Analysis and disposition of the appeal
36 As noted above, it was submitted on behalf of the appellant in her first outline of written submissions that the primary judge had erred in not finding that the RRT had failed to address the appellant's claims that she had been physically and sexually assaulted. It is difficult to see how this submission fits within any of the three grounds of appeal in the further amended notice of appeal, however, I will address it in circumstances where the Minister did not raise any pleading point.
37 In my view, this part of the appellant's case is based on an over-zealous reading of the RRT's reasons for decision and is contrary to the need for restraint in reviewing such reasons as required by Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; 185 CLR 259 (Wu Shan Liang).
38 The primary judge did not err in her consideration of the appellant's claim that she had been physically and sexually assaulted during the course of an interrogation by soldiers. Although there was no reference to that specific claim in [22] of the RRT's reasons for decision (where there is a summary of the appellant's claims regarding the interrogation), it is plain from [34] that the RRT was mindful of the fact that the appellant had claimed that she had been mistreated physically or sexually during the course of the interrogation. The RRT explained in [34] that it did not accept that the appellant had been mistreated physically or sexually because of the "highly significant credibility concerns" it had with her evidence, by reference to the six matters set out in [33] of the RRT's reasons for decision.
39 The appellant's contentions in relation to this matter are not only inconsistent with Wu Shan Liang, but they also fail to take into account Gleeson CJ's observations in Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Applicant S20/2002 [2003] HCA 30; 77 ALJR 1165 at [14] regarding the structure of an administrative decision-maker's reasons for decision:
Decision-makers commonly express their reasons sequentially; but that does not mean that they decide each factual issue in isolation from the others. Ordinarily they review the whole of the evidence, and consider all issues of fact, before they write anything. Expression of conclusions in a certain sequence does not indicate a failure to consider the evidence as a whole. I do not think that the Tribunal member intended to convey that she made up her mind about the evidence of the applicant/appellant before taking account of the evidence of the witness who was said to corroborate him.
40 Although Gleeson CJ's remarks were directed to the structure of the reasons of the Tribunal in that particular case, I respectfully consider that they apply equally here. Merely because there is no express reference in [22] of the RRT's reasons for decision to the alleged sexual assault does not mean that the matter was not considered, particularly when there is an express reference to it later in the RRT's reasons at [34] (see also Murad v Assistant Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 73; 250 FCR 510 at [44]-[46] per Griffiths, Mortimer and Perry JJ). The reasons should be read as a whole.
41 As to the appellant's complaint in ground 1 that the RRT did not consider her claim in respect of her older brother having been granted a protection visa in 2009, I accept the Minister's submissions that this ground should be rejected for the reasons which are summarised in [30] to [33] above. This case is far removed from a case such as CDD15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 65; 250 FCR 587, where the Full Court allowed an appeal on the basis that the FCCA had erred in not accepting the appellant's contention that the RRT had failed to deal with a claim of persecution which arose squarely in the appellant's case (see also NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) [2004] FCAFC 263; 144 FCR 1 (NABE) at [58]-[59]). Here, there was no failure by the primary judge to engage with the reasons of the RRT.
42 The difficulty with the appellant's claims under both grounds 1 and 3 is that her case, as presented to the RRT, did not draw attention in any clear way to the relevance to her case of the fact that her older brother had been granted a protection visa (see further [45] below).
43 The appellant's claim in ground 2 that the RRT had not considered her claim of harm by paramilitary groups must also be rejected. It is evident from [18] of the primary judge's reasons for judgment that the appellant, who represented herself in the FCCA, submitted that the RRT had only focused on the EPDP. Her Honour rejected that contention by reference to what the RRT said at [47] of its reasons for decision which, for convenience, is now set out (emphasis added):
47. Based on her individual circumstances (including that she and her family members have never been targeted by any paramilitary group) and the overall weight of the country information, I find that the applicant does not face a real chance of persecution on account of her Tamil race, membership of particular social groups (including young Tamil females from the north or her family) or her actual or imputed political opinion or any other Convention reason or any non-Convention reason, now or in the reasonably foreseeable future from the authorities, paramilitary groups such as the EPDP or anyone else.
44 The RRT's conclusion is expressed by reference to "paramilitary groups" and not merely the EPDP. That particular group is cited as an example of a broader class.
45 Appeal ground 3 should also be rejected. As is evident from the summary above of both the background facts and the RRT proceeding, the appellant never made a clear claim that her older brother had a connection to the LTTE or that his claims or evidence in support of his protection visa application were relevant, let alone critical, to the appellant's claims. Nor, in my view, did any such claim arise on the basis of evidence and material before the RRT, noting that a claim which is apparent on the face of material before the RRT does not "depend for its exposure on constructive or creative activity by the Tribunal" (see NABE at [58] and see also NAVK v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCA 1695 at [15] per Allsop J, which passage was approved in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZRMA [2013] FCAFC 161; 219 FCR 287 at [70]). It is not without significance that the appellant was assisted by a migration agent and lawyer in the RRT yet no submission was made there regarding the relevance of the fact that the older brother had been granted a protection visa back in June 2009.
46 The parties were agreed that the relevant principles concerning a duty to inquire were summarised by the Full Court recently in Ashraf v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 50 (Ashraf) at [56] per Tracey, Mortimer and Moshinsky JJ:
56 There does not appear to be any significant difference between the parties as to the applicable principles, which may be briefly stated as follows. The authorities establish that the Tribunal has no general obligation to initiate enquiries or to make out an applicant's case for him or her: Le at [60] and cases there cited. In SZIAI, French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ noted (at [20]) that "[t]he failure of an administrative decision-maker to make inquiry into factual matters which can readily be determined and are of critical significance to a decision made under statutory authority, has sometimes been said to support characterisation of the decision as an exercise of power so unreasonable that no reasonable person would have so exercised it". Their Honours said (at [21]) that the observations of Wilcox J in Prasad may support such a proposition. After noting, at [23], that the proposition that may emerge from Prasad had not been the subject of full consideration by the High Court, and referring to observations that had been made in certain cases, their Honours said (at [25]):
Although decisions in the Federal Court concerned with a failure to make obvious inquiries have led to references to a "duty to inquire", that term is apt to direct consideration away from the question whether the decision which is under review is vitiated by jurisdictional error. The duty imposed upon the tribunal by the Migration Act is a duty to review. It may be that a failure to make an obvious inquiry about a critical fact, the existence of which is easily ascertained, could, in some circumstances, supply a sufficient link to the outcome to constitute a failure to review. If so, such a failure could give rise to jurisdictional error by constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction. It may be that failure to make such an inquiry results in a decision being affected in some other way that manifests itself as jurisdictional error. It is not necessary to explore these questions of principle in this case.
(Footnote omitted.)
47 In Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Le [2007] FCA 1318; 164 FCR 151, Kenny J referred at [60] to there being authority "for the limited proposition that, in certain rare or exceptional circumstances, the Tribunal's failure to enquire may ground a finding of jurisdictional error because the failure may render the ensuing decision manifestly unreasonable in the sense used in Associated Provincial Picture Houses v Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KB 223 (Wednesbury Corporation)…" (emphasis added). In my respectful view, her Honour's statement still represents the law while also acknowledging the need to now also take into account the High Court's subsequent observations concerning Wednesbury Corporation in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li [2013] HCA 18; 249 CLR 332 (Li).
48 The following observations of Wilcox J in Prasad v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1985) 6 FCR 155 at 169-170 are also apposite:
…A power is exercised in an improper manner if, upon the material before the decision-maker, it is a decision to which no reasonable person could come. Equally, it is exercised in an improper manner if the decision-maker makes his decision - which perhaps in itself, reasonably reflects the material before him - in a manner so devoid of any plausible justification that no reasonable person could have taken this course, for example by unreasonably failing to ascertain relevant facts which he knew to be readily available to him. The circumstances under which a decision will be invalid for failure to inquire are, I think, strictly limited. It is no part of the duty of the decision-maker to make the applicant's case for him. It is not enough that the court find that the sounder course would have been to make inquiries. But, in a case where it is obvious that material is readily available which is centrally relevant to the decision to be made, it seems to me that to proceed to a decision without making any attempt to obtain that information may properly be described as an exercise of the decision-making power in a manner so unreasonable that no reasonable person would have so exercised it. It would follow that the court, on judicial review, should receive evidence as to the existence and nature of that information.
49 I accept the Minister's submission that this line of authority concerning the limited duty to inquire has no application in the circumstances here, with particular reference to the fact that the appellant was represented by a migration agent who was also a lawyer. Moreover, at no point in the course of the RRT proceeding was any clear claim made to the effect that the appellant's claim for protection was supported by the fact that her older brother had been granted a protection visa. Finally, that part of the appellant's claims which were based on what she described as her family links with the LTTE was directed to family members other than her older brother. Accordingly, having regard to the way in which the appellant's case was presented, the fact that her older brother had been granted a protection visa on a particular basis was not "a critical fact" for the purposes of the limited duty to inquire. I find that there was no jurisdictional error in the RRT's failure to access the Departmental file relating to the older brother.
50 Similarly, the RRT's failure to use its power under s 424 to access the older brother's Departmental file is not unreasonable in the legal sense explained in cases such as Li at [63]-[76] per Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ and Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Stretton [2016] FCAFC 11; 237 FCR 1. There is nothing in the material before the Court to indicate whether or not the RRT ever turned its mind to whether it should exercise its power under s 424 to access the older brother's Departmental file. In circumstances where the appellant failed to make any claim that her older brother's circumstance and migration status in Australia was relevant to her application for a protection visa, the RRT was not obliged to consider whether it should exercise its discretion under s 424 in the manner suggested by the appellant (see SZTGV v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 3; 229 FCR 90 at [82] per Perram, Jagot and Griffiths JJ).
51 For similar reasons, I reject the contention that the RRT constructively failed to carry out its review by not obtaining the older brother's Departmental file.
52 Finally, I reject the appellant's submission that the Full Court's decision in CRY16 supports her claim of legal unreasonableness. While it may be accepted that the RRT's discretion under s 424 has to be exercised reasonably in a legal sense, this ground has no application in the particular circumstances here where, for reasons given above, the appellant failed to make any claim that her older brother's Departmental file had any bearing on her claims. As explained above, the appellant's case relating to family links with the LTTE focused upon other members of her family and not her older brother. For similar reasons, the appellant's reliance on Peko-Wallsend is misguided. It is difficult to see how the contents of the brother's file would have "redeemed" the appellant's credibility when the appellant never claimed that his migration status had a bearing on her case.
53 On the materials before the Court, it would appear that the appellant's case on this potentially important matter could, and perhaps should, have been put differently to the RRT by her migration agent. This is a significant matter which, I respectfully suggest, should be taken into account by the Minister in considering a favourable exercise of his personal discretion in the unusual circumstances of the appellant's case.