The Tribunal found the applicant not to be a reliable witness and listed the reasons for it arriving at that finding. It did accept that there was generalised violence in Nepal, but that this did not amount to persecution under s 91R of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth).
6 In reaching its conclusion that the applicant was not a human rights worker with HURPEC, the Tribunal said:
"[T]he applicant's oral evidence as to when HURPEC was formed and the name of its leader is not consistent with information before me from the official internet web site of HURPEC and referred to elsewhere in this decision.
I am mindful of the need for caution in not requiring an unreasonable level of knowledge or sophistication from an applicant about a political group with which they claim to be involved. However, in the circumstances of this case the applicant has sought to portray himself as a person involved in exposing human rights violations and described himself as an executive member with HURPEC. In my view if the applicant had been involved at the level he has sought to claim [i.e. as an executive member] then it is surprising that in his oral evidence he did not know the correct year in which HURPEC was formed or the identity of its founder and current leader. Indeed when the applicant was confronted with this information he disingenuously suggested that he did not know what a web site was. I do not accept his assertion that these matters could be explained by reference to his involvement in his district of Pipara Simara Bara as distinct from Kathmandu. As I indicated to the applicant the head office and central committee of HURPEC is located in Kathmandu but branch offices exist in districts throughout Nepal.
I note that the applicant has provided a copy of what purports to be his HURPEC identity card. However, I am not satisfied that the provision of this document of itself demonstrates that his claim that he was a human rights worker for HURPEC is reliable."
7 Somewhat remarkably the applicant's legal adviser has relied upon these paragraphs as disclosing jurisdictional errors by the Tribunal. Those errors are, seemingly:
"The Tribunal took into account an irrelevant consideration, namely the Applicant's knowledge of the year in which HURPEC was formed and the identity of its founder and current leader. This was a critical link in the Tribunal's chain of reasoning.
…
The Tribunal failed to take into account a relevant consideration, namely the Applicant's HURPEC identity card."
8 Given the terms of the passages I have quoted, the burden of these grounds is far from obvious. What makes them remarkable is that the second of them mirrors a ground advanced by the same counsel, Mr Clisby, which was rejected by Mansfield J on 12 March 2004 in Applicant A168 of 2003 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 250. The factual setting of, and the claims made in, A168, have marked similarities with the present. Indeed the first of the above grounds refers to a factual matter which appears also to have occurred in A168.
9 In dealing with the HURPEC card/relevant consideration ground, Mansfield J held that it must be rejected for two reasons:
"The first is that the Tribunal did take into account the HURPEC identity card. In its recital of the material it had available, it specifically referred to the HURPEC identity card including that it described the applicant as an executive member. In the 'findings and reasons' section of its decision, it specifically referred to that document and gave a reason why, notwithstanding its content, it did not accept the veracity of the claim that the applicant was an executive member of HURPEC. Whether that process of reasoning is correct or not it does not demonstrate that the Tribunal failed to have regard to that piece of evidence. It may be that the Tribunal considered the expression on the card 'Executive Member' to convey something by way of involvement in HURPEC at a lesser level of prominence than that which the applicant asserted. It specifically addressed his claim to be a prominent member of HURPEC by reason of his human rights activities and rejected it. In rejecting it it had regard to that piece of evidence.
The second reason, in my view, is that that piece of evidence is not itself a relevant consideration. It is a piece of evidence going to a relevant consideration. That is, it was a piece of evidence going to an integer of the applicant's claim. He claimed to be a prominent member of HURPEC and therefore to have been imputed with an adverse political opinion by reason of his activities on behalf of HURPEC, by both the Nepalese authorities and by the Maoists. The HURPEC card was a piece of evidence going to that topic. The Tribunal considered the claims and rejected them. It had regard to the piece of evidence. The piece of evidence itself was not a relevant consideration in the sense of being a consideration which the Act requires the Tribunal to have addressed. What the Act requires the Tribunal to have addressed is each integer of the applicant's claims. The Tribunal did so."
10 While there are slight factual differences between the two cases, the substance of what his Honour said is directly applicable to, and provides a decisive answer to, what Mr Clisby is advancing here.
11 When I drew this decision to Mr Clisby's attention and enquired whether he intended to submit that his Honour's decision was clearly wrong, he disclaimed any such intention. I indicated to him that I assumed, consistent with his duty to the Court, that he intended at least to refer me to A168 notwithstanding he had to be furnished with a copy of Mansfield J's reasons at the hearing before me. The explanation he gave for persisting in raising this ground of appeal was that he had been instructed to do so.
12 I am not in a position to, and I do not, suggest that Mr Clisby has offended the "hopeless case" principle: see generally Dal Pont, Lawyers' Professional Responsibility in Australia and New Zealand, 473 - 475 (2nd ed, 2001); or that he ought not to have acted on his client's instructions: see Ashby v Russell [1997] ANZ Conv R 321 at 323; Ridehalgh v Horsefield [1994] Ch 205 at 233- 234. What is regrettable is the waste of time and resources occasioned by this proceeding.
13 In circumstances such as the present the duty of candour counsel owes to the Court has particular importance. I direct attention in this to rule 25 of the Australian Bar Association's Advocacy Rules (2002) (which is, in substance, replicated in r 14.6 of the Law Society of South Australia's Rules of Professional Conduct & Practice (2003)):
"25. A barrister must, at the appropriate time in the hearing of the case and if the court has not yet been informed of that matter, inform the court of:
(a) any binding authority;
(b) any authority decided by an intermediate court of appeal in Australia;
(c) any authority on the same or materially similar legislation as that in question in the case, including any authority decided at first instance in the Federal Court or a Supreme Court, which has not been disapproved; or
(d) any applicable legislation
which the barrister has reasonable grounds to believe to be directly in point, against the client's case."
14 The only additional comment I should make in relation to the grounds of appeal is that the first (the irrelevant consideration) ground is self-evidently without foundation. The matters relied upon formed part of the Tribunal's assessment of the credibility of the applicant's claim. It was open to the Tribunal to test that claim in the way it did. This ground is no more than a poorly disguised invitation to engage impermissibly in merits review of the Tribunal's conclusion on that claim.
15 The application, as I have said, has been dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding fifteen (15) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Finn .