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SZNVW v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2009] FMCA 1299 (22 December 2009)

Last Updated: 29 January 2010

FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA

SZNVW v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & ANOR

MIGRATION – RRT decision – applicant suffering mental impairments at hearing – impairments established by evidence not before Tribunal – whether applicant denied real and meaningful opportunity to give his evidence – Tribunal assessed his evidence upon false assumptions about his mental capacities – jurisdictional error found – matter remitted.

Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss.425, 425(1), 477(1), 477(2)

M175 of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2007] FCA 1212
Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZIAI [2009] HCA 39
Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZIZO (2009) 238 CLR 627, [2009] HCA 37
Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v SZFDE [2006] FCAFC 142; (2006) 154 FCR 365
Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs v SCAR [2003] FCAFC 126; (2003) 128 FCR 553
NAMJ v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 983
Perera v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [1999] FCA 507; (1999) 92 FCR 6
SZGYM v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2007] FCA 1923
SZIWY v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2007] FMCA 1641
SZJBD v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2009] FCAFC 106
VWFY v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCA 1723
WAHU v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 890

Applicant:
SZNVW

First Respondent:
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

Second Respondent:
REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL

File Number:
SYG 2018 of 2009

Judgment of:
Smith FM

Hearing dates:
9 November 2009, 14 December 2009 and 22 December 2009

Delivered at:
Sydney

Delivered on:
22 December 2009

REPRESENTATION

Counsel for the Applicant:
Applicant in person

Counsel for the First Respondent
(at Hearing on 9 November 2009):
Mr J Smith

Counsel for the First Respondent
(at Hearing on 22 December 2009):
Mr T Reilly

Solicitors for the Respondents:
DLA Phillips Fox

ORDERS

(1) A writ of certiorari issue directed to the second respondent, to quash the decision of the second respondent made on 29 June 2009 in matter 0903478.
(2) A writ of mandamus issue directed to the second respondent, requiring the second respondent to determine according to law the application for review of the decision of the delegate of the first respondent dated 7 May 2009.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES
COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT
SYDNEY

SYG 2018 of 2009

SZNVW

Applicant


And


MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

First Respondent

REFUGEE REVIEW TRIBUNAL

Second Respondent


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

(revised from transcript)

  1. The applicant is held in immigration detention, and has been so held for many months. The case has had an unfortunate history of adjournments in this Court, to enable the applicant and the Minister to present to the Court to the best of their respective abilities, medical evidence concerning the applicant’s mental impairments when he attended a hearing of the Tribunal in June 2009. I am giving this judgment three days before Christmas, I have decided that the matter should be remitted to the Tribunal, and the urgency of the matter has caused me to give an ex tempore judgment explaining my reasons.
  2. The applicant arrived in Australia in February 2006 on a student visa, allowing him to attend a postgraduate course in philosophy at the University of Sydney. He continued his university course but was unable to complete it, and in June 2008 his student visa expired or was cancelled, and he became an unlawful resident. He was given bridging visas but these expired, and he was detained in March 2009. He has been held in immigration detention since then.
  3. While in detention, he was referred to a solicitor for assistance to file a protection visa application, which was lodged on 2 April 2009. In it, he very briefly gave his reasons for seeking protection in Australia against return to his country of nationality, Pakistan. He said:
  4. No further details of these claims were provided in writing to the Department, but the applicant attended an interview with a delegate on 24 April 2009. Following the interview, he submitted a statement seeking to explain why he thought that he had been more outspoken about liberalism than other academics, and also seeking to explain his mental state which caused his delay in seeking protection in Australia.
  5. The delegate made a decision on 7 May 2009, refusing the protection visa. The delegate said that he was not satisfied that the applicant had provided “a plausible or credible account of his claimed circumstances”, referring to the lack of documentary evidence, to the applicant’s evidence being “vague, general and unsubstantiated”, and to the applicant’s delays in applying for refugee status.
  6. The delegate also said:
  7. The applicant appealed to the Refugee Review Tribunal while still in detention, and appointed the solicitor as his representative. The Tribunal gave notice of an expedited hearing on 5 June 2009, and received a request for a delay. An internal email within the Tribunal states:
  8. The Tribunal was not provided with any medical reports, but it postponed the hearing for one week until 12 June 2009. The applicant was in attendance on that day, but his representative was not present. A transcript of the hearing is not in evidence, but the Tribunal gives a description of the hearing in its statement of reasons, and I have no reason not to accept it.
  9. The Tribunal explored the applicant’s academic history in Pakistan, and his claims to have been threatened or harassed, in particular, in an incident in September 2005. It questioned him about his claim to have expressed liberal secular views, and about an email which had been received from the applicant’s brother. The Tribunal then put to the applicant that it had various difficulties accepting that he had been threatened, and had other problems with this case.
  10. At this stage in the hearing, the Tribunal drew the applicant’s attention to a statement which he had presented to the Tribunal at the start of the hearing, which was typed and heavily amended in handwriting. The statement is addressed to the Tribunal member, and inter alia, said:
  11. The statement then referred to extracts from Wikipedia concerning “procrastination”, and the applicant referred to this as a “psychological state related to anxiety”. A handwritten conclusion to the statement said:
  12. Accompanying the applicant’s statement was a document on letterhead of International Health and Medical Services, which appears to be the organisation providing medical services at the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre. The form reported a “standard health event” concerning the applicant. Its body says:

The form contains provision for the insertion of diagnoses, but no insertions were made.

  1. According to the Tribunal:
  2. According to the Tribunal’s description of the hearing, it then identified various inconsistencies and changes to the applicant’s story, which the Tribunal said might indicate that he had not provided a truthful account of what had happened to him in Pakistan. The Tribunal referred the applicant to various such inconsistencies and difficulties. In relation to a number of them, perhaps most of them, the applicant referred to his mental state to explain the difficulties perceived by the Tribunal. Thus:
  3. The Tribunal received no further evidence from the applicant as to his claims to be suffering a “psychological state”, and it did not seek further medical evidence in the possession of the Department, notwithstanding that the document before it suggested that the applicant had been referred for psychological treatments.
  4. The Tribunal made its decision on 29 June 2009. In its decision, the Tribunal fully extracted all the evidence before it, and summarised the interview before the delegate, and the hearing before the Tribunal. It referred to country information concerning the college at which the applicant had obtained his degree, and to the current situation in Lahore.
  5. Under the heading “Findings and Reasons”, the Tribunal said that it “did not find the applicant to be a truthful or credible witness”.
  6. It said: “there were a number of problems with the applicant’s claims that he was known among students for his secular opinion”. The Tribunal referred to the fact that the college at which the applicant had been a student was known to be committed to “the ideals of liberal education”, and the Tribunal appears to have thought that this was inconsistent with the applicant’s claim to have been “‘known’ because he expressed secular and liberal views”.
  7. The Tribunal then addressed the applicant’s responses when the Tribunal explored the nature of the applicant’s secular and liberal opinions. The Tribunal said they were “very general”. It said: “the Tribunal is of the view that if the applicant had been known for espousing liberal views he would have been able to do more than simply paraphrase the views of authors he had studied and would have been able to provide a more detailed explanation of his secular opinion and liberal views”.
  8. The Tribunal said there were also problems about how he had expressed his secular opinions” (emphasis added). It concluded: “the Tribunal is of the view that the fact that the applicant simply summarised the themes of two novels he had studied while at university and mentioned one poem when asked by the Tribunal what he told his students is not consistent with his claim that ‘among students he was known for his secular opinion’”.
  9. The Tribunal also thought “there were problems with the applicant’s evidence as to when he had expressed his secular opinions” (emphasis added). It thought that the applicant had discreditably referred to his secular opinions and his thesis written in Australia in this regard, and said that this “indicates that the applicant is not a witness of truth”.
  10. The Tribunal then identified various additional “problems with the applicant’s claims that he was harassed, socially persecuted and threatened because among students he was known for his secular opinion”. Chiefly, the Tribunal’s concern was that the evidence he gave was “vague and lacking in detail”. It said: “the Tribunal is of the view that if the applicant had been harassed because of his secular opinion he would have been able to provide more specific details of the harassment he suffered”.
  11. The Tribunal thought that the applicant had invented incidents of harassment in 2002, 2003 and 2004, and that there had been changes to the applicant’s claims about this. It thought that there was a lack of detail in the applicant’s evidence about how he was harassed in 2005. The Tribunal said that it was of the view “that if Islamist fanatics well known for their violent attacks by armed gunmen and suicide bombers had wanted to harm the applicant and get rid of him they would have done more than threaten him”. The Tribunal concluded that “the applicant is not a witness of truth and is prepared to fabricate evidence in order to strengthen his claim to refugee status”.
  12. The Tribunal referred to the applicant’s delays in leaving Pakistan, and later in applying for protection. It was at this point that it referred to the applicant’s claim to have been suffering from psychological impairments at the hearing. It said:
  13. In my opinion, in the above paragraphs the Tribunal clearly rejected the applicant’s claim that he suffered from impairments arising from symptoms of depression, and indicated that it was assessing his evidence as a person who was not suffering any impairments from such a condition. It is also clear from the remainder of its reasons, in my opinion, that it assessed all of the applicant’s evidence on that basis.
  14. When rejecting his evidence, the Tribunal appears even to have had doubts about his claimed academic history in Pakistan. It said:
  15. The Tribunal referred to the applicant’s explanation for his inconsistent recall, but did not accept it:
  16. The Tribunal concluded:
  17. The Tribunal thought that the country information showed “that Lahore is a modern, cosmopolitan and culturally vibrant city”, and that bombings and attacks by gunmen suffered in Lahore in the last 18 months had been mostly targeted at the offices of State security forces and had “injured civilian bystanders only incidentally”.
  18. The applicant attempted to appeal to this Court promptly, but suffered a number of setbacks in sending facsimiles to the Federal Court Registry, so that the application which was ultimately accepted on 19 August 2009 was filed outside the time required by s.477(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). However, the applicant’s explanations for the delay are before the Court, and the Minister ultimately did not oppose the extending of time pursuant to s.477(2). Such an extension was ordered by me at the hearing on 9 November 2009.
  19. It is plain that the applicant has lacked legal assistance in the course of his presentation of his case to the Court, and given the time constraints I have done no more than refer him for advice under the free legal advice scheme. However, the applicant was able to raise sufficient substance to his concern for me to give him an adjournment to present further medical evidence. It then became appropriate to allow further time to the Minister to submit further evidence.
  20. The contention made by the applicant in a document sent to the Court on 4 October 2009 is:
  21. This ground was not explained further in any amended application or written submission, although the applicant has developed it in the course of tendering further evidence of his medical treatment at Villawood Detention Centre. Additional such records have now been put before the Court by the Minister, and it is convenient for me to set out the medical history in chronological order.
  22. As I have noted above, the Tribunal had before it only one such record, being a record of an attendance on Ms Subirat on 10 June 2009, to which it gave “no weight”. It is now clear from subsequent evidence that Ms Subirat was, in fact, a qualified clinical psychologist.
  23. The applicant saw Ms Subirat again on 11 June 2009, being the day before the Tribunal’s hearing. Her “mental state examination assessment” on that occasion recorded a history from the applicant, and that “he experienced symptoms associated with depression, predominantly ‘procrastination’”, and “reports not sleeping well”. It opined that he had a “presenting problem” of:

Ms Subirat’s assessment described the applicant’s appearance and behaviour as “unkept, polite, articulate, informative, engaged well in discussion”, his mood and affect as “depressed, flat, affect congruent with mood”, and no problems noted were under other headings. Ms Subirat identified a treatment plan for monitoring “via case management” and promoting “ongoing discussion with DIAC”.

  1. It is difficult to detect whether Ms Subirat arrived at a clinical diagnosis on that occasion. She does not appear to have expressly recorded one. However, the aspects of her assessment which I have extracted above would appear to indicate a professional opinion supportive of the applicant’s claims that he was suffering symptoms of a depressive condition at the time of the Tribunal’s hearing.
  2. The next record of an attendance on Ms Subirat is dated 1 October 2009, which shows the applicant presenting with:

Ms Subirat again noted that the applicant’s mood and affect should be assessed as “depressed mood, affect congruent with mood”. She did on that occasion refer the applicant to a psychiatrist.

  1. An International Health and Medical Services “standard health event” record for 6 October 2009 is as follows:
  2. Subsequent to these attendances, the applicant’s matter came on for hearing before me on 9 November 2009, at which the applicant sought an adjournment of the hearing, inter alia by reference to his suffering from depression and being under psychiatric treatment and medication. On that occasion he tendered Mr Vrjosseck’s report. I considered that this evidence was sufficient to raise an arguable case for the ground of his application, and that it was appropriate to allow him one further opportunity to present evidence in support of a contention that he was denied a meaningful opportunity to participate in the Tribunal’s hearing, in the sense that the Tribunal acted upon a misapprehension as to his not suffering from any mental impairments on that occasion. In the written order adjourning the hearing, I included a specific direction:
  3. The applicant then sought a further referral to an appropriate professional person, and Ms Subirat on 20 November 2009 referred the applicant for assessment by a psychologist at STARTTS.
  4. Such an assessment was prepared by Ms Pearl Fernandes, and her report dated 30 November 2009 was given to the International Health and Medical Services at Villawood Detention Centre, and a copy was also tendered to Court in these proceedings. Ms Fernandes indicated in her report that she is a clinical psychologist with over 11 years’ experience working with refugees and asylum seekers at STARTTS (Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors). No contest is made in these proceedings as to her qualifications and expertise to give the opinions found in her report.
  5. The report is too long for me to extract in full. It is clear that a thorough interview was conducted by Ms Fernandes, involving the taking of a full personal history from the applicant and an assessment of his mental state. In the course of narrating the former, Ms Fernandes referred to the applicant’s concerns in relation to the RRT hearing:
  6. From page 9 of the report, Ms Fernandes summarised the applicant’s narration of his mental symptoms, and included her observations of these in the course of his narration:
  7. In my opinion, the statements in the report in the above extract, from under the heading “Automatic thoughts” and subsequently, indicate opinions by Ms Fernandes that the findings which she records were accepted by her. This seems implicit in the reference to “displayed” the dominant symptoms. Importantly to the issues which I must address, I would understand Ms Fernandes’s statement in relation to memory deficits: “this difficulty was responsible for him ‘missing out’ important dates during his RRT hearing”, to reflect an opinion by Ms Fernandes to that effect. I would also read the report as including that and other opinions, in response to the applicant’s narration of his experiences at the RRT hearing, and his explicit or implicit request that she provide a report which would be of use inter alia in the course of the present proceedings in accordance with my previous direction.
  8. Contrary to the submission of counsel for the Minister, I therefore do not accept that Ms Fernandes did not provide opinions about the applicant’s mental impairments as they stood at the time of the Tribunal’s hearings, that is, in June 2009, and specifically at the hearing of the Tribunal.
  9. Considering the whole of the medical evidence before me, and accepting that it might not be as comprehensive as might be hoped in a medico-legal dispute in litigation, I consider that the findings of dominant symptoms by Ms Fernandes in November 2009 should be applied to make findings on the balance of probabilities that the applicant was suffering from mental impairments at the time of his hearing with the Tribunal. The report should not be regarded entirely as a piece of subsequent medical opinion, since confirmation that there were symptoms of depression exhibited in June 2009 can be found in the records of attendances on Ms Subirat in June 2009 and on Dr Vrjosseck in October 2009.
  10. Considering all the medical evidence now before me, I am satisfied, to the contrary of the findings of the Tribunal, that the applicant probably gave his evidence to it when suffering from mental impairments affecting his memory, ability to recall details, and capacity to engage in discussion about his history and opinions. I consider it likely that he was suffering from a treatable medical condition involving symptoms affecting memory, articulation, and distress when recollecting past trauma. I find that the applicant was, in fact, suffering from such a condition when appearing before the Tribunal on 12 June 2009.
  11. The applicant’s ground of appeal can in legal terms be regarded as raising several issues of jurisdictional error, as to the applicant’s capacity to participate in a ‘meaningful’ hearing, the Tribunal’s appreciation of his true impairments and how this affected its reasoning, and the Tribunal’s investigation of the issues of impairment raised before it by the applicant. These are issues which I previously identified and addressed in SZIWY v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2007] FMCA 1641.
  12. The circumstances in SZIWY were similar but not entirely the same as the present, in that the Tribunal in that case had no medical evidence about medical treatment being given to the applicant in detention at Villawood, and entirely ignored the suggestion by the applicant’s solicitor that she was suffering from mental impairments which should be taken into account when assessing her evidence. Clear medical evidence of psychiatric treatment administered at Villawood, and proving the existence of material impairments, was later adduced before the Court. I therefore found jurisdictional error on several grounds, including the Tribunal’s failure to consider the solicitor’s submission, its failure to consider investigating the medical evidence held at Villawood, and its assessment of the applicant’s evidence upon the false assumption that she had no mental impairments affecting her presentation as a witness. I concluded that she had been denied an opportunity to provide her evidence meaningfully in the hearing held by the Tribunal.
  13. In the present case, the Tribunal did consider the applicant’s claims to be suffering mental impairments, and did consider the evidence he showed to it. That evidence, in my opinion, left it open to the Tribunal to not be persuaded that the applicant did suffer from any relevant medical condition. Upon the evidence which was before it, I consider that it was open to it to assess the applicant’s evidence on an assumption that he lacked any material impairment. It was therefore open to it to give substantial, even overriding, weight, to defects in the presentation by the applicant of his case at the hearing, particularly in relation to his inarticulate opinions, lack of details, vagueness, and inaccurate memory of dates and details.
  14. However, as in SZIWY, the evidence now before the Court reveals that the Tribunal’s assumption as to the applicant’s mental health was wrong, and the issue is whether jurisdictional error can be found by the Court in that circumstance alone.
  15. In SZIWY, I explained such a conclusion on the facts in that case, and discussed the relevant authorities:
  16. In the present case, it is unnecessary for me to arrive at any conclusion whether the Tribunal had obligations of inquiry in relation to the course and nature of treatments being obtained by the applicant at Villawood Detention Centre. Such duties are exceptional, but may arise (see Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZIAI [2009] HCA 39 at [25]). The present case is less clear than SZIWY in this respect.
  17. However, in my opinion, the reasoning which I applied in SZIWY at [33], arising from SCAR, is applicable to the present case. The High Court authorities to which I referred in [30] gave implicit support for the Full Court’s opinion in SCAR, that s.425 raises implicit obligations of fairness which are jurisdictional and may unconsciously be denied by the Tribunal’s decision, based on a variety of circumstances subsequently revealed to the Court. The implication of jurisdictional obligations of procedural fairness has received further confirmation in more recent judgments of the High Court (cf. SZIAI (supra) at [25], and Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZIZO (2009) 238 CLR 627, [2009] HCA 37 at [34]). I therefore remain of the opinion that the principle which I applied in SZIWY remains good law and binding on this Court.
  18. The Minister’s counsel made submissions on law and fact contrary to my above conclusions. I have taken his submission on fact into account when making my above findings. In relation to legal principle, he submitted that SCAR supported only a jurisdictional error concerning persons totally unfit to present evidence to a Tribunal. He submitted that the implications of SCAR were confined to the proposition addressed by Branson J in NAMJ v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 983.
  19. In that case, the issue which was litigated was whether the applicant at the time of his attendance at a Tribunal hearing was totally unfit to participate in a hearing. Evidence which the applicant wished to rely on in this respect had been presented to the Tribunal, and then to the Court. It was not, therefore, a case where the Tribunal proceeded upon assumptions about an applicant’s capacities which were subsequently disproved.
  20. Her Honour had difficulty with the Migration Act being construed to give rise to a jurisdictional error arising from unfitness to attend a hearing under s.425, since her Honour thought that this might result in the Tribunal never being able to complete its review. This concern appears to have led her Honour to confine the effect of SCAR. She said:
  21. Branson J then closely examined the medical evidence, and concluded:
  22. The Minister’s counsel also referred me to a judgment of Nicholson J in WAHU v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 890, where his Honour addressed a similar contention that the applicant had been totally unfit to give evidence and present arguments, and was not persuaded that there was evidence of this:
  23. It is to be noted that other justices in the Federal Court also had difficulty accepting that s.425 gives rise to more than a right to receive an invitation to a hearing, and as to the correctness of SCAR (cf. Graham J in Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v SZFDE [2006] FCAFC 142; (2006) 154 FCR 365 at [212]). However, the subsequent High Court authorities cited above now provide clear authority that the Act intends jurisdictional obligations of fair procedures and decision-making in relation to the opportunity to be afforded to an applicant by way of a hearing held pursuant to s.425 of the Migration Act. There are now several streams of jurisprudence, suggesting that obligations under s.425 encompass transient impediments suffered by an applicant at a hearing, including significant translator errors, the actions of fraudulent agents, some misadventures affecting attendance, and unknown medical impairments. These impediments may readily be remediable by the Tribunal and not prevent it completing its review jurisdiction, if it is aware of the relevant circumstance before it makes a decision and responds appropriately, or if it conducts a second hearing either on its own initiative or after judicial review.
  24. In my opinion, understood in the light of recent High Court and Federal Court judgments in such cases, the dicta of the Full Court in SCAR at [33] and [37] should be understood as pointing to a principle of jurisdictional error broader than the principal of total unfitness identified by Branson J, and as encompassing a variety of circumstances, including transient and remediable circumstances affecting the validity of a decision by the Tribunal made after a purported, but defective, hearing held under s.425.
  25. In SCAR, their Honours said:
  26. In my opinion, SCAR stands as binding authority for an underlying principle going beyond the issue of fitness to “represent himself before the Tribunal” on the day of a hearing, which was raised by the facts of that case (see [13]-[16] and [40]-[41]). The broader foundation of the Full Court’s decision is pointed to by the analogous circumstances that their Honours identify in [37] above. These include categories of jurisdictional error where a substantial error of translation has prevented the applicant meaningfully communicating his evidence to the Tribunal, where it assessed his evidence upon false assumptions as to his evidence, and where this materially affected the outcome (see authorities such as Perera v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [1999] FCA 507; (1999) 92 FCR 6, VWFY v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCA 1723, M175 of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2007] FCA 1212, SZGYM v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2007] FCA 1923, and SZJBD v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2009] FCAFC 106 at [73]). Plainly, such a jurisdictional error affecting a hearing of a Tribunal does not usually, if ever, have the drastic and irremediable effects which concerned Branson J. The important consideration of fairness, which in my opinion the Full Court’s judgment in SCAR points to, is that a significant impairment to communication at a hearing arising from language or mental state should be taken into account by the Tribunal when assessing the person’s evidence, and that the Tribunal should not make its decision based upon a false assumption that the impairment did not exist. If the Tribunal does make a decision upon a false assumption as to the opportunity enjoyed by the applicant at the hearing under s.425, and if this has materially affected the Tribunal’s conclusions, the Tribunal has failed to exercise its jurisdiction according to law.
  27. I accept the submission of the Minister in the present case that the evidence now before me does not indicate that the applicant was entirely unfit to attend the Tribunal’s hearing and answer its questions, whether on 12 June 2009 or at a later date. However, I am satisfied with the benefit of the additional evidence now before the Court, that the Tribunal was deprived of the opportunity to assess the evidence given by the applicant in the light of his diagnosed mental impairments, and that the applicant was denied a “real and meaningful” opportunity to participate in the hearing and to have his evidence fairly assessed by the Tribunal in the light of his impairments.
  28. Importantly to the grant of relief in this situation, the Tribunal in its reasoning and its ultimate decision has plainly given a great deal of weight, even overriding weight, in arriving at its adverse conclusions about the applicant’s credibility upon matters of demeanour, memory, and consistency. In relation to all of these matters, the applicant was denied a fair opportunity of having the Tribunal assess whether those defects were attributable to a mental impairment, or to concerns about veracity.
  29. For the above reasons, I am satisfied that the decision arrived at by the present Tribunal was affected by jurisdictional error, and I therefore propose to order writs of mandamus and certiorari.
  30. In relation to costs, the applicant does not seek any costs. The Minister seeks costs in relation to the adjournment of the hearing on 9 November 2009, and possibly also the adjournment of the hearing on 14 December 2009. Both of those adjournments came about because of the absence of medical evidence accompanying the applicant’s original application to the Court or filed within the time limits I directed for evidence at the first court date.
  31. However, that first court date was held on 8 September 2009, and I appointed an expedited hearing for 9 November 2009 because the applicant was in immigration detention. The applicant was, under the timetable, given until 5 October 2009 to file evidence. As I have indicated, shortly before 9 November 2009 he produced a medical report of an attendance on a psychiatrist at Villawood, but this was insufficient to win him the case on that day, and he applied for an adjournment to obtain further medical evidence.
  32. The adjournment on 14 December 2009 occurred because I had listed the matter for judgment on that day, but on an understanding that if the applicant produced additional evidence favourable to his case, a further adjournment would probably be required to allow the Minister to respond to it. The Minister was represented on that occasion only by a solicitor, who was not able to participate in any substantive discussion of the case. In effect, therefore, the Minister has faced two contested hearings, where efficiently conducted litigation might have required only one hearing. The second hearing has required the briefing of second counsel, due to the unavailability of counsel originally briefed to attend today.
  33. I accept that if this were normal inter partes litigation, I might be inclined to require the applicant to pay some costs incurred by reason of one of the above adjournments. However, it was not ordinary inter partes litigation. Importantly, because the applicant was in immigration detention and was produced to the Court by the Minister, the applicant was faced with a timetable at the commencement of the proceeding which was particularly short, and in retrospect, was insufficient to allow him a proper opportunity to obtain medical evidence in support of the contention which, it appears to me, he has attempted to pursue at all times in the Court. The Minister’s expense of briefing a second counsel has arisen from similar considerations, which pointed in my mind to the urgency of the matter and the need to arrive at a final hearing and judgment before Christmas. The applicant’s contention has now been upheld by me.
  34. In all the circumstances, in my opinion, the appropriate exercise of discretion, considering the interests of the administration of justice in this case, points towards the Court making no order as to costs.

I certify that the preceding seventy-one (71) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Smith FM


Associate: Lilian Khaw


Date: 21 January 2010


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