THE POSSIBILITY THAT THE APPELLANT MIGHT NOT RETURN
59 It is convenient, at this point, to record some of the observations that the Minister made in his Non-Revocation Decision. At [12], he identified the representations that the appellant advanced as to why the Cancellation Decision ought to be revoked:
12. In the representations/document submitted by or on his behalf, [the appellant] has articulated reasons why the original decision should be revoked, which include:
- He is remorseful for his crimes and will not commit any other crime, as he does not want to lose his family.
- He has made efforts to rehabilitate while in prison, undertaking courses to manage his alcohol dependency and emotions.
- He has seen a psychologist and taken medication for depression while in prison and has recovered.
- He has three minor children in Australia who are currently parented by his wife. He has a close relationship with his children, who need him to remain in Australia.
- His wife is having a stressful time parenting them [single-handedly] and needs his support and help.
- He would not expect his family to move with him to China if he were removed there because he fears they would be persecuted there.
- [The appellant] submits … that he will face harm if returned to China due to being a Falun Gong supporter and a person who may be imputed with being a Falun Gong practitioner, and because he is a person who previously held a Protection visa. He fears being imprisoned on his return to China.
60 The Minister then went on to consider the impact of the Cancellation Decision upon the appellant's family. At [14] and [15] of the Non-Revocation Decision, he observed (emphasis original):
14. I note [the appellant] has three minor children who are all Australian citizens. They are [names and ages redacted]. They reside with their mother, [the appellant]'s wife... [The appellant] submits his daughters visited him at least twice a week while he was in prison and he rings them every day.
15. I have regard to [the appellant]'s submission that he has a close relationship with his daughters, that before his imprisonment he supported them financially as the sole income earner for the household and he would take them to parks, movies and 'do all the things a father does with his children'. He states he would not want his daughters moving to China as he fears they will face persecution there, therefore, if he is removed to China he will be separated from them. He states his family is everything to him, his daughters desperately need their father to provide for them, he does not want to lose them and he does not want them to be displaced and to have to live only on Centrelink benefits.
61 At [17] of the Non-Revocation Decision, the Minister considered a contention advanced on the appellant's behalf by his wife, namely that "…sending [the appellant] back to China would mean their daughters would grow up without a father…"
62 At [26] and [27] of the Non-Revocation Decision, the Minister said as follows:
26. I accept that if I do not revoke the original decision to cancel [the appellant]'s Protection visa, he will be prevented by s501E of the Act from making an application for another visa, other than a Protection visa or a Bridging R (Class WR) visa (as prescribed by regulation 2.12A of the Migration regulations). Also, in terms of a Protection visa, [the appellant] will be prevented by s48A of the Act from making a further application for a Protection visa while he is in the migration zone (unless the Minister determines that s48A of the Act does not apply to him - s48A(1B) and s48B of the Act refer).
27. I note that a consequence of not revoking the original decision to cancel [the appellant]'s Protection visa is that he will be liable for removal from Australia under s198 of the Act.
63 At [28] of the Non-Revocation Decision, the Minister addressed the appellant's fears of subjection to harm upon his return to China. In short, the Minister accepted, on the strength of the International Treaties Obligations Assessment referred to above, that those fears were not well-founded.
64 At [32] and [33], the Minister considered the strength, nature and duration of the appellant's ties to Australia, observing (emphasis original):
32. I have considered [the appellant]'s submission that he has the support of his wife, who has forgiven him for his offending and who has been looking after their daughters on her own. He believes she is tired and stressed from being a single parent and that if he were removed from Australia she would surely face more difficult times without him. He adds his family is everything to him; he does not want to lose them and fears if he is removed he will not be able to provide for them.
33. I note that [the appellant's wife] states she has found it stressful being a single parent and sincerely hopes that their family will soon reunite because they love each other and cannot be separated adding that she could not go back to China because she is afraid of being persecuted by the Chinese government for practicing Falun Gong. She adds [the appellant] is the primary breadwinner for the family, they need him to financially support them and that life without his emotional and financial support has been very tough. This has meant that the children have had to miss out on 'normal childhood experiences like family trips' and I have taken this into consideration.
65 Later, the Minister accepted, "…that [the appellant] may experience emotional and financial hardship if removed from Australia and separated from his wife and children, as he has indicated they will not return to China with him" (Non-Revocation Decision, [43]).
66 The Minister next addressed the nature and severity of the appellant's offending, and his stated commitment to refrain from committing additional crimes in the future. The Minister observed that the appellant's "fear of losing his family" was "a strong motivating factor" that inclined against the possibility of repeat offending (Non-Revocation Decision, [57]).
67 Weighing the competing considerations together, the Minister concluded that there was not "another reason", for the purposes of s 501CA(4) of the Act, that warranted revocation of the Cancellation Decision. He thus declined to exercise his discretion to revoke that decision.
68 The appellant maintains that, in doing so, the Minister must be understood not to have considered the strong possibility (if not the inevitability) that, absent revocation of the Cancellation Decision, he would be removed from Australia and would be unable to return thereafter. That combination of consequences, he said, would result in his permanent separation from his wife and children (who, he indicated, would remain in Australia). That the Minister failed to consider that reality is, he says, evident as a matter of inference from the fact that the Non-Revocation Decision contains no reference to, or analysis of, the prospect that the appellant's removal from Australia would be permanent.
69 In my view - and with respect to those who think otherwise - that contention rests upon an unduly narrow reading of the Non-Revocation Decision. It is, of course, so that, in the absence of reference to a particular circumstance within a decision maker's written reasons for making a decision, a court might infer that that circumstance was not considered: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323, 346 [69] (McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ)); Faulkner v Conwell (1989) 21 FCR 41, 47 (Jenkinson J, with whom Woodward and Ryan JJ agreed); Bat Advocacy NSW Inc v Minister for Environment Protection, Heritage and the Arts (2011) 180 LGERA 99, 113 [46]-[47] (Emmett, McKerracher and Foster JJ); Soliman v University of Technology, Sydney (2012) 207 FCR 277, 294-295 [54] (Marshall, North and Flick JJ). Equally, however, a court might decline to draw such an inference if the claim or circumstance in question is addressed by, or subsumed within, analysis of greater generality: Minister for Home Affairs v Buadromo (2018) 362 ALR 48, 59 [46] (Besanko, Barker and Bromwich JJ). In Applicant WAEE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2003) 236 FCR 593 (French, Sackville and Hely JJ), the court observed (at 604 [47]) on that score that an:
"…inference that the [decision maker - in that case, a tribunal] has failed to consider an issue may be drawn from its failure to expressly deal with that issue in its reasons. But that is an inference not too readily to be drawn where the reasons are otherwise comprehensive and the issue has at least been identified at some point."
70 Whether or not it is appropriate to infer that a particular claim or issue has been overlooked should be assessed "…by reference to the facts of each particular case and the Minister's reasons as a whole [and t]he reasons must be construed in a practical and common-sense manner and not with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error": Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Sabharwal [2018] FCAFC 160, [76] (Perram, Murphy and Lee JJ).
71 In the present case, the primary judge, referring to [15] and [32] of the Non-Revocation Decision (above, [60] and [64]), found (Primary Decision, [65]) that it was:
"…tolerably clear, as a practical matter, that the Minister took into account that the [appellant] would not, or was highly unlikely to, be able to return to Australia [and that it was] implicit in [paragraphs 15 and 32 of the Non-Revocation Decision], read with the Minister's reasoning as a whole, that the Minister was approaching the matter on that basis."
72 With respect, I agree. Indeed, I would go slightly further: on a fair reading of all of the passages to which I have referred above (including those to which the primary judge referred), it is (to borrow from his Honour) tolerably clear that the Minister proceeded upon a consciousness that his Non-Revocation Decision would separate the appellant from his family. That separation was a function of the circumstance that the appellant's family would remain in Australia; a circumstance of which it was also tolerably clear that the Minister was conscious. To put it summarily: the separation arose from the likelihood that the appellant's family would remain in Australia, whereas he would not.
73 Conscious of that likelihood, it cannot fairly be said, in my view, that the Minister overlooked the prospect that the appellant, once removed from Australia, would not be able to return. Whether that was a function of the special return criteria for which item 5001(c) of Sch 5 to the Regulations provides is of little moment. At issue is the Minister's consciousness and consideration of that prospect.
74 To speak of the Minister's "consciousness" of that likely outcome is to acknowledge that it was taken into account in the course of his making the Non-Revocation Decision. Assuming that it was something that he was obliged to consider - a question addressed in subsequent sections of these reasons - the Minister was required to engage in an "active intellectual process" directed to the likelihood that, once removed from Australia, the appellant would not be able to return: CAR15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2019] FCAFC 155, [76] (Allsop CJ, Kenny and Snaden JJ); Tickner v Chapman (1995) 57 FCR 451, 462 (Black CJ), 476-477 (Burchett J), 495-496 (Kiefel J). In circumstances where, as the passages from the Non-Revocation Decision that are referred to above make clear, the Minister was alive to the prospect that the appellant's family would remain in Australia and that that would result in his separation from them, the Minister must be understood to have discharged that obligation. This court should not lightly find otherwise: Carrascalao v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 252 FCR 352, 364 [48] (Griffiths, White and Bromwich JJ).
75 The conclusion just stated aligns with what, at its core, was the nature of the Non-Revocation Decision. The Cancellation Decision had, by design (and subject to certain exceptions discussed below), the effect of requiring that the appellant leave Australia. The Non-Revocation Decision had, just as naturally, the effect that that requirement should not go unfulfilled. The circumstances in which a non-citizen whose visa is cancelled on character grounds might not be removed from Australia or might not be prevented from returning are, for obvious reasons, limited. Subject to the existence of non-refoulement obligations or to the person successfully mounting a claim for a protection visa, exclusion from Australia on account of visa cancellation under s 501 of the Act is, by design, permanent.
76 The Minister was plainly alive to the difficulties that the appellant would face in securing a new visa whilst still in Australia: Non-Revocation Decision, [26] (above, [62]). The policy considerations underpinning that reality are obvious: it would be surprising, to say the least, if a non-citizen whose visa has been cancelled on character grounds could circumvent the ordinary and natural consequences of that cancellation simply by acquiring a new one. It would be no less strange - indeed, substantially stranger still - if he or she could do so simply by leaving the country first.
77 Permanent exclusion is the end point by which this aspect of the legislative scheme is at least partially animated. At the risk of stating things too simplistically, the scheme of the Act is such that non-citizens whose visas are cancelled under s 501 are meant to leave and not come back (subject, of course, to that being a safe course for them to take). In circumstances where, as here, the Minister found that the appellant could safely return to China (above, [63]), the appellant's permanent (or likely-permanent) removal from Australia was an unremarkable and obvious consequence of the Non-Revocation Decision. The court here ought, in my view, to be even slower than it normally would be to infer that the Minister failed to take account of a consideration fairly so described: see, in that vein, Taulahi v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 246 FCR 146, 168 [85] (Kenny, Flick and Griffiths JJ).
78 Assuming for the moment that he was obliged to, it cannot be said that the Minister in this case failed to take account of the reality that the appellant's removal from Australia in consequence of the Non-Revocation Decision would very likely be permanent. Respectfully, the primary judge was correct so to conclude. The appeal must fail for that reason.