II. Section 473DC(3): legal unreasonableness
6 Section 473DC of the Act provides:
'473DC Getting new information
(1) Subject to this Part, the Immigration Assessment Authority may, in relation to a fast track decision, get any documents or information (new information) that:
(a) were not before the Minister when the Minister made the decision under section 65; and
(b) the Authority considers may be relevant.
(2) The Immigration Assessment Authority does not have a duty to get, request or accept, any new information whether the Authority is requested to do so by a referred applicant or by any other person, or in any other circumstances.
(3) Without limiting subsection (1), the Immigration Assessment Authority may invite a person, orally or in writing, to give new information:
(a) in writing; or
(b) at an interview, whether conducted in person, by telephone or in any other way.'
7 It will be seen that subsection (3), in particular, contemplates that the Authority may obtain 'new information' from an applicant whether by means of an interview in person or otherwise. Under subsection (1), however, information will only be 'new information' if it was not before the Minister or the delegate at the time of the decision to refuse to grant a visa and it is information that the Authority considers may be relevant.
8 The Appellant's argument turns upon a report prepared by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees dated 6 August 2013 entitled 'Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Afghanistan' ('2013 UNHCR document'). Before turning to the critical part of that report it is necessary to understand the claims which were made by the Appellant and how the delegate and the Authority dealt with those claims. The Appellant had made four claims:
(a) a claim that he faced persecution if returned to Afghanistan because he was a member of the social group consisting of former teachers. The delegate treated this as a claim about being a former teacher but the Authority treated it as a claim about being a former teacher of girls. For present purposes, this difference does not matter. It is convenient to refer to both claims together as the former teacher claim;
(b) a claim that he faced persecution if returned to Afghanistan because he would be a member of the social group consisting of persons who had unsuccessfully sought asylum in the West (the failed asylum seeker claim);
(c) a claim that he faced persecution if returned to Afghanistan because he was a member of the ethnic and religious group of Shia Hazaras (the Shia Hazara claim); and
(d) a claim that he was entitled to complementary protection because he faced a real risk of serious harm if returned to Afghanistan.
9 The Authority rejected the failed asylum seeker claim and Shia Hazara claim on the basis of a statement in the 2013 UNHCR Document in these terms:
'The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has advised that relocation may be a reasonable alternative only where the individual can expect to benefit from meaningful support of his or her own (extended) family, community or tribe in the area of prospective relocation. According to UNHCR the only exception to this requirement of external support are single able-bodied men and married couples of working age without identified vulnerabilities. I am satisfied that the applicant is a single able-bodied man without vulnerabilities. While I accept that there is evidence that some returnees have been targeted for robbery or extortion on the basis of wealth, I am not satisfied that the weight of the evidence indicates that an adult male such as the applicant faces a real chance of harm in Kabul on this basis now, or in the foreseeable future.'
10 It reasoned that because he was a single able-bodied male he could safely live in Kabul. The delegate had not rejected these claims on this basis. He had instead refused them on the basis of other material.
11 Outside the regime of Part 7AA of the Act, a failure to give an applicant an opportunity to comment would result in a denial of procedural fairness: SZBEL v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2006] HCA 63; 228 CLR 152 ('SZBEL') at 163 [35]. However, that reasoning is not applicable to Part 7AA because of s 473DA(1):
'473DA Exhaustive statement of natural justice hearing rule
(1) This Division, together with sections 473GA and 473GB, is taken to be an exhaustive statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to reviews conducted by the Immigration Assessment Authority.
(2) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Part requires the Immigration Assessment Authority to give to a referred applicant any material that was before the Minister when the Minister made the decision under section 65.'
12 The Full Court has held that the effect of this provision is that SZBEL has no direct traction under Part 7AA: DGZ16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 12 at [69]. The Appellant did not deny this, however, and did not rely directly on SZBEL. Instead, the submission was that, returning to s 473DC, it was legally unreasonable for the Authority not to seek the information from him under s 473DC(3) about the 2013 UNHCR Document. If it had done so, it was submitted on his behalf, he would have pointed out the difficulties he faced by reason of being a former teacher of girls.
13 The power to obtain new information conferred on the Authority by s 473DC is to be exercised under the auspices of legal reasonableness: M174/2016 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] HCA 16 (M174) at [21] and [86]. An unreasonable failure to exercise the power under s 473DC may invalidate a purported decision of the Authority: M174 at [21] and [86]. Specifically, it would not have been an answer to the Appellant's argument that:
(a) the Authority did not consider whether to exercise the power in s 473DC(3); or that
(b) subsection 473DC(2) provides that the Authority is under no duty to consider whether to exercise the power in s 473DC(3).
14 So much is established by the Full Court's judgment in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CRY16 [2017] FCAFC 210 ('CRY16') at, respectively, [69] and [70]. Further, in determining whether what occurred was legally unreasonable, it is not irrelevant that the outcome which has ensued is unfair 'in an ordinary sense': CRY16 at [67].
15 In CRY16, the Full Court concluded that it was legally unreasonable not to consider getting documents or information from the visa applicant. The Authority in that case determined that although the visa applicant, as a Sunni Lebanese, faced a real risk of significant harm in his place of habitual residence he could relocate to Beirut where that risk did not exist. The delegate had not decided the case on that basis at all and the first the visa applicant heard of it was when the Authority told him his application had been rejected because of it. The Full Court held that it was legally unreasonable not to seek information about this from the visa applicant under s 473DC(3). The Full Court explained it this way at [82]-[83]:
'82 Our conclusion is that it was legally unreasonable, in the circumstances, not to consider getting documents or information from the respondent. The legislature is to be taken to intend that the Authority's statutory power in s 473DC will be exercised reasonably. The failure to consider the exercise of that discretionary power lacks an evident and intelligible justification in circumstances where the Authority knew that it did not have, but the respondent was likely to have, information on his particular circumstances and the impact upon him of relocation to Beirut. The Authority did not have that information because the question of relocation, either at all or to Beirut, was not explored, or the subject of findings, by the delegate. The Authority's failure to consider the exercise of that discretionary power meant that it disabled itself from considering what was reasonable, in the sense of "practicable", in terms of relocation. In our opinion, as a consequence, the review by the Authority under s 473CC miscarried for jurisdictional error.
83 As in Li, at [82], it is not apparent how the conclusion not to consider the exercise of the discretionary power was reached in the present case, having regard to the facts and to the statutory purpose for which the discretion to get new information was directed.'
16 The difficulty, however, with the Appellant's argument in the present case is twofold. First, the issue of relocation to Kabul was subject to a finding by the delegate (unlike the decision before the Authority in CRY16). Secondly, he had in fact made a submission to the Authority about the risks he faced as a former teacher of girls and the Authority concluded that the Appellant would not face a real chance of persecution as a Shia Hazara former teacher of girls if returned to Kabul.
17 I can discern therefore no unreasonableness in the Authority's decision not to obtain new information from the Appellant under s 473DC of the Act. I do not see that there was any basis upon which it can be said that the Authority should have sought the Appellant's further views under s 473DC.
18 The primary judge dealt with the matter this way at [29]-[32]:
'29. It is apparent from the delegate's decision that the issue of relocation was an issue before the delegate on which the applicant had an opportunity to put submissions. The delegate expressly referred to particular UNHCR country information in relation to single able-bodied men in considering the reasonableness of relocation to Kabul.
30. Ms Grotte properly conceded that there was no request for the Authority to exercise its powers under s.473DC(3). I do not accept that the positive findings in the present case give rise to the position where no reasonable Authority conducting a review under Part 7AA could fail to exercise the power under s.473DC(3). The Authority provided detailed reasons in relation to the ability of the applicant to relocate to Kabul including the availability of the teaching of girls that takes place in Kabul and the country information referred to in the Authority's reasons.
31. It was a relevant consideration in respect of the criteria for complementary protection to take into account the applicant's personal circumstances and the reference to the applicant being an able-bodied male was one referred to in country information identified by the delegate. This was also a relevant matter for the Authority and optn [sic] to the Authority to so find.
32. This is not a case where there is made out legal unreasonableness by reason of the failure to exercise the power under s.473DC(3). No jurisdictional error as alleged in Ground 1(a) is made out.'
19 To the extent that this may suggest that a failure by the Authority to exercise the power in s 473DC cannot be judicially reviewed, it is contrary to M174. However, although the explanation by the primary judge for why it was not unreasonable for the Authority not to inquire of the Appellant is brief, I agree with the underlying conclusion that it was not unreasonable for the Authority to act as it did. The Appellant fails on this argument because, in fact, he received and took the opportunity to make submissions about this matter to the Authority.