Facts
21 The following statement of the facts is based on the Reasons, the documents in the Court Book, and the other documents that were in evidence in this proceeding (referred to above).
22 In 2001, the applicant arrived in Australia at the age of nine years.
23 In February 2012, the applicant was convicted of the offence of intentionally causing injury and the offence of affray.
24 In April 2012, the applicant was convicted of recklessly causing injury.
25 In July 2014, the applicant was convicted of recklessly causing serious injury, recklessly causing injury and acting as a security guard without a licence. For the offence of recklessly causing serious injury, he was sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment. For the offence of recklessly causing injury, he was sentenced to 10 months' imprisonment, with five months to be served concurrently with the first sentence.
26 On 3 August 2015, the cancellation decision was made.
27 The applicant applied under s 501CA of the Migration Act for revocation of the cancellation decision.
28 On 26 February 2016, a delegate of the Minister decided not to revoke the cancellation decision.
29 The applicant applied to the Tribunal for review of that decision.
30 On 10 May 2016, the first hearing before the Tribunal took place.
31 On 17 May 2016, the Tribunal affirmed the decision under review. This decision was later set aside by consent by this Court.
32 On 20 July 2016, while the applicant was in immigration detention at Christmas Island, an incident took place (referred to in these reasons as the "July 2016 Incident"). During the incident a detainee (who it is convenient to refer to as "Mr L") was assaulted by several other detainees. In the course of the incident, the applicant punched Mr L. The evidence in relation to the incident is discussed later in these reasons.
33 On 24 August 2016, this Court made orders by consent quashing the first decision of the Tribunal. The orders have been set out above. As a result, there was a need for a new hearing to take place before the Tribunal.
34 On 19 January 2017, a second hearing before the Tribunal (differently constituted) commenced. The Tribunal was constituted by a Deputy President, a Senior Member and a Member of the Tribunal. The hearing was conducted afresh in the sense that no regard was had to the material before, or the findings of, the Tribunal on the earlier occasion. It is necessary to describe the hearing in some detail in order to provide proper context for the procedural fairness issue.
35 The applicant was represented by counsel at the hearing. The Minister was represented by a solicitor. Although the process was inquisitorial rather than adversarial in character, the hearing was conducted with each party presenting evidence and submissions. A number of witnesses were called on behalf of the applicant (including the applicant himself) and these were cross-examined by the solicitor acting for the Minister.
36 The applicant's counsel presented an opening submission (Tribunal transcript, pp 2-4). Reference was made to the applicant's offences. Counsel said: "We do not eschew the fact that those were serious, very serious, involved serious injury". He submitted that the offences had occurred in a particular context and that "the tribunal will be comfortably satisfied that that context is most unlikely to repeat".
37 Counsel for the applicant referred to the applicant's brother and sister and submitted that there was a "parallel" between the applicant and his brother in that they were both "troubled youths [who had] spent some time in the criminal justice system" and "the purposes of sentencing [had been] effective" in turning around their lives (Tribunal transcript, p 3, lines 15-27).
38 In the course of the opening, the applicant's counsel referred to the July 2016 Incident. He said (Tribunal transcript, p 4):
The tribunal will also hear evidence about [the applicant's] behaviour in detention and it's fair to say, one particular incident will take a considerable amount of attention where [the applicant] was involved in, what can only be described as an act of violence. The tribunal will see that that was in essence, self-defence but I'll let the evidence speak for itself on that.
39 Although witness statements had been prepared, counsel for the applicant indicated that he wanted to lead evidence-in-chief orally from each of the witnesses, including the applicant (Tribunal transcript, p 5, lines 4-7; p 6, lines 6-10). The Tribunal was content with this course and the hearing proceeded in this way.
40 The solicitor for the Minister did not present an opening submission (Tribunal transcript, p 6).
41 The first witness was the applicant. Counsel for the applicant took him through a number of different matters, including his relationships with his family and church community, his criminal offences and what he had learned from his period of imprisonment. Counsel then led evidence from the applicant about how he had handled some potentially difficult or provocative situations that had occurred while the applicant was in prison or immigration detention (Tribunal transcript, pp 19-28). Counsel then addressed the July 2016 Incident. The applicant's evidence was as follows (Tribunal transcript, pp 28-29):
Now, there's another incident on Christmas Island where you punched a man. Do you remember that incident?---Yes.
Could you tell the tribunal the background to that incident?---Well, I didn't find out till later what really happened, like on that day I was walking to the canteen to go get my food and I hear this yelling at C Block - I'm from B Block - and then I was walking past C Block and on the second floor there was some yelling going on and all I saw was this Iranian fellow with a home-made shiv.
What's a shiv?---A knife. And - - -
Did you see what he made it from? Could you see that it - - -?---He had it from the - what's it called - the dustpan - the dust?
Yes, the broom handle? Would that be it?---Yes.
So you could see this clearly?---Yes. It was light, yes.
And you could see this clearly?---Yes.
And you could see - - -?---It was light yes.
Could you see whether it was sharp?---Yes, it had a point, yes.
Yes?---Yes, he sharpened it every night, you know, and then I saw them charging at my - at my friends and then a scuffle happened on the top stairs.
And where are you at this stage?---I was on the bottom.
Yes?---And then where I was standing was right in front of where the stairwell is and as he was running down he was running towards me and it happened - it happened fast but all I saw him was angry with a shiv and running towards me so I didn't take any risk, so I threw one punch and that was it and as he dropped it just went crazy from there. Everyone just jumped in and then I realised (indistinct) so I stood back.
What did you do?---I just stood back and then - then I saw the manager run in, that's when I started like pulling back the boys and this guy was just bleeding on the ground.
So you remember this incident clearly?---Yes.
And is that where you used violence?---Yes.
Why did you use violence?---You know, I just thought "he's got a shiv".
So you saw that he had a weapon?---Yes. And he charged - and he was charging at me.
Did you think he might use that weapon against you?---Yes.
When you say he was charging at you what does that mean?---I made like - he was just like running towards me.
He was running toward you?---Yes.
Did he seem calm - angry?---No, he was angry. And then from there I just didn't take no chances (indistinct).
"Didn't take no chances," what kind of chances? What were you worried about?---I wasn't going to wait for him just, you know, to stab me, so I can - I don't know, (indistinct).
Now, you've punched him so he must have come close enough for you to punch him?---Yes.
Was he - when he came that close to you could you still see the shiv - the knife?---Yes, it was in his left hand.
And were you worried that you might get attacked by that shiv?---Yes.
How do you feel about having used violence?---I like - when I started to hit him in that instant like I knew I stuffed up, like - like it hurt me like I had to - I had to use it again. I didn't really want to, I don't know it was just in my head like "You stuffed up again".
Do you think you had any other choice?---No, because it happened fast, you know, like I don't know - it just all happened fast for me. Before I knew it he was on the ground and then everyone jumped up and then, like, I actually started regretting it straight away because I didn't - I didn't want to use violence again and because everything like from my family, like struggling with pay, you know, making ends meet, like all of that kicked in and I - in my head I was just planning that and that's all for nothing now, "You've done this - you stuffed up and like all that money has gone to waste now" you know, like.
42 During his evidence-in-chief, the applicant also said that he saw his brother as a role model in his life (Tribunal transcript, p 32, lines 30-37).
43 In the course of the applicant's evidence-in-chief, his counsel tendered the applicant's statement dated 22 December 2016 (Tribunal transcript, p 36). This statement included the following in relation to the July 2016 Incident (at [29]):
I have been involved in one incident in detention. Another detainee from Iran threatened my friends with a knife. He charged at them. It was in the balcony of a stairwell - I saw and heard what was happening from downstairs through the railings. They punched him and he ran away, running down the stairs towards me holding the knife, and I punched him when he got to me in defence, because he was running at me with a knife in his hand and I thought he was going to attack me. I didn't know why he had attacked my friends or anything, all I knew is that he had a knife and had been aggressive. I was pretty shocked in the situation. The others then caught up and attacked him, which I was not involved in.
44 The Minister's solicitor then cross-examined the applicant. After addressing a number of other topics, the solicitor turned to the July 2016 Incident (Tribunal transcript, pp 46-49). The solicitor indicated to the Tribunal that she had filed an incident report (being the document referred to in these reasons as the "Serco Report"). The solicitor then asked the applicant questions about where he was when he heard the fight. This included the following exchange (Tribunal transcript, pp 47-48):
And so when the victim ran down the stairwell where did you position yourself? Were you still at the entranceway - were you still watching? It's not the case that you ran to the - you put yourself at the bottom of the stairwell to see what was going on?---No. I was already there.
You were where - sorry - in the - - -?---Because where the entrance is that's where also the entrance is to the stairwell so I was already there.
Okay, so you were at the bottom of the stairwell?---Yes.
And the victim is running away from the people who are beating him up. He ran down the stairs and is it the case that he ran out the entrance to the stairwell and you punched him?---All I recall is that the guy just was just running towards me with a knife - with a shiv.
Right. Well, I put it to you that you were in a different area of the detention block and you specifically positioned yourself at the entrance to the stairwell in order to hit the victim, is that right?---I don't recall that.
45 After further cross-examination in relation to the applicant's time in detention, and just before the luncheon adjournment, the following exchange occurred (Tribunal transcript, p 55):
[MINISTER'S SOLICITOR]: … I did want to raise something with the tribunal. I didn't intend to tender this and I haven't advised my friend of this at all but I have a copy of the CCTV footage from the incident that occurred in the detention centre and so my friend may object to me tendering that but I think it should be before the tribunal.
DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Well, I think - - -
[MINISTER'S SOLICITOR]: I wouldn't object to my friend asking questions about it, if he wants to view it.
DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Maybe he needs to have a look at it though.
[APPLICANT'S COUNSEL]: It is worse than that, Deputy President. I had finished my questions and I finished my questions based on the best evidence that was available to me and the instructions from my client. It is unfair for this evidence to be introduced because I don't have a chance [for] you unhear my questions and then ask them afresh with the benefit of the CCTV footage.
DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Yes.
[APPLICANT'S COUNSEL]: I am confident it says nothing more than what is recorded in the Serco report because the Serco report was produced off the back of that but it would be unfair, as a general proposition, to introduce it at this stage. Even if I saw it and I had no objection, there is a general policy about fairness.
[MINISTER'S SOLICITOR]: I am in the tribunal's hands. I will retract it. I won't press it.
46 The Tribunal then adjourned for lunch. When the hearing resumed after the luncheon adjournment, the Minister's solicitor sought an adjournment in order to enable the Minister to rely on the CCTV footage. The passage from the transcript is as follows (p 57):
[MINISTER'S SOLICITOR]: If I might make an application before we start, the Minister seeks to make an application to adjourn the proceeding. It's in relation to the CCTV footage, which I foreshadowed with the tribunal prior to the break. In the Minister's view - and the Minister initially did not intend to rely on the CCTV footage, because of the way that the matter is outlined in the Serco report. However, the evidence which has come out this morning suggests that, for the tribunal to be fully aware of the incident and to be fully appraised of the facts, that this footage should be before the tribunal. The Minister, therefore in order to make it procedurally fair, seeks an adjournment to enable the applicant to consider the footage and consider how that would impact on their case, and that is the basis for our adjournment. I understand my friend has something different to say about that.
[APPLICANT'S COUNSEL]: I do, Member. Obviously, rules of evidence don't apply, the rules [of] fairness do. [The Minister's solicitor], prior to lunch, purported to tender it and then withdrew and now is purporting to tender it again. It's probably not bound by the withdrawal, but it's there, first. Second, the justification appears to be that evidence this morning is somehow inconsistent with the Serco reports. Members, I think you have the Serco reports before you. It might be worthwhile going to them, just to see how that is so. …
47 Further discussion then ensued. Counsel for the applicant made the following submissions (Tribunal transcript, pp 60-61):
[APPLICANT'S COUNSEL]: … it would seem to be a clear example of unreasonable forensic behaviour by [the] Minister, in that they had this document a long time ago, and they have just given it to us. It also seems forensic decisions were made not to use the document - the document in the CCTV footage. I haven't seen the document, I haven't reviewed the footage, but I can observe as a practitioner with some experience, that when one prepares their case, when one gives advice, when one develops a case theory, when one develops their questions in examination-in-chief, one does so based on an understanding of the case for them and a case against them. It's essentially, then, put by the Minister now that there is an additional piece of evidence, effectively, against us. That will precipitate a need for us to make an application to reconstitute the tribunal, because the case theory that we've developed - if it is true, if the Minister's identification of something in that is actually against us, there will have to be a reconstitution of the tribunal.
…
[APPLICANT'S COUNSEL]: … If evidence is to be put before a tribunal or before a court to be relied upon, against a party, they must have the opportunity to see it before developing their case. If that was not realistically possible, discretion may be exercised in favour of letting it in, subject to whatever is required to remedy that prejudice. If it is before a jury, it is almost inconceivable that the trial could continue before that jury. And if it's before a decision maker who has, it seems what the Minister is doing, putting an issue, questions of credibility, the well is poisoned. The well is poisoned. And there will always be, in my submission, at least two explanations as to why. Recollection from bare memory and the CCTV footage may not entirely [coincide]. We don't know that they don't, they may well [coincide]. But, assuming they don't, there are always two explanations. One, someone is not telling the truth, or two, their recollection is not perfect. The former is devastating, the latter can be explained. But if the applicant has the opportunity to see that CCTV footage, it might have jogged his memory and he might have remembered the incident better.
48 The Tribunal then adjourned for a short time. Upon resuming, and following some further discussion, the Deputy President indicated that: the Tribunal would grant an adjournment to enable the applicant and his counsel to view the CCTV footage; and, so as not to waste the rest of the day, the applicant should proceed to call his other witnesses (who were character witnesses) (Tribunal transcript, p 66, lines 15-28). The hearing then proceeded with the evidence of these other witnesses.
49 One of the witnesses called on behalf of the applicant was his brother. He gave evidence of the closeness of his relationship with the applicant and said that it was "fair to say" that the applicant looked up to him as a role model (Tribunal transcript, pp 99-101).
50 At the conclusion of the first hearing day, the Minister sought to tender the DVD. The Tribunal made clear that it was not accepting the tender at this stage, and so it would not be viewing the DVD (Tribunal transcript, pp 125-126).
51 The hearing resumed on 2 March 2017. The first matter that was addressed was the Minister's application to tender the DVD of the CCTV footage. The applicant's counsel indicated that the applicant had reviewed the footage and that a supplementary statement of the applicant had been prepared and provided to the Tribunal. The parties' representatives then made submissions as to whether the DVD of the CCTV footage should be admitted. In the course of these submissions, the Minister's solicitor submitted (Tribunal transcript, p 131):
Therefore, the Minister seeks to tender this evidence because it is now relevant to the proceedings and it is important that the tribunal use this footage to have a full understanding and appreciation of the incident, as it occurred, and not as the applicant says it occurs in the two statements that he's now given. He admits, and I'll just quote, that his recall of the incident was not entirely accurate and has now provided a statement. Having looked at the CCTV footage, he gives a different version of what occurred and, in my submission, that goes to his credit as a witness and it is important for the tribunal to view that footage because that is the best evidence available.
52 The applicant's counsel made submissions in response. The Tribunal asked how the applicant was disadvantaged by the Minister's conduct (Tribunal transcript, p 135). The applicant's counsel responded that the applicant and his representatives understood that they had the totality of the evidence (Tribunal transcript, p 135, lines 4-12). He handed up a copy of a request under the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cth) which included a request for recordings. He stated: "What is also clear is that, from our perspective, we were entitled to assume, and conclude, that it didn't exist at the time of the tribunal hearing" (Tribunal transcript, p 135). The applicant's counsel also submitted that admission of the DVD "opens up a submission for the Minister about credit, a submission which we have said in our submissions shouldn't be accepted, but putting that aside, it opens up a submission and gives the Minister a tactical advantage" (Tribunal transcript, p 137, lines 25-28). The applicant's counsel did not make an application for the Tribunal to reconstitute.
53 After a short adjournment, the Tribunal stated that it had decided that "we should see the video" and that it would provide its reasons later (Tribunal transcript, p 140, lines 1-4). This was, effectively, a decision to admit the DVD into evidence. The Tribunal adjourned for a short time to view the DVD. The Tribunal then marked the DVD as an exhibit (Tribunal transcript, p 142). The Tribunal also accepted into evidence the applicant's 1 March 2017 statement (Tribunal transcript, p 143). In this statement, the applicant sought to explain some inconsistencies between his previous account of the July 2016 Incident and the CCTV footage of that incident. In particular, he accepted, at [6] of his statement, that he "had not been at the stairwell from the start like [he had] thought".
54 The hearing then continued with further cross-examination of the applicant by the Minister's solicitor, followed by re-examination and some questions from the Tribunal (including about the CCTV footage).
55 One further witness was called on behalf of the applicant. The parties' representatives then presented closing submissions.
56 In the course of the applicant's closing submissions, his counsel made the following submission in relation to the applicant's brother (Tribunal transcript, p 176):
Before I leave the topic, I made a note to myself about risk. There is one additional feature of this case which is important in risk. That is the applicant's brother. He is a role model - or a model to his brother. We have heard about that. The evidence was that they were as tight as two humans can be and one brother subbed in for the other when a parenting role was required.
[The brother] had also had a chequered past which included drugs and violence. Since his release from detention - prison - he has been a model citizen and the tribunal should take substantial confidence from that example - a living example for David to follow and also treat it as an indicia of David's likely path should he be released.
57 In the course of closing submissions, the Minister challenged the applicant's credit on the basis of the CCTV footage (Tribunal transcript, pp 182-183):
The version given by [the applicant] regarding that incident and his evidence, was that he was acting in self-defence. The victim came at him with a shiv and initially he stated that he didn't position himself at the bottom of the stairs but now he has accepted that the version of events which happened in the CCTV footage. In the Minister's submission the applicant gave a more favourable version in a statement to the tribunal and that inconsistent version given by the applicant should, in the Minister's submission, cause the tribunal to hold some concerns with the applicant's credibility.
58 The Tribunal reserved its decision at the conclusion of closing submissions.