 211 of 2021 constitute an abuse of process of the Court.