Grounds 2 and 6
76 These grounds raise the same issue namely whether the primary judge provided adequate reasons, in the case of ground 2, in relation to ground 6 of the Amended Application, and in the case of ground 6, in rejecting the argument that the Tribunal ought to have accepted that there was a real chance of it being imputed in Iran that the appellant had converted to Christianity. The primary judge dealt with ground 6 of the Amended Application at [23] to [25] of his judgment and the grounds concerning the appellant's conversion to Christianity at [28] to [31] of his judgment.
77 In support of both grounds the appellant has referred me to the judgment in Islam v Cash [2015] FCA 815 (Islam) at [14], and the cases cited therein, where Flick J said:
Such consideration as is given to those matters, it is to be recognised at the outset, must be a consideration in accordance with law. Mere advertence to a consideration, it is accepted, without any analysis may not be sufficient: Elias v Commissioner of Taxation [2002] FCA 845 at [62], (2002) 123 FCR 499 at 512. For a consideration to be properly taken into account, a decision-maker must give more than mere "lip service" to a relevant consideration: Anderson v Director-General of the Department of Environment and Climate Change [2008] NSWCA 337 at [58], (2008) 251 ALR 633 at 651 per Tobias JA (Spigelman CJ and Macfarlan JA agreeing). There must be "proper, genuine and realistic" consideration of those matters that are required to be taken into account: Williams v Minister for the Environment and Heritage [2003] FCA 535 at [29] to [30], (2003) 74 ALD 124 at 130. Wilcox J there cited with approval the following observations of Gummow J in Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1987) 14 ALD 291:
"[W]hat was required of the decision maker, in respect of each of the applications, was that in considering all relevant material placed before him, he give proper, genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of the case and be ready in a proper case to depart from any applicable policy ... The assertion by a decision maker that he has acted in this fashion will not necessarily conclude the matter; the question will remain whether the merits have been given consideration in any real sense ..."
…
78 Islam was concerned with a decision made by the Assistant Minister for Immigration and Border Protection and his Honour's comments at [14] and the cases cited therein relate to the nature of the consideration to be given by an administrative decision maker in considering those matters prescribed by relevant legislation, in that case s 501 of the Act. Grounds 2 and 6 of the notice of appeal are limited to the reasons given by the primary judge. The judgment in Islam is not concerned with the issue of whether reasons given by a Court are sufficient or adequate and does not provide any assistance in determining that matter in the context of this appeal.
79 In his written submissions in relation to ground 2 the appellant refers to SZVAP v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 1089 (Flick J) which he submits highlights the fact that adverse credit findings are not immune from examination as to whether jurisdictional error is involved. The appellant relies on [23] of the judgment where Flick J refers to SZSRV v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 220 and notes that the basis upon which the Tribunal has made adverse findings, including adverse findings as to credit, must be adequately explained. But ground 2, as I have already observed, complains about the adequacy of reasons of the primary judge in exposing why he reached the conclusion that he did.
80 The judgment of the High Court in Public Service Board of NSW v Osmond (1986) 159 CLR 657, on which the appellant also relies, was concerned with the issue of whether the appellant in that case, an administrative body, was obliged to give reasons for its decision. But in the course of his judgment Gibbs CJ referred with approval to the principle in Pettitt v Dunkley [1971] NSWLR 376 that an obligation to give reasons lies upon any court, including an intermediate court of appeal, so far as it is necessary to enable the case to be "laid properly and sufficiently" before the higher appellate court and to the observation of Mahoney JA in Housing Commission (NSW) v Tatmar Pastoral Co Pty Ltd [1983] 3 NSWLR 378 that the requirement to give reasons is an "incident of the judicial process" subject to the qualification that it is a normal but not universal incident: at 666-667.
81 There have been a number of judgments addressing the issue of adequacy of reasons. I refer to some of them below.
82 In City of Wanneroo v Holmes (1989) 30 IR 362; [1989] FCA 369 (City of Wanneroo), on which the Minster relies, French J, as his Honour then was, in the context of considering an appeal from an Industrial Magistrate, said the following about sufficiency of reasons at [32] to [33] and [36]:
32. It is well established that a failure by a judge or magistrate to give any or adequate reasons for decision can amount to an error of law. Until recently judicial exposition of the duty rested largely upon the proposition that a failure to do so would encroach upon rights of appeal. This was the limiting criterion enunciated by Moffitt JA (with whom Manning JA agreed) in Pettitt v Dunkley (1971) 1 NSW LR 376 at 388:
I do not think there is any judicial duty to give reasons except so far as such duty can be related to a right of appeal.
The various authorities referred to in his Honour's reasons and the judgment of Asprey JA. in the same case, provided support for that view - see especially Carlson v R (1947) 64 WN (NSW) 65 (Jordan CJ) and generally De Iacovo v Lacanale [1957] VicRp 78; (1957) VR 553, 558-559 (Monahan J.). But in Soulemezis v Dudley (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1987) 10 NSW LR 247, the Court of Appeal did not accept that limitation on the duty. The right of appeal there arose only on a question of law, a circumstance regarded by Kirby P. as enhancing the judge's duty to set out, however briefly, reasons for decision. Mahoney JA repeated the view he had expressed in Housing Commission of New South Wales v Tatmar Pastoral Co. Pty Ltd (1983) 3 NSWLR 378 at 386 that the requirement was not confined to cases where there is an appeal and should be seen as an incident of the judicial process. That comment had been approved by the High Court in Public Service Board of NSW v Osmond (1986) 159 CLR 656, 667 (Gibbs CJ, Wilson, Brennan and Dawson JJ agreeing) with the qualification that the requirement is "a normal but not a universal incident". The third member of the Court of Appeal in Soulemezis, McHugh JA, considered that the statement of reasons for a judicial decision serves at least three purposes:
1. To provide the foundation for acceptability of the decision by the parties and the public.
2. To further judicial accountability.
3. To enable practitioners, legislators and members of the public to ascertain the basis upon which like cases will probably be decided in the future.
...
33. The content of the duty will vary according to the circumstances of the case and in some cases reasons may not be necessary. As McHugh JA observed in Soulemezis (supra) at 279, neither the needs nor the appearance of justice require that reasons be given for every decision by a judicial tribunal. Many interlocutory matters, rulings on admissibility of evidence and the like, will not require explanation. …
…
36. One option open to the Court is simply to set aside the decisions and penalty and send the case back to the Industrial Magistrate for further hearing and determination subject to appropriate directions. Another would be to order a new trial. Each of those options would undoubtedly incur considerable additional expense for both parties. If the proper outcome can be determined without the need for a new trial then that is, in my opinion, the better course to follow. ...
83 In Carlisle Homes Pty Ltd v Barrett Property Group Ltd [2009] FCAFC 31 (Carlisle Homes), a Full Court of this Court (Tamberlin, Sundberg and Besanko JJ) observed at [40] to [41] that "a trial judge is under an obligation to give reasons for his or her decision" and that the rationale for the obligation had been discussed in a number of cases as had the nature and content of the duty. Their Honours referred to a number of the cases which had addressed the nature and content of the duty. They observed that the reasons of a trial judge will be inadequate if the appeal court is unable to ascertain the reasoning upon which the decision is based, or justice is not seen to have been done. Their Honours considered a number of authorities on the issue and at [45] referred to the judgment in Hunter v Transport Accident Commission (2005) 43 MVR 130 and said:
… With respect, his Honour's analysis provides a helpful summary of what we think are the appropriate working principles. He said (at 136-137 [21]):
Furthermore, while the extent of the reasons will depend upon the circumstances of the case, the reasons should deal with the substantial points which have been raised; include findings on material questions of fact; refer to the evidence or other material upon which those finding [sic] are based; and provide an intelligible explanation of the process of reasoning that has led the judge from the evidence to the findings and from the findings to the ultimate conclusion. It should also be understood that the requirement to refer to the evidence is not limited to the evidence that has been accepted and acted upon. If a party has relied on evidence or material which the judge has rejected, the judge should refer to that evidence or material and, in giving reasons which deal with the substantial points that have been raised, explain why that evidence or material has been rejected. There may be exceptions. But, ordinarily, where a judge rejects or excludes from consideration evidence or other material which is relevant and cogent, it is simply not possible to give fair and sensible reasons for the decision without adverting to and assigning reasons for the rejection or exclusion of that material. Similarly, while it is not incumbent upon the judge to deal with every argument and issue that might arise in the course of a case, where an argument is substantial or an issue is significant, it is necessary to refer to and assign reasons for the rejection of the argument or the resolution of the issue. Above all the judge should bear steadily in mind that reasons are not intelligible if they leave the reader to wonder which of a number of possible routes has been taken to the conclusion expressed. Failure to expose the path of reasoning is an error of law.
(citations omitted.)
84 The Full Court in Carlisle Homes also considered the consequences of a failure to provide adequate reasons. At [46] the Court said:
The consequences of a court or judge failing to provide adequate reasons have also been discussed in a number of cases. In Pettit v Dunkley, Asprey JA and Moffitt JA each referred (at 382 and 388 respectively) to a failure to give reasons as an error of law, and Moffitt JA said that such an error could vitiate the judgment even in cases where it did not appear whether or not the omission would have affected the result (see also Soulemezis v Dudley (Holdings) Pty Ltd at 281 per McHugh JA). In Palmer v Clarke (1989) 19 NSWLR 158, the New South Wales Court of Appeal set aside a trial judge's orders because his reasons were inadequate. The Court did so even though the outcome of the case itself was not necessarily incorrect (at 163 per Kirby P (with whom Samuels JA agreed)); at 174 per Priestley JA). In Mifsud v Campbell, Samuels JA (at 728) and Hope A-JA (at 729) each reserved for further consideration the question whether a failure to give adequate reasons was an error of law or some other type of error. In Bourke v Beneficial Finance Corp Ltd (1993) 47 FCR 264, the Full Court of this Court, although it found a failure on the part of a trial judge to give adequate reasons, did not make an order for a new trial. The Court in that case was able to see for itself, quite clearly, that the same result would necessarily be reached and that there would be no point in a new trial. We refer to the observations of the Court at 284. Meagher JA, in Beale v Government Insurance Office of NSW, said (at 444) that the Court could take such an approach in an appropriate case. In Hunter v Transport Accident Commission, the Court concluded that the trial judge had not provided adequate reasons. However, the Court did not remit the matter for rehearing, but, rather, decided the matter for itself. The Court said (at 143 [37]) that, there being no credit issue, the appeal Court was in as good a position to decide the matter as the trial judge.
85 In AMF15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCAFC 68 (AMF15) a Full Court of this Court (Flick, Griffiths and Perry JJ) said at [48]:
It should be further noted that as a matter of substance no reasons were provided by the primary judge as to why he proceeded to dismiss the application. As earlier mentioned, the primary judge accepted the Minister's submissions without more and concluded that, "The application is dismissed under rule 44.12" as he was clearly satisfied (without explanation) that the application failed to disclose any arguable jurisdictional error. Depending upon the facts of any given case, it may be that such reasons as are required to be given may be commendably brief. It may be that little more may be required than a statement as to the need to exercise caution before executing the power conferred by r 44.12 and a brief reference to the facts and the grounds of review relied upon. But some explanation, however brief, is required which exposes an awareness on the part of the judge exercising the power as to the manner in which legal principles have been applied to the facts of a given case. In the absence of reasons which comply with these minimum standards, this Court is severely hampered in discharging its appellate function. In the absence of explanation by the FCCA, the task of providing an applicant with an explanation as to why his judicial review case has been dismissed is impermissibly shifted from the FCCA to this Court. But it is not for this Court on appeal to discharge the functions which should be performed by the FCCA and which have been entrusted by the legislature to that Court.
86 Also of relevance to these grounds is s 28(1) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) which sets out what the Court can do in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction and relevantly provides:
28. Form of judgment on appeal
(1) Subject to any other Act, the Court may, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction:
(a) affirm, reverse or vary the judgment appealed from;
(b) give such judgment, or make such order, as, in all the circumstances, it thinks fit, or refuse to make an order;
(c) set aside the judgment appealed from, in whole or in part, and remit the proceeding to the court from which the appeal was brought for further hearing and determination, subject to such directions as the Court thinks fit;
(d) set aside a verdict or finding of a jury, and enter judgment notwithstanding any such verdict or finding;
…
87 There is an issue between the appellant and the respondent as to whether the argument raised by ground 1 of the notice of appeal was raised before the primary judge in the terms it is now raised. Before me, by consent, the appellant was given leave to rely on ground 1 in the form set out in his submissions. If the ground was argued before the primary judge in the way that it was argued before me then it is the case that the reasons given do not address that ground. The primary judge's reasons address the ground as a no evidence ground. To the extent they do, while they are sparse and could have been more detailed, they are in my view sufficient to tell this Court something of why the primary judge reached the conclusion he did on the ground as he understood it.
88 Whether the ground was argued as now put in ground 1 of the notice of appeal is a matter which has not been resolved. The parties have not sought to tender any transcript of the hearing below or the written submissions that were before the primary judge. The parties rather took the pragmatic approach of proceeding on the basis of a consent order for leave to raise the ground. That being the case, there is insufficient material before me to determine if the ground was raised and if therefore the primary judge's reasons are inadequate in that they simply fail to address the ground.
89 In relation to ground 6 the primary judge dealt with the grounds of appeal concerning the appellant's conversion to Christianity in four paragraphs of his judgment and addresses the grounds as raised together. That may be because of the discursive way in which the grounds were pleaded and the manner in which the relevant paragraphs of the amended application seem to be linked to each other. The grounds that attack the Tribunal's finding on imputed conversion are at [12] and [13] of the Amended Application and are as follows:
12. To surmise that his conversion is merely "temporary therapy," without evidence, is to impose a wrong and impermissible test, by attempting to predict the future depth and resilience of his conversion rather that (sic) asking the question whether he is likely to be persecuted if forced to return to Iran because of his conversion to Christianity or imputed conversion to Christianity.
13. The decision maker implicitly accepts that the Applicant has converted to Christianity in dealing with the resilience of his new faith. He fails to apply the correct statutory test, namely whether the Applicant is reasonably likely to be persecuted for reasons of religion if forced to return to Iran and instead applies a different one, namely to ask how resilient his faith is likely to be in the future.
90 The primary judge referred to the Tribunal's findings in relation to the appellant's conversion to Christianity at [30] of his judgment and held that the Tribunal was addressing the relevant question in the context of its ultimate finding that the appellant did not have a well founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason should he be returned to Iran. The Minister submits that in that way the primary judge did address the predictive nature of the exercise the Tribunal undertook.
91 The primary judge's reasons are rolled up in a summary fashion. He did not fail to provide reasons but the reasons that are provided are of limited, if any, assistance to the Court in relation to the particular ground. They do not expose the primary judge's reasoning on the ground and in that regard they are, in my opinion, inadequate.
92 There may have been a failure to provide reasons, if ground 1 of the notice of appeal was raised below. Further, the reasons provided in rejecting the argument that the Tribunal ought to have accepted that there was a real chance of it being imputed in Iran that the appellant had converted to Christianity, as raised by ground 6, are inadequate. However, I do not propose to remit the matter to the Federal Circuit Court.
93 This is a matter where, as the Full Court in Carlisle Homes identified, I am able to see that the same result would necessarily be reached if it was remitted. A similar approach was taken in City of Wanneroo. In this instance, the parties ought not to be put to the expense of having the matter remitted to the Federal Circuit Court for the provision of further reasons when doing so will not impact on the outcome and I am able to resolve the issues without the need to do so. These are not grounds dependent on findings of fact, an understanding of the material on which the findings of fact were made or the reasoning leading from those finding to the ultimate findings and conclusions. Nor are the circumstances in this case the same as those in AMF15 where there were other grounds for remitting the matter.