Consideration of the appeal
17 By its notice of appeal, the appellant contends that the Tribunal erred by failing to consider that, after the appellant's wife gave birth, she would need the appellant's support and presence in Australia. The appellant argued that the Tribunal wrongly confined its consideration to the period of the wife's pregnancy and failed to consider the period after the child would be born.
18 The appellant put the ground of appeal on three bases. He argued that the his support for his wife in the period after the birth of the child was a mandatory relevant consideration as per Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24 (Peko-Wallsend) at 39 per Mason J, and the Tribunal erred in failing to take the consideration into account. Alternatively, he argued that, having made the submission to the Tribunal that his wife required his support in the period after the birth of the child, the Tribunal was required to consider the submission as per Dranichnikov v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 73 ALD 321 (Dranichnikov) at [24] per Gummow and Callinan JJ, Hayne agreeing at [95], and that the Tribunal erred in failing to do so. To the extent that the appellant did not articulate the submission expressly, he says that the submission clearly emerges from the submissions and evidence before the Tribunal, requiring the Tribunal to consider the matter as per NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) (2004) 144 FCR 1 (NABE) at [55] and [68].
19 I reject the first basis upon which the appellant puts the appeal. As decided in Peko-Wallsend, the failure to take into account a relevant consideration can only constitute legal error if the consideration is one that the decision-maker is bound to take into account in making the decision. In the present case, clause 820.211(2)(d)(ii) of Schedule 2 of the Migration Regulations did not prescribe any considerations that the Minister must take into account in determining whether or not he or she is satisfied that there are compelling reasons for not applying the Schedule 3 criteria, and there is no basis in the subject matter, scope or purpose of the Migration Regulations or the Act for implying an obligation on the part of the Minister to consider the appellant's future role as father to the child when born. Very recently, in Singh v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCAFC 7, the Full Court of this Court considered a similar argument: that the Tribunal had committed a jurisdictional error as a result of failing to take into account the best interests of the child when it refused to waive the Schedule 3 criteria, contending that Article 3 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child required the Tribunal to make the best interests of the child a primary consideration in reaching its determination. The Full Court rejected that argument. In the course of the Court's reasons, Logan J concluded (at [7]) that "neither expressly nor by necessary implication does the regulation make the existence of an Australian-citizen child relevant in the sense explained by Sir Anthony Mason in Minister for Aboriginal affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24, at 39-40"; Derrington J (with whom Reeves J agreed) likewise concluded (at [66]) that "There was no obligation on the Tribunal to take into account as a mandatory consideration, in ascertaining whether 'compelling reasons' existed, the interests of the appellant's child - let alone make the interests of that child a primary consideration".
20 I accept the second and third bases upon which the appellant put his appeal. The appellant's submissions concerning the needs of his wife in the immediate future were substantial, clearly articulated arguments relying upon established facts in the sense considered in Dranichnikov. As discussed below, to the extent that the appellant did not clearly articulate a submission concerning his wife's needs after the birth of the child, in my view that issue clearly arose on the materials in the sense discussed in NABE. Although I accept the bases upon which the appellant puts the appeal, I reject the appeal because, in my view, the Tribunal gave proper consideration to the appellant's submissions.
21 It appears likely that the appellant's wife was unaware of her pregnancy at the time of the delegate's decision (30 June 2016), as the evidence includes a medical certificate dated 21 July 2016 stating that, as at that date, the appellant's wife was 6 weeks and 6 days pregnant. In a submission to the delegate dated 6 June 2016, the appellant stated that his wife was suffering from anxiety, which required the appellant to be with her and not leave Australia.
22 The appellant made submissions to the Tribunal about his wife's pregnancy. In late July 2016, the appellant sent a short submission to the Tribunal stating (errors in original):
I am writing in regards to my partner visa refusal as I didn't meet schedule 3 criteria. In this letter I am requesting you that I am in a genuine relationship with my wife Ramandeep Kaur. Now she got pregnant with 7 weeks as I have already provided the evidence of her pregnancy report with supporting documents. Apparently, I can't leave her in this condition alone. She needs emotional and physical support in this stage. Apart from that, she hasn't got any family or friends in Australia. So I have to look after her. Please consider my request for my partner visa application as per my circumstances.
23 The submission was directed to the needs of the appellant's wife and was focussed on the period of pregnancy. That can be seen from the statements that the appellant "can't leave her in this condition alone" (where condition is a reference to her pregnancy) and the appellant's wife "needs emotional and physical support in this stage (where "stage" is a reference to her pregnancy). It is understandable that the appellant's submissions were directed to those matters, because they reflected an immediate concern; his wife was 7 weeks pregnant and the appellant was focussed on her need during the expected 33 further weeks (7 months) of pregnancy.
24 The appellant reiterated that submission during the hearing before the Tribunal. By that time, the appellant's wife was 19 or 20 weeks pregnant with an expected delivery in March 2017. The transcript of the hearing shows that the appellant referred to the fact of his wife's pregnancy, and that they were having a child, on a number of occasions, and put forward his wife's needs and his support for those needs as compelling reasons for the waiver of the Schedule 3 criteria. The appellant submitted that his wife would be unable to survive without the appellant in Australia; that he now had work rights and can undertake work, both for his wife and in the future for their child.
25 It is clear from the decision record that the primary submission advanced by the appellant as to why the Tribunal should waive the Schedule 3 criteria was that the appellant's wife, who was then some 20 weeks pregnant, required his emotional, physical and financial support. Understandably, the appellant's submissions were focussed on the immediate future, being the period of his wife's pregnancy. If the appellant had to leave Australia in order to apply for a partner visa, the impact on his wife would be immediate and that would occur during her pregnancy. It could not be known at that time how long the appellant would need to be offshore pending the processing of an offshore partner visa application, and whether that period might extend to a time after the birth of the child. Nevertheless, the appellant's submissions concerning the needs of his wife would clearly extend to the period after the birth of the child. In that sense, the concerns raised by the appellant could properly be understood as applying to both the period of his wife's pregnancy and the period after birth.
26 In my view, the Tribunal gave proper consideration to the appellant's submission. However, for the reasons set out earlier, it concluded that the appellant's submission did not weigh strongly in favour of waiving the Schedule 3 criteria. Three points should be noted.
27 First, the Tribunal was aware of the wife's pregnancy. It expressly referred to the fact that the appellant's wife was 20 weeks pregnant, it discussed her health during the pregnancy and noted the expected delivery date ([at 24]). While the Tribunal referred to the fact that "There is no Australian-child of the relationship" (at [17]), I reject the appellant's submission that this indicates that the Tribunal disregarded the fact that the appellant and his wife were expecting a child and that, in a further 20 weeks, the child would be expected to be born.
28 Second, the Tribunal assessed the support that the appellant claimed he would be able to provide to his wife. The Tribunal expressed its findings at [27] and [28] as follows:
27. The applicant and the sponsor have made only very general statements about how the sponsor's physical or mental health or wellbeing is dependent on care or support that the applicant provides. The generality of those statements, and the reservations that the Tribunal has about the applicant's claims, lead the Tribunal to be not satisfied that he is the source of support to her he claims to be. In terms of the pregnancy, the Tribunal does not accept that the sponsor requires significant care or assistance from the applicant notwithstanding that she is experiencing some pregnancy related issues including morning sickness and lower back pain.
28. The sponsor indicates that she also needs the applicant to provide for her financially. The evidence before the Tribunal is that the applicant has had no work rights since 10 February 2010, although he was recently given work rights in September 2016. He does not have a job and has not received any income from other sources. The evidence would indicate that the applicant and the sponsor have lived from the sponsor's savings since March 2016 and have received some assistance from the applicant's friend. The sponsor is now receiving some salary although it is limited since she is working casual one day or so per week. The applicant said she had applied for Centrelink recently but this had not been finalised because she did not have the relevant paperwork. There is no evidence to suggest that the applicant has financially supported the sponsor at this time.
29 I reject the appellant's submission that those findings by the Tribunal are only addressed to the future period of the wife's pregnancy. In my view, that is not a fair reading of the findings. In considering whether there were compelling reasons to waive the Schedule 3 criteria, the Tribunal addressed the asserted consequences of the appellant leaving Australia to apply for a partner visa. That was a forward looking assessment, having regard to presently known facts. The Tribunal's reasons, fairly read, express its findings on that forward looking assessment, without limiting itself to the immediate future or the period of pregnancy. The Tribunal expressed doubt about, and ultimately gave little weight to, the appellant's submissions concerning the appellant's support for his wife, emotionally, physically or financially. In my view, the findings were directed to the foreseeable future and included the period after the birth of the child. The fact that the Tribunal referred to the wife's pregnancy in the last sentence of paragraph 27 does not support a conclusion that the Tribunal's consideration was confined to that period; nor does the statement, in the last sentence of paragraph 28, that the appellant had not supported his wife financially to that point in time, indicate that the Tribunal was not considering the foreseeable future.
30 Third, the Tribunal ultimately concluded that the appellant's reason for waiving the Schedule 3 criteria, to provide support for his wife, then 20 weeks pregnant, did not weigh strongly in determining whether there were compelling reasons to waive the criteria. The Tribunal weighed more strongly the appellant's conduct in his previous protection claims (which the Tribunal found to have involved fabrications) and the appellant's long period of unlawful residence in Australia (at [29]).
31 In my view, reading the Tribunal's reasons fairly and as a whole, the Tribunal gave proper consideration to the appellant's submissions concerning his wife's need for his support and presence in Australia in the immediate future, which included the period of his wife's pregnancy and the period after the expected birth of their child.