Ground 3: Failure to take into account the effect of non-revocation on family members
52 The family ties sub-consideration in para 14.2(1)(b) expressly provides that the Tribunal must have regard to the effect of non-revocation on the non-citizen's immediate family in Australia. The applicant submitted that the Tribunal erred in failing to do so, or in failing to engage in an active intellectual process in this respect. He further contended that had the Tribunal not made this error, it could have accorded more weight to the consideration at para 14.2 of the Direction, which could have formed a reason, or part of a reason, to revoke the cancellation of his visa.
53 It is now accepted that, although there is no explicit statutory duty on the Minister (or a subsequent decision-maker) under s 501CA(4) to "consider" representations made in support of a revocation request, it is necessarily implicit in the statutory regime that there is such an obligation: Minister for Home Affairs v Omar (2019) 272 FCR 589 (Omar) at 606 36; GBV18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCAFC 17 at 31. In this respect, the decision-maker is obliged to engage in an "active intellectual process" in order to give meaningful consideration to significant and clearly expressed relevant representations: Omar, 607 [37]; see also Hands v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 267 FCR 628 (Hands) at 630 [3]. Moreover, a failure to consider, by engaging in an active intellectual process, a clearly articulated ground raised in the representations amounts to an error which may vitiate the Tribunal's putatively formed state of mind that there was no other reason to revoke the cancellation decision: Ali [45].
54 In his representations to the Department, the applicant consistently identified the suffering of his immediate family as a reason for revoking the cancellation of his visa. Although in his initial submissions he relied upon a failure by the Tribunal to take account of the impact on his partner, his dependent parent, nieces, nephews and sister, during the course of the appeal this ground was restricted to the impact on his partner, a person called Ms Olaremi Agbede. Ms Agbede wrote a letter of support for the applicant in which she claimed that since his incarceration (presumably in jail for his crimes), she had been through a lot of emotional turmoil and suffered loss and grief, and that she lacked support from friends and family as a result of the applicant's conviction. She added that if the applicant was deported it will cause her further emotional turmoil and will strain the relationship and bring it to an end.
55 It appears that Ms Agbede gave evidence at the hearing before the Tribunal although her name in the transcript is given as Ms Advedeh. This person claimed to be the applicant's partner and that she had been for some four years. In her evidence she said she had derived emotional support from the applicant even whilst he was incarcerated and that he had previously assisted her in pursuing her career. She again stated that after his conviction a lot of people withdrew from her and she was stigmatised by her relationship with him. She further stated that she and the applicant had planned to move in together, get married, and start a family. Ms Advedeh said that if the applicant were required to return to Nigeria she would suffer loss, grief and emotional turmoil.
56 The above matters were referred to in the applicant's supplementary Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions (SSFIC) where it was asserted (at [62]):
The Applicant has an Australian permanent resident partner and they plan to move in with each other upon his release. The Applicant and his partner have known each other for 5 years and have been in a relationship for over 3 years. The Applicant and his partner draw a high level of emotional support from one another and wish to marry in the near future. Their plans involve settling in Australia. If the Applicant is deported, it would ultimately result in the end of their relationship.
57 There was nothing to suggest that the applicant's contention that Ms Agbede would suffer emotional loss and suffering if he were required to return to Nigeria was questioned by the Minister or the Tribunal.
58 The Tribunal's "consideration" of the effect of non-revocation on the applicant's immediate family was conclusory at best. Under the heading, "The strength, nature and duration of ties to Australia", the Tribunal described (at [132] and [133]) the family links the applicant had in Australia, which include his three brothers, his sister, and his nieces and nephews. The Tribunal did not consider the effect of non-revocation on these persons beyond identifying them. The Tribunal did state at paragraph [158], "[t]here is an impact on family members who are in Australia if he is removed from Australia", which - in combination with several other unrelated factors - was described as weighing "somewhat in favour" of revoking the cancellation of his visa.
59 In relation to Ms Agbede specifically, the Tribunal made the following observations in its reasons at [132]:
132. Mr Okoh has been in a committed relationship with Ms Olaremi Agbede for five years, although he has been in prison or in immigration detention for the last two years. Ms Agbede gave evidence to the Tribunal and stated that she is willing to live elsewhere in Australia with Mr Okoh if he is released from detention but is not be willing to return to Nigeria with him as her life is now in Australia.
60 The Minister submitted that the brevity of the Tribunal's reasons in addressing the interests of the applicant's family does not, of itself, point to a failure by the Tribunal to consider the effect of non-revocation on these persons. Reliance was placed on RZMW (at 180 - 181 [21] - [22]) to the effect that the Tribunal's treatment of a consideration must be read in the context of the evidence and the rest of the reasons. The Minister submitted that the obligation to "consider" a matter is not an obligation to express findings about a particular matter in a particular way. He contended that it was sufficient for the Tribunal to accept that the effect of non-revocation on the applicant's family would be negative and that it was unnecessary for the Tribunal to go into detail to reinforce that conclusion. He went further and submitted that the Tribunal's observation that Ms Agbede would not return to Nigeria carried with it a conclusion that the relationship would break down and that Ms Agbede would suffer further emotional suffering as a result.
61 With the greatest respect to Mr Johnson, these submissions cannot be accepted. The Tribunal's observation that Ms Agbede would not return to Nigeria was merely a recitation of that fact as it had been received by the Tribunal. There is nothing in [132] which suggests that the Tribunal considered the personal consequences to Ms Agbede if the cancellation decision was not revoked. That issue is neither expressly nor implicitly addressed in the reasons and it follows that the "impact on the non-citizen's immediate family in Australia", insofar as that relates to Ms Agbede, was also not addressed in the reasons.
62 Mr Johnson also submitted that the absence of any reasons concerning the impact on Ms Agbede of the non-revocation of the cancellation decision did not establish that it was not considered by the Tribunal. As the authorities referred to above indicate, it may well be that a decision-maker will have considered a matter which is not expressly referred to in the reasons and that the onus is on the applicant to establish that it was ignored. However, here the structure and content of the reasons strongly indicate that if the impact on Ms Agbede had been considered by the Tribunal, such consideration would have been reflected in the reasons. In the section of the reasons dealing with the strength, nature and duration of the applicant's ties to Australia, the Tribunal set out para 14.2(1) of Direction No. 79 and in the following paragraphs identified some of the evidence relating to that topic. It did not refer to the evidence which was before it concerning the impact on Ms Agbede and nor did it refer to the submissions made in that regard. No reason was provided as to why some of the evidence relating to the impact on the applicant's immediate family was referred to but that relating to Ms Agbede was not. Moreover, the impact on Ms Agbede was the most significant issue in the consideration of this factor and the failure to refer to it tends to suggest that it has been overlooked.
63 The Minister's submissions in this respect are difficult to reconcile with the Chief Justice's observations in Hands (with which Markovic J agreed). At [3], his Honour emphasised the importance, in cases under s 501 of the Migration Act, of decision-makers confronting the human consequences that removal from Australia can bring about, stating:
[W]here decisions might have devastating consequences visited upon people, the obligation of real consideration of the circumstances of the people affected must be approached confronting what is being done to people. This obligation and the expression of its performance is not a place for decisional checklists or formulaic expression. Mechanical formulaic expression and pre-digested shorthand expressions may hide a lack of the necessary reflection upon the whole consideration of the human consequences involved. Genuine consideration of the human consequences demands honest confrontation of what is being done to people.
(Emphasis added).
64 It was not suggested by Mr Johnson that the principle articulated by the Chief Justice was in error or ought not to be followed. That is not surprising given that those comments have been referred to with approval in many subsequent decisions and, in particular, in MQGT v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2020] FCAFC 215. There, the Court (Jagot, Kerr and Anastassiou JJ) cited the above quote from Hands and then referred with approval to the discussion of Charlesworth J in Hernandez v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCA 415 concerning the Minister's obligation under s 501CA(4) to consider representations made on behalf of the applicant. In that latter decision, Charlesworth J had held that there existed an obligation on the Minister to consider the representations made by an applicant and to engage in an active intellectual process with each significant and clearly expressed representation. Her Honour observed that the practical content of that obligation was identified in Omar (at 607 [39]) as requiring more than sampling, acknowledging or noting representations have been made and, depending upon their nature and content, may require specific findings of fact by reference to the relevant parts of the representations.
65 There is nothing in the Tribunal's reasons in the present case to suggest it engaged in a genuine consideration of the effect of non-revocation on the applicant's partner, Ms Agbede. Whilst it made mention of the impact on other persons, it failed to make any mention of the substantially more significant evidence concerning the impact on Ms Agbede and it made no findings as to that issue. The representations and evidence adduced raised this issue and it was a significant one in the applicant's claim. Although the Tribunal made a cursory conclusion that there would be an impact upon family members, its reasons fell far short of indicating it had engaged in any meaningful way with the representation that Ms Agbede would suffer emotional loss and difficulties and the loss of the relationship with her partner. In the context of the Tribunal's reasons, its discussion would appeared to relate to the impact upon persons other than Ms Agbede.
66 The analogy the Minister sought to draw with RZMW in this regard is inapt. In that case the Tribunal made an express finding, when considering the applicant's ties to Australia, that there would be some impact on his family members were he returned to Liberia, which was corroborated by his family members. The Tribunal also referred elsewhere in its decision to evidence of his family members, his parental and familial responsibilities, and his relationship with his children and nieces and nephews. In contrast, the Tribunal in the present case did nothing more than identify in paragraph [132] that the applicant was in a relationship with Ms Agbede and that she was willing to live with the applicant if he is released from detention but would not move with him if he returned to Nigeria. It made no reference to the impact on her of the applicant being required to return there. For this reason, and contrary to the Minister's submissions, it is also not possible to infer that the Tribunal gave genuine intellectual consideration to the issue of the impact on Ms Agbede. On the contrary, it can be inferred that it did not.
67 The result of the foregoing is that the Tribunal failed to properly engage with the clearly articulated ground advanced by the applicant that a reason for revoking the cancellation of his visa was the detrimental impact of that decision on Ms Agbede. That failure amounted to a failure to comply with the requirements of s 501CA(4) for the purposes of ascertaining whether the Tribunal reached the required state of satisfaction. This had the result that the Tribunal's failure to exercise the power in that section was infected by a jurisdictional error.