3.5 Would any appeal have reasonable prospects of success?
19 In those circumstances, it is unnecessary for me to consider whether, as the Minister submits, there is insufficient merit in the proposed appeal to grant leave in any event. Nonetheless, I consider that it is appropriate to consider this issue, given the seriousness of the consequences for the applicant.
20 The first proposed ground of appeal alleges that the Federal Circuit Court acted in breach of procedural fairness in two respects;
(1) given among other things that the applicant was unrepresented, could not speak, read or write English, and had no understanding of the Australian legal system, the Court below ought to have assisted him to present his case of a failure to consider the psychological report in assessing his credibility;
(2) the primary judge did not take appropriate steps to ensure that the applicant had sufficient information about the practice and procedure of the court and, in particular, did not explain the reasons for denying him the opportunity to submit photographs as proof of his involvement with the LTTE.
21 As the Minister submitted, a court has a duty to ensure a fair trial and, as a consequence, it may be appropriate for the court to give some assistance to those who are unrepresented in order to fulfil that duty. However, the Court hearing a case between an unrepresented litigant and another party "cannot give assistance to the unrepresented litigant in such a way as to conflict with its role as an impartial adjudicator": Reisner v Bratt [2004] NSWCA 22 at [4] (Hodgson JA). As the Court of Appeal explained in Hamod v New South Wales [2011] NSWCA 375 (to which the applicant referred in his proposed grounds of appeal):
311. Insofar as the duty relates specifically to an unrepresented party, it has been said that a trial judge has an obligation to take appropriate steps to ensure that the unrepresented litigant has sufficient information about the practice and procedure of the court, so far as is reasonably practicable for the purpose of ensuring a fair trial. The application of that principle will vary depending upon the circumstances of the case…
312. Although the duty of a trial judge to assist an unrepresented litigant is cast in active terms, it does not extend to advising the accused as to how his or her rights should be exercised: R v Gidley (1984) 3 NSWLR 168. Rather, the judge has to put the unrepresented litigant in the position of being able to make an effective choice, a duty which applies notwithstanding the adversarial character of a criminal trial: McPherson per Mason J at 534. The duty is the same in a civil proceeding, with such modifications as are called for to take account of civil procedures. However, it is not the function of the court to give judicial advice to, or conduct the case on behalf of, the unrepresented litigant…
(Citations omitted)
22 In short, the Court must ensure that an unrepresented applicant is in a position to decide in an informed way how she or he wishes to pursue her or his rights, but cannot assist an applicant to establish her or his case.
23 Bearing these matters in mind, it is evident that the alleged breaches of procedural fairness have no reasonable prospects of success. The first complaint of a breach of procedural fairness merely asserts breach by reason of an alleged failure to assist the applicant in presenting an aspect of his case; it does not identify any particular breach of procedural fairness such as identifying what assistance was not, but ought to have been, given and how that failure impacted on the applicant's capacity to present his case. The second complaint concerns the primary judge's rejection of the tender by the applicant of photographs in relation to his alleged involvement with the LTTE. However as the primary judge held at [8] of his reasons, the photographs were not relevant to the issues before the Court because it had jurisdiction only to determine the lawfulness of the Tribunal's decision; it did not have jurisdiction to decide whether or not the applicant's claims to fear harm should have been accepted by the Tribunal: see below at [25]. The decision in SZRUR v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2013] FCAFC 146; (2013) 216 FCR 445 (SZRUR), which is cited in the proposed ground of appeal, does not suggest otherwise. In that case the Full Court held that the primary judge ought to have explained to the unrepresented appellant that he could give evidence in support of his allegation that the migration agent had acted fraudulently in the conduct of his visa application and the failure by the Court to give that explanation may have affected the outcome. Unlike SZRUR, however, in this case there was no different procedure which the Court below could have explained to the applicant with respect to the tender of the photographs that might have led to a different outcome.
24 Ground 2 alleges that the Court below erred in failing to find that the Tribunal's decision was unreasonable because it did not take into account the applicant's memory loss as a result of medical treatment in making findings as to his credibility. The ground, however, has no reasonable prospects of succeeding. The Tribunal accepted that at the time of his entry interview, the applicant was receiving medical treatment and that he had expressed difficulties with his memory at the interview. The Tribunal then took that into account and as a result "placed limited weight on his evidence from the entry interview and is willing to accept that it is not significantly inconsistent with his oral evidence to the Tribunal." (Tribunal's reasons at [33]). There is therefore no arguable case that the primary judge erred in finding that the Tribunal had in fact taken this matter into account in making credibility findings (Court below at [15]).
25 Finally, in his oral submissions the applicant repeated his claims to fear persecution and harm if returned to Sri Lanka. As I explained at the hearing, the jurisdiction of the Federal Circuit Court is limited to deciding whether the Tribunal's decision was made lawfully under the Migration Act, that is, whether the Tribunal's decision is invalid by reason of a jurisdictional error. This Court in turn must decide whether the Federal Circuit Court wrongly decided that there was no jurisdictional error. The Tribunal would make a jurisdictional error if, for example, it misunderstood the criteria by which the applicant's visa application must be assessed under the Act, or if it failed to hear and determine his application in accordance with the requirements of procedural fairness: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf [2001] HCA 30; (2001) 206 CLR 323 at [82] (McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ); Craig v South Australia (1995) 184 CLR 163 at 179 (the Court). However, neither this Court nor the Federal Circuit Court has jurisdiction to grant the applicant a visa, to consider whether he satisfies the criteria for the grant of protection visa, or to correct mistaken findings of fact by the Tribunal: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Rajalingam (1999) 93 FCR 220 at [65] (Sackville J), [146] (Kenny J); Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; ex parte Applicant S20/2002 [2003] HCA 30; (2003) 77 ALJR 1165 at [114] (Kirby J). The question of whether or not this Court or the Court below agrees with the Tribunal's decision is not, therefore, a basis for finding that decision invalid, even if another decision-maker might have made a different decision.
26 For these reasons, any appeal would have no reasonable prospects of success even if an extension of time were granted.