Ground 1: the Tribunal applied the wrong law
22 It was submitted for the applicant that when considering the "protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct" at [30]-[43] of its reasons the Tribunal considered and applied Part A rather than Part C of the Direction as required. These were not mere clerical or typographical errors. The citations of the wrong clause occurred in six separate paragraphs. The text of the provision cited, cl 9.1, was not identical to the text of the provision that applied, cl 13.1. Clause 13.1.1 contains factors, (a) to (h), which are referred to in cl 13.1.1(1) as factors the Tribunal "must have regard to". Further, in [5] of the Tribunal's reasons it referred to a discretion "to not cancel the applicant's visa", relevant to Part A of the Direction, when in fact the Tribunal was required to consider whether to revoke a mandatory cancellation decision under Part C of the Direction. The Tribunal thus applied the wrong law to its task which constitutes jurisdictional error as it cannot be said that the Tribunal necessarily would have reached the same conclusion had it applied Part C of the Direction as required: Hossain v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] HCA 34; (2018) 359 ALR 1 at [29]-[37].
23 The first respondent submitted that, when read as a whole, it should be inferred that the Tribunal had considered Part C of the Direction and that its reasons, in referring to cl 9, involved mere typographical errors. Alternatively, if the Tribunal in fact considered cl 9 rather than cl 13, the errors were immaterial because the substance of the provisions, insofar as they could apply to the applicant, were the same.
24 The Tribunal said in its reasons:
3. A decision by a delegate of the respondent not to revoke the mandatory cancellation in the exercise of discretion was made in October 2016.
4. The issue is whether the mandatory cancellation of the applicant's visa should remain. That is, whether discretion should be exercised in the applicant's favour notwithstanding the fact that the applicant fails to meet the character test under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) because of his criminal record.
5. Discretion may be exercised to not cancel the applicant's visa and that discretion is to be exercised in accordance with Direction 65 made under s 499 of the Act.
…
21. It is Part C of Direction 65 which is applicable in this case.
22. Part C requires a decision-maker to have regard to three primary considerations as well as other considerations.
23. The primary considerations are:-
(a) Protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct;
(b) The best interests of minor children in Australia; and
(c) The expectations of the Australian community (Part C, cl 13(2)).
…
28. There is no question here that the applicant does not pass the character test referred to in s 501. Notwithstanding this, Direction 65 allows for the non-revocation of the applicant's visa in light of the considerations contained in Direction 65.
29. I turn now to the considerations under Direction 65.
PRIMARY CONSIDERATIONS
(a) Protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct
30. Australia is committed to protecting the Australian community from harm as a result of criminal activity (cl 9.1(1)). It is necessary to give consideration to the nature and seriousness of a non-citizen's conduct and to the risk to the Australian community should the non-citizen commit further offences (cl 9.1(2)).
31. In assessing the nature and seriousness of the conduct, one is to look at, amongst other things, the sentence imposed by the courts (cl 9.1.1(e)) and the frequency of offending (cl 9.1.1(f)).
32. Here, the sentences imposed were for substantial gaol terms on two occasions. I would regard the applicant's conduct as being serous in terms of offending. The first major offence involving the fire on 9 December 2011 when the applicant's wife and child were in the premises was a serious matter. Notwithstanding that offence, the applicant was found again to have a clandestine laboratory for making drugs in November 2013. He also breached bail conditions following the December 2011 offence.
33. This is not a case where there has been a sole offence. There are, in addition to the fire and later laboratory offences, other offences to which I have referred.
34. It is true that the applicant says he had become dependent on drugs and that he has undertaken rehabilitation. However, the gravity of the offences cannot be ignored.
35. The applicant has not been in the community at large since around March 2015. His second prison sentence - as a result of being found of having a crude laboratory for making drugs - occurred after the earlier conviction for starting a fire associated with his earlier drug-making laboratory in a residential unit. For a second time, the applicant put people at risk. The applicant did not learn from the fire incident despite undergoing some rehabilitation.
36. In considering whether the person represents an unacceptable risk, regard is to be had to the principle that the Australian community tolerance for any risk of further harm becomes lower as the seriousness of the potential harm increases (cl 9.1.2(1)).
37. Regard is to be had to (a) the nature of the harm and (b) the likelihood of the non-citizen engaging in further criminal or other serious conduct (cl 9.1.2(2)(b)).
38. What is relevant here is the information and evidence of the risk and evidence of rehabilitation.
39. In the present matter, the applicant has had a long period of offending and has put others in danger. His conduct has offended community standards by his drug-taking despite coming before the courts. Even after causing a fire and being charged, his offending persisted and this was so despite undertaking rehabilitation programs.
40. The Australian community can be said to tolerate some risk. Here, however, the applicant continued to re-offend after coming to the attention of authorities. He has participated in rehabilitation programmes and has engaged in the "Getting Smart Programme" while in prison. The applicant has engaged in other programmes in prison and whilst in detention.
41. In my view, given that the applicant has been in custody or detention for some time, there is a risk that the applicant could revert to old patterns and that this is a risk which must be taken into consideration. I say this knowing that the applicant believes that he has put all of that behind him. He has a collection of favourable references which I have considered.
42. In summary though, I regard this first primary consideration to weigh strongly against the applicant.
43. I now come to the next primary consideration.
25 It will be apparent that the Tribunal correctly identified the task it was required to undertake in [4] of its reasons and that it was required to consider Part C of the Direction in [21] of its reasons. However, when it came to consider the first primary consideration, the protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct, the Tribunal consistently referred to cl 9 which is in Part A of the Direction and which is inapplicable rather than the relevant provision, cl 13, which is in Part C of the Direction.
26 If the only problem was the loose language in [5] and [28] of the Tribunal's reasons the applicant's concern would be without substance. There can be no doubt that the Tribunal knew it was deciding whether or not to revoke the cancellation of the applicant's visa. But that is not the only problem with the Tribunal's reasons. In that part of its reasons in which it was meant to consider Part C of the Direction, its reasons refer only to cl 9 in Part A.
27 Contrary to the submissions for the first respondent, [37] of the Tribunal's reasons does not suggest that the Tribunal was merely repeatedly committing a typographical error. Both cl 9.1.2(2) and cl 13.1.2(2) contain sub-paras (a) and (b). Accordingly, [37] is equally capable of supporting either inference - that the Tribunal had in mind cl 9 in Part A or cl 13 in Part C.
28 I do not accept that inferring that the Tribunal failed to consider cl 13 and in fact considered cl 9 of the Direction would involve reviewing the Tribunal's reasons with "an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error": Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272, quoting Collector of Customs v Pozzolanic Enterprises Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 456; (1993) 43 FCR 280 at 287. The following considerations lead me to infer that despite its correct reference to Part C of the Direction in [21]-[23] of its reasons the Tribunal in fact considered Part A when dealing with the protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct:
(1) In the part of its reasons dealing with the primary consideration of the protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct the Tribunal consistently referred to cl 9 in Part A. It never once referred to cl 13 in Part C. Contrary to the submissions for the first respondent, in my view, the fact that there is not even a stray reference to either cl 13 or Part C of the Direction under the heading "(a) Protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct" in the Tribunal's reasons is a strong indicator that it had in mind cl 9 in Part A and not cl 13 in Part C.
(2) Clause 13 includes a preamble to the primary considerations which does not appear in cl 9. The preamble to cl 13 includes as part of the Direction the statement that "Where the discretion to consider revocation is enlivened, the decision-maker must consider whether to revoke the cancellation given the specific circumstances of the case". While it may be accepted that, when exercising the discretion to cancel a visa and considering Part A of the Direction, the decision-maker must also consider the individual case before the decision-maker, the preamble to cl 13 expressly provides that "the decision-maker must consider whether to revoke the cancellation given the specific circumstances of the case". There is no reference in the Tribunal's reasons to this requirement.
(3) While cl 13.1.2(2)(b) refers to decisions not being "delayed in order for rehabilitative courses to be undertaken", cl 9.1.2(2)(b)(ii) refers to "evidence of rehabilitation achieved by the time of the decision". In [38] of its reasons the Tribunal referred to "evidence of rehabilitation" which is the language of cl 9.1.2(2)(b)(ii) and not the language of cl 13.1.2(2)(b).
29 I do not accept the submissions for the first respondent that the errors were immaterial. The circumstances are not analogous to those in Pokharel v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCAFC 34. In that case, the legal criterion in each provision, that the applicant be the "spouse" of the sponsoring partner, was identical. Accordingly, the reference to the incorrect provision in the reasons for decision could not have affected the outcome of the decision: see at [50]-[51].
30 First, and in contrast to Pokharel, it is relevant in the present case that there is a material difference between a statutory duty expressly requiring that where "the discretion to consider revocation is enlivened, the decision-maker must consider whether to revoke the cancellation given the specific circumstances of the case" (as in cl 13 of the Direction) and one which does not expressly impose such an obligation, leaving it to the general principles of administrative law to ensure that the individual circumstances of each case are considered where it is necessary to do so (as in cl 9 of the Direction). It is not that in complying with Part A of the Direction a decision-maker could do other than consider the "specific circumstances of the case". It is that in complying with Part C of the Direction a decision-maker is expressly instructed to apply each provision of cl 13 "given the specific circumstances of the case". To my mind, in discharging the duty imposed by s 499(2A) of the Act to comply with the Direction, the Tribunal was bound to comply with the Direction in the terms in which it was expressed. For cl 13, the terms of the Direction required the decision-maker to consider whether to revoke the cancellation given the specific circumstances of the case. The erroneous references to cl 9 in the Tribunal's reasons, together with the matters referred to above which found the inference that the Tribunal considered cl 9 and not cl 13, also lead to the inference that the Tribunal did not turn its mind to the preamble to cl 13 in its reasoning process.
31 While it is not possible to know the effect that complying with this express instruction in the preamble to cl 13 would have had on the Tribunal's decision, the possibility that compliance would have led the Tribunal to reach a different result cannot be excluded. This is sufficient to make the Tribunal's errors material. The contrary conclusion would reduce the preamble to cl 13 of the Direction to mere verbiage which, in my view, it is not.
32 Second, having regard to my conclusions above, I also infer that the Tribunal treated the "evidence of rehabilitation achieved by the time of the decision" as a mandatory relevant consideration (because it is such a consideration in cl 9.1.2(2)(b)(ii)). As noted, the Tribunal used this very expression, "evidence of rehabilitation", in [38] of its reasons. That expression appears in cl 9.1.2(2)(b) (the provision to which the Tribunal also expressly referred in the immediately preceding paragraph of its reasons at [37]). However, the "evidence of rehabilitation" is not a mandatory relevant consideration under cl 13.1.2(2)(b). The phrase never appears in the applicable provision, cl 13.1.2(2)(b).
33 This reference to the "evidence of rehabilitation" in cl 9.1.2(2)(b)(ii), which does not appear in cl 13.1.2(2)(b), must add something to the assessment process under cl 9.1.2. In particular, it must add something to the way in which the risk of re-offending is weighed given that it appears in that context and the other references to rehabilitation in the two provisions are in the same terms (that is, the qualifying statement that a decision should not be delayed in order for rehabilitative courses to be undertaken).
34 Again, it is not that evidence of rehabilitation would have been an irrelevant consideration under cl 13. Plainly enough, the reference in cl 13.1.2(2)(b) to decisions not being delayed in order for rehabilitative courses to be undertaken means that evidence of rehabilitation would be relevant to the application of that provision. Similarly, evidence of rehabilitation would be relevant to the ultimate question posed by both cl 9.1.2 and cl 13.1.2 about the risk to the Australian community should the non-citizen commit further offences or engage in other serious conduct.
35 It is well-established, however, that mandatory relevant considerations are required to be given weight as "a fundamental element in" the decision-making process: R v Hunt; Ex parte Sean Investments Pty Ltd [1979] HCA 32; (1979) 180 CLR 322 at 329; R v Toohey; Ex parte Meneling Station Pty Ltd [1982] HCA 69; (1982) 158 CLR 327 at 333 and 337-338. Mandatory relevant considerations are not matters which merely "take their place amongst any other relevant considerations" but are the "focal point" of the decision-making process: Evans v Marmont (1997) 42 NSWLR 70 at 79-80 cited in Zhang v Canterbury City Council [2001] NSWCA 167; (2001) 51 NSWLR 589 at [73]; see also Commissioner of Police (NSW) v Industrial Relations Commission (NSW) [2009] NSWCA 198; (2009) 185 IR 458 at [73].
36 Given that:
(1) the risk of the non-citizen re-offending was a mandatory relevant consideration under cl 13.1.2(2)(b);
(2) the "evidence of rehabilitation" was a mandatory relevant consideration under cl 9.1.2(2)(b) but the only reference to rehabilitation in cl 13.1.2(2)(b) is that the "decisions should not be delayed in order for rehabilitative courses to be undertaken", which also appears in cl 9.1.2,
it is not possible to know what effect the Tribunal's treatment of the "evidence of rehabilitation" as a mandatory relevant consideration had on the decision. At the least, the possibility of a favourable outcome cannot be excluded. And again, to conclude otherwise would be to reduce the clear textual difference between cl 9.1.2(2)(b) and cl 13.1.2(2)(b) to mere verbiage which, in my view, it is not.
37 If cll 9 and 13 had been in identical terms then I would have accepted that the Tribunal's errors were immaterial. To explain, the relevant legal criterion for the decision was that specified in s 501CA(4) of the Act, whether there was "another reason why the original decision should be revoked". In deciding this question, however, the Tribunal was bound to comply with the Direction, the applicable clause of which was cl 13 and not cl 9. If the two clauses had been in identical terms I would not have characterised a mere erroneous reference, or even repeated erroneous references, to the number of the provision as a jurisdictional error. The error would be one of numbering only and could have had no effect on the application of the legal criterion for the decision. But as I have explained, the clauses are not identical. They are different in at least two respects, one difference being positive (that is, the duty in cl 13.1.2 to consider whether to revoke the cancellation given the specific circumstances of the case) and the other being negative (that is, the fact that the inapplicable provision, cl 9.1.2(2)(b) refers to the "evidence of rehabilitation" whereas the applicable provision, cl 13.1.2, does not). While the effect of each difference on the Tribunal's reasoning process cannot be known I consider that the possibility that each difference, of itself, might have led the Tribunal to a different conclusion cannot be excluded. Given my inference that the Tribunal in fact considered cl 9 and not cl 13 of the Direction in evaluating the primary consideration of the protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct, it necessarily follows that the Tribunal's errors were jurisdictional errors which vitiate its decision.
38 While the facts of the present case are different from those which Greenwood J considered in SZIFI v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2007] FCA 63; (2007) 238 ALR 611, in which the Tribunal referred to the applicant being a national of the wrong country, the same conclusion that the errors are "neither merely typographical errors nor errors of fact at the margin of the Tribunal's review" which his Honour expressed in SZIFI at [45] must also apply in the present case. The Tribunal did not comply with the Direction as it was required to do by s 499(2A) of the Act. Its decision was beyond power and thus a nullity.
39 Accordingly, it also follows that the Tribunal's purported correction of its errors under s 43AA(1) of the AAT Act cannot be effective. The Tribunal's reasons did not contain "obvious error[s]" which were able to be corrected by exercise of the power in s 43AA(1) of the AAT Act. In my view, the Tribunal's reasons accurately reflected its consideration of the application for review, and that consideration was vitiated by jurisdictional error.
40 As a result of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider the other two categories of alleged jurisdictional error but I will do so briefly.