Resolution
30 There is no debate that the preconditions set out in s 473DD which are required to be satisfied before the Authority can consider "new information" are cumulative. However, there is a degree of overlap in them, and it is for that reason that if the Authority adopts too narrow an approach it may fall into error.
31 In BDY18, the Full Court expressed it this way at [23]-[26]:
So, the Authority must be satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances in all cases. In addition, where the visa applicant is the source of the information, the Authority must be satisfied of one of the other circumstances set out in s 473DD(b)(i) and (ii) before it can consider new information.
As to what is meant by exceptional circumstances, in Plaintiff M174/2016, Gageler, Keane and Nettle JJ said at [30]:
Quite what will amount to exceptional circumstances is inherently incapable of exhaustive statement. The word 'exceptional', in such a context, is not a term of art but 'an ordinary, familiar English adjective': '[t]o be exceptional a circumstance need not be unique or unprecedented, or very rare; but it cannot be one that is regularly, or routinely, or normally encountered'.
Whether a particular instance is exceptional requires a contextual evaluation by reference to all the circumstances of the case. The requisite state of satisfaction as to whether there are exceptional circumstances cannot be formed by focussing upon a particular aspect to the exclusion of other matters. Section 473DD(a) requires all the circumstances to be evaluated together to determine whether they are exceptional. The phrase 'exceptional circumstances' is to be given a broad meaning and matters that form part of those circumstances may overlap with those referred to in s 473DD(b). As to these matters, see Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v BBS16 [2017] FCAFC 176; (2017) 257 FCR 111 at [104] (Kenny, Tracey and Griffiths JJ); AQU17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 111 at [14] (McKerracher, Murphy and Davies JJ); Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CQW17 [2018] FCAFC 110; (2018) 264 FCR 249 at [51] (McKerracher, Murphy and Davies JJ); and the analysis by Mortimer J in CVV16 v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCA 1890 at [23]-[27].
Section 473DD specifies two requirements, those in para (a) and those in para (b) (which itself has two alternatives). The two requirements in (a) and (b) are cumulative. If one is not met then the new information must not be considered. There is no need to go on and consider the other requirement: AUH17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCA 388 at [34]. However, because the considerations that are relevant to the two requirements may overlap, an error as to the formation of the state of satisfaction as to one may infect the other.
32 BDY18 was a case where the jurisdictional error was that the Authority, in applying s 473DD, had formed its state of satisfaction in a legally unreasonable way. That is not how the argument was put in this case to the Federal Circuit Court, nor how it is put in the notice of appeal. Nevertheless, the general approach set out by the Full Court is applicable.
33 The next point to note is that ss 473DD(b)(i) and (b)(ii) are expressed in the alternative. In other words, as the Full Court pointed out in BDY18, the Authority must always be satisfied there are exceptional circumstance to justify considering the new information. An applicant must also satisfy the Authority that either:
(a) the new information was not, and could not have been, provided to the delegate prior to the delegate's decision: para (b)(i); or
(b) the new information is credible personal information which was not previously known and, had it been previously known, may have affected the consideration of the referred applicant's claims: para (b)(ii).
34 Section 473DD(b)(ii) refers, as its text makes clear, to whether the information could have affected the delegate's consideration of whether to grant or refuse a protection visa. The reference to "not previously known" in s 473DD(b)(ii) could be a reference to what was known, or not known, by the delegate or the applicant or both. The language could also be suggestive of a more objective and hypothetical test, without reference to the state of mind of either the delegate or an applicant. It is not necessary to determine this construction question for the purposes of resolving the issue in this appeal.
35 As Bromberg J explained in CSR16 at [42], the term "credible" is used in s 473DD(b)(ii) as "a filtering mechanism designed to separate information worthy of consideration at the deliberative stage from that which is not". His Honour said at [41]:
In my view all that the "credible" element of the s 473DD(b)(ii) criteria requires is the Authority's satisfaction that the "new information" is information which is open to be or capable of being accepted by the Authority as truthful (or accurate, or genuine). It is only at the deliberative stage of its review that the Authority will be required to determine whether or not the "new information" is true. The s 473DD(b)(ii) criteria is concerned with an earlier or anterior stage of the review directed at whether "new information" should be received by the Authority so that it may be considered at the deliberative stage.
36 I respectfully agree. The same approach was taken by O'Bryan J in BOS17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2020] FCA 75 at [43], adopting Bromberg J's approach in CSR16, and adding:
The word "credible" does not impose a requirement that the information be believed by the Authority or that it be judged by the Authority to be more likely than not true.
37 Finally, in terms of principle, it is important to recognise that the whole purpose of s 473DD is to deal with a circumstance that is an exception to the usual way in which the Authority is required to review a decision. The usual way is set out in s 473DB(1) - a review under Part 7AA is to be decided without accepting or requesting new information and without interviewing a visa applicant. Thus, the premise of s 473DD is that there is further "new" information that has not been disclosed to the delegate. The mere fact of non-disclosure is therefore not a sufficient basis for the rejection of new information, otherwise the purpose of the exception for which s 473DD provides would be frustrated. The objective of s 473DD is to take the non-disclosure as a starting point and then to require the Authority to engage in an evaluative exercise about whether there is, in accordance with the text of the provision, a sufficient justification to make an exception to the operation of s 473DB(1).