The Federal Circuit Court of Australia Decision
21 Only two aspects of the FCCA decision are directly relevant to the Appellant's appeal in this Court. The first such aspect is the FCCA's reasoning with respect to the penalty for desertion, which was as follows:
53. The applicant appears to claim that the Tribunal made findings in relation to whether the applicant was on "active service", and as to the penalty the applicant would face upon return to Pakistan, which were "devoid of any real thought processes and possibilities''.
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55. In the Court's view the Minister's submission that this ground argues that the Tribunal was required to put its thought processes to the applicant adopting the procedure under S.424A of the Migration Act is misconceived. Rather, it appears that the applicant is saying that the Tribunal has not considered a component integer of the applicant's claim to meet the criteria for a Protection Visa, or not engaged in an appropriate intellectual process thereby leaving the applicant guessing at what particular role a particular issue, in this case the meaning of "active service" in the Navy Ordinance, played, if any, in any facts found in the Tribunal Decision, which on either account constitutes jurisdictional error: Dranichnikov v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [2003] HCA26; (2003) 77 ALJR 1088; (2003) 197 ALR389; (2003) 73 ALD 321 at [24]-[25] per Gummow and Callinan JJ; Htun v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 1802; (2001) 233 FCR 136; (2001) 194 ALR 244 at [42] per Allsop J; Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v MZYTS [2013] FCAFC 114; (2013) 230 FCR 431; (2013) 136 ALD 547 at [62] per Kenny, Griffiths and Mortimer JJ; Lafunv Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2009] FCAFC 140; (2009) 112 ALD 1 at [47]-[54] per Lindgren, Rares and Foster JJ.
56. The High Court considered the approach a Tribunal ought to take in the Minister for Immigration & Citizenship v SZMDS [2010] HCA 16; (2010) 240 CLR 611; (2010) 84 ALJR 369; (2010) 266 ALR 367; (2010) 115 ALD 248 at [133] per Crennan and Bell JJ:
[133] However, the correct approach is to ask whether it was open to the Tribunal to engage in the process of reasoning in which it did engage and to make the findings it did make on the material before it.
57. The Court is also cognisant of the fact that the Tribunal Decision ought not be overzealously examined for error: Wu Shan Liang, CLR at 272 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ.
58. The applicant was on notice that the issue of whether or not he was on active service or "in action" was an issue to be reviewed by the Tribunal as a consequence of the Delegate's Decision in which it was concluded that he was on non-active service rendering him liable to a short period of detention and cessation of payment: CB 192 at [29].
59. The Tribunal was plainly aware that the applicant alleged that he may be killed or seriously harmed by the Government because of a lack of tolerance for dissent and opposition within the Navy: CB 188-190 at [13]; and that the Delegate in the Delegate's Decision had considered the applicant's complementary protection claims by reference to the nature of the mission upon which the Navy ship from which the applicant deserted was engaged, and had concluded that it was "non-active service" and that the penalty that the applicant may face would be a period of 7, 14 or 28 days detention and cessation of payment for his period of absence: CB 192 at [29].
60. The Tribunal went through the circumstances of the applicant's desertion and what the applicant thought might happen if he was returned to Pakistan, in relation to which the applicant thought he might be executed, and in relation to which the Tribunal noted and discussed with the applicant that the country information that he relied upon for that view was related to the slaughter of school students by terrorists, and the murder of a senior Naval officer by a deserter, and that those matters were not really comparable: CB 200-201 at [115]-[119].
61. The Tribunal discussed the possible length of the term of imprisonment for desertion with the applicant, and noted that the usual penalty for desertion was summary dismissal with a dishonourable discharge from the Navy: CB 201 at [125].
62. The Tribunal also:
a) considered the penalties for desertion which were detailed in a DFAT cable of 11 July 2006 ("2006 DFAT Cable") and in a Refugee Review Tribunal response of 29 April 2009 PAK34771 ("2009 RRT PAK34771"): CB 204 at [132];
b) had regard to relevant provisions of the Navy Ordinance with respect to desertion, namely ss.45 and 46, which it set out as follows:
Definition of desertion 45.
A person is guilty of desertion within the meaning of this Ordinance if he leaves or fails to attend at his ship or place of duty with the intention of remaining permanently absent from duty without proper authority or if having left or failed to attend at his ship or place of duty in any circumstances, he does any act with the like intention.
Desertion 46.
(1) Every person subject to this Ordinance who deserts shall-
(a) if he commits the offence on active service or when under orders for active service, be liable to suffer long imprisonment; and
(b) if he commits the offence under any other circumstances, be liable to suffer short imprisonment.
c) found that the charges against a deserter are generally dismissed and they are discharged, however depending on the period of desertion, the deserter may face a period of detention of 7, 14 or 28 days: CB 216 at [273];
d) took into account the applicant's "role as a junior stocktaker of rations", and weighed that against the independent material before the Tribunal, to find that the applicant would not face either the death penalty or disproportionate penalties for his desertion: CB 216 at [278]; and
e) considered the nature of the naval exercises which the applicant's vessel was involved in: CB 202 at [129], and found that the applicant's desertion was not whilst "in action", but rather whilst on an exercise involving a number of countries, and therefore the penalties applicable to the applicant would either be dismissal and discharge or a brief period of detention: CB 216 at [281]-[284], and it followed that the applicant would not be subjected to significant harm for non-Convention reasons: CB 217 at [286], In making that finding the Tribunal had regard to the particular circumstances of the applicant's desertion, the media coverage of it, and the request of the Government, made to the Australian authorities, for the arrest and return of the applicant: CB 216 at [279]-[280],
63. The applicant's argument before the Court with respect to the alleged error by the Tribunal in its consideration of the issue of "active service" in ss.45 and 46 of the Navy Ordinance is based upon an extract from Wikipedia dealing with "Active Duty", which, in the Wikipedia extract, is said to refer to fulltime occupation as part of a military force, as opposed to reserve duty, and that in Great Britain and Commonwealth countries the equivalent term is "active service". A further part of the Wikipedia extract deals with statistical details as to the size of the Pakistan armed forces.
64. The material relied upon by the applicant seeks, as is expressed in the Applicant's Final Written Submissions, to reargue the conclusions reached by the Tribunal, arguing that the Tribunal's conclusion is based on irrelevant material and information, and that the statutory provisions provide for long imprisonment and not short detention as concluded by the Tribunal.
65. The Court has determined that it ought not have regard to the Wikipedia extract which the applicant seeks to rely upon for the purposes of establishing jurisdictional error in the Tribunal Decision because:
a) whilst it is a well-established principle that there is no prohibition as such on receiving new evidence in judicial review proceedings, ordinarily the Court should exercise "resistance to the admission of fresh evidence": MZXLD v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2007] FCA 1912 at [120] per Gordon J;
b) it is not open to the Court on a judicial review application to consider material which was not put before the Tribunal, where:
i) the applicant had more than one opportunity to submit evidence and material over a lengthy period of time, and simply did not take advantage of the opportunity provided to put the Wikipedia extract before the Tribunal: Sullivan v Department of Transport (1978) 20 ALR 323; (1978) 1 ALD 383; and
ii) the applicant is effectively inviting the Court to admit new evidence for the purpose of disagreeing with the factual conclusion reached by the Tribunal, as opposed to the new evidence bearing on some jurisdictional error, and that invitation mistakes the role of the Court upon judicial review and seeks to invite the Court to undertake impermissible merits review: SZJMG at [27] per McKerracher J; Wu Shan Liang, CLR at 272 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ; and
iii) there is no means of knowing if the information in the Wikipedia extract is reliable, and the reliability of the information therein is, at the very least, uncertain.
66. The Tribunal did not in the Court's view err by finding that the applicant would not have been liable to long imprisonment for desertion. Section 46 of the Navy Ordinance provides that a deserter will "be liable to suffer long imprisonment", that is it provides for a maximum penalty, and does not preclude a lesser penalty being imposed, as was found to be the case by the Tribunal in relation to lesser cases of desertion, that conclusion being based on credible country information prepared by DFAT and the RRT as to how s.46 of the Navy Ordinance had recently been applied in Pakistan. The Tribunal also had regard to the letter sent by the Navy to the applicant's parents which indicated that the penalty likely to be imposed for desertion was the "loss of his job" and the bringing of shame to his family: CB 216 at [274] (and CB 169). The Court notes that the language used in the letter from the Navy to the applicant's parents is not consistent with any suggestion that the Navy would seek to impose the death penalty or some form of disproportionate penalty upon the applicant. The Court finds that the Tribunal having regard to:
a) the terms of the statute (the Navy Ordinance) itself;
b) the relevant country information; and
c) correspondence sent by the Navy to the applicant's parents, is relevant material and information upon which the Tribunal was entitled to base its conclusion, and the applicant's assertion to the contrary is not made out.
67. It follows from the foregoing that the Court is of the view that there was no error, let alone jurisdictional error, in this regard in relation to the Tribunal Decision and it was open for the Tribunal to make the findings it did on the material before it, and therefore Further Ground 4 does not establish any jurisdictional error in the Tribunal Decision.
68. Neither party sought to adduce or refer the Court to any statutory or case law definition of the meaning of "active service" for the purposes of ss.45 and 46 of the Navy Ordinance. The Court notes, but has not had any regard to, the fact that there is a definition of "active service" in s.4of the Navy Ordinance: see Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), s.174.
22 The second aspect of the reasoning of the FCCA that is pertinent to these proceedings is the FCCA's treatment of a claim made by the now Appellant that the Tribunal had erred by "describing the applicant as low profile" and had as a result underestimated the threat that he faced. The FCCA addressed this claim as follows:
[47] In relation to the applicant's profile the applicant refers to three media reports which post-date the Tribunal Decision, and in relation to which the applicant does no more than seek to rely upon those reports to dispute the Tribunal's findings, and as such the three media reports are not materials which the Court can have regard to: WZATI v Minister for Immigration & Border Protection [2015] FCA 923 (UWZATF) at [70] per Barker J; SZJMG v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2008] FCA 1145 ("SZJMG") at [27] per McKerracher J. The remaining documents which the applicant now seeks to rely upon, and which predate the Tribunal Hearing, mistake the role of the Court, in that they invite the Court to assess the merits of the applicant's claims by reference to selected country information: but that is, for reasons set out above: see [18] and [25] above, the role of the Tribunal: Wu Shan Liang, CLR at 272 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ. In circumstances where, as here, the Tribunal has set out the relevant law, and assessed the applicant's claims by reference to relevant country information (and there was country information referred to by the Tribunal which was specific to the applicant's home area: CB 207 at [169], 208 at [175] and 209 at [191]-[196], and to his Pashtun ethnicity and religion: CB 211-213 at [216]-[236]) no jurisdictional error in the Tribunal Decision is established by this aspect of the Applicant's Final Written Submissions. Even if the Court were to be able to have regard to the press reports referred to by the applicant which pre-date the Tribunal Hearing it is to be noted that:
a) three of the four press reports referred to relate to attacks on major institutional infrastructure, namely a Navy dockyard, an Army run school and a Navy air base; and
b) the fourth press report relates to the shooting of the then 14 year old peace activist Malala Yousafzai, and would do nothing to advance the applicant's case on the merits in circumstances where the Tribunal has, in a finding open to it, assessed the applicant as being a low level sailor in the Navy whose profile would not warrant attention from the Taliban. As the Tribunal also observed, the applicant would be likely to be dismissed from the Navy as a result of his deserting his ship in Australian waters. It follows that he would therefore be unlikely to be in the vicinity of the type of infrastructure attacked by the Taliban as referred to in the press reports now sought to be relied upon by the applicant. The comparison to Ms Yousafzai is simply not apt: Ms Yousafzai is an internationally recognised activist whereas the applicant is a low level junior Navy sailor who, in a finding that the Court considers was open to the Tribunal, was found to be a person not of interest to the Taliban.
[48] In relation to the second aspect of the applicant's submissions concerning his home area origins, religion, language, tribal affiliations, association with the Navy and way of life, these are all matters which were put to the Tribunal, and considered by the Tribunal, as is evident from the Tribunal Decision summary set out above: see [5] above, and from the country information referred to by the applicant in the Applicant's Further Written Submissions. Once again, the applicant's submissions amount to no more than an invitation to the Court to reassess the merits of the Tribunal Decision. This Court cannot substitute its own view in relation to the applicant's profile and alleged threat from the Taliban for that of the Tribunal. To undertake that task is to engage in fact-finding for the purposes of merits review, which is not a permissible task for this Court on judicial review of the Tribunal Decision: Wu Shan Liang, CLR at 272 and 281-282 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ, particularly where, as here, the findings of fact were open to the Tribunal, and otherwise made in accordance with the law: NADR v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 167 at [9] per Heerey, RD Nicholson and Selway JJ. The weight to be given to an applicant's claims and the evidence is a matter for the Tribunal to assess as part of its fact-finding function: Wu Shan Liang CLR at 281-282 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ; SZJSS at [33] per French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Hey don, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ; SZRTN at [81]-[82] per Katzmann J. It is also well established that the consideration of, and weight attributed to, country information is a matter for the Tribunal and that the Court will generally not interfere with factual findings open to be made based on country information: NAHI v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 (NAHI) at [11] per Gray, Tamberlin and Lander JJ; Lee v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCA 464 ("Lee") at [27] per French J; Indatissa at [32] per Sundberg, Emmett and Conti JJ. While the applicant may disagree with the country information, or dispute the factual findings drawn from it by the Tribunal, disagreement with a finding does not support a contention the Tribunal failed to consider evidence properly or fairly: SZDFZ v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship &Anor [2008] FCA 390; (2008) 168 FCR 1; (2008) 100 ALD 575 ("SZDFZ') at [40] per Flick J.
[49] The Tribunal considered all the material put before it in relation to the applicant's claim to have a profile which would result in his being threatened by the Taliban in Pakistan, both on the basis of his experience in the Navy, and on the claims made peculiar to the applicant's home area, religion, language, tribal affiliations, association with the Navy and his way of life, and the Tribunal applied itself to that material to make findings which were open to be made in relation the applicant's profile.