"Principle" of forfeiting the "privilege" to remain in Australia - particular (c)
50 Mr Kemp noted that the Assistant Minister's reasoning at [42] and [80] of the Reasons takes into account a "principle" that persons who commit serious crimes should expect to forfeit the "privilege" of remaining in Australia. These paragraphs provide:
42 In coming to my decision about whether or not there is another reason why the original decision should be revoked I have had regard to the consideration of the protection of the Australian community, noting in particular Mr KEMP's claim he does not pose an unacceptable risk of reoffending. I considered the Government's commitment to protecting the Australian community from harm as a result of criminal activity by non-citizens. I also took into consideration that remaining in Australia is a privilege that Australia confers on non citizens in the expectation they are law abiding.
…
80 On the other hand, in considering whether I was satisfied that there is another reason why the original decision should be revoked, I gave significant weight to the serious nature of the crimes committed by Mr KEMP, in particular that of supply (sic) a prohibited drug not less than the commercial quantity. I am also mindful of the principle that persons who commit serious crimes should expect to forfeit the privilege of remaining in Australia.
(emphasis added)
51 Mr Kemp submitted that, for the same reasons as were found in Tesic v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 1465 (Tesic) at [53] and [56]-[57], the use of the word "privilege" and its elevation to a "principle" gave rise to jurisdictional error.
52 In the alternative, Mr Kemp relies on the concerns expressed in Stretton at [26] (Allsop CJ) and [70(d)] (Griffiths J) and AZAFQ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 243 FCR 451 (AZAFQ) (Allsop CJ, Robertson and Griffiths JJ) at [47] and the reasoning adopted by the Assistant Minister in this case as adding weight to the allegation that the Assistant Minister's reasoning was legally unreasonable.
53 In Tesic Collier J considered an argument that the Minister did not properly exercise his powers under s 501CA(4) of the Act because there is no principle, as referred to in the Minister's reasons in that case, that persons who commit serious crimes should expect to forfeit the privilege of remaining in Australia. In addressing that ground, after referring to the relevant part of the Minister's reasons, at [55]-[57] her Honour said:
55 I do not accept that the statements of the Minister in respect of "privilege" in this case could properly be confined to rhetoric expounding the relevant considerations concerning Mr Tesic's criminal history and the importance of protecting the Australian community.
56 The fact that the Minister "took into consideration" that remaining in Australia is a privilege that Australia confers on non-citizens indicates that the decision-making process was distorted. The "principle" coloured the Minister's reasoning process. The Minister approached the decision from that perspective. As was explained by the Full Courts in both Stretton [2016] FCAFC 11 and AZAFQ [2016] FCAFC 105, that perspective was not correct. The fact that the Minister subsequently repeated the statement concerning privilege in paragraph 55, elevating it to a "principle", reinforces the point that the Minister attributed importance to this irrelevant consideration in reaching his decision.
57 The statement of reasons in this case may be contrasted with that of the Minister in Stretton [2016] FCAFC 11, where the Minister referred to the "privilege of being able to remain in Australia" in the conclusion, and in the course of elucidating the expectations of the Australian community. Similarly, in AZAFQ [2016] FCAFC 105 the Minister summarised his reasons for cancelling the appellant's visa, including the generalised statement that non-citizens who committed serious, violent offences should "generally expect to forfeit the privilege of remaining in Australia". Unlike in these cases, the Minister in the statement of reasons in Mr Tesic's case referred to the "privilege" as a principle of law referable to the exercise of the power, rather than a general policy statement.
54 In Tupkovic v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCA 73 (Tupkovic) at [32]-[38] Robertson J considered a similar ground to that raised in Tesic. On the facts of that case, in contrast to the findings in Tesic, his Honour did not accept that the decision-making process was distorted or that the Assistant Minister referred to the "privilege" as a principle of law. His Honour was of the opinion that the Assistant Minister was "doing no more than taking into account a statement of policy": at [33]. At [35] Robertson J said:
In my opinion, Tesic is to be distinguished. In Tesic it was said, at [57], that the statement of reasons was to be contrasted with that of the Minister in Stretton where the Minister referred to the "privilege" in the conclusion and in the course of elucidating the expectations of the Australian community. In Tesic, at [57], it was held that the Minister in the statement of reasons referred to the "privilege" as a principle of law referable to the exercise of the power, rather than a general policy statement. As I have said, in my opinion this did not occur in the present case. It is this which, at [56] in Tesic, was held to be an irrelevant consideration.
55 Other decisions in this Court have distinguished Tesic based on their facts in the manner identified in Tupkovic: see for example, Nigam v Minister for Immigration v Border Protection (2017) 71 AAR 369; [2017] FCA 106 at [62]-[80]; Parker v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCA 314 at [34]-[38]; and Kim v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCA 372 at [43]-[46].
56 Since hearing this matter a Full Court of this Court (Reeves, Robertson and Rangiah JJ) has handed down its decision in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Tesic (2017) 251 FCR 23 (Tesic Appeal). In one of his grounds of appeal the Minister challenged the finding in Tesic that the reference in the Minister's statement of reasons to "principle" was referable to a principle of law and contended that the primary judge should have found that references to the "privilege of remaining in Australia" were "an unremarkable synonymous phrase for the statutory rights held under the [Act]" as was held in Stretton at [26].
57 In considering this ground of appeal at [31] the Full Court said:
Properly read in context, the references to "privilege" in [31] and [55] of the Minister's statement of reasons are not to be construed as suggesting that the Minister was referring to legal principles but to considerations of government policy. Direction No 65 provides the relevant context. We do not read the Minister's statement of reasons as meaning that a non-citizen has no rights (but only privileges). We therefore do not accept the factual basis for the submission that the decision-making process was distorted. Further and consequentially, we do not accept that there was a misunderstanding of the "privilege" as a principle of law which coloured the Minister's reasoning process.
58 At [33] the Full Court identified two respects in which the primary judge erred.
59 Having regard to the decisions of Tupkovic and Tesic Appeal and the relevant statements in the Reasons set out at [50] above, there is no basis on which to infer that the Assistant Minister considered that the "principle", namely, that "persons who commit serious crimes should expect to forfeit the privilege of remaining in Australia", was a principle of law rather than a statement of policy. The Assistant Minister referred to that "principle" as a matter that he took into consideration and noted that he was mindful of it. It is plain from the context that he treated it as a policy matter affecting the exercise of his discretion conferred by the Act and not as a legal principle. There is no error in the Assistant Minister referring to the "principle" that remaining in Australia is a privilege conferred on non-citizens.
60 Mr Kemp's alternative argument based on the Assistant Minister's reference to the "principle" should also be rejected. In support of the argument Mr Kemp relies on Stretton:
(1) at [26] where Allsop CJ said:
Whilst not the focus of any argument, it is to be doubted that the judicial review of decisions such as this is affected or impeded by the use by the Minister in his reasons of phrases such as "the privilege of being able to remain in Australia". At one level such an expression can be seen as an unremarkable synonymous phrase for the statutory rights held under the Migration Act. To the extent, however, that the use of that language seeks to surround, or has the apparent effect of surrounding, the decision with an aura of a non-justiciable assessment of community values, I would not necessarily accept such. It is unnecessary for the resolution of this appeal to explore the full fabric of the scope and purposes of s 501 beyond the protection of the Australian community. In particular, there is no call to consider the relevance of what might be called broader political or policy considerations (whether expressed as such, or expressed as a judgment as to the expectations of the Australian community) in the exercise of the power.
(2) and at [70(d)] where Griffiths J relevantly said:
… In particular, without doubting the relevance to the exercise of that power of protecting the Australian community, it is important that the value of the statement of reasons is not diminished by resort to superficial aphorisms or empty rhetoric, which is illustrated by phrases such as "expectations of the Australian community" and the "privilege" of being a visa-holder. The former concept has the potential to mask a subjective value judgment and to distort the objectivity of the decision-making process. The latter expression is simply misleading as a legal concept. Under Australian law, having the status of a visa-holder is not a privilege. Visa-holders hold statutory and non-statutory rights which are inconsistent with the notion of their status being described simply as a "privilege". For example, many visa-holders have statutory rights of review and all visa-holders have rights relating to judicial review of adverse migration decisions. The statutory rights of a visa-holder are, of course, subject to the lawful exercise of executive powers such as those under s 501. But that fact does not justify the position of a visa-holder under Australian law being described as merely one of "privilege" in a legal sense.
61 Mr Kemp also relies on AZAFQ Mr Kemp at [47] where the Full Court said:
If the reference to "privilege" in the Minister's statement of reasons is read in isolation from the balance of those reasons, there might appear to be some force in the appellant's complaint. This Court has previously commented on the danger of describing a visa holder's entitlement to remain in Australia as a "privilege" (see Stretton at [26] per Allsop CJ and at [70(d)] per Griffiths J). The inappropriateness of describing such entitlement as a "privilege" is further underlined in the following passage from Gummow J's judgment in Fardon v Attorney-General (Qld) (2004) 223 CLR 575 at 611:
… in other respects aliens are not outlaws; many will have a statutory right or title to remain in Australia for a determinate or indeterminate period and at least for that period they have the protection afforded by the Constitution and the laws of Australia.
62 A fair reading of the Reasons leads to the conclusion that, in referring to the "principle", the Assistant Minister was applying policy and not a principle of law. Mr Kemp had the rights conferred on him under the Act in relation to the Visa and the Cancellation Decision and there is no suggestion that the Assistant Minister was not aware of those rights. It was not legally unreasonable for the Assistant Minister to refer to policy as he did in considering the issue of protection of the Australian community.