CONSIDERATION
24 It may be accepted that a demonstrated error of the kind asserted in relation to s 473DD(b)(ii) of the Act would be material and so jurisdictional, at least on the facts of the present case. That is because an erroneous failure to categorise information as credible personal information may affect the Authority's assessment of whether exceptional circumstances exist for the purposes of s 473DD(a), and so materially affect the outcome. As the Full Court said in DLB17 v Minister for Home Affairs [2018] FCAFC 230 said (at [22]) (McKerracher, Barker and Banks-Smith JJ):
In this case, the Authority said that it had considered the question of exceptional circumstances by reference to 'all the circumstances': see Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v BBS16 (2017) 257 FCR 111 per Kenny, Tracey and Griffiths JJ (at [104]). The Authority was not obliged to articulate its reasoning in any greater detail: CVS16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 951 per Bromwich J (at [25]-[30] and the citations therein cited). The assessment of exceptional circumstances does not require the Authority, in all cases, to consider the matters relevant to the criterion in s 473DD(b)(ii): AQU17 (at [14]). The Authority is, however, permitted to consider these matters, including by assessing whether the information is credible: AQU17 (at [16]). Even if the credibility of information for the purposes of s 473DD(b)(ii) is to be assessed at the lower threshold suggested by the primary judge (that is that the new information is arguable), there is no prohibition on the Authority going further when considering the requirement for exceptional circumstances. That is, the Authority may, even if it accepts a contention to be arguable, test it so as to consider for itself whether it is satisfied as to the truth of the new information. Any suggestion to the contrary would be inconsistent with the decision in Plaintiff M174/2016 and the purposely broad range of considerations relevant to the establishment of exceptional circumstances.
25 And as White J said in BVZ16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 254 FCR 221 (at [9]):
The requirements of paras (a) and (b) are cumulative but may nevertheless overlap to some extent. The Authority's satisfaction that the new information could not have been provided to the Minister at the time of the s 65 decision (subpara (b)(i)) may contribute to its satisfaction that there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering the new information. So also may the Authority's satisfaction that the new information is credible personal information which had not previously been known (subpara (b)(ii)). Accordingly, one would expect the IAA to consider the para (b) matters when considering in a given case whether the circumstances are exceptional. Obviously enough, however, the matters which may contribute to a finding that the circumstances in a particular case are exceptional may extend beyond those specified in subparas (b)(i) and (ii) and it seems improbable that the Authority could be satisfied, by reference to one matter only, that an applicant's circumstances are not exceptional.
26 His Honour's view was affirmed in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v BBS16 (2017) 257 FCR 111 at [102] - [103] (Kenny, Tracey and Griffiths JJ). See also CHF16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 257 FCR 148 at [17] - [18] (Gilmour, Robertson and Kerr JJ) and DYS16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 260 FCR 260 at [31] - [33] (Tracey, Murphy and Kerr JJ) and Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CQW17 (2018) 264 FCR 249 (McKerracher, Murphy and Davies JJ).
27 Whilst the Authority may not be compelled to consider any circumstances fulfilling either criterion in s 473DD(b) when performing the essentially evaluative task in s 473DD(a), it is well established that it may do so. In my view it follows that an error in the Authority's construction or application of s 473DD(a) may affect the exercise of the power to consider new information if it could be shown that the Authority might have arrived at a different conclusion about the existence or non-existence of "exceptional circumstances" for the purposes of s 473DD(a) had it not so erred. For an error in the application of s 473DD to be material (and so properly characterised as jurisdictional), it must then be shown that the error may have affected the ultimate outcome of the exercise of the Authority's powers on the review.
28 Returning to the present case, I am not satisfied that the Authority erred in concluding that the LTTE support information was not "credible" within the meaning of s 473DD(b)(ii). To explain why that is so it is necessary to address the numbered sentences extracted at [10] above.
29 The first sentence is not controversial. There is no question that the LTTE support information could have been provided prior to the delegate's decision. The appellant did not submit otherwise.
30 By the second and third sentence, the Authority accepted that the appellant's failure to disclose "all his claims" at his arrival interview could be explained by the appellant acting on erroneous information, as he was not represented at that time and had recently arrived in Australia. That sentence introduces the question of whether the appellant's explanation for not disclosing all of the new claims before the delegate's decision should be accepted. The sentences that follow must be read in that context.
31 By the fourth sentence, the Authority found that the appellant had been released from detention in May 2013 and had received assistance from a refugee assistance service including for the preparation of his application for the SHEV and his statement of claims. No issue is taken with those factual findings.
32 By the fifth sentence, the Authority found that the appellant had been told more than once during his SHEV interview that he should put forward all of his claims because claims made after the application was determined may not be considered. No issue is taken with those findings. Clearly they relate to all of the new claims.
33 By the sixth and seventh sentences, the Authority identified an inconsistency between the new claim that the appellant's father had been killed by the army and an earlier claim to the effect that his father had frozen to death because he had had no shelter. There can be no doubt that the claims were inconsistent.
34 There is a dispute as to the proper interpretation of the eighth sentence. In my view, the Authority's conclusion that it was implausible that the appellant would "continue to hold that erroneous belief after obtaining professional assistance" is plainly a reference to the appellant's belief that if he revealed the full extent of his LTTE involvement, he would be detained indefinitely or returned to Sri Lanka. By that finding, the Authority must be understood as having rejected as implausible (and hence untrue) the asserted explanation the appellant had given for failing to provide the information earlier. Read in context, the Authority's conclusion that it was not satisfied that "the information" was credible is to be understood as a reference to all of the new information referred to at [9] of the Authority's reasons, not only that information relating to the cause of the death of the appellant's father.
35 The words "that being so" at the commencement of the ninth sentence reinforce that "the new information about the applicant's circumstances" (being all of the information) was not considered to be credible and for that reason did not satisfy the requirement of s 473DD(b)(ii).
36 Whether the appellant laboured under an erroneous belief about the consequences of divulging the information at an earlier time was a question of fact. It was open to the Authority to reject the facts the appellant had asserted in that regard. The circumstance that the appellant had given an implausible explanation for failing to provide the information at an earlier time was clearly relevant to the criterion in s 473DD(b)(ii). That is because the rejection of the asserted explanation had the consequence that the appellant had no acceptable explanation for not revealing the information until after the delegate's decision. That left it open to the Authority to conclude that the information was not credible. Whilst poorly phrased, the Authority' reasons clearly indicate that it considered the new information to have been recently constructed.
37 The Authority's reasons should be understood as taking into account the direct inconsistency in the appellant's accounts as to how his father had died in drawing that conclusion. I accept that the clumsy mixing of subject matter in the eighth sentence does introduce some ambiguity as to the particular topic the Authority is there intending to address. However, as I have said, the Authority's rejection of the explanation as implausible must be understood as informing its conclusion that all of the new information was not credible. It was permissible for the Authority to reason in that way. Its consequential finding concerning the credibility of the information itself was sufficient to support its conclusion that the requirements of s 473DD(b)(ii) had not been met. The inconsistency in respect of the claims about the appellant's father is to be understood as furnishing an additional (albeit unnecessary) basis for concluding that the new claim about the father's death lacked credibility. Whilst the words "despite the inconsistent information about the applicant's father's death" introduce some confusion, I am not satisfied that they are demonstrative of error.
38 Nor did the Authority err in the conclusion (expressed in its tenth sentence) that there were no exceptional circumstances justifying the receipt of the information. That conclusion must be understood as one based on the earlier conclusion that the explanation for the late provision of the information could not be accepted and the consequential conclusion that the information was not credible. It applies to the information summarised in all five dot points, not only that relating to the appellant's father. On this appeal, the appellant did not point to circumstance that would constitute "exceptional circumstance" other than the facts alleged in support of his explanation for not providing the information earlier and the related assertion that the information was credible. Neither premise was accepted by the Authority.
39 As there is no error affecting the Authority's conclusion in relation to s 473DD(b)(i) or (ii), there is no error in the application of s 473DD(a) of the particular kind contended for by the appellant. Moreover, as the Authority's power to consider new information depends upon satisfaction of the accumulative criteria in both s 473DD(a) and (b), any error in the application of subs (a) will be immaterial as no error is shown in the application of subs (b): AUH17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 388 at [33].
40 It follows that the primary judge did not err in dismissing the application for judicial review notwithstanding the concession that had been made by the Minister in the proceedings at first instance.
41 The appeal should be dismissed.
I certify that the preceding forty-one (41) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Charlesworth.