The review grounds and Ketjan
10 The interrelated grounds of the Minister's application are that the Tribunal erred in finding that the delegate did not have jurisdiction to cancel Ms Singh's visa and misconstrued s 501(3A), including by finding that the condition in s 501(3A)(b) is only satisfied where the sentence of imprisonment being served is for the same offence(s) that caused the Minister (via his delegate) to be satisfied as to s 501(3A)(a).
11 In Ketjan, the unsuccessful appellant had been convicted and sentenced prior to enactment of s 501(3A). The Full Court posed the question before it succinctly as follows (at [3], emphasis in original):
What happens, then, where the non-citizen is serving a term of imprisonment at the time of the Minister's decision (after the commencement of the mandatory visa cancellation scheme), but the non-citizen has a "substantial criminal record" only because of a different sentence of imprisonment that was served exclusively before the commencement of that scheme? Is the non-citizen's visa liable to mandatory cancellation in these circumstances?
12 It is appropriate to reproduce the Full Court's reasoning in answer to that question in full:
[35] The appropriate starting point is the text of s 501(3A) of the Act. That provision is again set out for reference:
(3A) The Minister must cancel a visa that has been granted to a person if:
(a) the Minister is satisfied that the person does not pass the character test because of the operation of:
(i) paragraph (6)(a) (substantial criminal record), on the basis of paragraph (7)(a), (b) or (c); or
(ii) paragraph (6)(e) (sexually based offences involving a child); and
(b) the person is serving a sentence of imprisonment, on a full-time basis in a custodial institution, for an offence against a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.
…
[36] As apparent from s 501(3A), there are two conditions which must exist to enable the mandatory cancellation of a visa by the Minister. The first is para (a) of s 501(3A). The second is para (b) of s 501(3A).
…
[38] From an ordinary reading of the language of s 501(3A)(a), and the supporting definitions in ss 501(6) and (7), there is no basis to confine the Minister to a consideration of events that influence the passing (or not) of the character test after, but not before, the commencement of the mandatory visa cancellation scheme on 11 December 2014. In particular, s 501(7)(c) prescribes that a person has a "substantial criminal record" if he or she "has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 12 months or more". That language pre-dates the commencement of s 501(3A), and does not temporally confine the terms of imprisonment to those that straddle or operate exclusively after the commencement date of the scheme.
[39] As to para 501(3A)(b), there is no requirement that the sentence of imprisonment that the non-citizen is serving for the purposes of that paragraph be the same sentence that gave rise to the non-citizen having a "substantial criminal record" for the purposes of para (a). The events that may trigger paras (a) and (b) may be distinct. There are various bases for this interpretation.
[40] First, para (b) refers to "a" sentence of imprisonment rather than "the" sentence of imprisonment. Should Parliament have intended for a non-citizen's visa to only be mandatorily cancelled where he or she is serving the term of imprisonment that gave rise to the non-citizen having a "substantial criminal record", then the language of para (b) could have easily connected to the operation of para (a).
[41] Second, although para (b) is inherently directed to a sentence of imprisonment, the satisfaction of para (a) may not occur as a result of such a sentence. Paragraph (b) may alternatively be satisfied where the non-citizen is "merely" convicted or found guilty of a sexually based offence (s 501(6)(e)) or where the non-citizen has been sentenced to death (s 501(7)(a)). These events do not necessarily involve sentences of imprisonment. This tends to demonstrate that para (b) has an operation distinct from that of para (a).
[42] Third, as evident from the text of the provisions, para (a) requires a "positive state of satisfaction" on the part of the Minister (Falzon v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 262 CLR 333 (Falzon) at [46] per Kiefel CJ, Bell, Keane and Edelman JJ), while para (b) operates upon a factual state of affairs at a particular point in time.
[43] Fourth (and relatedly), having regard to the policy behind the introduction of the mandatory visa cancellation scheme, paras (a) and (b) serve different purposes. Paragraph (a) is directed to the quality of the non-citizen's character which, in this context, is determined objectively by reference to the non-citizen's (past) criminal record. Paragraph (b), in contrast, is directed to a state of affairs at a particular point in time; namely (and broadly), whether the non-citizen is, at that time, in prison on a full-time basis for committing an Australian criminal offence. This makes sense when you have regard to the stated purposes behind the mandatory visa cancellation scheme. As explained in the relevant explanatory memorandum and second reading speech, which were relevantly extracted above at [13]-[14], the primary intention of the mandatory visa cancellation scheme was to ensure that the decision to cancel a non-citizen's visa occurs before he or she is released from prison: see Falzon at [49]-[50]. The result is that, should the non-citizen subsequently request revocation of the mandatory cancellation, that request would be pursued while the non-citizen is in prison or, if released from criminal custody, in immigration detention.
[44] Having regard to these matters, no aspect of the plain reading of the legislative text justifies the imposition of a limitation that s 501(3A) cannot apply to the appellant's circumstances.
13 The Minister's submissions helpfully, accurately and succinctly summarise the way in which the Tribunal found that the delegate who cancelled Ms Singh's visa in the first place had no jurisdiction to do so, effectively concluding that there was no valid visa cancellation and therefore revoking that decision (omitting court book references and cross-references to the Tribunal reasons):
The Tribunal found that there was no "jurisdiction" for the delegate to have cancelled the First Respondent's visa under s 501(3A). In so finding, the Tribunal observed that the delegate had "acted on the basis that he or she was obliged to take into account [the First Respondent's] earlier 2017 sentence of 12 months' imprisonment and was also bound to take into account the term of imprisonment [the First Respondent] was serving at the time of his or her decision (albeit for a different offence)". The Tribunal posed the "jurisdictional question" before it as "whether that was the correct approach". The Tribunal reasoned that, for the power in s 501(3A) to be available, the visa holder must be serving a term of imprisonment (ie. such that s 501(3A)(b) of the Act is met) "on account of" the conviction that falls within s 501(3A)(a) of the Act. Accordingly, in the present case, the delegate was said to have "impermissibly relied upon" the 2017 Sentence, for the purposes of s 501(3A)(a), in circumstances where the Applicant "was not in jail at the time of his or her decision on account of that conviction". It was the fact that the sentence being served at the time of the cancellation decision was for a different offence from the 2017 sentence relied upon for the purposes of the character test that was the basis of the Tribunal's decision.
In reaching that conclusion, the Tribunal did not accept the Minister's construction of s 501(3A). That was that the power in s 501(3A) is available "whenever two conditions are satisfied", namely, (a) where the visa holder has been sentenced at any time in the past to a term of imprisonment of 12 months or more; and (b) at the time the Minister is exercising the power to cancel, the visa holder is "in a custodial institution on a full time basis (whether or not the term of imprisonment which a person is serving at that time is one of at least 12 months' duration)". The Minister saw the second condition as not dependent upon the sentence being served being the same as that satisfying the first condition.
14 It is not necessary to address a range of collateral matters that the Tribunal saw as pointing, as a matter of statutory construction, against the Minister's interpretation, given the binding terms of Ketjan and the plain language of s 501(3A). As the High Court pointed out in Alcan (NT) Alumina Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Territory Revenue (NT) [2009] HCA 41; 239 CLR 27 (at [47], omitting footnotes):
This Court has stated on many occasions that the task of statutory construction must begin with a consideration of the text itself. Historical considerations and extrinsic materials cannot be relied on to displace the clear meaning of the text. The language which has actually been employed in the text of legislation is the surest guide to legislative intention. The meaning of the text may require consideration of the context, which includes the general purpose and policy of a provision, in particular the mischief it is seeking to remedy.
In this case, there was no need to go beyond the text of s 501(3A), although, as the reasons in Ketjan reproduced above make clear, context served only to reinforce the plain meaning.
15 The Tribunal erred in its interpretation of s 501(3A), largely by deploying a collateral reasoning process to depart from the ordinary meaning to be derived from the express language of that provision. As the passages from Ketjan reproduced above make clear, there was no proper basis for the finding that the prison sentence giving rise to the "substantial criminal record" for the purposes of s 501(3A)(a)(i) needed to have any relation to the prison sentence being served for the purposes of s 501(3A)(b), let alone that they needed to be same sentence of imprisonment.
16 It follows that the Minister's application succeeds. The Tribunal's decision must be set aside and the matter remitted to the Tribunal to decide Ms Singh's merits review application. There is no reason that I can see why the same Tribunal member should not hear that application, although that is, of course, a matter for the President of the Tribunal. Costs should follow the event, such that Ms Singh be ordered to pay the Minister's costs.
I certify that the preceding sixteen (16) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment of the Honourable Justice Bromwich.