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SZQJP v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 759 (14 October 2011)

Last Updated: 17 October 2011

FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA

SZQJP v MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & ANOR
[2011] FMCA 759

MIGRATION – Independent merits review of refugee claims of offshore entry person – obligation to afford procedural fairness – failure to invite comment on December 2009 guideline decision of the United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal concerning Tamil refugee claimants – whether “credible, relevant and significant” information taken from decision – declaration of error made.


Alami v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2011] FMCA 623
Applicant NAFF of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] HCA 62; (2004) 221 CLR 1
Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs (2005) 225 CLR 88, [2005] HCA 7
Dagli v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 298; (2003) 133 FCR 541
Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259
Plaintiff M61/2010E v Commonwealth of Australia; Plaintiff M69 of 2010 v Commonwealth of Australia (2010) 272 ALR 14, [2010] HCA 41
SZPAC v Minister for Immigration [2011] FMCA 517
SZPZI v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 530
SZQEK v Minister for Immigration [2011] FMCA 628

Applicant:
SZQJP

First Respondent:
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

Second Respondent:
PETER GACS IN HIS CAPACITY AS INDEPENDENT MERITS REVIEWER

File Number:
SYG 1306 of 2011

Judgment of:
Smith FM

Hearing date:
30 September 2011

Delivered at:
Sydney

Delivered on:
14 October 2011

REPRESENTATION

Counsel for the Applicant:
Mr R Nair

Solicitors for the Applicant:
Salvos Legal Humanitarian

Counsel for the Respondents:
Ms A Mitchelmore

Solicitors for the Respondents:
Sparke Helmore

ORDERS

(1) The time for making the application provided by s.477(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) is extended up to and including 22 June 2011.
(2) Declare that, in recommending to the first respondent that the applicant be not recognised as a person to whom Australia has protection obligations, the second respondent made an error of law, in that the second respondent failed to observe the requirements of procedural fairness in relation to the disclosure of country information.
(3) Application otherwise dismissed.
(4) The first respondent pay the applicant’s costs in the amount of $6,240.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES
COURT OF AUSTRALIA
AT SYDNEY

SYG 1306 of 2011

SZQJP

Applicant


And


MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP

First Respondent

PETER GACS IN HIS CAPACITY AS INDEPENDENT MERITS REVIEWER

Second Respondent


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. The applicant arrived in Australia on a boat which was intercepted and taken to Christmas Island in September 2009. On 1 November 2009 he requested an assessment by the Department of Immigration of his refugee status, under procedures designed to assist the Minister to decide under s.46A of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) whether he would allow the applicant to make an application for a protection visa.
    A negative assessment was made on 12 March 2010, and the applicant then applied for ‘independent merits review’ under those procedures.
  2. On 11 June 2010 Mr Godfrey (“the First Reviewer”) recommended that the applicant should not be recognised as a person to whom Australia has protection obligations, but the Minister directed a second review following the judgment of the High Court in Plaintiff M61/2010E v Commonwealth of Australia; Plaintiff M69 of 2010 v Commonwealth of Australia (2010) 272 ALR 14, [2010] HCA 41 (“Plaintiff M61”). Mr Gacs became the second Independent Merits Reviewer, and delivered a report making the same recommendation on 25 March 2011. Throughout the administrative proceedings, the applicant was assisted by migration agents. He is currently held in immigration detention at Villawood.
  3. The applicant filed his present application to the Court on 22 June 2011, seeking a declaration that Mr Gacs’ report is affected by legal error, and injunctive relief to prevent the Minister and his Department from relying upon it. Throughout the administrative and judicial proceedings, the applicant has been held in immigration detention as an ‘offshore entry person’. The Minister concedes that Mr Gacs’ report attracts judicial review, and that the present application is within this Court’s jurisdiction under s.476 of the Migration Act, based on the High Court’s reliance on s.75(v) of the Constitution in Plaintiff M61 at [51].
  4. I have held in another case that an IMR report and recommendation is itself a ‘migration decision’ which is subject to the 35 day time limit in relation to relief of the type sought in the present application (see Alami v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2011] FMCA 623 at [48]-[67]). In the present case, an extension of time of about six weeks is required. The applicant’s explanations for this delay are poorly detained in his application, and are not supported by sworn evidence. However, the Minister consents to an extension of time. In all the circumstances I consider it appropriate to accept that concession, particularly taking into account my conclusion on the merits of the matter.
  5. Under the judicial review jurisdiction upheld in Plaintiff M61, it is the function of the Court to consider whether Mr Gacs’ report reveals any error of law, including denial of procedural fairness in its reasoning or the procedures followed before its making. The relief sought in the present application can only be contemplated, if I am satisfied that Mr Gacs made such an error. It is not the function of the Court to engage in merits review of Mr Gacs’ findings on the credibility of the applicant’s evidence and the risks he faces if he returns to Sri Lanka, nor to form its own opinions on whether the applicant should be permitted to reside in Australia.
  6. When examining Mr Gacs’ reasons for legal error, I consider that the Minister’s instructions as to the contents of his report make it appropriate to examine the report on the same principles as would be a statement of reasons given by a migration tribunal (see SZPZI v Minister for Immigration & Anor [2011] FMCA 530 at [12]-[13]). These principles include the obligation not to read Mr Gacs’ statement of reasons “minutely and finely with an eye keenly attuned to the perception of error”, but to adopt a ‘benign approach’ when attempting to understand ambiguous or poorly explained reasoning (see Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272 and 291).
  7. In the present matter, I have concluded that the applicant has established a breach of procedural fairness arising from Mr Gacs’ significant reliance upon information taken from a piece of ‘country information’ which was not raised with the applicant and his advisors, and that this error should be recorded in a declaration which should be sufficient to cause the Minister to direct a further review of the matter by a different reviewer. I do not consider it necessary for me to explain and address other grounds also contended by the applicant.

The applicant’s claim to be at risk of persecution as a young male Tamil from Jaffna.

  1. The applicant claimed that he is an ethnic Tamil, who was born and worked in Jaffna in Northern Sri Lanka, until the LTTE insurgency forced him to leave that region and, ultimately, to settle in Colombo. He modified and amplified his account of his personal history considerably in the course of the RSA and IMR proceedings.
    In particular, he retracted claims that he had never left Sri Lanka before coming to Australia, that he had lived and worked in LTTE controlled areas until “in 2000 the LTTE was forcing to conscript me and I fled to Colombo”, and that he had met and married his wife in 2004 in Jaffna.
  2. Rather, he later told interviewers that he had resided and unsuccessfully sought refugee protection in France between 1989 and 2000, and had been a refugee in India between 2000 and 2003, and had married his wife in India, before returning to live and work in Colombo. He denied the reliability of information suggesting that he had visited India more recently, and had applied there for entry to the United Kingdom in 2009.
  3. The changes to the applicant’s claimed history, as well as other difficulties with his evidence, provided grounds for decision-makers throughout the proceedings to have doubts about the credibility of his claims to have personally encountered persecution on the grounds of being a perceived associate of the LTTE. In particular, his claims that he had been beaten and detained as a suspected LTTE cadre in 2006, that he was detained and subjected to medically-aided interrogation in 2007, and that he had been arrested and detained for three days in 2009. All these claims, and other parts of his claimed personal history, ultimately were rejected by Mr Gacs, who found: “In sum, I do not accept that the claimant has ever been of any individual interest to the authorities as a suspected LTTE affiliate or for any other reason.”
  4. It is unnecessary for me to examine how the applicant’s claims to have a personal ‘profile’ giving rise to a heightened risk of persecution were presented, and how they were examined and rejected by Mr Gacs and previous assessors, since these parts of his reasoning are not challenged before me, and do not bear upon the ground of review which I am upholding.
  5. This concerns a claim, which it is common ground was properly perceived by Mr Gacs as being raised in the evidence of the applicant and submissions of his advisors, and as having some support in background ‘country information’. It was that the applicant should be assessed as facing a future real chance of persecution for Convention reasons if he returned to Sri Lanka, merely based upon his attributes as a male Tamil national of Sri Lanka who came originally from Jaffna.
    I shall refer to this as the applicant’s ‘generic’ or ‘general’ refugee claim.
  6. Mr Gacs accepted that he had these attributes, and examined his risk of persecution resulting from them alone, before examining ‘the applicant’s claims concerning his real and suspected LTTE connections’. This course of reasoning is not challenged before me. Rather, it is submitted that Mr Gacs’ reasoning concerning the ‘general’ refugee claim was affected by a failure of procedural fairness in relation to a piece of country information which Mr Gacs quoted at paragraph 83 of his reasons.
  7. It is convenient to extract the full passage in Mr Gacs’ reasoning in which he referred to this information at paragraph 83:

Ground 3 of the amended application

  1. Ground 3 of the amended application is:
  2. The particulars to the ground, and the submissions of counsel for the applicant, argued that the sentence quoted by Mr Gacs at paragraph 83 was the opening sentence to paragraph 132 of an important United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal publication, with the citation given by Mr Gacs. As the name of the publication indicates, it was intended to provide ‘up-dated’ risk assessment guidelines for the United Kingdom refugee determining authorities in relation to Tamil claimants, of the most authoritative kind as at December 2009. The sentence quoted by Mr Gacs appears in the course of an examination of various categories of claims being considered in relation to refugee claimants from Sri Lanka. The potentially substantial evidentiary weight which it might carry outside the United Kingdom arose from the discussion supporting the opinions expressed in the publication, from the purpose of the publication as a generally relevant and up-to-date assessment of country information, and from the constitution of the UK Tribunal with Lord Justice Carnwath, ‘Senior President of Tribunals’, together with a Deputy President of the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal and a Senior Immigration Judge.
  3. As Mr Gacs’ indicated, he appears to have located the UK Tribunal document, from footnote 35 to the “UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Sri Lanka”, 5 July 2010, which cited, but did not quote from, the UK Tribunal publication. As Mr Gacs indicated in his paragraphs 82 and 83, this was a footnote to a proposition which had also appeared in the previous 2009 UNHCR guidelines, which had been strongly relied upon in the submissions of the applicant’s agent. It is common ground that the footnote did not appear (at least in the same terms) in the 2009 guidelines they had cited. Manifestly this must have been the case, since the citations in the 2010 UNHCR guidelines – including of the December 2009 UK Tribunal publication – had not been in existence when the 2009 guidelines were published and quoted by the applicant’s agent.
  4. As I understand the submissions of both counsel, it is common ground that the written and oral submissions of the applicant and his agent in the course of the RSA and IMR proceedings made no reference to the July 2010 UNHCR Guidelines nor to the UK Tribunal decision quoted by Mr Gacs. Nor was there any reference to them in the previous RSA and IMR assessments.
  5. There is no evidence that the agent was aware of the existence of either document prior to Mr Gacs’ interview with the applicant and his agent on 9 May 2010. The only evidence suggesting that the agent could or should have been aware of them, arises from Mr Gacs’ reference in his report to his drawing attention to the possible relevance of parts of the new 2010 UNHCR Guidelines in the course of the interview. In this respect, he said:
  6. The Minister now submits that it is possible that this exchange drew attention to the existence of footnote 35 to the UNHCR 2010 report, and to the potentially relevant statement in the UK Tribunal publication which it cited. However, I would not draw that inference, and find that this is not probable. I draw that inference because in Mr Gacs’ report the “items of country information I have included below, under ‘country information’” clearly does not include the passage in the UNHCR 2010 report to which footnote 35 attached, nor footnote 35, nor reference to the UK Tribunal decision, nor a quotation of the statement from it which Mr Gacs reproduced in his paragraph 83.
    On the evidence before me, I infer that he did not put that statement, nor the gist of the information which he took from it, to the applicant and his agent before he made his report and recommendation to the Minister.
  7. I draw that inference notwithstanding that neither party has led evidence which could have clarified this factual issue. Nor is a transcript of what was said at the interview available. There is evidence that the respondents were unable to locate and provide the applicant’s present solicitor with the recording of these parts of the interview. Neither party has explained why direct evidence from any of the participants in the interview was not presented to the Court, including Mr Gacs or the applicant’s Melbourne agent. However, neither counsel sought to make any forensic point from the absence of witnesses or evidence, and, in the circumstances of the present proceedings I would not draw adverse inferences from the absence of better or additional evidence.
  8. On the evidence which is before me as to what occurred at the interview, I find that neither the applicant nor the applicant’s agent had any reason to be aware of the December 2009 UK Tribunal publication, nor that the passage from it quoted by Mr Gacs might be relied upon by him in the manner subsequently shown in his paragraph 83. I find that the applicant and his agent probably did not anticipate that this might happen, and therefore had no opportunity to respond to the adverse implications which Mr Gacs drew from it. I do not consider that this is a case where it is essential for the applicant to lead better evidence to support an inference of ‘practical injustice’ from Mr Gacs’ omission to give him this opportunity (cf. Dagli v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 298; (2003) 133 FCR 541 at [91] and [97], Applicant NAFF of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] HCA 62; (2004) 221 CLR 1 at [34] and [74-75]).
  9. The critical issue is, therefore, whether common law principles of procedural fairness required Mr Gacs to afford that opportunity.
  10. I recently explained how these principles apply in relation to an obligation to invite IMR claimants to comment upon potentially significant country information in SZQEK v Minister for Immigration [2011] FMCA 628:
  11. In SZQEK, I found that a breach of procedural fairness was established by the IMR reviewer giving reliance to recently published UNHCR eligibility guidelines on Afghanistan, when rejecting a ‘generic’ claim based on previously published country information, where the existence of the new guidelines and perceived adverse information drawn from them had not been put to the applicant’s migration agent for comment.
  12. Federal Magistrate Raphael discussed the relevant principles and arrived at similar conclusions in relation to a failure by an IMR reviewer to invite comment on a passage from new UNHCR eligibility guidelines in relation to Sri Lanka, in SZPAC v Minister for Immigration [2011] FMCA 517 at [15]-[25].
  13. As both judgments emphasise, not every passing new citation of country information by a reviewer gives rise to breach of procedural fairness, merely because the possibility of that citation was not foreshadowed to an applicant with an invitation to comment. In every case, it is necessary to consider the significance of the absence of an invitation to comment through the prism of fairness in the particular circumstances, in particular by considering whether the undisclosed source contained information which was "credible, relevant and significant" to the decision to be made by the refugee assessor. When considering that issue, the actual significance given to the information in the reasons for decision may provide decisive evidence, but it is the Court’s assessment of the significance of the adverse information to the decision which is determinative (see Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs (2005) 225 CLR 88, [2005] HCA 7 at [16-17]).
  14. In the present case, I have above extracted the full context in which, at paragraph 83 of his report, Mr Gacs quoted a sentence from the UK Tribunal December 2009 publication. The significance of the quotation in Mr Gacs’ reasoning is somewhat opaque. However on a fair analysis of his reasoning extracted above, in my opinion information was taken from the UK decision, and was relied upon by Mr Gacs as evidence which was ‘credible, relevant and significant’ to his decision on the applicant’s ‘general claim’. Thus:
  15. In my opinion, this analysis of paragraph 83 of Mr Gacs’ report in its context shows undoubtedly that he regarded the quoted conclusion of the December 2009 UK Tribunal decision as being particularly relevant, recent and authoritative, and that he relied upon it in support of his adverse conclusion on the applicant’s ‘general’ refugee claim.
    I consider that he regarded it as providing a highly material piece of information, and one which Mr Gacs regarded as undercutting or significantly qualifying the implications of the suggestion by the UNHCR relied upon the applicant’s agent, that the applicant was at risk of being ‘disproportionately affected’ due to ‘suspected affiliation with the LTTE’ as a result of being a male Tamil from Jaffna.
  16. Looking at the sentence extracted from the December 2009 UK Tribunal decision, undoubtedly it was a recent and authoritative expert assessment of recent evidence bearing on the applicant’s refugee claim, and was, therefore, itself a significant piece of ‘country information’. It was properly treated by Mr Gacs as separate evidence which could be weighed with other ‘country’ evidence, against which the applicant’s refugee claims were assessed.
  17. In my opinion, it was open to Mr Gacs to have treated the UK Tribunal opinion as diminishing the import of the UNHCR opinion relied upon by the applicant’s advisors. I also consider that he decided to treat it in that manner. Although the UK Tribunal opinion related to ‘Tamils from the north’ without qualification, and although other decision-makers might not have given it the significance and weight which Mr Gacs gave it, it was open to Mr Gacs to regard the opinion as bearing on the applicant’s claim to be at risk as such a person with the added attribute of being a relatively young male. It was, in my opinion, objectively ‘relevant’ and ‘material’ to the factual assessment which Mr Gacs was obliged to make, and did make.
  18. I do not accept the submission of the Minister’s counsel that paragraph 83 provides only a “passing observation” to the UK decision, and “does not constitute reliance upon it, such as to have enlivened an obligation on the part of the reviewer to draw it to the applicant’s attention and allow him an opportunity to comment on it.”
  19. Read fairly, in my opinion the opening words to paragraph 83 “However, I note that...”, do not introduce only a side comment or obiter observation, which was not intended to form part of Mr Gacs’ actual reasons for his adverse conclusion. Rather, they are references back to the preceding paragraph, showing that paragraph 83 makes a point in answer to the key submission noted in that paragraph, being a point which Mr Gacs’ regarded as significant to his adverse conclusion.
  20. The preceding paragraph, properly, in my opinion, identified the key information cited by the applicant’s advisor favouring acceptance of the ‘general’ refugee claim, being an important and highly authoritative opinion of the UNHCR which was capable of providing solid evidentiary support for that claim. Mr Gacs has identified and focused upon the advisor’s reliance on the supportive UNHCR opinion found in the 2009 UNHCR eligibility guidelines, and discovered that it was repeated in the ‘2010 version’ of those guidelines with added citations in a footnote. He has then obtained and examined one important citation in the footnote, being the December 2009 UK Tribunal decision. He has found one sentence in it which he regarded as undercutting the advisor’s reliance on the UNHCR opinion. He has then concluded that he was free not to treat the UNHCR opinion as decisive in favour of the applicant’s refugee claim.
  21. In my opinion, fairness required that Mr Gacs should not adopt this reasoning, and should not make his adverse report in reliance on the new evidence, without ensuring that the applicant and his advisor had the opportunity to be aware of the December 2009 UK Tribunal decision, and, in particular, of the sentence in it which Mr Gacs was contemplating treating as adverse information which would undercut the advisor’s submission based on the UNHCR opinion.
  22. It is regrettable that Mr Gacs did not perceive that he was under this obligation, particularly since he showed at the interview an appreciation that he was under an obligation to afford procedural fairness in relation to country information which might lead him to report adversely to the applicant’s claims. As I have noted above, he did ‘read to (the applicant), in summary, those items of country information’ which he subsequently extracted in his report under the heading ‘Independent Evidence/Country Information’. However, I have found that this probably did not include any reference to footnote 35 of the UNHCR 2010 report, nor to the statements to which that footnote attached, nor – critically – to the December 2009 UK Tribunal decision. He made no reference to his possible adverse reliance on the sentence which formed a significant part of his adverse reasoning in his report. In my opinion, this failure constituted a failure of procedural fairness.
  23. I do not accept the Minister’s submission that “the applicant was clearly on notice of the substance of the material from the Tribunal’s decision to which reviewer referred, namely that being Tamil and from the north of Sri Lanka was not enough to establish a well founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason.” Undoubtedly, the applicant and his advisor were aware that it was a critical issue whether his being a young Tamil male from Jaffna might itself allow refugee status to be found. Undoubtedly they were aware, before and at the interview, that there was a body of country information and authoritative opinion on it bearing on this issue. However, I find that they were not made aware of this particular piece of country information which Mr Gacs ultimately regarded as particularly undercutting the applicant’s case on this issue.
  24. I therefore consider that ground 3 of the applicant’s amended application has been made out, and he is entitled to a declaration that Mr Gacs’ report is flawed by a material failure of procedural fairness.
    I am not satisfied that the applicant needs any other relief so as to obtain a further review of his refugee status under the IMR procedures.
  25. It is agreed that costs should follow the event.

I certify that the preceding thirty-nine (39) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Smith FM


Date: 14 October 2011


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