THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF MR GBOJUEH'S OFFENDING
15 The Minister provided detailed reasons for his decision. In dealing with the questions of whether the cancellation of Mr Gbojueh's visa was in the national interest and whether he should exercise his discretion to cancel the visa, the Minister said that:
"NATIONAL INTEREST
…
22. In deciding whether it is in the national interest to cancel Mr GBOJUEH's visa, I have considered the nature and seriousness of Mr GBOJUEH's two convictions of Unlawful Sexual Intercourse with a Person Under 14 Years of Age. The convictions were for crimes which were:
• of a sexual nature;
• committed against a vulnerable person, a child under 14 years of age; and
• particularly abhorrent due to the consequences which were the pregnancy and resultant termination of that pregnancy of the 12 year old victim.
23. I consider that such offences are particularly serious and repugnant to the Australian community.
24. In light of the above information regarding the nature and seriousness of the offending, I consider that cancellation of Mr GBOJUEH's visa in the natural interest, given the serious nature of the offending.
…
DISCRETION
…
29. I gave key consideration to the protection of the Australian community (taking into account the seriousness and nature of the conduct and the risk to the community should the conduct be repeated), ties to Australia, the best interests of any minor children in Australia and relevant international obligations.
Protection of Australian Community
Seriousness and nature of conduct
30. I consider that all sexually based offences are serious. Mr GBOJUEH was convicted of sexual offences, two counts of Unlawful Sexual Intercourse with a Person Under 14 Years of Age.
31. Offences against vulnerable victims, such as children are especially abhorrent in my opinion. The offences were committed against a 12 year old girl, herself a refugee from Liberia.
32. The offences resulted in the girl's pregnancy and the subsequent termination of that pregnancy. I consider that the Australian community would regard such offending as repugnant.
33. Mr GBOJUEH incurred a term of imprisonment for the two offences detailed above, further reflecting their serious nature.
34. I have also taken into account Mr GBOJUEH and his representatives submissions that the length of time of the sentence and the reduction in the period of incarceration on appeal as an indicator of how seriously the offences were viewed by the courts.
35. I have taken into account that Mr GBOJUEH has no other convictions recorded against him in Australia or overseas and no breaches of judicial orders."
16 Mr Gbojueh contended that these passages disclosed that the Minister had failed to take into account that he was ultimately sentenced on the basis that the complainant had been the instigator of each of the sexual encounters in respect of which he had been convicted. As a result the sentence of 27 months imprisonment was at the lower end of the available sentencing range. This had been recognised by the Tribunal when it had dealt with Mr Gbojueh's earlier appeal but had not been acknowledged by the Minister.
17 Mr Gbojueh said that the Departmental submissions which had been placed before the Minister prior to his decision included passages extracted from the trial judge's original sentencing remarks but that the judge's remarks, when he re-sentenced Mr Gbojueh after the Court of Criminal Appeal had set aside the rape conviction, were not included. This complaint misstates the position. The submissions contained extracts from both sets of sentencing remarks (see at [34] and [36]). Neither of these passages dealt with the disputed question of whether the complainant had been the instigator of the sexual contact. Full transcripts of both sets of sentencing remarks by the trial judge were provided to the Minister as attachments to the Departmental submissions.
18 Mr Gbojueh submitted that the Minister's failure, in his reasons, to refer to passages in the resentencing remarks and in the Tribunal's reasons, which dealt with the "instigation" and "consent" issues, demonstrated that the Minister had failed to give genuine and realistic consideration to the seriousness of Mr Gbojueh's offending.
19 It was also asserted that the Departmental submissions were misleading because they only contained an extract from the reasons of the Tribunal and that extract concluded at the point where the Tribunal embarked on a consideration of the "consent" question. Again, however, the Minister was provided with the full text of the Tribunal's reasons.
20 Notwithstanding the fact that the Minister had all the relevant information relating to the treatment by the District Court and the Tribunal of conflicting assertions by Mr Gbojueh and the complainant about the "instigation" and "consent" issues, Mr Gbojueh sought to maintain his argument by asserting that the omission from the Departmental submissions meant that there had been a "failure to join the dots."
21 This aspect of Mr Gbojueh's challenge to the Minister's decision fails at a number of levels. In the first place it fails at a factual level. It assumes, without foundation, that the Minister failed to read and consider the attachments and had confined his attention to the material in the body of the Departmental submissions. There is no evidentiary foundation for this assertion. Furthermore, it is clear from the Minister's reasons that he did not confine his attention to the seriousness of the crimes of which Mr Gbojueh stood convicted. He had regard to the age of the victim, the fact that she was, like Mr Gbojueh, a refugee from Liberia, her vulnerability and her resultant pregnancy. Given that, at the time of the offences, Mr Gbojueh was aged 42 and his victim 12 it was open to the Minister to take the view that, even if the victim had been the instigator of the sexual encounters, this was a consideration which carried little or any weight in assessing the seriousness of Mr Gbojueh's offending. It may not be without significance that Mr Gbojueh's legal advisers did not seek to place any reliance on the victim being the initiator of the contact in their written submissions to the Minister opposing the proposed visa cancellation.
22 Mr Gbojueh's argument also proceeds on the assumption that there exists a generally available ground of jurisdictional error of failure "to give proper, genuine and realistic consideration" to the relevant material advanced by a party. The authority relied on by Mr Gbojueh was the decision of Gummow J in Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1987) 14 ALD 291. Khan does not stand for the broad proposition for which Mr Gbojueh contends. As the High Court observed in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZJSS (2010) 243 CLR 164 at 174-176, it is important to notice the context in which Gummow J's observation was made. In Khan a decision, made under the Act, was challenged on the ground (among others) that the impugned discretionary power had been exercised in accordance with a rule of policy, without regard to the merits of the particular case. This challenge was brought under s 5 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth). Gummow J held that the delegate of the Minister and a review panel had both erred in the manner alleged because they had failed to give proper, genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of the case advanced by the applicant when deciding to give effect to a policy relating to the treatment of non-citizens who had Australian born children and who sought permanent residence status. It is one thing to assert that a decision maker errs if he or she determines to give effect to a principle or policy without regard to submissions and material advanced by a party with a view to persuading the decision maker that the policy should not govern the outcome of a particular case. It is another, altogether, to maintain that any failure to take account of all available material necessarily gives rise to jurisdictional error: see Swift v SAS Trustee Corporation [2010] NSWCA 182 at [45]. A failure by a decision maker, for example, to deal with a relevant consideration advanced by a party would not give rise to jurisdictional error if the consideration concerned was not one which the decision maker was bound to take into account: Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 39-40.
23 Mr Gbojueh's argument fails at another level. It assumes that the Minister was bound, when exercising his powers under s 501A(2) to have regard, not just to the offence or offences committed by a visa holder which caused the person to fail the character test, but also to have regard to the circumstances of the offending. No such obligation arises. In Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Huynh (2004) 139 FCR 505 at 523 Kiefel and Bennett JJ said, in dealing with the application of s 501(2) of the Act, that:
"The object of the Act is to regulate, in the national interest, the coming into, and presence in, Australia of non-citizens: s 4(1). To advance that object, provision is made for the removal or deportation from Australia of non-citizens whose presence is not permitted by the Act: s 4(4). If the Minister were able, consistent with the object of the Act, to consider a matter as broad as the national interest, in determining whether a person ought to be permitted to remain in Australia, it does not seem possible to imply some obligation on the Minister's part to consider specific factors, personal to the visa holder, such as the circumstances surrounding the offences they have committed. By way of illustration, the Minister may consider that the national interest requires that the commission of a particular type of offence will inevitably result in the cancellation of a visa, where there has been a sentence to imprisonment for the requisite term. To construe the section as requiring the Minister to consider factors such as the level of involvement of the visa holder in the offences would cut across that broad discretion."
24 A majority of the High Court approved this passage in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Nystrom (2006) 228 CLR 566 at 606 (Heydon and Crennan JJ, with whom Gleeson CJ agreed). See also: Tewao v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2012) 126 ALD 185 at [39].
25 Mr Gbojueh sought to suggest that Huynh was distinguishable because, in that case, the sentencing remarks of the Court which had dealt with Ms Huynh had been before the Minister. As already noted the Minister, in the present case, also had the full sentencing remarks before him, albeit as an annexure to the Departmental submissions.
26 Mr Gbojueh also disputed that Huynh stood as authority for the proposition that the Minister was not bound to have regard to the "actual conduct of the [visa holder]" when exercising his powers under s 501A(2). This was because, he contended, the proposition had "been criticised and not followed" by the Full Court in NBNB v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 307 ALR 90. In that case the Full Court dealt with appeals from five applicants who had been found to be refugees but had been denied protection visas by the Minister under s 501(1) of the Act because they had been convicted of criminal offences while in detention. They argued that, in exercising his power, the Minister had erred by failing to have regard to a consequence of his decision. That consequence was that each applicant faced indefinite detention in Australia. This was because none of them had a visa. Under the Act it was required that each must be detained and removed from Australia as soon as reasonably practicable. There was, however, in each case, no other country which was prepared to accept the applicant and in which the applicant would not confront a risk of persecution.
27 The Minister, relying on the passage from the joint judgment in Huynh (quoted above at [23]), argued that he was not required to have regard to the consequences of his refusal to grant visas because the consequences were factors which were personal to each visa holder.
28 Buchanan J (with whom Allsop CJ and Katzmann J agreed) quoted the relevant part of the joint reasons in Huynh and then continued (at 121):
"Those observations must be considered in the context that the specific question being addressed was whether a minister was obliged to take into account (and be informed about) sentencing remarks made by an appellate court as well as a sentencing judge: see Huynh at [70]. Put more broadly, the question was whether a minister should consider 'the circumstances surrounding the crimes concerned and the imposition of sentences for those crimes': see Huynh also at [70]."
His Honour went on to note that, in the cases under consideration by him, the Minister had, in fact, had regard to the particular circumstances of each applicant's offending conduct. He went on to hold that Huynh did not support a wider proposition that the Minister, when exercising his powers under s 501 of the Act, is under no obligation to pay any regard to, or consider, the consequences for a particular visa applicant of refusal of a visa.
29 Similar issues arose in another appeal in which judgment was delivered on the same day by the same Full Court. That case was NBMZ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 307 ALR 49. Buchanan J (with whom the other members of the Court agreed) referred to what he had said about Huynh in NBNB. He restated his conclusion:
"…that Huynh does not detract from the principle distilled in SZJSS that it is not permissible to ignore the merits of a particular case in order to give effect to a rule or policy. The merits of a particular case may or may not extend to consideration of the conduct which causes a visa applicant to fail a character test. In the present case the minister did enter the territory because he made judgments about the applicant's conduct…". (Emphasis added).
30 In dealing with another ground on which the appellant in that case had relied, namely, unreasonableness, Allsop CJ and Katzmann J suggested, obiter, that the views expressed in the joint judgment in Huynh may need to be reconsidered where the Minister was confronted with "a person who feared for his life, and [faced being] detained indefinitely, because he had committed the offence for which he was convicted, in the circumstances in which he did." (at 55).
31 What is significant for present purposes is that, in neither case, did the Full Court expressly or impliedly overrule Huynh to the extent that Huynh supports the proposition that the Minister is not obliged, in exercising his power under s 501, to consider the circumstances surrounding the commission of offences by the non-citizen and their impact on the sentencing discretion. The powers exercised by the Minister, in the present case, were governed by the same two preconditions relating to the character test as were considered by the Full Court in Huynh: see s 501A(2)(c) and (d). The reasoning in Huynh, therefore, applies with equal force to the construction and application of s 501A(2).
32 The broad scope of the power, conferred on the Minister by s 501A(2) has been remarked on in many cases. In Gbojueh (No 1) Bromberg J (at [43]-[44]) said that:
"43. The authorities which have considered s 501A(2) (and in a similar context the reference to the national interest in s 501(3)), make it clear that the matters that the Minister may take into account in determining the national interest are largely matters for the Minister: Madafferi v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2002) 118 FCR 326 at [89] (French, O'Loughlin and Whitlam JJ); Huynh at [74] (Kiefel and Bennett JJ); Tewao v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2011) 125 ALD 57 at [12] and [32] (Katzman J); Maurangi v Bowen [2012] FCA 15 at [70] (Lander J); and see also Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng (2001) 205 CLR 507 at [61] (Gleeson CJ and Gummow J); Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 418-419 (Gaudron J), 502-503 (Kirby J).
44. The exercise calls for a broad evaluative judgment. It calls for the Minister's satisfaction in relation to a power that may only be exercised personally by the Minister: s 501A(5). Political responsibility and accountability is reposed in the Minister in relation to a subject matter of wide scope. All of that, strongly suggests that the Minister is left largely unrestrained to determine for him or herself what factors are to be regarded as relevant when determining whether the cancellation or refusal of a visa is in the national interest and thereafter whether to exercise the discretion conferred by s 501A(2)."
33 In Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 419 Gaudron J specifically contemplated that, in the context of s 501 of the Act, "the crimes, or some of the crimes of which a person has been convicted may be of such a nature as to found a satisfaction that it is in the national interest to cancel his or her visa".
34 In the present case the Minister gave consideration to the seriousness of Mr Gbojueh's offending and to a number of significant aspects of the circumstances surrounding the offending when he determined that it was in the national interest to cancel Mr Gbojueh's visa and exercise his discretion to cancel the visa. In doing so he made the broad evaluative judgment contemplated by s 501A(2). He had regard to what he described as both the nature and seriousness of Mr Gbojueh's criminal conduct. Although not obliged to do so, the Minister expressly referred to some material matters which had been referred to in the trial judge's sentencing remarks such as the respective ages of Mr Gbojueh and his victim and her resultant pregnancy. His failure to advert expressly to the issue of who initiated the sexual contact in both cases is not, in any event, suggestive of reviewable error. This issue was referred to by the sentencing judge in his short reasons which were before the Minister. In making his overall assessments this matter may, understandably, not have loomed large in the Minister's thinking given the respective ages of the participants.
35 This first basis of challenge must be rejected.