PROPOSED GROUND OF APPEAL
14 The proposed grounds of appeal are expressed in a draft notice of appeal lodged on 19 February 2018 as follows:
1. The decision of the Federal Circuit Court is affected by jurisdictional error.
PARTICULARS
a. Under the show cause procedure, if the Court is of the view that no arguable case is shown by the applicant, the court is empowered, among other things, to dismiss the whole proceedings.
b. The power to summarily dismiss a proceeding should not be exercised lightly and I say the court did not approach this task in this case with that instruction in mind.
c. It is my submission, that this case was arguable. The Court was required to consider if I had a well-founded fear of persecution or a real risk of significant harm in the reasonably foreseeable future if I returned to Sri Lanka. It was required to consider if there was a real chance or a real possibility of me suffering persecution or harm upon my return and furthermore it has not taken into account the profile of my father in law.
15 The Minister took issue with the opening words of this paragraph because the task of this Court on an appeal is to identify appealable error, not jurisdictional error. I would not dismiss the application for leave to appeal (or the appeal) on that basis. In the context of an appeal sought to be commenced by a self-represented litigant there would appear to be no reason why this Court should not understand the particulars to a proposed ground of appeal to allege error on the part of the primary judge of a kind that would justify the appeal being allowed. Although strictly correct, I consider the Minister's point to detract from the real issues.
16 The particular in (a) does not allege error and will be read as a submission concerning the nature of the show cause procedure.
17 The particulars in (b) and (c) may be fairly understood as contending that the primary judge had too lightly dismissed the application for judicial review, specifically by erroneously concluding that the appellant had not raised an arguable case.
18 The proposed ground of appeal does not expressly articulate the arguable case that the appellant had raised before the primary judge. In this respect it may be said that the proposed ground of appeal is lacking in particulars. However, I do not consider the Minister to be prejudiced by the lack of express particularity. The arguable case that was raised by the appellant may be discerned from the grounds for judicial review advanced in the proceedings before the primary judge, together with the written and oral submissions of the appellant which gave better content to those grounds.
19 The appellant appeared self-represented before the primary judge, as he did on this appeal. His ground for judicial review was expressed as follows:
1. The Decision of the AAT is affected by jurisdictional error
Particulars
(a) The tribunal was required to consider if the applicant had a well founded fear of persecution or a real risk of significant harm in the reasonably foreseeable future if he returned to Sri Lanka. It was required to consider if there was a real chance or a real possibility of the applicant suffering persecution or harm upon his return and the AAT has formed a mindset that his claim was contrived and then failed to properly address the issue of his fear of UNP political opponents and not taken into account the profile of his father in law.
(b) Likewise the tribunal has given scant consideration to his fears of persecution because he was a Buddhist who converted to Christianity and not considered the opportunities he would have to practice his religion openly and without fear of repercussions from the nationalistic Buddhist organisations.
(c) The tribunal has not properly considered the alternative criterion in s.36(2)(aa), that is, whether there are substantial grounds for believing that as a foreseeable consequence of the applicant being removed from Australia to Sri Lanka, there is a real risk that the applicant will suffer significant harm, given his religious & political beliefs.
20 The Minister submits that the particulars are poorly expressed. To a degree, I accept that submission.
21 By para (a) of the particulars it is nonetheless clear that the appellant advanced (at least) a contention to the effect that the Tribunal had not given genuine consideration to his claims because it was fixed in a mindset that the claims were contrived. This complaint is to be fairly understood as affecting all of the appellant's claims.
22 The appellant did not use the language of a lawyer to categorise the asserted error with a formulation of words to describe a recognised "category" of jurisdictional error. It was not necessary for him to do so, for three reasons.
23 First, the words employed in the particulars may be fairly understood as asserting that the Tribunal had not genuinely considered the appellant's claims because it had not made a proper and genuine assessment of the appellant's credit. A failure to genuinely engage with the issues to be determined (including with the issues affecting the credibility of a review applicant) may constitute jurisdictional error: BZD17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 161 ALD 441 at [32] - [38] (Perram, Perry and O'Callaghan JJ).
24 Second, to insist that an applicant for judicial review articulate an alleged error in language that semantically conforms to a "recognised category" of jurisdictional error is to misunderstand both the purpose of an originating application and (to my mind more importantly) the nature of jurisdictional error itself.
25 The requirement that grounds for judicial review of an administrative decision be articulated in an originating application is a requirement that is concerned with fairness: the party defending the legality of the decision is to be given notice, in advance of the hearing, of the basis upon which it is said that the decision is affected by illegality. Subject to amendment, clarification and particularisation, the originating application defines the limits of the controversy to be adjudicated.
26 To achieve that purposes, it is of course convenient to identify an error as being in the nature of a jurisdictional error by employing descriptive language used in decided cases, such as that used by the High Court in Craig v South Australia (1995) 184 CLR 163. However, it does not follow that an asserted error must verbally conform to any one of those descriptions before an established error can be said to be jurisdictional in nature. The substantive question is as stated by Kiefel CJ, Gageler and Keane JJ in Hossain v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] HCA 34; (2018) 359 ALR 1:
23 Jurisdiction, in the most generic sense in which it has come to be used in this field of discourse, refers to the scope of the authority that is conferred on a repository. In its application to judicial review of administrative action the taking of which is authorised by statute, it refers to the scope of the authority which a statute confers on a decision-maker to make a decision of a kind to which the statute then attaches legal consequences. It encompasses in that application all of the preconditions which the statute requires to exist in order for the decision-maker to embark on the decision-making process. It also encompasses all of the conditions which the statute expressly or impliedly requires to be observed in or in relation to the decision-making process in order for the decision-maker to make a decision of that kind. A decision made within jurisdiction is a decision which sufficiently complies with those statutory preconditions and conditions to have 'such force and effect as is given to it by the law pursuant to which it was made'.
24 Jurisdictional error, in the most generic sense in which it has come to be used to describe an error in a statutory decision-making process, correspondingly refers to a failure to comply with one or more statutory preconditions or conditions to an extent which results in a decision which has been made in fact lacking characteristics necessary for it to be given force and effect by the statute pursuant to which the decision-maker purported to make it. To describe a decision as 'involving jurisdictional error' is to describe that decision as having been made outside jurisdiction. …
(footnotes omitted)
27 In the present case, the appellant's originating application ought to have been understood as asserting, at least implicitly, that the mindset the Tribunal had formed as to his credibility and its failure to "properly" consider his claims involved an error of a kind that justified the grant of relief he had sought in the proceedings in that it involved a failure to comply with a condition which the statute implicitly requires the Tribunal to observe. In the context of the show cause hearing, the onus was on the appellant to show that the asserted error was arguable and that its characterisation as jurisdictional error was also arguable. However, subject to considerations of fairness, it was not necessary for the appellant to describe the error as jurisdictional by a particular form of words employed in any one of the decided cases.
28 Third, the asserted error in respect of the assessment of the appellant's credibility was given content in the appellant's written submissions upon which he relied before the primary judge. The submissions were expressed as follows:
12. It is my submission that the Tribunal formed an initial mindset that my claims were contrived and has given no consideration to case law on witness credibility assessment when concluding that my story was contrived. In other words the tribunal was saying that I was not a credible witness.
13. The Full Court in CQG15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection extensively reviewed the law concerning adverse credibility findings and earlier authorities than that case from the Federal Court have held that adverse credit findings do not shield the Tribunal from scrutinising its decision-making process. Those cases include Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZRKT, SZLGP v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship and SZRUI v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship.
14. The mere fact that the Tribunal takes an adverse view of credit as against the applicant, that in and of itself does not render the Tribunal decision impervious from judicial review. In this case, I claim the Tribunal failed to properly assess my claim for a protection visa because of its mindset that mine was a contrived claim and it did not consider any of the cases cited above and it should have assessed my credit, that my claim was contrived according to applicable law. I submit that credit assessment since CQG15 involves a vastly more sophisticated process than what the tribunal undertook in this matter.
29 The reasons of the primary judge expressly acknowledged the receipt of the appellant's submissions and expressly referred to the appellant's reliance on CQG15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 253 FCR 496. Indeed, the primary judge extracted in his reasons for judgment a part of the submission I have extracted above. The primary judge refused to grant the appellant an adjournment for the purpose of securing legal advice and assistance, including for the reason that the appellant's written submissions were "quite clearly prepared by a person with significant background in this area". There was no suggestion by the primary judge that the submissions did not bear on the issues that fell to be decided, nor is there suggestion that the submission could not be properly understood.
30 I am satisfied that the primary judge correctly identified that the issue arising on the application for judicial review included the appellant's assertion that the Tribunal had not made a genuine assessment of his credibility and that this asserted error was said to be reviewable in accordance with the principles stated in CQG15. In that case the Full Court confirmed that findings of fact, including findings as to credibility, may be subject to judicial review in accordance with "well established legal precedent", including on the basis of illogicality and/or irrationality or on the basis that the findings have no logical or probative basis. To those examples I would add that the power of the Tribunal to review the delegate's decision was subject to a condition that the Tribunal meaningfully engage with the issues. Among other things, the Tribunal was required to review all of the claims and all of the evidence before forming a concluded view as to whether the claims were contrived. The relevant question on the show cause application was whether the appellant had raised an arguable case as to whether these conditions had been observed.
31 The written submissions filed on behalf of the Minster in the proceedings before the primary judge make express reference to the fact that the appellant had filed written submissions. However, the Minister's submissions proceeded to address the grounds for judicial review without reference to the issues the appellant had raised in respect of the Tribunal's credibility findings. No complaint was made by the Minister to the effect that the appellant's written submissions could not be understood, nor was it said that the written submissions did not or could not give content to the grounds for judicial review as expressed on the originating application. No attention was given in the Minister's submissions to the application of the principles stated in CQG15 to the adverse credibility findings in the appellant's case.
32 I have concluded that the primary judge correctly identified that the appellant had asserted error affecting the Tribunal's adverse credibility findings. Implicitly, the primary judge also recognised that the question of whether such errors were to be categorised as jurisdictional was to be decided in accordance with the principles stated in CQG15 and the authorities cited therein. However, the primary judge neither grappled with nor determined whether the case the appellant had raised in respect of that issue was an "arguable case" for the purposes of r 44.12 of the FCC Rules. At least on the topic of credibility, the reasons of the primary judge deal with the grounds of review as though the appellant's written submissions had not been filed at all. The primary judge proceeded on the basis that the conclusions of the Tribunal were correct in light of the factual findings it had made, without regard to the appellant's challenge to those factual findings (based as they were on the adverse view the Tribunal had taken of the appellant's credit).
33 In my view, the satisfaction of the primary judge that the appellant had not raised an arguable case is attended with sufficient doubt to justify the grant of leave to appeal. There is an arguable failure to grapple with the complaints the appellant had raised with respect to the adverse credibility finding. Such a failure would fall within the broad contention that the primary judge summarily dismissed his application for judicial review too lightly or misapplied the test applicable on an application for summary judgment. Leave to appeal will be granted on this basis. I do not consider it appropriate to confine the grant of leave to any particular aspect of the ground of appeal. As will be seen, the Tribunal's adverse credibility findings were cumulative and so affected the whole of the appellant's claims to fulfil the visa criteria.