Adequacy of consideration of issue of risk to the community
12 Mr Johnson submitted that the Minister was bound to take into account the risk to the community which Mr Fraser presented and that he was bound to assess this matter properly which he had not done. Instead, he had made conclusory remarks about the risk of harm and had given insufficient attention to the actual risk posed by Mr Fraser. There was material which suggested that Mr Fraser had expressed genuine remorse (this was in fact accepted by the District Court); he had participated in therapy and counselling programs in prison; he had family support; he had been an exemplary prisoner and had favourable prospects of rehabilitation. There was also the issue of what was in the best interests of his children. The availability of these grounds of review was said to spring from the recent decision of Mortimer J in Tanielu v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 673.
13 For the Minister, Ms Francois submitted that there was binding authority to the effect that the Minister did not have to examine the individual circumstances of a person in Mr Fraser's position. This was the Full Court's decision in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Huynh (2004) 139 FCR 505 at 523-525 [74]-[80]. Further, the High Court had approved those very statements in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Nystrom (2006) 228 CLR 556 at 571 [1], 606 [127]. The correct approach was illustrated by the decision of Tracey J in MZAGK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1190 at [34]-[35] where, albeit in a slightly different context, his Honour had observed that it was difficult to identify a basis on which it could be said that additional personal matters were required to be taken into account.
14 In reply Mr Johnson submitted that the statements in Huynh had been undermined by the recent Full Court decision in NBMZ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 220 FCR 1 at 7-8 [25]-[27].
15 The Minister provided reasons for his decision. Paragraphs [15]-[19] and [38] are the relevant paragraphs:
'15. Mr FRASER has completed a number of courses in prison. On 22 September 2013 he provided a supporting statement in which he stated that he has been diagnosed with attention deficit disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, oppositional defiance disorder, major depression, chronic depression and borderline personality disorder. He advised that he was taking Prozac for borderline personality disorder. Mr FRASER added that while [sic] was not receiving treatment at that time, he intended seeking assistance and continuing regular appointments following his release from prison on 24 November 2013.
16. Mr FRASER had no incidents recorded in prison and had no positive urine test.
17. Mr FRASER has a serious criminal history as a juvenile offender. As a juvenile he had two convictions for violent offences and he was convicted of Robbery Armed with an Offensive weapon, a serious violent crime, on 12 July 2010. Although he was by this time an adult, he was sentenced in the Youth Drug Court, indicating that he was still a minor when he committed this offence.
18. Mr FRASER also has a history of breach of judicial orders.
19. In view of Mr FRASER's criminal history, particularly his violent offending, his disregard for judicial orders and the limited action to address his anger and mental health issues, I find that there remains a risk that Mr FRASER will re-offend. I find that if the conduct was to be repeated, serious harm could result.
…
38. In reaching my decision, I gave considerable weight to the violent offending by Mr FRASER and the pattern of his repeat offending. The sentences Mr FRASER has received reflect the seriousness of his offending conduct against the community. If Mr FRASER were to engage in similar offending the harm would be very serious. I consider that any risk of the conduct and the harm being repeated is unacceptable. '
16 I accept Mr Johnson's submission that the Minister's statement of reasons does not refer to:
the decision by the Parole Board to release Mr Fraser on parole; or
his exemplary behaviour in prison.
17 I reject the submission that the Minister's reasons did not deal with:
his sincerely expressed remorse. The Minister referred to the sentencing judge's comments to this effect at [14];
his favourable prospects of rehabilitation. The Minister also referred to the sentencing judge's comments to this effect at [14];
participation in therapy and counselling programs in prison. The statement in [15] that Mr Fraser had taken part in courses whilst in prison reflected a statement at [47] of the briefing note which was placed before the Minister that he had taken part in these courses;
the position of his children. This was dealt with at [25]ff; or
the fact that he had family ties to Australia. This was dealt with by the Minister at [24].
18 As Ms Francois correctly pointed out, the fact that a matter was not referred to in the reasons does not mean inevitably that it was not considered. There was an extensive briefing note before the Minister. Each of the two matters referred to above (which I am satisfied were not expressly referred to in the actual decision) were touched upon in the briefing note. The Minister was bound to produce a statement of his reasons: s 501G(1)(e). Further, in those reasons he was required to 'set out the findings on material questions of fact and refer to the evidence or other material on which those findings were based': Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth), s 25D. Since the two matters do not appear in the reasons there are two inferences which may be open:
(a) the Minister did not consider these matters at all; or
(b) the Minister did consider them but did not regard them as material within the meaning of s 25D and omitted them from the statement of reasons.
19 Either of these conclusions is, I think, sufficient for the purposes of Mr Johnson's argument. On that view of affairs, the matters were material in the sense that the Minister, as I apprehended the argument, could not proceed to make a decision without dealing with them. Whether the Minister did not refer to them because he did not consider them at all (i.e. (a)) or because, whilst taking them into account he did not think they were material (i.e. (b)), there would have been a failure to give proper consideration.
20 The question then arises as to whether the Minister was bound to consider these matters as material. There were four steps to the argument. First, the protection of the Australian community was a mandatory consideration for the Minister in exercising his power having regard to the scope, subject matter and purpose of the Act: Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 39-40 per Mason J. Secondly, he was bound in considering this mandatory matter to give it proper, genuine and realistic consideration. Thirdly, in doing so he was therefore bound to take into account the two matters set out above. Fourthly, he had not done so.
21 I accept the first step. The subject matter of s 501 is those non-citizens who have failed the character test. The various ways in which this may occur are set out in s 501(6). One way by which a person does not pass the character test is if they have a 'substantial criminal record'. This is defined by s 501(7) and includes being sentenced to a term of imprisonment for more than 12 months. More complex, but not presently relevant, provision is made for persons who are sentenced on more than one occasion. It is beyond constitutional power for s 501 to operate to authorise the Minister to punish non-citizens for their past misdeeds, for punishment for criminal guilt is the exclusive domain of the judicial department as a result of Chapter III of the Constitution. The only relevance a non-citizen's criminal record can therefore have is the exercise by the Minister of a power to protect the community from persons who pose a threat to it. The exercise of such a power does not involve the exercise of judicial power. I note a similar conclusion was reached by Mortimer J in Tanielu at [88].
22 As to the second step I would accept that it is not sufficient simply to advert to the issue of the protection of the community without any analysis: Elias v Commissioner of Taxation (2002) 123 FCR 499 at 512 [62]. What is required when a mandatory consideration is taken into account is more than mere lip-service: Anderson v Director-General of the Department of Environment and Climate Change (2008) 251 ALR 633 at 651 [58] per Tobias JA. For myself, I doubt whether the formulations of what this requires such as 'proper, genuine and realistic consideration' or consideration 'in a real or conscientious way' add to this concept and I respectfully agree with the observations of Basten JA in Belmorgan Property Development Pty Ltd v GPT RE Ltd (2007) 153 LGERA 450 that their use may be apt to cause a slide into impermissible merits review. Nevertheless, I do accept that the Minister was bound to take into account the protection of the community and that his consideration of the matter had to be more than merely formulaic. As Allsop CJ and Katzmann J recently observed, if the consideration was mandatory then he was required to give it proper or genuine consideration: NBMZ at 7-8 [26].
23 I part company from Mr Johnson's submissions on his fourth point, however. The fact is that the Minister did take into account the risk to the community presented by Mr Fraser in a reasonably detailed way in the paragraphs set out above. I cannot say that he has merely adverted to the matter or that his consideration of it was entirely formal. Mr Johnson submitted that the words in [19] of the decision 'I find that there remains a risk that Mr FRASER will re-offend' was a mere conclusory statement disconnected from analysis. No doubt that would be true if it occurred in isolation but it is evident that the conclusion is drawn from the preceding four paragraphs.
24 It seems to me that the consideration of the risk to the community given by the Minister was genuine and proper. Against this conclusion Mr Johnson submitted that the Minister was bound to undertake an assessment of the risk of harm and referred to Mortimer J's decision in Tanielu. In that case the Minister made these statements in his reasons:
'In total Mr TANIELU has been convicted of 11 chid [sic] sex related offences. His offending has involved two victims, one aged 15 and one aged 13. He had carnal knowledge of a 15 year old on nine occasions and also has a conviction for indecent treatment of the same victim. His conviction for indecent treatment of the 13 year old victim involved him inserting his fingers in her vagina when she was heavily intoxicated. I regard these offences as very serious and believe they are abhorrent to the Australian community. I also regard children as vulnerable members of the Australian community, which adds to the seriousness of Mr TANIELU's offending.
….
Mr TANIELU received sentences of two years imprisonment for each of the carnal knowledge offences and nine months imprisonment for each of the indecent treatment offences. These sentences are an indication that the court viewed his offending as serious.
….
Despite Mr TANIELU's remorse, his efforts at rehabilitation, the support he has in the community and his apparent good behaviour in prison [sic], However I find that there remains a risk, in light of his criminal history, that he may re-offend in Australia.'
25 Mortimer J concluded that the Minister had not given genuine consideration to the risk of Mr Tanielu re-offending: see [109]-[112]:
'109 There are no express findings at all about the likelihood of the applicant reoffending. At [10] of the reasons the Minister concludes there "remains a risk, in light of his criminal history" that the applicant may reoffend in Australia. I do not consider that, by this statement, the Minister was engaging in any assessment of the risk of future harm. If the applicant was a recidivist offender, then a reference to his "criminal history" in an assessment of risk might be rational. In the present case, no such connection can be drawn, especially since this passage in the reasons comes after an acknowledgment by the Minister of the applicant's remorse, his efforts at rehabilitation, his support in the community and his good behaviour in prison. The Minister does not say for example that the applicant's offences were so serious that any risk whatsoever was too much of a risk. Nor, one might think, could he rationally have done so in light of the remarks of the sentencing judge and the surrounding circumstances of the offences. Contrary to the respondent's submissions, it is not possible to see this statement in the reasons as any assessment of the likelihood of the applicant reoffending. It is nothing more than a reference to the nature of his offences, which, in common with all persons who have not satisfied the Minister they have passed the character test because of a specified conviction, is the very matter which has triggered the availability of the cancellation power in the first place.
110 In the penultimate paragraph of his reasons, the Minister expresses the conclusion to which I have referred about the risk of the applicant reoffending against children. This is in the context of having recited the factors which weigh in the applicant's favour: his close family ties to Australia, the impact his removal will have on his wife especially in light of her health conditions, the best interests of his four children. The Minister expresses his conclusion in the language of the Direction - namely, that the risk is unacceptable, and protection of the Australian community has outweighed any countervailing considerations. It is notable that the Minister refers to the "potential risk" and says "should" the applicant reoffend. That is not the language of a decision-maker who has for himself assessed the likelihood of reoffending and reached a conclusion about it. It is the language of a decision-maker who is, at best, speculating about whether a person might reoffend. That is not the task in assessing risk of harm to the Australian community. The task is more concrete than that. It is rooted in an assessment of the characteristics of the particular applicant - not only his or her previous offences, but all aspects of his or her history, and the "dynamic factors" to which I have referred. Consideration of those factors must then be combined with consideration of what kind of offences the applicant might commit in the future - bearing in mind this may or may not be the kind of offences an applicant has committed in the past - with some evidentiary basis being disclosed for that consideration.
111 No such analysis can be seen, even at the most basic of levels, in the Minister's reasons. In NBMZ 138 ALD 495; [2014] FCAFC 38 at [16], Allsop CJ and Katzmann J described the well-established principles concerning the approach to what is and is not said in a statement of reasons:
The written reasons of the Minister may, and generally will (subject to a contrary finding of fact), be taken to be a statement of those matters adverted to, considered and taken into account; and if something is not mentioned, it may be inferred that it has not been adverted to, considered or taken into account: Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth), s 25D, s 501G of the Act and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323; [2001] HCA 30 at [5], [37], [69], [89] and [133].
112 There is no genuine consideration on the merits about the likelihood of this applicant, in the circumstances facing him on release from prison, reoffending: see NBMZ 138 ALD 495; [2014] FCAFC 38 at [26], [153]; see also NBNB 138 ALD 455; [2014] FCAFC 39 at [122]-[125] and the authorities there cited. The Minister's reasons do not engage at all with the likelihood on the material of further offending by this applicant. There is no active intellectual process (Bat Advocacy NSW Inc v Minister for Environment Protection, Heritage and the Arts (2011) 180 LGERA 99; [2011] FCAFC 59 at [44]) evident in the reasons relating to likelihood. Rather, there is a conclusionary assertion of "potential risk".'
26 In essence, her Honour concluded that whilst the Minister had recited the facts which brought Mr Tanielu within the purview of the character test he had not undertaken an actual assessment of the risk posed to the community by reason of re-offending.
27 I do not think that can be said in the present case. A number of matters indicate that the Minister was focussed on what might happen in the future. These were Mr Fraser's breach of judicial orders and the limited action the Minister thought he had taken to address his anger and mental health issues. Both of these were rational reasons to think, as the Minister concluded, that he might re-offend. In Tanielu, by contrast, the Minister reasoned to his conclusion that there was a risk of re-offending more or less solely by reason of the fact that Mr Tanielu had a criminal record.
28 I do not think, therefore, that Tanielu assists Mr Fraser. Both Mortimer J and I accept the need for the risk to the community to be addressed. The difference between the two cases is that the Minister appears to have done so in the case before me. I would accept that the Minister's statement that Mr Fraser's efforts to address his anger management issues have been limited is problematic in that the Minister also accepted that Mr Fraser had proposed on his release to continue treatment but I do not see that it gives rise to a ground of review in itself.
29 In those circumstances I do not need to deal with Ms Francois' submission that Tanielu was incorrectly decided in light of the Full Court's judgment in Huynh at [74] and that the personal circumstances of Mr Fraser were not a mandatory consideration. I doubt that that submission is really an answer to the reasoning of Mortimer J which does not hold that personal circumstances are a mandatory consideration but instead only that the risk to the community is. For myself, I struggle to understand how one could address the risk to the community without examining the likelihood of an offender re-offending.
30 This ground fails.