The appeal
19 The amended notice of appeal states only two grounds of appeal and abandons the five grounds based on Article 9(1) of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. The two grounds are that the primary judge, Cowdroy J, erred as follows:
1. … in failing to find that the Respondent had failed in the exercise of his statutory duty by creating and applying the wrong test when exercising the discretion under s 501A(2); and
2. … in failing to find that the Respondent had denied the Appellant procedural fairness.
20 Senior Counsel for the appellant accepted that these grounds stood or fell together and that ground 2 captured the necessarily procedural aspects of the failure of the Minister of which the appellant complains.
21 The appellant submitted that rather than treat the best interests of the children as a primary consideration the respondent determined that the risk of offending was "unacceptable" and then weighed a risk already characterised as unacceptable against all other considerations, including the best interests of the children. This, it was submitted, was an erroneous approach. Had the respondent in fact taken the best interests of the children into account, it would have required him to decide whether the significant risk to the welfare of the Australian community he had found to exist was outweighed by the best interests of the children and other considerations including the appellant's ties to Australia and only then to decide whether the risk was unacceptable so as to outweigh the interests of the children and any other considerations. This failure, it was submitted, of the respondent Minister to in fact treat the best interests of the children as a primary consideration that could be weighed against the risk to the Australian community (as opposed to the conclusion that such a risk was unacceptable), was the application of the wrong test and a denial of procedural fairness.
22 We turn to consider the substance of the grounds.
23 As Gleeson CJ observed in Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Applicant S20/2002 [2003] HCA 30; (2003) 198 ALR 59 at [14]:
Decision-makers commonly express their reasons sequentially; but that does not mean that they decide each factual issue in isolation from the others. Ordinarily they review the whole of the evidence, and consider all issues of fact, before they write anything. Expression of conclusions in a certain sequence does not indicate a failure to consider the evidence as a whole. I do not think that the Tribunal member intended to convey that she made up her mind about the evidence of the applicant/appellant before taking account of the evidence of the witness who was said to corroborate him.
This observation was cited with approval in Baker v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2012] FCAFC 145 at [43]. It follows that the reasons must be read as a whole.
24 Similarly, Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 requires that the reasons of the Minister not be read hypercritically.
25 In context, the word "unacceptable" as used in [33] of the Minister's statement of reasons should not be construed as an absolute conclusion but as a relative term indicating significance of risk. Otherwise, the reasons of the Minister both before and after his statement that there was "an unacceptable risk of harm to the Australian community" would be largely otiose, in particular the last two sentences of [33] of the Minister's reasons which we have set out above.
26 It follows, in our view, that the sequence of reasoning of the Minister was not that which the appellant describes and on which he relies. We do not accept that the Minister determined that the risk of offending was "unacceptable" and then purportedly weighed a risk already characterised as unacceptable, in an absolute sense, against all other considerations, including the best interests of the children.
27 In addition, as we have said, we do not accept the contention implicit in the appellant's submissions that the Minister's statement that there was "an unacceptable risk of harm to the Australian community" meant that no other considerations, including the best interests of the children, could be weighed against that risk.
28 To the extent that the appellant submitted that the legislation required a particular sequence of reasoning on the part of the decision-maker we reject that submission as having no foundation in the language of the section.
29 In our opinion, the Minister did treat the interests of the children as a primary consideration and thus did not err either by applying the wrong test or by denying to the appellant procedural fairness. It is to be recalled that Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183 CLR 273 does not state more than that, procedurally, the interests of the children are a primary consideration, not the only, or the only primary, consideration.
30 The appeal is dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding thirty (30) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Chief Justice Allsop, and the Honourable Justices Flick and Robertson.