The First Issue: Independent Assessment vs Government Policy
38 The first issue encapsulates several grounds of appeal (namely grounds 1 to 4 in the Notice of Appeal) but it is convenient to deal with them together.
39 The effect of the submission of counsel for Dr Hneidi was:
· there is a distinction to be drawn between the weight to be given to policy formulated at the departmental level and that which is to be given to policy formulated by the Minister;
· by failing to recognise this distinction, the Tribunal adopted a wrong process of reasoning, thereby according an impermissible level of weight to the Instructions and fettering the exercise of its discretion to the facts of the case.
40 The seminal authority on the entitlement of an administrative decision-maker to take into account a statement of governmental policy is the decision of the Full Court in Drake, in particular the joint judgment of Bowen CJ and Deane J at 590-591.
41 For present purposes, four relevant propositions emerge from their Honours' consideration of that question. The first is that the decision-maker is entitled, in the absence of specifically defined criteria for the exercise of the discretion, to take into account "government policy". Thus, where the Tribunal is not under a statutory duty to regard itself as bound by the policy, it is entitled to treat the policy as a relevant consideration.
42 Second, in the absence of a specific statutory provision (which would no doubt be unusual) the Tribunal is not entitled to abdicate its function of determining whether the decision under review was, on the material before the Tribunal, the correct or preferable one, to a more passive function of determining whether the decision conformed to the relevant policy.
43 Third, it is not desirable to frame a general statement of the part which government policy should ordinarily play in the determinations of the Tribunal. That is a matter for the Tribunal to determine in the context of the particular case, informed by considerations of the desirability of consistency of administrative decisions but balanced against the ideal of justice in the individual case.
44 Fourth, the borderline between cases in which the Tribunal has abdicated its functions to those of an unthinking application of "government or Ministerial policy" to the facts may sometimes be blurred. But where the Tribunal considers that the correct or preferable decision results from the application of such a policy, it should make it clear that:
"… it has considered the propriety of the particular policy and expressly indicates the considerations which have led it to that conclusion"
45 There is nothing in the statement of these principles which draws any distinction between departmental policy and Ministerial policy.
46 In his discussion of the relevance of policy in Drake (No 2), Brennan J at 643-644 referred, in an obiter remark, to the fact that under the Westminster system, a Minister is politically responsible to the Parliament for the policy adopted by him or her to guide the exercise of the discretionary power.
47 But this statement is not of itself a sufficient basis for drawing the distinction relied upon by Dr Hneidi. Brennan J was dealing only with the review of a Minister's order and the question of what part the policy statement promulgated by the Minister should play in considering the circumstances of the case. No occasion arose for a determination of any difference between the role of departmental and Ministerial policy in the consideration of that question.
48 The principle for which Drake (No 2) is authority is well established. It is that where a Minister has adopted a general policy as a guide to the exercise of a discretionary power, the Tribunal will consider an argument against its application to the facts of the case but "cogent reasons" will have to be shown against its application: see page 645.
49 We do not consider that the gloss on this statement added by the words "especially if the policy is shown to have been exposed to parliamentary scrutiny", support Dr Hneidi's contention as to the distinction between departmental and Ministerial policy. Again, this is because his Honour's remarks were confined to a discussion of the place of Ministerial policy in the review of administrative action.
50 The only authority to which we were referred that supports the distinction is the decision of Brennan J, sitting as President of the Tribunal, in Becker. His Honour there referred (at 701) to the difference between policies made or settled at the political level and those made at the departmental level.
51 His Honour said that one reason for the distinction lies in the opportunity of Parliament to review Ministerial policy. He went on to say:-
"Different considerations may apply to the review of each kind of policy, and more substantial reasons may have to be shown why basic policies - which might frequently be forged at the political level - should be reviewed."
52 In our view, the observations in Becker do not support the proposition relied upon by Dr Hneidi. There are a number of reasons for this.
53 First, the observations are obiter and are not expressed as unqualified considered dicta.
54 Second, in any event, the highest that the observations rise for present purposes is that different considerations may apply to the review of each different kind of policy. This says nothing about the relevance of, or weight to be accorded to, Ministerial policy as against departmental policy.
55 Third, the authority to which his Honour referred in apparent support of the distinction was concerned with a different question from that which is presently in issue; see The Queen v Anderson; Ex parte Ipec-Air Pty Ltd (1965) 113 CLR 177 ("Ipec-Air").
56 The question which arose in the Ipec-Air case was whether mandamus should be ordered against the Director-General of Civil Aviation to compel him to consider an application for the importation of aircraft. The relevant issue was the nature of the discretion conferred on the Director-General and the extent to which he was entitled to take into account the instructions of the Minister: see the discussion of Ipec-Air by Mason J in Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Commonwealth of Australia (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 82-83.
57 Ipec-Air therefore says nothing about any distinction between the weight to be given by the Tribunal to departmental policy against Ministerial policy.
58 It is true that a number of authorities to which the learned primary judge referred may be thought to be authority for the proposition that "great weight" ought to be given by the Tribunal to policies developed in the political arena: see Re Aston and Secretary, Department of Primary Industry (1985) 8 ALD 366 at 380; Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Swift and Others (1989) 18 ALD 679 ("Swift") at 692. But that is not to say that lesser weight must be given, regardless of the factual circumstances, to statements of departmental policy.
59 In any event, we do not consider that any error is disclosed in the approach adopted by the Tribunal. As the primary judge observed, the overarching principle is that the Tribunal must make an independent assessment. That is precisely what it did.
60 The Tribunal accepted that policy statements (which included the Instructions) were not binding on it but that such statements must be brought to account. The Tribunal did not abdicate its review function so as merely to adopt an uncritical application of the policy statements in the Instructions. Rather, it addressed the merits of Dr Hneidi's application, in particular at [90] - [92]. The Tribunal concluded on the facts of the case that Dr Hneidi failed to satisfy the residency requirements and had no close ties with Australia.
61 The effect of Dr Hneidi's argument about his insecurity in times of crisis was, as the Tribunal recognised, a submission that the policy should be ignored. Whether or not there is a distinction between the weight to be accorded to departmental and Ministerial policy, the authorities make it plain that the Tribunal is to take the policy into account and give it an appropriate level of weight. That is what the Tribunal did.
62 To do otherwise would be to permit "administrative chaos" and inconsistency in administrative decision making: Swift at 692. The approach urged on us by Dr Hneidi's counsel would be to say that the Tribunal was not entitled to give any weight to the Instructions. That is plainly contrary to established authority.
63 There was a further argument advanced by Dr Hneidi under ground 1. This was that the Tribunal was required to consider "the propriety of the particular policy": Drake at 591.
64 In our view this submission was correctly answered by the primary judge at [55]. First, there was no suggestion that the policy was unlawful, so that the Tribunal was not required to consider the propriety of the policy as such. The Tribunal is not a forum for the review of the desirability of government policy.
65 Second, what is required is that the Tribunal consider the "propriety" of applying the policy to the facts of the case; that is what the Tribunal did.
66 Third, in any event, the Tribunal gave implicit consideration to the propriety of the policy by endorsing the remarks made in an earlier decision in Re Sadiq and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2006] AATA 75. In that decision, it was observed that the essential themes underlying the grant of citizenship pursuant to s 13(9)(c) of the Act are residence and a close continuing association with Australia.