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SZMZC v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2009] FMCA 124 (23 February 2009)
Last Updated: 27 February 2009
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SZMZC v MINISTER FOR
IMMIGRATION & ANOR
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MIGRATION – Review of Refugee Review
Tribunal decision – refusal of a protection visa – interlocutory
dismissal
of show cause application – Tribunal made a legal error in
handing down its decision after 15 September 2008 and breached s.430A(1) of the
Migration Act 1958 (Cth) but no arguable case of a jurisdictional
error.
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First Respondent:
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& CITIZENSHIP
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Delivered on:
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23 February 2009
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REPRESENTATION
The Applicant appeared in person
Solicitors for the Respondents:
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Ms A Crittenden Clayton Utz
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INTERLOCUTORY ORDERS
(1) The application is dismissed, pursuant to rule
44.12(1)(a) of the Federal Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth).
(2) The applicant is to pay the first respondent’s costs and disbursements
of and incidental to the application, fixed in the
sum of
$2,000.
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FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
AT SYDNEY
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SYG3101 of 2008
Applicant
And
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION &
CITIZENSHIP
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First Respondent
Second Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(revised from transcript)
- This
is an application to review a decision of the Refugee Review Tribunal
(“the Tribunal”). The decision appears to
have been made on 29
September 2008. I will return to that issue later as it is an issue of some
significance. The Tribunal affirmed
a decision of the delegate of the Minister
not to grant the applicant a protection visa. The applicant is from China and
had made
claims of religious persecution.
- The
applicant arrived in Australia on 24 August 2007 and applied to the Minister's
Department for a protection visa on 8 October 2007.
That application was
refused by the Minister's delegate on 3 January 2008 and notified to the
applicant the following day. The
applicant sought review by the Tribunal of
that decision on 10 April 2008. The Tribunal was unable to make a favourable
decision
on the papers and invited the applicant to a hearing. He attended that
hearing on 29 May 2008. The applicant told the Tribunal
that he was unsure
whether what was in his protection visa application was accurate because he had
signed it without reading it and
it had not been translated to him. In the
circumstances, the Tribunal, reasonably and properly in my view, relied upon the
oral
claims made by the applicant at the Tribunal hearing. I note that although
the applicant was represented by a migration agent before
the Tribunal, the
representative did not attend the Tribunal hearing. The applicant was
questioned about his claims at the Tribunal
hearing. He claimed to have been an
underground Christian in China, but the Tribunal found that his claims lacked
credibility.
The Tribunal found that the applicant had difficulty in answering
the Tribunal's questions about his experiences in China and changed
his evidence
during the course of questioning.
- The
Tribunal concluded that, viewed cumulatively, problems with the applicant's
evidence outlined by the Tribunal led it to conclude
that the applicant was not
a credible witness. Accordingly, the Tribunal did not accept the applicant's
claims concerning past harm
in China and found that there was no real chance
that the applicant or his wife would attend underground church activities in the
future if they were to return to China. It followed that there was no real
chance that the applicant and his wife would be subjected
to harm amounting to
persecution in China in the future.
- These
proceedings began with a show cause application filed on
26 November 2008. The applicant continues to rely on that application.
I incorporate in this judgment the three grounds and particulars set out in that
application:
- 1. The RRT
decision was affected by jurisdictional error in that the Tribunal failed to
follow the requirements of the Migration Act 1958 [(Cth) (‘the Migration
Act’)], s.424A.
- Particulars:
The Tribunal rejected the applicant’s credibility on the basis of his
difficulty answering the Tribunal’s
questions and changes in evidence.
The Tribunal failed to invite the applicant to comment on the difficulty and the
changes in evidence.
The applicant claims he had difficulty answering the
Tribunal’s questions because he could not understand the
interpreter.
- 2. The
Tribunal did not make a genuine and realistic attempt to make the decision in a
bona fide manner in that the Tribunal failed
to ask the applicant’s
current practice in Australia. The applicant claims that he is still practicing
as a Christian in Sydney
but the Tribunal did not ask anything about his current
practice. The applicant claims that the Tribunal should have [given]
substantial
consideration to his current practice.
- 3. The
Tribunal did not afford to the applicant the benefit of the doubt when there was
no material to the contrary to what was
being asserted by the
applicant.
- The
application is supported by a short affidavit which I received as a submission.
I have before me as evidence the court book filed
on 8 January 2009. The
applicant denied receipt of the court book, although I accept from what the
Minister's solicitor told me
from the bar table that the court book was sent to
the applicant to his address for service by mail on or about 8 January 2009.
There is no explanation for the applicant's non-receipt of the court book other
than his statement that he was moving around at the
time and that there was some
delay in him checking his mail. The applicant was provided today with a copy of
the court book and
I explained its contents. As I explained to the applicant,
all of the documents of significance in the court book he would have
seen
previously and he is not disadvantaged by receiving the court book late.
- There
is no substance to the asserted grounds of review in the show cause application.
Section 424A of the Migration Act did not impose on the Tribunal any obligation
to disclose to the applicant in writing its credibility concerns. That was not
information
for the purposes of the section.
- The
applicant claims also that he could not understand the interpreter at the
Tribunal hearing. That goes to the Tribunal's obligation
to ensure a fair and
effective hearing for the purposes of s.425. There is no evidence of any
contemporaneous complaint about interpretation made by the applicant. He told
me from the bar table
that the problem related to his poor education rather than
any defect in interpretation. There is no reason to believe that the
standard
of interpretation provided by the Tribunal at its hearing was inadequate.
- The
applicant was invited to a hearing as required by s.425 of the Migration Act and
attended. It appears from the record of the Tribunal hearing in the Tribunal
decision that the Tribunal did enough to ensure
that the applicant understood at
the hearing the essential and significant issues upon which the review would
turn. Those issues
were issues of his own credibility. There is no substance
to the attack on the Tribunal's bona fides.
- Neither
is there any substance to the allegation that the Tribunal erred in not asking
the applicant about his religious practice
in Australia. On the basis of the
available material, the simple fact is that the applicant made no claim in
relation to religious
practice in Australia, so there was nothing for the
Tribunal to consider in that regard. The Tribunal does not have to ferret out
claims that an applicant does not make.
- I
also reject the assertion that the applicant should have been given the benefit
of the doubt. It is clear from the Tribunal's decision
there was no doubt to
give the applicant the benefit of.
- The
only issue in my mind of legal significance concerns the manner in which the
Tribunal decision was made and notified. Prior to
15 September 2008,
s.430B of the Migration Act required the Tribunal to hand down its decisions in
most circumstances. That section was repealed with effect from 15 September
2008. Sections 430 and 430A of the Migration Act in effect from that date now
prescribe the procedure for the Tribunal to record and notify its decisions in
relevant circumstances:
- Section
430 states:
- (1) Where
the Tribunal makes its decision on a review, the Tribunal must prepare a written
statement that:
- (a) sets
out the decision of the Tribunal on the review; and
- (b) sets
out the reasons for the decision; and
- (c) sets
out the findings on any material questions of fact; and
- (d)
refers to the evidence or any other material on which the findings of fact were
based.
- (2) A
decision on a review (other than an oral decision) is taken to have been made on
the date of the written statement.
- (3) Where
the Tribunal has prepared the written statement, the Tribunal must:
- (a)
return to the Secretary any document that the Secretary has provided in
relation to the review; and
- (b) give
the Secretary a copy of any other document that contains evidence or material on
which the findings of fact were based.
- Section
430A states:
- (1) The
Tribunal must notify the applicant of a decision on a review (other than an oral
decision) by giving the applicant a copy
of the written statement prepared under
subsection 430(1). The copy must be given to the applicant:
- (a) within
14 days after the day on which the decision is taken to have been made; and
- (b) by
one of the methods specified in section 441A.
- (2) A
copy of that statement must also be given to the Secretary:
- (a)
within 14 days after the day on which the decision is taken to have been made;
and
- (b) by
one of the methods specified in section 441B.
- (3) A
failure to comply with this section in relation to a decision on a review does
not affect the validity of the decision.
- Regrettably,
by letter dated 30 September 2008, after the date of commencement of the new
provisions, the Tribunal wrote to the applicant
inviting him to a purported
handing down of the Tribunal decision on 21 October 2008. The applicant was
notified of the Tribunal
decision by letter dated 21 October 2008, presumably
after the purported handing down of the decision. (see court book, pages 71
to
74) The Tribunal decision could not have been made on that date of purported
handing down because there was no legislative provision
for the handing down of
the Tribunal decision by that stage. It follows, in my view, that the Tribunal
decision must be taken to
have been made on the date that it was signed, namely
29 September 2008. A relevant consequence is that the Tribunal breached
s.430A(1) of the Migration Act in failing to notify the applicant of the
decision within 14 days after the day on which the decision is taken to have
been made.
However, I see no jurisdictional significance in that failure having
regard to the terms of s.430A(3) of the Migration Act which means, in my view,
what is says.
- I
also see no jurisdictional significance in the purported handing down of the
Tribunal decision at a time when there was no longer
any procedure for the
handing down of decisions. The Tribunal overlooked the change in the
legislation, which was a legal error.
But, in my view, such an error of law
following the Tribunal decision does not affect the validity of the
decision[1]. The error
may have a consequence in relation to the time limit for appeals to the courts.
For the avoidance of doubt, on 16 December
2008 I enlarged time for the filing
of the present show cause application. Any disadvantage that the applicant
might therefore have
suffered from the Tribunal's error has been dealt with.
- I
find that there is no arguable case of any jurisdictional error. Accordingly, I
dismiss the application, pursuant to rule 44.12(1)(a) of the Federal
Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth).
- Costs
should follow the event in this case. The Minister seeks an order for costs
fixed in the sum of $2,000. Scale costs in this
instance would be $2,500. The
applicant did not wish to be heard on costs. I will order that the applicant
pay the first respondent's
costs and disbursements of and incidental to the
application fixed in the sum of $2,000.
Addendum
- Since
giving oral judgment in this matter, my attention has been drawn to the fact
that Schedule 1 to the Migration Legislation Amendment Act (No 1) 2008
(which contains the relevant amendments to the Migration Act dealt with
above at [11]-[15]) did not commence operation on the date of Royal Assent to
the Amendment Act as I had thought. Rather,
the relevant amendments commenced
operation on 27 October 2008 pursuant to a proclamation by the Governor-General.
It follows that
my reasoning at [11]-[14] above was based on a false premise and
that there was no error by the Tribunal. The reasoning at [15]
becomes
hypothetical but I maintain those views.
I certify that the
preceding eighteen (18) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment
of Driver FM
Associate:
Date: 27 February 2009
[1] SZBPF v
Minister for Immigration [2005] FCA 1532 at [13]; SZLWE v Minister for
Immigration [2008] FCA 1343 at [30]
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