Ground one: failure to take account of certain matters
27 By the first ground that he advances by way of challenge to the Tribunal's Decision, the applicant submits that the Tribunal failed to take account of certain, relevant considerations or otherwise exercised its discretion unreasonably. Two such considerations are identified. The first is that, having been placed into the care of a paedophile when he was young, the applicant was the victim of a "breach of the duty of care owed to [him] by the state". The second is that he is the subject of the Guardianship Orders, which has various "practical and legal implications".
28 In terms, the ground suggests two species of jurisdictional error. It is convenient to deal first with the allegation of legal unreasonableness. The contention that the applicant advances is that, having regard to the considerations that he lists, it was not legally reasonable for the Tribunal to exercise the discretion reposed in it to not revoke the Cancellation.
29 The principles of legal unreasonableness were conveniently summarised in DLJ18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2018] FCA 1650, [21] (Thawley J) as follows:
The principles with respect to "legal unreasonableness" are also well established:
(1) The question of whether a decision is legally unreasonable is directed to whether or not the decision or action is within the scope of the statutory authority conferred on the decision-maker; it involves an assessment of whether the decision was lawful having regard to the scope, purpose and objects of the statutory source of power: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Stretton [2016] FCAFC 11; (2016) 237 FCR 1; Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZVFW [2018] HCA 30; 92 ALJR 713 at [54]- [60] (Gageler J); [78]-[79] (Nettle and Gordon JJ); [135] (Edelman J).
(2) A decision may be found to be legally unreasonable having regard to the scope, purpose and objects of the statutory source of power:
(a) because it is "illogical", but an inference of unreasonableness is not to be drawn only where a decision appears to be irrational: SZVFW at [10] (Kiefel CJ); [82] (Nettle and Gordon JJ); Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li …(2013) 249 CLR 332 at [68] (Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ).
(b) if it "lacks an evident and intelligible justification": Li …(2013) 249 CLR 332 at [76] (Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ); SZVFW at [10] (Kiefel CJ), [82] (Nettle and Gordon JJ);
(c) if it is arbitrary, capricious, lacking in common-sense or plainly unjust: Stretton at [11] per (Allsop CJ, with whom Griffiths and Wigney JJ relevantly agreed at [87], [90]); Muggeridge v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 200; (2017) 255 FCR 81 at [35] (Flick, Perry and Charlesworth JJ).
Those observations were not disturbed on appeal.
30 I do not accept that the Tribunal's conclusion can be impugned as legally unreasonable because of the considerations to which the applicant points. It appears to have been reached in an orthodox way: namely, by weighing competing considerations, the import of which was reasonably open to debate. It cannot be said that the decision not to revoke the Cancellation was illogical, or lacked an evident or intelligible basis, or was otherwise not a conclusion that could reasonably have been drawn.
31 The applicant's more forceful submission was that the Tribunal's Decision was jurisdictionally unsound because, in the course of making it, the Tribunal failed to take account of the considerations to which he adverts.
32 In Nguyen v Minister for Home Affairs [2021] FCA 155, [34]-[36] (Snaden J), I made the following observations about the Tribunal's obligation to consider what is advanced by an applicant seeking to revoke the cancellation of a visa:
There is no doubt that the Tribunal was obliged to consider the submissions that the applicant advanced in support of revocation of the Cancellation: Minister for Home Affairs v Omar (2019) 272 FCR 589, 602-604 [34] (Allsop CJ, Bromberg, Robertson, Griffiths and Perry JJ); DQM18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCAFC 110, [23]-[34] (Bromberg and Mortimer JJ), [153]-[158] (Snaden J); Navoto v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCAFC 135, [86]-[89] (Middleton, Moshinsky and Anderson JJ); Minister for Home Affairs v Buadromo (2018) 267 FCR 320 ("Buadromo"), 332 [42] (Besanko, Barker and Bromwich JJ). Doing so required engagement in an active intellectual process directed at the representations that were advanced: CAR15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2019) 272 FCR 131 ("CAR15"), 149-150 [76]-[79] (Allsop CJ, Kenny and Snaden JJ); Buadromo, 332 [42]-[43] (Besanko, Barker and Bromwich JJ).
A finding that a minister "…has not engaged in an active intellectual process will not lightly be made and must be supported by clear evidence, bearing in mind that the judicial review applicants carry the onus of proof": Carrascalao v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 252 FCR 352, 364 [48] (Griffiths, White and Bromwich JJ); see also CAR15, 149-150 [76] (Allsop CJ, Kenny and Snaden JJ), GBV18 v Minister for Home Affairs (2020) 274 FCR 202, 219 [32] (Flick, Griffiths and Moshinsky JJ) and CTB19 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2020] FCAFC 166, [15] (McKerracher, Kerr and Wigney JJ). In Applicant WAEE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2003) 236 FCR 593 (French, Sackville and Hely JJ), the court held (at 604 [47]) that an:
…inference that the [decision maker - in that case, a 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.
In assessing whether or not a court should infer that a decision-maker failed to consider a submission or evidence advanced by an applicant, regard must be had to "…the facts of each particular case and the…reasons as a whole[, and t]he reasons must be construed in a practical and common-sense manner and not with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error": Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Sabharwal [2018] FCAFC 160, [76] (Perram, Murphy and Lee JJ).
33 Determining whether or not an administrative decision-maker took account of something in the course of making a particular decision involves an evaluative judgment, which must be made taking into account the available evidence and reasonable inferences as to all of the facts and circumstances relevant to the decision: Carrascalao v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 252 FCR 352, 364 [47] (Griffiths, White and Bromwich JJ). That judgment is formed as a function of impression, resting upon a qualitative assessment as to whether the decision-maker has, as a matter of substance, had regard to the representations that were made: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Maioha (2018) 267 FCR 643, 654 [45] (Rares and Robertson JJ, Flick J agreeing in the result).
34 Decision makers (including The Tribunal) are not obliged to recite (or make findings about) every issue that is put before them or considered in the course of making a decision. In Minister for Home Affairs v Buadromo (2018) 267 FCR 320 (Besanko, Barker and Bromwich JJ) - which, like this matter, was a case concerning the application of s 501CA(4) of the Act - the full court (at 332 [46]) made the following observations:
A finding of fact may not be required if the claim or issue is irrelevant or if it is subsumed within a claim or issue of greater generality or, to use an example advanced by the appellant in the course of submissions in this case, even assuming fact or proposition A, I (the decision-maker) do not accept that fact or proposition B follows. These are only examples and it is not possible to be comprehensive.
35 The applicant complains that the Tribunal did not squarely address that his placement into the care of a paedophile when he was a boy amounted to a breach of a duty of care owed to him by the state. His contention before the Tribunal was apparent enough: he submitted that "another reason" why the Cancellation ought to be revoked was that his criminal offending was the product of his troubled upbringing, which in turn was a function of bureaucratic negligence.
36 On any view, the Tribunal was alive to the fact that the applicant had been "placed into" the care of a paedophile when young. Its reasons record as much, as well as the fact that the applicant had been a "Ward of the State" (above, [21]). Although the Tribunal's Decision does not, in terms, equate those events with the breach of a duty of care at law, there can be no doubt that the Tribunal was conscious of the relevant, underlying circumstances. I do not accept that there was anything that the applicant advanced as to those circumstances of which it might be said (or inferred) that the Tribunal failed to take account in the course of making its decision.
37 It was not - or, at least, not obviously - the applicant's case before the Tribunal that "another reason" why the Cancellation ought to be revoked was that he had been the victim of a breach of a duty of care. Rather, it was put that "another reason" lay in the circumstances in which he came to have been placed into the care of a paedophile. Those circumstances were described, in summary form, as a "failure of duty of care by the state"; but it was the circumstances themselves, rather than the label that was conveniently attached to them, that were said to ground the applicant's submission that his Cancellation ought to be revoked. The Tribunal was plainly alive to those circumstances. From its reasons, it is clear that it understood that the applicant had been placed (that is to say, placed by the state) into the care of a paedophile, and that that was a source of trauma or upheaval that later sounded in (or contributed to) his extensive criminal history. It cannot be inferred that its decision proceeded without consideration of those circumstances.
38 Likewise, it is apparent enough that the Tribunal was conscious of the fact that the applicant is the subject of the Guardianship Orders. Nonetheless, the applicant submitted that he:
…was in a unique position in that he had a disability and by virtue of that disability had been assessed as not being able to make reasonable judgments for himself and thus in need of a guardian. Failing to revoke the cancellation decision would necessarily deprive him of his guardian and would render him vulnerable to making unreasonable judgments for himself.
39 It was said that the Tribunal failed to take account of those implications. During her oral submissions, counsel for the applicant put the contention succinctly: namely that "nowhere in its decision [did the Tribunal] deal with…the fact that [the applicant] was a person who could not make reasonable decisions on his…own behalf".
40 Again, I am not persuaded that the court should infer any want of consciousness, on the Tribunal's part, of the contentions that the applicant put about his capacity to make decisions on his own behalf. As his counsel properly acknowledged, it was inherent in the nature of the Guardianship Orders that the applicant was somebody whose capacity to make such decisions was impaired. I do not accept that the court should infer, merely from the Tribunal's failure to state it, that that obvious consequential reality went improperly unconsidered. All the more is that so given that the Tribunal did make reference (see, for example, above, [21]) to the impairments under which the applicant labours (both generally and in relation to the impediments that he will face in the event that he returns to Scotland).
41 The Tribunal cannot be said to have failed to consider any of the relevant representations that the applicant advanced in support of his campaign to have the Cancellation revoked. Likewise, it cannot be said that its decision not to revoke it was, under the light of those representations, legally unreasonable. The applicant's first ground of challenge to the Tribunal's Decision fails.