Consideration
34 The question for decision is whether the Tribunal impugned or 'went behind' the essential factual basis of the sentence imposed in respect of charge 1.
35 In a passage cited with approval by the majority in the Full Federal Court in HZCP (at [102]), the Victorian Court of Appeal in LLF at [42] explained:
…The authorities distinguish between cases where a previous conviction is the basis for a decision-maker or reviewing tribunal's jurisdiction and those where it is not. In the former case, the essential factual basis of the conviction (or sentence, as the case may be) is not able to be reviewed, but the circumstances of the conviction can be reviewed for a purpose other than impugning the conviction itself. In the latter case, the essential facts underlying the conviction are not immune from challenge and the conviction is conclusive only of the fact of the conviction itself, but there is a heavy onus on a person seeking to challenge the facts upon which the conviction is necessarily based.
(Citations omitted and emphasis added)
36 It is common ground that the present case falls in the fomer of the above two above categories. The foundation of the Tribunal's exercise of power was the imposition of a sentence of 12 months imprisonment for grooming a person under 16 years of age for sexual activity and the conviction of the applicant of two sexually based offences involving a child. It is the sentence, rather than the conviction which the applicant alleged was impugned by the Tribunal's decision.
37 The Full Court in SRT explained what is meant by impugning a sentence (at [40]):
The manner in which the Tribunal satisfies itself is determined by s 33 of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth). Under that provision, the Tribunal is not bound by the rules of evidence but may inform itself on any matter in such manner as it thinks appropriate. But where the decision to be reached depends upon there having been a sentence that satisfies s 201(c) of the Act, it is not open to the Tribunal to engage in any enquiry which would impugn the sentence. Accordingly, at least the essential facts found by a sentencing judge in the course of his or her deliberations concerning sentence and upon which the sentence is based must be accepted by the Tribunal. The most obvious example of such a fact is a finding as to the circumstances of the commission of the offence. The starting point for consideration by the Tribunal in relation to sentence, when concerned with the question of an order under section 200 of the Act, must be the findings made by the judge in imposing the sentence that satisfies the statutory description of a sentence of imprisonment for a period of not less than one year.
(Emphasis added.)
38 As Justice McKerracher explained in HZCP (at [77]):
As a matter of policy, it would be highly undesirable if Minister or the Tribunal exercising a decision-making power that is founded on an earlier decision of a criminal court could, in effect, challenge the propriety or correctness of that decision, or reopen findings on which the decision was necessarily based. To make a finding of "another reason" on facts necessarily inconsistent with the conviction and sentence would be an incongruous outcome. It has long been recognised that the adjudgment and punishment of criminal guilt is an exclusively judicial function. The adjudgment of guilt, and the determination of the punishment to be imposed as a consequence (including a sentence of imprisonment), fall within the central conception of judicial power. It is inconsistent with this principle at the heart of the separation of powers to suggest that an administrative decision-maker could come to a factual conclusion contrary to that of a court when making an adjudgment and punishment of criminal guilt which is, in turn, the precondition to that administrative decision-maker's power.
(Citations omitted and emphasis added.)
39 In a similar vein Justice Colvin said (at [181]-[182]):
In an administrative law context, some decision-making powers conferred by legislation depend upon the fact of a particular criminal conviction or sentence. They require its existence and confer no power to go behind it in the course of the exercise of the power. In such cases, the conviction or sentence becomes a foundation upon which the decision-maker must proceed (there may be others). The statutory authority reposed in the decision-maker does not extend to questioning the very matter the existence of which enlivens the power conferred by the statute…
In all such instances, the legislature itself has acted upon the basis of the confidence that can be entrusted to decisions in criminal cases. It has formed the view that the fact of the conviction or sentence shall provide the foundation for the exercise of the power. The form of legislation itself demonstrates that Parliament intended the decision-maker to act on the basis of the correctness of the conviction or sentence. Where the legislative provision takes such a form, there is no opportunity to go behind the conviction or sentence and urge the administrative decision-maker to take a different view. Usually, the legislative context will also require the further conclusion that the decision-maker is not entrusted with power to contradict the necessary factual basis for the conviction or the sentence. However, the extent to which the foundation for the power constrains the fact finding process of the decision-maker will depend upon a proper consideration of the legislative provision in each case.
(Emphasis added.)
40 In my view, on a fair reading of the Tribunal's reasons, it did not impugn the essential factual basis of the criminal sentence.
41 First, it is necessary to keep in mind that the applicant's knowledge of the victim's age was not a necessary element of his conviction for using a carriage service to 'groom' a person under 16 years of age for sexual activity contrary to s 474.27(1) of the Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth).
42 That section provides as follows:
A person (the sender) commits an offence if:
(a) the sender uses a carriage service to transmit a communication to another person (the recipient); and
(c) the sender does this with the intention of making it easier to procure the recipient to engage in sexual activity with the sender; and
(d) the recipient is someone who is, or who the sender believes to be, under 16 years of age; and
(e) the sender is at least 18 years of age.
43 Section 474.27(1) can be satisfied where either: (i) the recipient of the communication is under 16 years of age; or (ii) the sender believes the recipient is under 16 years of age. Before the County Court, it was uncontentious that the recipient was 11 years of age at the relevant time and it was therefore unnecessary for the prosecution to establish the applicant's belief as to the victim's age.
44 This is confirmed by the indictment, particulars and statement of offence in respect of charge 1, to which the applicant pleaded guilty. The indictment in respect of that charge was set out in the summary of statement of offence as follows:
Use a carriage service to groom a person under 16 years of age for sexual activity contrary to subsection 474.27(1) of the Criminal Code (Cth).
The particulars and statement of offence in the indictment stated:
The Director of Public Prosecutions for the Commonwealth of Australia, who prosecutes in this behalf for Her Majesty the Queen, charges that GALJINDER SINGH at Melbourne in Victoria between the 15th day of February 2014 and the 11th day of March 2014, being at least 18 years of age, used a carriage service to transmit a communication to [redacted] being someone who is under 16 years of age, with the intention of making it easier to procure [redacted] to engage in sexual activity with him.
The charge documents made no mention of the applicant's belief or knowledge as to the victim's age, and merely alleged that the victim was under 16 years of age at the time of the applicant's conduct.
45 That the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between15 February 2014 and 11 March 2014 was not a necessary element of his conviction is relevant to, but not of itself dispositive of, the question of whether such knowledge or belief was essential to the sentence.
46 Second, I do not accept the applicant's contention that his knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014 was an essential fact found by the sentencing judge and upon which the sentence is based.
47 There is little or nothing to show that the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age over that six day period was essential to the sentence or that the sentence was based in such a finding. Judge Parsons said little in the sentencing reasons in relation to the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014. The reasons (set out at [8] above) show that his Honour made only a passing reference to the applicant's knowledge or belief in that regard(at [4]), by noting that having been told by the victim on 15 February 2014 that she was 11 years old, he "resolved to press on" until he learned the truth of her age. That reference aside, his Honour did not address the applicant's knowledge or belief regarding her age.
48 The applicant contends that the sentence was imposed on the basis that his Honour accepted that he reasonably believed the victim of his grooming was under 16 years of age, but did not know between 15 and 21 February 2014 that she was 11 years old. But his Honour did not directly refer to that knowledge or belief and did not give it any significance in the sentencing reasons.
49 Furthermore, having regard to the following matters, it is inherently unlikely that Judge Parsons would have seen the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014 as essential to the sentence.
(1) The applicant was convicted of grooming a person under the age of 16 years for sexual activity. The victim was under 16 years of age, and the applicant submits that his Honour accepted that by 15 February 2014 the applicant reasonably believed that the victim was under 16 years of age. They were the primary facts underpinning the sentence.
(2) The applicant was convicted of grooming a person under the age of 16 years for sexual activity over the period 15 February 2014 until 11 March 2014, being a period of 25 days. His Honour relied upon and referred to the summary of prosecution opening which stated that the applicant was aware after meeting the victim on 21 February 2014 that she was 11 years old from. It is inherently unlikely that the applicant's knowledge of the victim's age during the first six days of the period was essential to the sentence when, for the majority of the period of his offending conduct, the applicant knew that the person he was grooming was an 11 year old child.
(3) His Honour said after meeting with and kissing the victim on 21 February 2014 the applicant "continued to communicate with her, including in a sexualised manner". The summary of prosecution opening stated that after meeting the victim the applicant "continued communicating with her, asking if she was now his girlfriend, telling her that he loved her and that he couldn't wait until he could hold her and kiss her again." The summary of prosecution also set out internet chat messages from the applicant to the victim, representative of the communications the applicant had with the victim after his meeting with her, including the following:
I want another kiss
U gonna feel horny when I'm gonna touch
I think I'm gonna kiss you everywhere on your body
Make sure you don't tell anyone about us meeting…otherwise we can both get in big trouble
Make sure…you don't…otherwise I'm gunna get in jail and my whole life gonna finish…also couple of another people too
The applicant only ceased his sexualised communications with the victim when he was arrested on 12 March 2014. It is inherently unlikely to have been essential to the sentence imposed on the applicant that, for the first six days of the period of his offending conduct, he did not know the victim was 11 years old, when he continued to communicate in a sexualised manner with her for almost three weeks after learning the victim's age on 21 February 2014.
50 In such circumstances it is appropriate to infer that his Honour did not consider the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014 to be essential to the sentence.
51 Third, I do not accept the applicant's contention that Judge Parsons' reliance on the reports of Ms Matthews and Dr Ong confirms or shows that the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014 was an essential fact in the sentence imposed.
52 His Honour expressly relied on those reports and made it clear that the opinions expressed regarding the low risk of the applicant reoffending were material to his view that the applicant's prospects for rehabilitation were "reasonably good". But the reports do not show that the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age was essential to the sentence.
53 The forensic history set out by Dr Ong does not make express reference to the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age during the period of 15 February 2014 to 21 February 2014. The report said that the victim had informed the applicant that "she was anywhere between 11, 15 or 17 years of age" but that at the time of kissing her (being 21 February 2014), the applicant "acknowledged that he suspected she may have been younger than 17 years of age". That acknowledgement was inconsistent with the the sentencing judge's acceptance (on the applicant's submissions) that the applicant reasonably believed his victim was under 16 years of age at 15 February 2014. There is little or nothing in the report to indicate that the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victim's age between 15 and 21 February 2014 had any significance in Dr Ong's conclusions, nor that his Honour treated that matter as essential to the sentence imposed.
54 Ms Matthews' reports put forward a similar factual account to that set out in the sentencing reasons (at [4]). The reports do not however treat as important any assertion by the applicant that he reasonably believed that his victim was under 16 years old but did not know that she was 11 years old at 15 February 2014, and there is nothing in the reasons for sentence to show that his Honour treated that as essential to the sentence. It is also worth noting that, notwithstanding its concerns about the correctness of Ms Matthews' opinion in light of the applicant's changed evidence, the Tribunal accepted her assessment that the applicant's risk of reoffending was low (at [68]).
55 Fourth, even if contrary to my view the applicant's knowledge or belief as to the victims age between 15 and 21 February 2014 was essential to the sentence, I am not persuaded that the Tribunal's consideration of the change in the applicant's evidence regarding that can properly be said to 'impugn' or 'go behind' the sentence in the manner described in the authorities.
56 Where a conviction or sentence is the basis for an administrative decision-maker or reviewing tribunal's jurisdiction, the decision-maker or tribunal may not review the essential factual basis of a conviction or sentence "but the circumstances of the conviction [or sentence] can be reviewed for a purpose other than impugning the conviction [or sentence]": LLF at [42]. The function of deciding whether to cancel a visa, which leads to removal from Australia, involves many different considerations to those involved in criminal sentencing and an applicant may present to the Tribunal matters pertaining to a conviction or sentence provided they do not contradict the facts a court found in arriving at a conviction or sentence: Re Du Pont v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1983] AATA 180 (Davies J); Beckner v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs [1991] FCA 331; (1991) 30 FCR 49 (Davies J).
57 In Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Daniele [1981] FCA 247; 39 ALR 649 at 653, Fisher and Lockhart JJ said the following in the context of a Tribunal decision setting asisde a decision to deport the respondent on the basis of a criminal conviction, under s 12 of the Act as it then was:
There are powerful reasons of public policy why the Tribunal cannot ignore the conviction or seek to set it at nought. That is not to say that the circumstances surrounding the commission of the offence or matters relating to the trial itself cannot be examined by the Tribunal. However such examination is for the purpose of enabling the Tribunal to make its own assessment of the nature and gravity of the applicant's criminal conduct and not for the purpose of assessing the propriety of the conviction or the fairness of the trial…The Tribunal's task includes assessing the deportee's character and personality, his criminal behaviour, the risk of repetition of criminal acts, the likelihood of his rehabilitation, the future risk to the Australian community if he remains here and the likelihood of harm to him if he is deported.
58 Having regard to the applicant's about-face in admitting in the second Tribunal hearing, amongst other things, that by 15 February 2014 he "definitely knew" that the victim of his grooming was only 11 years old and that he had been "covering up" in his previous evidence, the Tribunal concluded (at [61]) that it was not to the applicant's credit that he had maintained an untruthful position for over five years. That conclusion was unremarkable.
59 The Tribunal's finding that the applicant had been untruthful about that and other matters was relevant to its conclusions that:
(a) while accepting that the risk to the Australian community of the applicant reoffending was low, his risk of recidivism was "nevertheless real and cannot be considered remote or fanciful". The Tribunal considered such risk to be unacceptable to the Australian community, particularly given the seriousness of the potential harm from any further sexual offending against a child (at [69]-[70]); and
(b) the tolerance of the Australian community for crimes against children, particularly sexual crimes, is "particularly low", and the Australian community would expect the applicant's visa to be cancelled (at [91]).
60 Those matters were material to the Tribunal's ultimate conclusion (at [129]) that the primary considerations of "Protection of the Australian community" and "Expectations of the Australian community" weighed substantially against the applicant's application and outweighed the collective weight of other considerations which were in the applicant's favour. Those assessments were a necessary part of the Tribunal's task in deciding whether to exercise the discretion to cancel the applicant's visa, and by considering or taking into account the change in the applicant's evidence the Tribunal did not impugn or go behind the sentence imposed in the County Court.
61 Ground one of the application must be dismissed.