Consideration - does s 501(7)(c) include a sentence imposed by a foreign court?
23 In my opinion, it is not necessary to consider in substantial detail the arguments advanced by Ms Darnia-Wilson in support of the construction that s 501(7)(c) does not have extraterritorial effect. In DRJ v Commissioner of Victims Rights (No 2) (2020) 103 NSWLR 692, Bell P and Leeming JA (with whom Meagher JA agreed) considered, in learned judgments, the principles as to when legislation will be construed as having extraterritorial operation. Leeming JA summarised his conclusion, with which the President also agreed, as follows (at 732 [157]):
A variety of language has been used, including "central conception", "central focus", "statutory springboard" and "hinge", to which may be added the "central concern" mentioned by Mitchell and Beech JJA in Huntingdale Village Pty Ltd (recs and mgrs apptd) v Corrs Chambers Westgarth (2018) 128 ACSR 168; [2018] WASCA 90 at [167]. The different language describes the same approach. Putting to one side the different considerations applicable to legislation creating an offence, in cases where no express provision has been made connecting the statute to New South Wales, the task is to identify the central focus or central conception of the legislation, and require that to bear a connection with New South Wales. One does so as a matter of construction, based on subject matter and scope, and with a regard to internal indications and to avoiding improbable and absurd outcomes. It will be relevant to have regard to the purpose of the statute, the likelihood that the statutory purpose will be evaded if made to depend upon something readily altered at the instance of the parties, and the need to avoid an unduly restrictive approach whereby more than one factum is required to bear a connection.
(emphasis added)
24 It is important to bear in mind that the Migration Act, as its long title states, is one "relating to the entry into, and presence in, Australia of aliens, and the departure or deportation from Australia of aliens and certain other persons". The scheme of the Act is to provide for the grant or cancellation of visas, pursuant to which, it will be lawful or not for a non-citizen to enter Australia or remain here. It is important that, notwithstanding the Parliament's predilection for legislative complexity, those administering the provisions of the Act should be able to understand any particular provision in a practical and sensible way.
25 Relevantly, the purpose of s 501 is to create powers for the Minister (and his or her delegates), to grant or cancel visas in particular situations based principally on whether a person passes the character test and, where relevant, other criteria prescribed in the various subsections.
26 The natural and ordinary meaning of the unqualified expression, "sentenced to a term of imprisonment", as it is used within the definition of a substantial criminal record in s 501(7)(c), describes an objective state of affairs. That unqualified expression contrasts, for example, with the qualified expression of the nature of the sentence on which s 501(3A)(b) operates. The Parliament expressly provided in s 501(3A)(b) that the sentence of imprisonment to which a decision-maker must have regard, in the context of a mandatory cancelation, is one, first, that the person is serving, on a full-time basis, in a custodial institution, and secondly, for an offence against a law of the Commonwealth, a State, or a Territory. However, s 501(3A)(a)(i) prescribes no such qualification of a geographical or jurisdictional nature to a sentence of imprisonment within s 501(7)(a), (b) or (c) as a component of a substantial criminal record. Had the Parliament thought that the location of the sentencing jurisdiction was relevant in identifying the factors actuating the mandatory cancellation of a visa, it would have made a similar qualification in s 501(3A)(a)(i) as in s 501(3A)(b).
27 Indeed, the silence of s 501(3A)(a)(i) as to the geographical location of any jurisdiction in respect of a sentence within the meaning of s 501(7)(a), (b), or (c) also contrasts with the operation of s 501(3A)(a)(ii). The latter provision picks up sexually based offences involving a child within the meaning of s 501(6)(e) by reference to a conviction or a finding of either guilt or the proof of an offence by a court in Australia or a foreign country. The Parliament mandated in s 501(3A)(a)(ii) that where an Australian or foreign court entered a conviction or made a finding of an offence against the visa holder that falls within s 501(6)(e), then regardless of the location of the offending, the Minister must cancel the visa if the person is currently serving a sentence of full time imprisonment for an offence against a law of an Australian jurisdiction. It is unlikely that in this context the Parliament intended that a sentence to which s 501(3A)(a)(i) applies would be confined only to one imposed by an Australian Court.
28 In my opinion, the considerations that Ms Darnia-Wilson urged in support of the unorthodox construction arrived at by the Tribunal do not warrant its artificial construction of the natural and ordinary meaning of the plain English words of s 501(7)(c): Australian Securities and Investments Commission v DB Management Pty Limited (2000) 199 CLR 321 at 338 [34]-[35] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ.
29 While, as Ms Darnia-Wilson's argument noted, some elements of the character test in s 501(6) are linked to the occurrence of a fact or the person's presence in Australia, there is no sufficient reason to consider that s 501(7)(c) has any meaning other than its ordinary and natural meaning, namely a sentence of imprisonment per se regardless of its territorial nexus as the Full Court held in Brown 183 FCR at 139 [93], and Kenny J held in Markaj [2020] FCA 1511 at [12].
30 Moreover, if a sentence of imprisonment in s 501(7)(c) were construed as limited to one imposed by a court of an Australian jurisdiction, it may result in a person who had never been to Australia, such as Mr Cathcart, but had been convicted overseas of serious offences, as he has, being in a better position than a visa holder in Australia who had been convicted in Australia and sentenced to a term of imprisonment here who, automatically, would fail the character test under s 501(7)(c), in respect of an offence of the same kind. It is possible that, as Ms Darnia-Wilson argued, a person could be convicted and sentenced in a foreign jurisdiction for an offence that would not be, or be regarded as, a crime here, yet he or she would fail the character test automatically. But that argument ignores the fact that, ordinarily, the decision maker, under s 501, will have a discretion whether or not to refuse to grant or to cancel a visa, notwithstanding the failure of a person to pass the character test. If s 501(7)(c) includes a sentence of a foreign court, there may be rare occasions, as Ms Darnia-Wilson argued, in which the Minister, or more likely a delegate, must cancel a visa under s 501. However, in the event that the Minister was persuaded that such a result was inappropriate, he or she can always permit the person to apply for a grant of another visa. Such theoretical possibilities are not a basis to depart from the natural and ordinary meaning of s 501(7)(c).
31 Accordingly, I am of opinion that the Tribunal erred in failing to find that Mr Cathcart failed the character test because he had a substantial criminal record within the meaning of s 501(6)(a) and (7)(c).
32 That then raises the question whether the Minister is entitled to an order that the Tribunal's decision should be set aside.