The circuit Court decision
20 On 7 March 2019 the applicant filed an application for judicial review in the Circuit Court in which he raised the following grounds:
Ground One:
The Administrative Appeals Tribunal has failed to apply the correct test pursuant to Section 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth).
Particulars
In dealing with the Applicant's claims under Section 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), the Administrative Appeals Tribunal explicitly failed to disaggregate the statutory formulae under Section 36(2)(aa) of the Act.
Ground Two:
The Administrative Appeals Tribunal denied procedural fairness to the applicant.
21 The primary judge made some general observations about the claims made by the applicant to the Tribunal and his presentation of the evidence in support of it, expressing a general feeling of unease about the Tribunal's findings. His Honour noted that, although a matter beyond the scope of the proceeding, the case merited further consideration by the Minister and his Department: AYB19 at [29]-[30].
22 The primary judge then considered the applicant's oral submissions made at the hearing which concerned allegations that the Tribunal had failed to deal properly with several of the documents he had provided to it. The primary judge was satisfied, in relation to each document raised by the applicant, that the Tribunal had considered it or, in relation to a particular document that the applicant had only provided in Bengali, that his Honour could not draw any conclusion about its significance. The primary judge was not persuaded by the applicant's oral submissions that he had an arguable case of jurisdictional error by the Tribunal: AYB19 at [31]-[37].
23 The primary judge turned to address each of the grounds raised by the applicant.
24 His Honour found that ground 1 did not reveal any error on the part of the Tribunal. At [40], after summarising the Tribunal's findings relevant to its consideration of the complementary protection criterion, the primary judge reasoned:
The Tribunal's factual findings comprehensively dealt with the claims put forward by the applicant and it additionally found that the applicant would not face serious or significant harm for reason of his religion. Furthermore, the Tribunal correctly made findings under the complementary protection criterion in respect of conduct which it disregarded under s.5J(6) of the Migration Act. Ground 1 is not arguable.
25 The primary judge observed that ground 2, which alleged that the Tribunal denied the applicant procedural fairness, was not particularised. His Honour noted that the applicant was invited to two hearings; that the Tribunal's decision was based on the same dispositive issues as that of the delegate but nonetheless the Tribunal discussed those issues at the hearings; there was no information that enlivened the Tribunal's obligations under s 424A of the Act; and the Tribunal put information to the applicant pursuant to s 424AA of the Act: AYB19 at [41].
26 Finally, the primary judge considered an issue raised by the Minister concerning a purported certificate issued pursuant to s 438 of the Act. His Honour noted that the certificate was invalid, that its existence was not disclosed to the applicant and that, by failing to do so, the Tribunal breached its procedural fairness obligations or, if the Tribunal did act on the invalid certificate, it followed a procedure contrary to the law. However, his Honour found that neither breach amounted to a jurisdictional error because neither was material in that they did not deprive the applicant of the possibility of a successful outcome. At [49]-[50] his Honour said:
49. The materials subject to the certificate were not relevant to the applicant's claims for protection nor to the issues being considered by the Tribunal. Therefore:
a) if the Court were to find that the Tribunal acted on the invalid certificate, there is no realistic possibility that the Tribunal's decision could have been different if the material covered by the certificate had been taken into account; and
b) in relation to the failure by the Tribunal to disclose the existence of the certificate to the applicant, there is no realistic possibility that the Tribunal's decision could have been different if the certificate had been disclosed so as to allow the applicant a full opportunity to make submissions about it.
50. In short, the certificate is plainly invalid. It was not disclosed to the applicant by the Tribunal, and it should have been. Having regard to the documents purportedly covered by the certificate, that omission was, however, not material to the review.