The Minister's Notice of Contention
36 In support of the notice of contention, Mr Reilly for the Minister in oral argument correctly observed that the Appellant was legally represented before the Tribunal and framed her case in accordance with a detailed Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions dated 26 August 2020 (the Appellant's SFIC). The Appellant's SFIC did not mention her relationship with her dogs and did not assert any psychological impact that may occur as the result of separation from her dogs. Nor were any claims to that effect advanced in oral submissions before the Tribunal. In short compass, Mr Reilly submitted that:
[t]he preferable inference, we say, is that it was simply such a minor matter by the time the matter had been argued before the Tribunal that the preferable inference is just the Tribunal didn't think it necessary to specifically mention it.
37 Importantly, counsel for the Minister in oral argument confirmed that the notice of contention did not go so far as to assert that there was no jurisdictional error by the Tribunal in not referring to a matter that was not agitated before it.
38 As we have noted, there was before the Tribunal, in the representations of the Appellant, material relevant to the psychological and emotional impact of separation from her two dogs. In its decision, the Tribunal carefully considered each contention put to it on behalf of the Appellant when addressing the "other considerations" set out in clause 14(1) of Direction No. 79 and which the primary judge summarised at [22]-[26] of her reasons. Specifically, the Tribunal, in considering the extent of impediments if removed, did not accept the Appellant's contention that separation from her friends and her partner would significantly and adversely impact on her mental health. The Tribunal reasoned that mental health services and welfare support are available in New Zealand and that overall, the Appellant "has some impediments to re-establishing herself in New Zealand, however these are not insurmountable, and this factor weighs slightly in favour of revoking the cancellation of her visa": [130].
39 The content of any statutory obligation to give reasons for a decision is relevant to the question of what, if any, inferences may be drawn from a decision-maker's statement of reasons vis a vis the apparent absence of any reference to, or findings on, particular claims or evidence. Where reasons are given in writing, s 43 of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) (which applied in this case) imposes an obligation on the Tribunal, to "include its findings on material questions of fact and a reference to the evidence or other material on which those findings were based." An obligation in such terms has been held to require that the Tribunal set out the findings of fact which it subjectively considers to be material: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323; [2001] HCA 30 (Yusuf) at [68] (by analogy). The consequence is that this Court on judicial review is entitled to take the reasons of the Tribunal as setting out the findings on each matter which it considered material to its decision and is entitled to "infer that any matter not mentioned [in the statement of reasons] was not considered by the Tribunal to be material" : Yusuf at [69]. Similarly, Gleeson CJ in Yusuf at [5] explained that:
When the Tribunal prepares a written statement of its reasons for decision in a given case, that statement will have been prepared by the Tribunal, and will be understood by a reader, including a judge reviewing the Tribunal's decision, in the light of the statutory requirements contained in s 430 [of the Migration Act]. The Tribunal is required, in setting out its reasons for decision, to set out "the findings on any material questions of fact". If it does not set out a finding on some question of fact, that will indicate that it made no finding on that matter, and that in turn, may indicate that the Tribunal did not consider the matter to be material.
(Emphasis added.)
See also e.g. ETA067 v Republic of Nauru (2018) 92 ALJR 1003; [2018] HCA 46 at [13] (Bell, Keane and Gordon JJ).
40 Conversely as Gleeson CJ also held at [10], by setting out its findings, and thereby exposing its views on materiality, the Tribunal's reasons may disclose (relevantly) a jurisdictional error.
41 Furthermore, in Applicant WAEE, the Full Court of this Court (French, Sackville and Hely JJ) in two oft cited passages at [46]-[47], explained (in the context of a decision by the then Refugee Review Tribunal to affirm a decision refusing the grant of a protection visa to the appellant):
It is plainly not necessary for the Tribunal to refer to every piece of evidence and every contention made by an applicant in its written reasons. It may be that some evidence is irrelevant to the criteria and some contentions misconceived. Moreover, there is a distinction between the Tribunal failing to advert to evidence which, if accepted, might have led it to make a different finding of fact (cf Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323 at [87]-[97]) and a failure by the Tribunal to address a contention which, if accepted, might establish that the applicant had a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason. The Tribunal is not a court. It is an administrative body operating in an environment which requires the expeditious determination of a high volume of applications. Each of the applications it decides is, of course, of great importance. Some of its decisions may literally be life and death decisions for the applicant. Nevertheless, it is an administrative body and not a court and its reasons are not to be scrutinised "with an eye keenly attuned to error". Nor is it necessarily required to provide reasons of the kind that might be expected of a court of law.
The inference that the Tribunal has failed to consider an issue may be drawn from its failure to expressly deal with that issue in its reasons. But that is an inference not too readily to be drawn where the reasons are otherwise comprehensive and the issue has at least been identified at some point. It may be that it is unnecessary to make a finding on a particular matter because it is subsumed in findings of greater generality or because there is a factual premise upon which a contention rests which has been rejected. Where however there is an issue raised by the evidence advanced on behalf of an applicant and contentions made by the applicant and that issue, if resolved one way, would be dispositive of the Tribunal's review of the delegate's decision, a failure to deal with it in the published reasons may raise a strong inference that it has been overlooked.
42 Thus, while s 501CA of the Migration Act imposes an obligation upon the Minister, and the Tribunal on review, to consider an applicant's representation, it does not follow that every statement contained therein is of itself a mandatory consideration with the consequence that a failure to consider some aspect of the representations amounts to jurisdictional error: Viane v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 263 FCR 531; [2018] FCAFC 116 at [67]-[69]; EVK18 v Minister for Home Affairs (2020) 274 FCR 598; [2020] FCAFC 49 at [10] and Minister for Home Affairs v Omar (2019) 272 FCR 589; [2019] FCAFC 188 at [34]-[36].
43 In this case, we are not persuaded that the Appellant discharged her onus of establishing on the balance of probabilities that the Tribunal overlooked a material representation advanced by the Appellant.
44 In her Honour's reasons addressing ground 4 of the judicial review application, the primary judge at [95] correctly stated that:
The question of whether a claim amounts to a "clearly articulated and substantial or significant representation" so as to give rise to an obligation on the Tribunal to consider and address it has been described as a "fact sensitive inquiry": Kwatra v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2021] FCA 58 at [34].
45 In this regard, we agree with the primary judge that the separation impact issue was a sufficiently clearly articulated claim to require the Tribunal to consider it, given the representation made by the Appellant to the Minister pursuant to s 501CA(3)(b) of the Migration Act which was therefore also before the Tribunal.
46 However, with respect, contrary to her Honour, in our view there was no reason why the Yusuf inference should not be drawn, given the way in which the Appellant presented her case before the Tribunal. In our view, the primary judge at [98]-[99] erred in placing too much emphasis upon the content of the relevant representation, when the correct approach in this case required careful attention to the case that the Appellant sought to make to the Tribunal. Significantly, the Appellant's legal practitioner, in formulating her SFIC before the Tribunal, comprehensively addressed each of the impediments the Appellant contended she would or may suffer if removed at paragraphs [65]-[67] and listed a number of miscellaneous considerations at paragraph [68] but made no contention that the impact of separation from the Appellant's dogs was at all relevant. Nor did the Appellant adduce any evidence before the Tribunal as to the costs of relocating the dogs to New Zealand and her inability to meet such cost. Viewed in that context, we are not satisfied that the Appellant established that the Tribunal's failure to mention her claims about her relationship with her dogs and the mental health impacts for her if she was returned to New Zealand and separated from them should have founded the inference that the Tribunal failed to consider these claims.