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SZNTY v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2011] FCA 12 (19 January 2011)
Last Updated: 20 January 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZNTY v Minister for Immigration &
Citizenship [2011] FCA 12
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Citation:
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SZNTY v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2011] FCA 12
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Appeal from:
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Parties:
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SZNTY and SZNTZ v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP and REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL
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File number:
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NSD 990 of 2010
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Judge:
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KATZMANN J
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Date of judgment:
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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H v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs (2000) 63 ALD 43; [2001] FCA 1348Minister for Immigration
& Ethnic Affairs v Guo (1997) 191 CLR 559 Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng (2001) 205 CLR 507;
[2001] HCA 17 Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZNSP
[2010] FCAFC 50 Minister for Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs; Ex parte Applicant S20/2002 (2003) 198 ALR 59; [2003] HCA
30Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Re Ex parte
Durairajasingham (2000) 168 ALR 407; [2000] HCA 1 Refugee Review
Tribunal; Re Ex parte H (2001) 179 ALR 425; [2001] HCA 28 SLMB v
Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004]
FCAFC 129 SZBEL v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and
Indigenous Affairs (2006) 228 CLR 152; [2006] HCA 63 SZBYR v
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2007) 235 ALR 609; [2007] HCA 26
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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No catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Appellants:
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SZNTY appeared in person and SZNTZ appeared by his
guardian SNZTY with the aid of an interpreter
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Solicitor for the Respondents:
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Mr G Johnson of DLA Phillips Fox
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SZNTZ Second Appellant
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIPFirst Respondent
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal is dismissed.
- The
first appellant is to pay the first respondent’s costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 990 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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BETWEEN:
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SZNTY First Appellant
SZNTZ Second Appellant
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AND:
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MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP First
Respondent
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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KATZMANN J
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DATE:
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19 JANUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
appellants are father and son. They are Pakistani citizens. They arrived in
Australia on 7 September 2008. Precisely one month
later the father, who is the
first appellant and the litigation guardian of the second and who, for
convenience, I will call the
appellant, applied to the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship for Protection (Class XA) visas for him and his young son.
- In
his application the appellant claimed that he was a successful businessman who
had been forced to abandon his business and flee
his country, taking his son
with him. He said he was a member of the Rajput caste and his wife, whom he
divorced on 4 March 2008,
was a member of the Arain caste and they had married
despite the insistence of her family that she marry within her caste. He said
that his in-laws never accepted him, poisoned his wife against him and
interfered in their relationship. He said she left him “numerous”
times and returned to her parents and they separated permanently when she left
the matrimonial home in June 2007 taking their two
children with her. From that
time on, he said, he started to receive anonymous threatening calls and in
October 2007 their daughter
suddenly died. He claimed his in-laws used their
wealth and “immense political reach” (including as members of the
then
ruling Pakistan People’s Party) to bribe top police officials and
political leaders to persecute him and teach him a lesson.
He alleged he was
threatened with death, abused on the phone and followed on the way to work. He
said he lived for the last year
in fear, filed many reports with the police
about these incidents but often they refused to “file” or
“register”
these First Information Reports (which the delegate of
the Minister said are issued by the police following complaints that
“offer
reasonable proof that a crime was committed” and are the
legal basis for all arrests in Pakistan) and had to go to court to
require them
to do it.
- He
specifically claimed that he sought to “lodge” a First Information
Report about his daughter’s death but “due
to my In-laws
[sic] influence at all levels, police refused to register our
report”. He claimed that “[d]espite [the] doctor’s report
of
unnatural death”, he had to take legal action and obtain a court order for
the police to “register” the report.
- He
said he will continue to face harassment from his in-laws and “their
influential people”, that “[p]olice and
higher authorities are
taking my in-laws side and he is also influential member of PPP [the Pakistan
People’s Party]”
and, as a result, he has “no hope and faith
in the judicial or administrative system”.
- To
qualify for a protection visa the appellant had to show that he was a refugee
within the meaning of Article 1A(2) of the Refugees
Convention as amended by the
Refugees Protocol (Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (“the Act”),
s 36(2)), and could satisfy the further requirements of s 91R of the
Act. In short, he had to show that he had a well-founded fear of persecution
(that is, that there was “a real substantial
basis” for it:
Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Guo (1997) 191 CLR 559 at
572) on one of the Convention grounds, that the ground or grounds is or are the
essential and significant reason(s) for the persecution
and that the persecution
involves serious harm to his person and systematic and discriminatory conduct.
He said he was being persecuted
for being a Rajput and marrying an Arain girl.
He said that if her were to return to Pakistan he and his son would be killed or
otherwise harmed. The son’s claim was parasitic on his father’s.
As his dependant, his claim would succeed if his father’s
did. See
s 36(2)(b) of the Act.
- On
30 October 2008 the appellant was invited to attend an interview with a
departmental officer (a delegate of the first respondent,
“the
Minister”) on 5 December 2008 to discuss his claims and told that an Urdu
interpreter would be provided. Before
the interview, on 23 November 2008, a
registered migration agent sent a number of documents to the Department on the
appellants’
behalf. These were documents purporting to be copies and
translations of letters said to have been written by the appellant to the
police, in which he complained of being followed and threatened by unknown
individuals, and other documents purporting to verify
his other contentions.
They consisted of reports or complaints to the police, records of court
proceedings directing the police
to record those complaints [a reference to the
First Information Report procedure], including a record relating to a court
proceeding
to compel the police to issue the First Information Report relating
to his daughter’s death and what appears to be a record
of court
proceeding in which he is granted custody of his son and some kind of tax record
(supporting his claim of employment).
The threats mentioned in the letters were
said to have been made not only to him, but also to his young son, then aged
four years.
The documents included a copy of what purported to be a report of
an autopsy into his daughter’s death. The cause of death
was noted to be
“pneumonia causing suffocation and leading to asphyxia” but the
author said he could not rule out “some
kind of death due to
smothering”. At the interview with the Minister’s delegate the
appellant said he suspected his
daughter was murdered by his in-laws because she
was of mixed caste.
- On
10 December 2008 the Minister’s delegate rejected his application.
- The
appellant applied for a review of the decision to the second respondent
(“the Tribunal”) which, on 2 July 2009, rejected
his application and
affirmed the delegate’s decision. He then applied to the Federal
Magistrates Court for an order that the
respondents show cause why a remedy
should not be granted in exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction under
s 476 of the Act, that remedy being confined to the writs available against
an officer of the Commonwealth under s 75(v) of the Constitution. The
Federal Magistrate also rejected his application and he now appeals from that
decision.
The Tribunal hearing
- The
appellant had been assisted by a migration agent to lodge his original
application and his application to the Tribunal, but he
appeared without the
assistance of the agent at the Tribunal hearing. There the appellant was only
assisted by an Urdu interpreter.
This time he gave a markedly different account
of the reason for his fear of persecution. In short, his case before the
Tribunal
was that his ex-wife’s family belonged to the Mujahedin, were
fanatical, extremist and anti-American. His former father-in-law
was a
recruiter for the Taliban. He claimed his in-laws wanted him to convert and
fight the Americans. He said that his ex-wife
tried to force him to become her
father’s “right-hand man” and avenge her brother’s
murder and she left him
after he refused her entreaties. He also said that when
he tried to tell the police about this, they refused to listen. Neither
in his
application nor in his interview with the Minister’s delegate had he
mentioned the Mujahedin or the Taliban. There
were a number of other
inconsistencies in his account.
- The
Tribunal raised these inconsistencies with him orally and in a letter addressed
to him on 30 March 2009 foreshadowing what impact
these might have on its
decision and inviting him to respond by 23 April.
- On
17 April 2009 the appellant faxed a handwritten letter requesting his
“Interview CD”, meaning the recording of the
Tribunal hearing. On
20 April 2009 the recording was sent to him. The same day the appellant faxed a
second handwritten letter
seeking an extension of time to reply to the 30 March
letter. His reason was that his “previous” migration agent’s
office had only recently forwarded it to him. He also informed the Tribunal
that correspondence should no longer be sent to that
agent. A file note records
that the appellant was telephoned by the Tribunal on 21 April 2009 refusing his
request for an extension
of time but indicating he would, in any case, have
until 30 April 2009 to respond. It also records a dispute about whether he told
the Tribunal at the hearing that he was no longer represented by the agent.
- Nevertheless,
on 21 April 2009 the Tribunal wrote again to the appellant reproducing the
content of the 30 March letter, presumably
out of concerns it had about the
questions relating to the role of the agent.
- The
appellant replied on 23 April 2009 seeking to explain the inconsistencies
between his original and later claims and making a
separate claim about the
conduct of the Minister’s delegate. In essence he blamed the differences
between the accounts on
the advice of his migration agent that what he had
included in his application was “enough” and on the delegate’s
conduct of the interview, including her manner of questioning him, which he
described as abrupt and forceful and continuously interrupting
him and her
alleged insistence he speak English.
- That
led the Tribunal to write to him a third time – on 9 June 2009. In that
letter the Tribunal indicated it had “decided
to carefully re-listen to
the audio recording of [his] interview with the delegate” and, having done
so, rejected his claims
completely. It went on to inform him that his
characterisation of the conduct of the delegate when compared to the interview
might
lead the Tribunal to find that he had provided a misleading account of the
interview, that his evidence in that regard was “manifestly
unfounded”, that it might also find he had shown “a total disregard
for the truth” and disregard his claims. It
enclosed a copy of the audio
recording of the interview with the letter.
- The
appellant replied to the third letter on 1 July 2009 maintaining his claims,
although also seeking to explain why the recording
appears not to support hem.
- The
Tribunal rejected the appellant’s claims because of the significant
inconsistencies in his accounts and his “untruthful,
unreliable,
farfetched and self-serving” explanations for them. The Tribunal’s
decision provides numerous examples to
support its conclusions. It described
some of his oral evidence on key matters as “incoherent, vague and
unconvincing”,
pointing, amongst other things, to his inability to provide
“a single, convincing explanation” for why his parents-in-law
would
murder their own granddaughter and his fluctuating accounts of his in-laws
wanting to kill his children on the one hand and
wanting to take them from him
on the other. It concluded that he was not credible, truthful or reliable, that
he had a propensity
to shift and tailor his evidence for his own purposes, and
that he had fabricated his claims and concocted evidence in order to advance
his
case. Accordingly, it rejected all of his claims and affirmed the decision
under review. It referred to the documents he submitted
but gave no weight to
them having regard to the view it had formed of his credibility, citing Re
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Applicant S20/2002
(2003) 198 ALR 59; [2003] HCA 30
(“S20”).
The application to the Federal Magistrate
- The
grounds of the application before the Federal Magistrate (without alteration)
were:
- The
Tribunal failed to note that the delegate of the Department, without giving
consideration to the Applicant’s inability to
explain his claims in
English language, continued to conduct the hearing in English language and made
an unreasonable procedural
error and thus made a jurisdictional error.
- The
Tribunal knowingly and with bias failed to consider the submissions made by the
Applicant in relation to the new claims and the
reasons given therein and with
an ulterior motive rejected the Applicant’s new claims and thus made a
jurisdictional error.
The Tribunal rejected the Applicant’s claims on 2
July 2009 before even considering the submissions made by the Applicant
on 1
July 2009 as requested by the Tribunal.
- The
Tribunal made a jurisdictional error by not giving the Applicant an opportunity
to explain any doubts the Tribunal had, in relation
to his further submissions
and explanations in writing as requested by the Tribunal.
- The
Federal Magistrate was satisfied that the Tribunal’s finding on the
appellant’s credit and its consequent rejection
of his claims was open to
it on rational grounds on the material before it and disclosed no error. He
also upheld its treatment of the documents supplied on the
appellant’s behalf.
- His
Honour dismissed the first ground. He noted that the Tribunal did investigate
the appellant’s complaints, listened itself
to the CD of the
delegate’s interview (twice in fact) and invited him to comment on its own
assessment. He held that its refusal
to accept the appellant’s submission
did not demonstrate a jurisdictional error.
- In
relation to ground 2 his Honour observed that the Tribunal did in fact consider
the appellant’s submissions and recorded
its findings about them. He felt
that the appellant’s real complaint appeared to be that his submissions
were not accepted.
He noted that bias was a very serious allegation that must
be distinctly made and clearly proved: Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng (2001) 205 CLR 507; [2001] HCA 17
(“Jia”). He accepted that actual bias could in a particular
case “be inferred from the facts and circumstances but caution
should be
exercised, in the absence of evidence of partisanship or hostility before
inferring actual bias from the Tribunal’s
reasoning”, citing
decisions of this Court. He also said that no inference of bias or pre-judgment
can be drawn from the mere
fact that adverse findings had been made, again
citing a number of decisions of this Court. He was satisfied on the material
before
him that there was no bias on the part of the Tribunal.
- As
for the last ground, his Honour noted that the Tribunal had no obligation to
write to the appellant before handing down its decision
under s 424A of the
Act or give him a further opportunity to comment on the reasons it had decided
against his submissions,
relying on SZBYR v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship [2007] HCA 26; (2007) 235 ALR 609 at [18]; [2007] HCA 26 and SZBEL v
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2006] HCA 63; (2006) 228
CLR 152 at [48]; [2006] HCA 63.
- Finally,
his Honour observed that the appellant had been provided with the opportunity of
participating in the Tribunal’s legal
advice scheme but elected not to do
so and was granted leave to file an amended application but did not avail
himself of that leave.
He recorded that he failed in his application because of
the significant inconsistencies in his evidence and the Tribunal’s
findings about his credibility. He considered that the grounds of review were
based either on a factually incorrect basis or misunderstandings
about the
operation of the law. He concluded that the application had to be dismissed
with costs.
The appeal
- The
appeal is in the nature of a rehearing, but error must still be shown: SLMB
v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs
[2004] FCAFC 129 (“SLMB”) at [11].
- The
grounds of appeal (without alteration) are as follows:
(1) The decisions made by the Respondents were made incorrectly and had used
their authority wrongly thus making a jurisdictional
error. The Respondents
also by exceeding their jurisdiction and constructively failed to exercise its
jurisdiction by failing to
accept the facts the First Appellant orally made at
the Tribunal hearing.
(2)
The Respondents used their absolute uncontrolled and unlimited discretion with
respect to the extent of their jurisdiction and made
orders which had no
relation to the claims made at the Tribunal hearing and dealt with original
matters and claims only ignoring
the claims at the Tribunal hearing and thus
made jurisdictional error on the grounds of procedural
fairness.
(3) The Respondents formed the opinion which was reached by taking into account
irrelevant considerations by misconstruing the claims
at the Tribunal hearing,
failed to reach the reasonable decision and thus made a jurisdictional error.
The decision made by the
Respondents was arbitrary, capricious, irrational or
not bona fide.
(4) The Respondents made an error of law by identifying wrong issues, by asking
wrong question, by ignoring relevant materials and
facts in the claims orally
made by the First Appellant at the Tribunal hearing and by relying on irrelevant
material, made an erroneous
finding against the Appellants. The Respondents
reached a mistaken conclusion on credibility grounds which is the only grounds
that
they could use against the Appellant. The Respondents’ exercise or
purported exercise of power is thereby affected and they
exceeded their
authority or powers making jurisdictional error.
(5) The Second Respondent do not have authority to authoritatively decide
questions of law or to make decisions otherwise than in
accordance with the law.
The Second Respondent constructively ignored the claims put forward by the First
Appellant orally at the
Tribunal hearing giving answers to the questions put to
him by the Tribunal and had made a decision arbitrarily and capriciously
thus
making jurisdictional error.
- In
so far as the grounds refer to the Minister’s decision as well as the
Tribunal’s they make no sense. The appellant,
however, was unrepresented
before the Federal Magistrate and is unrepresented in this appeal. I take it
that the references to “the
Respondents” in the first four grounds
should be read as references to the Tribunal. It was clear during the hearing
that
his complaint related to the decision of the Tribunal. On its face none of
these issues was raised in the proceeding before his
Honour.
- As
the Minister submitted, the appellants require the leave of the Court to raise
new grounds of appeal that could have been raised
before and considered by the
Federal Magistrate. Leave will only be granted if it is expedient to do so in
the interests of justice:
H v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs [2000] FCA 1348; (2000) 63 ALD 43 at [6]; [2001] FCA 1348. The
practice of raising arguments for the first time on appeal has been deprecated
many times, including in H at [8] and in VUAX v Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2004] FCAFC 158 where the Full Court
said at [48]:
The practice of raising arguments for the first time before the Full Court has
been particularly prevalent in appeals relating to
migration matters. The Court
may grant leave if some point that was not taken below, but which clearly has
merit, is advanced, and
there is no real prejudice to the respondent in
permitting it to be agitated. Where, however, there is no adequate explanation
for
the failure to take the point, and it seems to be of doubtful merit, leave
should generally be refused...
- The
appellant put on no evidence to explain why these points were not taken below.
Nevertheless, his oral submissions appeared to
show that his grievances were not
materially different from the matters he raised in the Federal
Magistrate’s Court. I therefore
take it (as did the Minister) that he is
claiming that the Federal Magistrate fell into error in the way in which he
disposed of
his application. The Minister conceded he was not prejudiced by the
new grounds. In the circumstances, and notwithstanding his
failure to provide
an explanation, I propose to grant leave and consider the appeal on its merits.
- The
appellant filed no written submissions. At the hearing of the appeal, through
an Urdu interpreter, he was invited to explain
the various grounds.
Ground 1: The decision made by the [Tribunal] was made incorrectly and had used
their authority wrongly thus making a jurisdictional
error. The [Tribunal] also
by exceeding their jurisdiction and constructively failed to exercise its
jurisdiction by failing to
accept the facts the First Appellant orally made at
the Tribunal hearing.
- The
appellant’s complaints really fell into two categories. First, he was
distressed and frustrated that the Tribunal did
not believe him. Secondly, he
complained that the Tribunal published its decision only the day after it
received his second letter,
which, he submitted means that it did not even
bother considering the information in it. For this reason, he argued, justice
had
not been done.
- The
Tribunal’s decision was a privative clause decision under the Migration
Act. This means that the only basis for reviewing it was for jurisdictional
error. The grounds raised before the Federal Magistrate and
in this Court
seemed to recognise as much, but a failure on the part of the Tribunal to
believe the account an applicant gives does
not, without more, raise any
question of jurisdictional error. As the Minister submitted, whether or not an
applicant’s evidence
should be accepted is entirely a matter for the
Tribunal and a decision that it should not is not amenable to review for
jurisdictional
error. See Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs: Ex parte Durairajasingham (2000) 168 ALR 407; [2000] HCA 1.
- The
appellant’s submission that the Tribunal did not consider the information
contained in his second letter must be rejected.
The Tribunal referred
specifically to its contents in paragraph 102 of its decision but dismissed the
claims he made in it. The
Tribunal’s reasons are detailed and considered.
There is nothing in them to support the appellant’s submission.
- I
reject the first ground.
Ground 2: The [Tribunal] used their absolute uncontrolled and unlimited
discretion with respect to the extent of their jurisdiction
and made orders
which had no relation to the claims made at the Tribunal hearing and dealt with
original matters and claims only
ignoring the claims at the Tribunal hearing and
thus made jurisdictional error on the grounds of procedural fairness.
- In
support of the second ground the appellant said that when he attended the
tribunal hearing the member threw his pen on the table,
said, “I
can’t believe you” and showed a “really hostile”
attitude.
- The
submission may raise a question of apprehended bias which, if proved, amounts to
jurisdictional error: Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte H (2001) 179
ALR 425; [2001] HCA 28 (“Ex parte H”). In Ex parte H
at [30]-[31] the High Court said:
[30] Where, as in the present case, credibility is in issue, the person
conducting inquisitorial proceedings will necessarily have
to test the evidence
presented — often vigorously. Moreover, the need to ensure that the
person who will be affected by
the decision is accorded procedural fairness will
often require that he or she be plainly confronted with matters which bear
adversely
on his or her credit or which bring his or her account into question.
Similar questions by a judge in curial proceedings in which
the parties are
legally represented may more readily give rise to an apprehension of bias than
in the case of inquisitorial proceedings.
[31] Where, however, parties are not
legally represented in inquisitorial proceedings, care must be taken to ensure
that vigorous
testing of the evidence and frank exposure of its weaknesses do
not result in the person whose evidence is in question being overborne
or
intimidated. If that should happen, a fair-minded lay observer or a properly
informed lay person might readily infer that there
is no evidence that the
witness can give which can change the decision-maker's
view.
- For
the reasons given by the Federal Magistrate, however, there is no basis for a
finding of actual or apprehended bias. If the
appellant wanted to make out a
case that the Tribunal was hostile and its behaviour was overbearing or
intimidating it was up to
him to present the evidence. This he did not do. I
might add that the complaint of hostility on the part of the Tribunal does not
appear to have been made to the Federal Magistrate.
- The
fact that the Tribunal was prepared to, and did, listen a second time to the
audio recording of the interview with the Minister’s
delegate after
receiving the appellant’s first letter militates against a conclusion that
it was not prepared to apply an impartial
mind to his case.
- There
is no substance to the contention that the Tribunal made orders which had no
relation to the claims made at the Tribunal hearing
and dealt with the original
matters ignoring the claims made before the Tribunal. To the contrary, the
Tribunal paid close attention
to the new claims, drew to the appellant’s
attention the numerous inconsistencies between them and the former claims, asked
for his explanation and then rejected them.
- Ground
2 must also be rejected.
Ground 3: The [Tribunal] formed the opinion which was reached by taking into
account irrelevant considerations by misconstruing the
claims at the Tribunal
hearing, failed to reach the reasonable decision and thus made a jurisdictional
error. The decision made
by the [Tribunal] was arbitrary, capricious,
irrational or not bona fide.
- In
the third ground the appellant asserts that the Tribunal took into account
irrelevant considerations, failed to make a reasonable
decision and made a
decision that was arbitrary, capricious, irrational or not bona fide. He
provided no particulars of any of these
claims. In his oral submissions he said
that the decision was arbitrary etc because the Tribunal did not believe him.
He complained
that the Tribunal did not accept that his daughter had been
murdered despite the autopsy report containing a conclusion that the
doctor
performing the post-mortem could not rule out smothering. As the Minister
submitted, the decision was properly reasoned.
The appellant’s
descriptions of it are quite inapt. Although it would have been better if the
Tribunal had dealt in more
detail with the documents, including this one, in its
reasons, it was entitled in the circumstances to give no weight to them, having
regard to the view it had formed of the appellant’s credibility:
S20. See also Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZNSP
[2010] FCAFC 50.
- I
reject ground 3.
Ground 4: The [Tribunal] made an error of law by identifying wrong issues, by
asking wrong question, by ignoring relevant materials
and facts in the claims
orally made by the First Appellant at the Tribunal hearing and by relying on
irrelevant material, made an
erroneous finding against the Appellants. The
[Tribunal] reached a mistaken conclusion on credibility grounds which is the
only
grounds that they could use against the Appellant. The [Tribunal’s]
exercise or purported exercise of power is thereby affected
and they exceeded
their authority or powers making jurisdictional error.
- Once
again, no particulars were provided. In his oral submissions in support of this
ground the appellant made it clear that his
complaint that there had been
jurisdictional error was based on the fact that the Tribunal did not believe
him. As I observed earlier,
a tribunal does not commit jurisdictional error
merely by disbelieving an applicant. This ground must also be
rejected.
Ground 5: The [Tribunal] do[es] not have authority to authoritatively decide
questions of law or to make decisions otherwise than
in accordance with the law.
The [Tribunal] constructively ignored the claims put forward by the First
Appellant orally at the Tribunal
hearing giving answers to the questions put to
him by the Tribunal and had made a decision arbitrarily and capriciously thus
making
jurisdictional error.
- In
oral submissions the appellant stated that the Tribunal had already made up its
mind. I have already dealt with this submission.
This ground is no more than a
restatement of the appellant's arguments made in the second and third grounds.
They do not improve
in the retelling.
Conclusion
- The
appellant has failed to show any error on the part of the Federal Magistrate.
The “new” grounds of complaint about
the Tribunal’s decision
do not have any merit. Accordingly, I have no option but to dismiss the appeal
with costs.
|
I certify that the preceding forty-three (43) numbered paragraphs are a
true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice
Katzmann.
|
Associate:
Dated: 19
January 2011
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