Principles
34 Direction 79 does not require that the Tribunal make a binary choice as to whether or not cancellation of the non-citizen's visa is or is not in the best interests of minor children in Australia. In Uelese, French CJ, Kiefel, Bell and Keane JJ said, of an equivalent direction (at [67]):
It is not necessary here to seek to chart the boundaries of the Tribunal's obligation to inquire after the best interests of the children of an applicant for review. There may be cases, hopefully rare, where the evidence presented by the parties does not alert the Tribunal that minor children in Australia may be affected by the decision. There may also be cases where the evidence is such that the only determination which can be made in obedience to cl 9.3(1) of Direction 55 is that cancellation is neutral so far as the best interests of any minor child are concerned. In this regard, it is to be noted that cl 9.3(1) requires a 'determination about whether cancellation is, or is not, in the best interests of the child' (emphasis added). Sometimes the best decision 'about' whether cancellation is, or is not, in the best interests of the child may be that it is neither.
35 In other cases, it may not be possible to make any determination because of the paucity of evidence upon which any determination might sensibly be made. As Buchanan J said in Paerau v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 219 FCR 504 (at [27]):
In my respectful view, there could be no objection in any case to the AAT concluding that the best interests of a child did not weigh either for or against the cancellation of a visa, so long as the available material was assessed conscientiously. That is not the same as not stating a conclusion about the issue at all. Similarly, in a case where the evidence did not permit a proper conclusion about the issue, there could be no objection to the AAT saying so, as it did in the present case.
(emphasis in original)
36 Perry J said at [118]:
… the Tribunal lawfully decided that it was unable to make the determination required by cl 9.3(1) of Direction No 55. In substance, the finding equates in the language of the Direction to a finding that the consideration was not 'relevant'. In effect, the Tribunal decided that it had insufficient probative material available to it to be able to embark upon the determination otherwise required by cl 9.3(1) and (3) and in those circumstances, in my opinion, the precondition to the obligation in cl 9.3(1) (relevancy in the particular case) was not satisfied. So read, this is not a case where the Tribunal made findings on the evidence before it on matters relevant to determining where the best interests of children lie, but failed to complete that process by determining what was in their best interests and taking that into account in balancing that primary consideration against the other considerations: cf Spruill v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2012) 135 ALD 45 (Robertson J).
37 In Uelese the High Court quashed a decision of the Tribunal affirming a decision not to revoke the cancellation of Mr Uelese's visa. The Tribunal had held that s 500(6H) of the Act precluded its consideration of the interests of two of Mr Uelese's natural children. The existence of the children had not been disclosed by Mr Uelese either to the Minister or to the Tribunal. A witness had disclosed their existence in the course of cross-examination either by the Minister's Counsel or by the Tribunal member. Section 500(6H) of the Act provided that the Tribunal must not have regard to information presented orally in support of an application for review unless the information had previously been provided in a written statement to the Minister at least two days before the hearing. The Tribunal did not consider the children's interests because it considered itself precluded by s 500(6H) from doing so.
38 On judicial review, the primary judge accepted the Tribunal's view as to the effect of s 500(6H). The Full Court of this Court dismissed an appeal, concluding that s 500(6H) operated as a constraint on the Tribunal's obligation under s 499 to comply with Direction 55 (as then issued under s 499 of the Act).
39 The High Court made orders setting aside the judgment of the Full Court and quashing the decision of the Tribunal. Speaking of [9.3] of Direction 55 the majority said:
60 It is of particular importance that, in the circumstances of the present case, the Tribunal's erroneous understanding of s 500(6H) precluded it from making a determination about whether cancellation of the appellant's visa was or was not in the best interests of each of his children in Australia.
61 Counsel for the Minister developed a submission that the interests of the appellant's two youngest children were not 'relevant' to the Tribunal's review within the meaning of cl 7(1)(a) of Direction 55. It was said that because the appellant had not included their interests in the case he sought to present to the Tribunal, their interests were not relevant. This submission should be rejected for a number of reasons. First, it depends upon a misreading of cl 7(1)(a) of Direction 55: the best interests of an applicant's minor children in Australia are 'relevant' if such children exist and that fact is known to the Tribunal.
62 Secondly, the Minister's submission seeks to import into the inquisitorial review function of the Tribunal notions appropriate to adversarial proceedings conducted in accordance with formal rules of pleading. That approach is inappropriate to the kind of review undertaken by the Tribunal.
63 In Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs, this Court cautioned against transposing the language and mindset of adversarial litigation to inquisitorial decision-making of the kind authorised by s 500 of the Act. It is true, as the Full Court of the Federal Court rightly observed in Jagroop, that both s 500 of the Act and the AAT Act 'contemplate participation by both the applicant and the Minister in the [Tribunal] hearing'. Section 500(6H) expressly contemplates that the applicant will present a 'case'; and it is implicit that the Minister will also present a 'case'. That having been said, it would be to give undue weight to conceptions drawn from adversarial litigation to accept that the Tribunal was not required to take into account the interests of the appellant's two youngest children because he had not sought to advance their interests as a positive part of his case.
64 Whether or not the appellant sought to make the interests of those children a positive aspect of his case, the Tribunal was obliged by s 499 of the Act and the terms of Direction 55 to take into account the interests of any minor children of which it was aware in determining his application for review. By virtue of s 499 and Direction 55, one of the primary considerations for the Tribunal concerned the interests of children who were not themselves represented in the proceedings before the Tribunal. The requirement of cl 9.3 of Direction 55 to consider the best interests of minor children in Australia affected by the decision is imposed on decision-makers in terms which are not dependent on whether an applicant for review argues that those interests are relevant as part of his or her 'case'.
(footnotes omitted, emphasis added)
40 In the present case, the Minister submitted that the principles stated by the High Court in Uelese can have no application in a case in which there has been no error by the Tribunal in the exercise of its functions or powers. Unlike Uelese, the Tribunal had not considered itself to be constrained by s 500(6H) of the Act.
41 Counsel submitted that the test for determining whether there was an obligation on the part of the Tribunal to consider the interests of Ms C's other children was that re-stated by the Full Court of this Court in Hong. That case concerned the cancellation of the visa of a citizen of China on character grounds. As in the present case, the non-citizen made an application to the Tribunal for review of a decision not to revoke the cancellation of the visa. In a written representation to the Minister advancing reasons why the cancellation should be revoked, the applicant had stated that prior to leaving China she had assisted a social justice organisation. She claimed that if she were to be returned to China she may lose her job as a teacher and may not be able to return to the profession. In proceedings before the Tribunal, no further reference was made to that claim by the applicant or her legal representatives, whether in the course of the hearing or in her Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions. On her application for judicial review, the applicant submitted that the Tribunal had committed jurisdictional error by making no specific finding in relation to the issue of her involvement with the social justice organisation. The primary judge applied the principles stated in AYY17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 261 FCR 503 at [18] relating to the Tribunal's duty to consider issues arising on the materials before it. The same principles are relied upon by the Minister in the present case. It is convenient to extract them in full:
It is common ground that nothing in the statutory constraints to be found within Pt 7AA of the Migration Act (as discussed, for example, in BMB16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 253 FCR 448 per Dowsett, Besanko and Charlesworth JJ) affects the relevant existing case law on this topic, namely, the duty to consider claims and issues arising from material before it as that law applies to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal under Pt 5 of the Migration Act. In that regard, we note that:
• The Tribunal review function requires it to consider all claims made by an applicant and its essential components or integers: Htun v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2001) 233 FCR 136 (Htun) per Allsop J (as the Chief Justice then was) (at [42]), with whom Spender J agreed.
• The Tribunal is only required to consider such claims where they are either:
(a) the subject of substantial clearly articulated argument, relying on established facts; or
(b) clearly emerge from the materials: NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) (2004) 144 FCR 1 (NABE) per Black CJ, French and Selway JJ (at [55] and [68]) and AWT15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCA 512 (AWT15) per Barker J (at [67]).
• These principles apply to the IAA regime: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v BBS16 (2017) 257 FCR 111 per Kenny, Tracey and Griffiths JJ (at [79]) where their Honours said:
… A body such as the IAA, which is conducting an inquisitorial review process in which there is a claim for protection under s 36(2)(a) of the [Migration] Act must not only consider and determine the case as articulated by the protection visa applicant, but also do so in relation to an unarticulated claim which is nevertheless raised clearly or squarely on the material before that review body (see NABE at [58]-[61] per Black CJ, French and Selway JJ).
(Emphasis added.)
• As to whether a claim clearly emerges, the following principles were collected in AWT15 by Barker J (at [67]-[68]):
(a) such a finding is not to be made lightly (NABE at [68]);
(b) the fact that a claim might be said to arise from materials is not enough (NABE at [68]);
(c) to clearly emerge from the materials, the claim must be based on 'established facts' (SZUTM v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 241 FCR 214 (SZUTM) per Markovic J (at [37]-[38])). In SZUTM, Markovic J said:
37 While the tribunal is not required to deal with claims which are not clearly set out and which do not clearly arise from the material before it, the tribunal is not limited to dealing with claims expressly articulated by an applicant. A claim not expressly advanced by an applicant will attract the review obligation of the tribunal when it is plain on the face of the material before it.
38 Both the appellant and the Minister have made submissions on whether there is a requirement that there be a claim based on 'established facts'. At [35], the primary judge found, relying on NABE and Dranichnikov that, as the threshold point the claim must 'emerge clearly from the materials before the Tribunal and should arise from established facts'. I agree with the primary judge's approach: the decision in NABE must be read in light of the principle set out in Dranichnikov.
(d) while there is no precise standard to determining whether an unarticulated claim has been 'squarely raised' or 'clearly emerges' from the materials 'a court will be more willing to draw the line in favour of an unrepresented party': Kasupene v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2008) 49 AAR 77 per Flick J (at [21]); and
(e) understanding whether a claim has clearly emerged from materials cannot be assessed in a vacuum. Consideration must be given to the way an applicant's claims are presented over time.
(emphasis in original)
42 In Hong, the primary judge rejected the argument that the principles AYY17 were limited to claims made in the statutory context of an application for a protection visa and inapplicable on the review of a decision not to revoke a cancellation decision on character grounds. The Full Court (Bromwich and Wheelahan JJ, Logan J dissenting) found no error in the approach of the primary judge.
43 The majority surveyed the judgments of single justices and the Full Court applying the principles in AYY17 in the statutory context of a review conducted pursuant to s 500(1)(ba) of the Act: Minister for Home Affairs v Buadromo [2018] FCAFC 151; 362 ALR 48 at [41] (Besanko, Barker and Bromwich JJ); Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v DRP17 [2018] FCAFC 198 (Jagot, Rangiah and Banks-Smith JJ). The majority went on to say (at [69]):
… At the heart of the guidance in AYY17 is the idea that the Tribunal is only required to consider matters that are raised by argument, or which clearly emerge from the materials. That is equally so in relation [to] matters advanced in proceedings before the Tribunal involving reviews of decisions under s 501CA(4) of the Act, where the section contemplates that the former visa-holder may advance matters by way of representation directed to why the power of revocation should be exercised.
44 The majority went on to consider the particular circumstances of the case (including the circumstance that the appellant was legally represented before the Tribunal and had been afforded a fair opportunity to advance and develop her case at the hearing) before concluding (at [71]) that:
… the Tribunal addressed the case that had been maintained by the appellant before the Tribunal. Given that it was for the appellant to place before the Minister's delegate, and in turn the Tribunal, the matters that she wished to have taken into account in aid of the exercise of the power to revoke under s 501CA(4), having regard to the procedures adopted by the Tribunal in this case, including taking evidence, the filing of contentions, and the hearing of submissions, there was no error by the Tribunal in not referring to a matter in the personal circumstances form that had not been maintained before the Tribunal. …
45 The High Court refused an application for special leave in Hong, it seems on the basis that the proposed grounds of appeal raised no issue of principle: Hong v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection & Anor [2019] HCATrans 230.
46 Returning to the present case, argument proceeded on the basis that the judgment in Uelese erected a different test than that erected in Hong. In Uelese it was said that an obligation to consider the best interests of minor children arose if the existence of the children came to the Tribunal's attention, whereas in Hong the obligation only arose in relation to matters that clearly emerged on the material before it.
47 If there be a difference in the principles stated in Uelese on the one hand and Hong on the other I do not consider it to be a difference upon which this case turns.
48 In each case, whether jurisdictional error had occurred was dependent not only upon the statutory context but also upon the specific circumstances of the case. The statutory context in Uelese included an obligation to have regard to the interests of minor children in Australia as a primary consideration. That obligation did not form a part of the statutory context considered in Hong or the authorities referred to therein. The Full Court in Hong did not refer to the decision of the High Court in Uelese, I infer for that reason. As the majority in Uelese said, the obligation itself is not cast in terms dependent upon the review applicant or the Minister advancing a positive case as to where the interests of a particular child might lie.
49 In Uelese, the fact that the Tribunal was in possession of information to the effect that the children existed was sufficient to found error. It is not insignificant that the particular information coming to the attention of the Tribunal in Uelese revealed that there were two children in existence who were the natural children of the non-citizen. As his natural children they were clearly entitled expect his financial and emotional support for their advancement in life and so it was plain that their interests may be affected by the decision.
50 The circumstance that a father does not disclose the existence of his natural children may well be taken into account in determining where the best interests of the children may lie. But it cannot provide a legal justification for a decision-maker's failure to conscientiously consider whether and how the interests of such children might be affected upon their existence coming to the decision-maker's attention. Whether or not there is sufficient material before the Tribunal to make a determination one way or another is a separate question bearing on the materiality of any erroneous failure to consider the issue.
51 On the facts in Uelese, the children were clearly children to whom the relevant direction applied, whether or not Mr Uelese or the Minister had made any submissions in relation to them. It seems to me that jurisdictional error would be established on the particular facts in Uelese, even if the test articulated in Hong were to be applied. The Minister's arguments as to materiality were rejected because the paucity of evidence was explained by the Tribunal erroneously precluding the receipt of further material.