Primary Judge's Decision
12 The applicant sought judicial review of the Tribunal's decision in the Circuit Court. The applicant relied on the following four grounds (as written):
(1) The second respondent failed to comply with the mandatory requirements under section 424A (read with section 424AA) of the Migration Act to give the applicant clear particulars of information it considered would be part of the reason for affirming the decision under review, to ensure the applicant understood why that information was relevant to the review and the consequences of its being relied upon, and to invite the applicant to comment or respond to that information.
(2) The Tribunal construed erroneously (and narrowly) the existence of risk to life and fear of significant harm to the applicant upon his return to India.
(3) The Tribunal had no jurisdiction to make the said decision because its "reasonable satisfaction" was not arrived at in accordance with the provisions of the Migration Act.
(4) The Tribunal failed to investigate applicant's claim, specially the grounds of persecution in India.
13 The first ground was particularised by reference to a claim that the Tribunal had failed to provide a written invitation under s 424A of the Migration Act and did not comply with the requirements under s 424AA of that Act. No particulars were provided for grounds 2, 3 or 4.
14 In dismissing the first ground, the primary judge held (at P[19] as written):
19 …This ground is entirely devoid of particulars. The applicant does not even attempt to identify the information that he contends the Tribunal was required to put to him for comment under s.424A, and no such information is apparent. The Tribunal's adverse credibility findings were primarily based on identified contradictions and inconsistencies in the applicant's claims and evidence. Inconsistencies and the Tribunal's subjective appraisal of the evidence do not constitute "information" for the purposes of s.424A. As no information that enlivened the Tribunal's s.424A obligations is either identified or apparent, the assertion that the Tribunal breached its s.424A obligations cannot succeed.
(Footnotes omitted.)
15 With regard to the second ground, the primary judge held:
20 …As this ground is also devoid of any particulars or details to identify or explain how the Tribunal's approach was erroneous, it would fail on the basis of a lack of particularity alone.
21 In any event, the Tribunal comprehensively considered the applicant's claims to fear harm in India and its rejection of those claims on the basis of adverse credibility findings were supported by cogent and logical reasons. The Tribunal correctly cited the relevant law and there is nothing in its decision to suggest that it asked itself a wrong question or applied the wrong statutory test. In substance, this ground appears to be nothing more than an expression of the applicant's disagreement with the Tribunal's factual conclusions and seeks to invite the Court to engage in impermissible merits review.
(Footnotes omitted.)
16 The primary judge held, with respect to the third ground, that (at P[22]):
22 …This ground discloses no jurisdictional error on behalf of the Tribunal and is no more that a bare assertion which is meaningless without further particulars. The findings of the Tribunal, including its adverse credibility findings, were open to it on the available information for the reasons it gave.
(Footnotes omitted.)
17 Finally, in dismissing the fourth ground, the primary judge held (at P[23]):
23 …If the Tribunal cannot be satisfied on the basis of the material presented that the applicant's claims are genuine, it had no general duty to make further inquiries or obtain information beyond what is provided to it by the applicant. The applicant made no attempt to identify a critical fact the existence of which was easily ascertained that might give rise to a specific duty on the Tribunal to make an enquiry, and none is apparent.
(Footnotes omitted.)
18 As mentioned, the primary judge summarily dismissed the application pursuant to r 44.12 of the FCC Rules, with costs.