The appeal
38 The original notice of appeal raised three grounds. By an amended notice of appeal, the first three grounds were abandoned. Seven other grounds were raised and leave was sought to rely on an eighth and ninth ground.
39 The alleged errors were that the primary judge:
(1) applied the wrong test in that he directed himself to "compelling circumstances" instead of "compelling reasons"(ground 4);
(2) failed to consider that the sponsor's desire to fall pregnant "in and of itself, or in conjunction with other circumstances, may give rise to compelling reasons to waive the relevant criteria" (ground 5);
(3) based his determination on matters which were not, but needed to be, the subject of expert evidence in the area of in vitro fertilisation (ground 6);
(4) failed to find that the genuineness of the marriage was relevant to the question of compelling reasons (ground 7);
(5) failed to take into account that Mr Qin and his sponsor were "in a long-standing relationship for over four and a half years which gave rise to reasons of a strongly compassionate nature and hence 'compelling reasons'" (ground 8);
(6) failed to consider the sponsor's circumstances of undergoing in vitro fertilisation procedures in the absence of her husband as compelling reasons (ground 9); and
(7) erred in determining that whether or not Mr Qin was in a genuine relationship "would not have made any difference to the overall outcome" (ground 10).
40 Leave is required to raise the following grounds which were not raised in the court below:
(8) the Tribunal displayed apprehended bias by concluding that Mr Qin had remained in Australia after his visa was refused in order "to manipulate his circumstances to enable him to gather more evidence for his … application" (proposed ground 11);
(9) the Tribunal failed to "properly consider" that the delay in applying for a partner visa was attributable to the appellant's fear of persecution upon returning to China and that "in considering [Mr Qin's] reasons for wanting to return to China", it took into account irrelevant considerations (proposed ground 12 (a));
(10) the Tribunal erred in finding that no member of Mr Qin's family had "suffered harm at the hands of the Chinese government" (proposed ground 12 (b)).
41 Mr Qin sought leave to adduce further evidence in relation to proposed ground 12 (b).
42 There is no merit in any of the grounds.
43 The first ground (ground 4) is spurious. The primary judge referred to "compelling circumstances" rather than "compelling reasons" twice in his reasons: at [17] while summarising what the Tribunal said at [38] of its reasons ("in the view of the Tribunal, [the applicant] manipulated his circumstances in an attempt to give rise to favourable compelling circumstances") and at [36] when his Honour observed that Mr Qin needed to show "compelling circumstances for the criteria to be waived". There is no doubt his Honour was aware of the relevant test. The first reference was a direct quote from the Tribunal's reasons. In eight other places in his Honour's reasons he referred to "compelling reasons" (at [5], [8] (twice), [16], [23], [24], [39], and [41]). In any event, he was not applying the test. That was the Tribunal's task and, despite the reference by the Tribunal to "compelling circumstances", Mr Qin did not allege that the Tribunal applied the wrong test.
44 In ground 5 Mr Qin pleaded:
That in considering the comment of the [Tribunal] in relation to the sponsor falling pregnant to this effect [para. 40]: "that is a matter for the applicant and sponsor to decide in whatever circumstances they find themselves", the learned primary judge failed to consider that this circumstance in and of itself, or in conjunction with other circumstances, may give rise to compelling reasons to waive the relevant criteria in the Regulations.
45 This is a misrepresentation of what the primary judge said. The primary judge did not say or suggest that the sponsor's desires or needs could not amount to a compelling reason for not applying the Sch 3 criteria. Besides, neither the ground as pleaded nor the submissions advanced in support of it point to any jurisdictional error. The focus was on the merits of the Tribunal's decision. Mr Qin submitted that:
The emotional needs of the sponsor loom large in any humane consideration of her position.
The support of parents is no substitute for conjugal support. The observation [para 40] that it was not physically necessary for the appellant to be present in Australia shows that there was no considered appreciation of the difference to a prospective mother undergoing IVF treatment of her being with, or without, the father. There was no consideration given to the negative issues of travel by the sponsor should she seek IVF treatment.
46 No appealable error is disclosed. The specific attack on para 40 of the primary judge's reasons is the subject of the next ground.
47 I reject the submission made on Mr Qin's behalf that the Tribunal did not give the matter due consideration. It is plain from [33] and [34] of the Tribunal's reasons that it did (see [25] above).
48 Ground 6 attacks the primary judge's comment at [40] that "it was not physically necessary for the applicant to be present in Australia for the sponsor to undergo fertility treatment, provided that, he made appropriate arrangements prior to leaving to allow IVF, or other fertility treatment to take place in his absence". This was not a finding of fact but a passing observation. No expert evidence was required to support it as IVF (in-vitro fertilisation), by definition, involves the fertilisation of ova outside the womb in a tube or dish; "vitro" derives from the Latin for "glass". In any case, having regard to the fact that in the court below Mr Qin did not press the submission that the sponsor could only fall pregnant with his child if he were physically present in Australia, leave would be required to revive the proposition on appeal and leave was not sought.
49 By ground 7 Mr Qin alleged that, although the primary judge noted the Tribunal's comment about the genuineness of his marital relationship, he did not find that circumstance was relevant to the determination of "compelling reasons" for waiving the Sch 3 criteria.
50 He submitted that:
The court was bound to consider the circumstances of the appellant and then to subject those circumstances to a process of reasoning in assessing the existence or otherwise of compelling reasons. The position of the appellant is not to be seen 'in a vacuum" but in a context of the circumstances in which he finds himself, and the circumstances of those around him. In this case the appellant was in a genuine relationship. The prospective physical disintegration of that genuine relationship is outstandingly a feature to be considered. To dismiss or diminish its relevance is to gravely disregard the reality of the situation. The prospect of separating a couple who are in a genuine and committed relationship of demonstrated duration provides a compelling reason not to do so.
51 This submission is based on a fundamental misconception about the nature of the Court's role. Its task was not to assess whether there were compelling reasons to waive the Sch 3 criteria. That task was consigned exclusively to the Minister and, on review, to the Tribunal. As Brennan J put it in Attorney-General (NSW) v Quin (1990) 170 CLR 1 at 35-6:
The duty and jurisdiction of the court to review administrative action do not go beyond the declaration and enforcing of the law which determines the limits and governs the exercise of the repository's power. If, in so doing, the court avoids administrative injustice or error, so be it; but the court has no jurisdiction simply to cure administrative injustice or error. The merits of administrative action, to the extent that they can be distinguished from legality, are for the repository of the relevant power and, subject to political control, for the repository alone.
52 In some circumstances, of course, an administrative decision-maker may fall into jurisdictional error by not taking into account a relevant consideration. But that will only occur if first, the matter that was not considered was a matter the decision-maker was bound to take into account, either expressly or impliedly, and second, if the failure to do so was material to the outcome. See Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 39-40 (Mason J). Where, as here, the legislation confers on a decision-maker a discretion the terms of which are unconfined and is silent as to the factors the decision-maker is to take into account, whether a consideration is relevant in this sense requires an examination of the subject-matter, scope and purpose of the Regulations: Peko-Wallsend at 40 (Mason J). The submissions made on Mr Qin's behalf did not even embark on such an exercise.
53 It is by no means obvious that the genuineness of the marriage is a matter that must be taken into account in determining whether there are compelling reasons for not applying the Sch 3 criteria. Rather, cl 820.211 rests on the assumption that the marriage is genuine. After all, for the purposes of the Migration Act, spouses are defined as persons in a genuine and continuing relationship with each other: Migration Act, s 5F. As Allsop CJ observed in Choi v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 291 at [34], "[f]rom a practical point of view, since the existence of a genuine relationship is already a requirement for a partner visa, one must show additional impetus for the waiver of the relevant Sch 3 criteria".
54 That is not to say that the Tribunal was bound to ignore the nature of the relationship. It is not an irrelevant consideration in the Peko-Wallsend sense. A decision-maker, acting reasonably, could well take it into account and give it weight. Had the Tribunal considered that the marriage was not genuine, for example, that might well have been a compelling reason to refuse to waive compliance with the Sch 3 criteria. The fact that the Tribunal in the present case did not consider the genuineness of the marriage to be probative does not bespeak jurisdictional error.
55 In ground 8 Mr Qin pleaded that the primary judge acknowledged (at [37]) that the marriage was "over a year" and, in doing so, he failed to take into account that the relationship was "long-standing for over four and a half years which gave rise to reasons of a strongly compassionate nature" and were therefore "compelling reasons".
56 As the Minister submitted, this alleged error does not follow from what the primary judge said at [37]. In any case, this was just a complaint about the merits.
57 Ground 9 reads:
That in considering the matters specifically submitted to the [Tribunal] [para. 39] as being compelling reasons for waiving relevant criteria in the Regulations, the learned primary judge failed to consider the compelling reasons as they particularly related to the sponsor should she undergo in vitro fertilisation procedures in the absence of her husband, by not considering matters discretely personal to the sponsor, such as lack of conjugal intimacy, sense of isolation, coping with grief after ectopic pregnancy or denial of bonding, associated with being physically removed from her spouse.
58 Mr Qin's counsel laboured this argument on the hearing of the appeal, emphasising the point about the sponsor's grief after the ectopic pregnancy and the pain of separation. But it was no part of the primary judge's role to consider whether there were compelling reasons to waive the Sch 3 criteria. Nor is it the role of this Court on appeal.
59 In ground 10, Mr Qin alleged that the primary judge erred in [41] by holding that whether or not he was in a genuine relationship would not have made a difference to the outcome.
60 Despite the way in which this ground was expressed, Mr Qin made it clear in submissions that this was not a complaint that the primary judge erred by applying the wrong test of materiality. Rather, it was a repetition of the complaint that the Tribunal should have taken into account and given weight to the nature of the marital relationship. The nub of his written submissions is set out below:
It is submitted that the genuineness is highly important in this case. Suppose for the sake of argument a couple formed a relationship of convenience with a view to exploit the system: the contrast would be stark. Here we have a committed and long standing relationship between husband and wife. It is therefore a very proper consideration to take into account the deleterious effects of separating that couple, leading to compelling reasons not to do so. These negative effects include the repercussions for the spouse.
…
Apart from considering the wrong test in this regard ("compelling circumstances"), the genuineness and quality of the relationship are glaringly relevant circumstances which merited taking into account. This in order to comprehend the contextual importance of medical evidence concerning the sponsor and the utility of the support from the appellant.
61 Each of the two grounds must be rejected. For the reasons given above, I am not persuaded that the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error by the way in which it treated the evidence and submissions on this issue. While it was not bound to disregard it, it was not bound to take it into account either. It was open to the Tribunal to find that, despite credible evidence that the marriage was genuine, there were no compelling reasons to waive the Sch 3 criteria.