Consideration
36 The Tribunal was obliged to deal with any claim raised by the evidence and the contentions before it which, if resolved in one way, would or could be dispositive of the review: see NABE at [63]. Citing Dranichnikov v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 197 ALR 389 at [24], the Full Court in NABE further stated (at [55]) that "[w]here the Tribunal fails to make a finding on 'a substantial, clearly articulated argument relying upon established facts' that failure can amount to a failure to accord procedural fairness and a constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction": see also Applicant WAEE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 184; 236 FCR 593 at [44]-[47] and Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v MZYTS 2013] FCAFC 114; 230 FCR 431 at [62].
37 The Tribunal may fail to deal with a claim by misunderstanding or misconstruing the claim, and basing its conclusion on the claim so misunderstood or misconstrued. It may also fail to deal with a claim, and thus fall into jurisdictional error, if it fails to deal with one or more of the component integers of the claim: see Htun v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 1802; 233 FCR 136 at [42] (Allsop J, with whom Spender J agreed); NABE at [63] (Black CJ, French and Selway JJ).
38 In Applicant WAEE, a Full Court of this Court (French, Sackville and Hely JJ) said (at [45] and [47]):
[45] … If the Tribunal fails to consider a contention that the applicant fears persecution for a particular reason which, if accepted, would justify concluding that the applicant has satisfied the relevant criterion, and if that contention is supported by probative material, the Tribunal will have failed in the discharge of its duty, imposed by s 414, to conduct a review of the decision. This is a matter of substance, not a matter of the form of the Tribunal's published reasons for decision.
…
[47] The inference that the Tribunal has failed to consider an issue may be drawn from its failure to expressly deal with that issue in its reasons. But that is an inference not too readily to be drawn where the reasons are otherwise comprehensive and the issue has at least been identified at some point. It may be that it is unnecessary to make a finding on a particular matter because it is subsumed in findings of greater generality or because there is a factual premise upon which a contention rests which has been rejected. Where however there is an issue raised by the evidence advanced on behalf of an applicant and contentions made by the applicant and that issue, if resolved one way, would be dispositive of the Tribunal's review of the delegate's decision, a failure to deal with it in the published reasons may raise a strong inference that it has been overlooked.
39 Section 430(1) of the Migration Act provides that, where the Tribunal makes its decision on a review (other than an oral decision), the Tribunal must make a written statement that, among other things: sets out the reasons for the decision; sets out the findings on any material questions of fact; and refers to the evidence or any other material on which the findings of fact were based. In discussing the effect of that provision in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf [2001] HCA 30; 206 CLR 323, Gaudron J stated (at [35] and [44]):
[35] The corollary to the construction of s 430(1)(c) of the Act set out above is that it is to be inferred from the absence of a reference to, or, a finding with respect to some particular matter that the Tribunal did not consider that matter to be material. As will later appear, there may be cases where that will indicate error of a kind that will ground review under s 476(1) of the Act or, even, jurisdictional error which will ground relief under s 75(v) of the Constitution. …
…
[44] It follows from what has been written above that the failure of the Tribunal to make findings with respect to a particular matter may, at the same time, reveal failure to exercise jurisdiction, whether actual or constructive, and, also, failure to conduct a review as required by the Act. And the latter constitutes reviewable error for the purposes of s 476(1)(b) and (c) of the Act.
40 Also in Yusuf, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ stated (at [69]):
It is not necessary to read s 430 as implying an obligation to make findings in order for it to have sensible work to do. Understanding s 430 as obliging the Tribunal to set out what were its findings on the questions of fact it considered material gives the section important work to do in connection with judicial review of decisions of the Tribunal. It ensures that a person who is dissatisfied with the result at which the Tribunal has arrived can identify with certainty what reasons the Tribunal had for reaching its conclusion and what facts it considered material to that conclusion. Similarly, a court which is asked to review the decision is able to identify the Tribunal's reasons and the findings it made in reaching that conclusion. The provision entitles a court to infer that any matter not mentioned in the s 430 statement was not considered by the Tribunal to be material. This may reveal some basis for judicial review by the Federal Court under Pt 8 of the Act, or by this Court in proceedings brought under s 75(v) of the Constitution. For example, it may reveal that the Tribunal made some error of law of the kind mentioned in s 476(1)(e) of the Act, such as incorrectly applying the law to the facts found by the Tribunal. It may reveal jurisdictional error. The Tribunal's identification of what it considered to be the material questions of fact may demonstrate that it took into account some irrelevant consideration or did not take into account some relevant consideration.
(Footnotes omitted; emphasis in original)
41 Before turning to consider whether in fact the Tribunal considered the appellant's claim that he and his father were subjected to questioning and harsh treatment by CID officers in January 2012, it is convenient to set out how the appellant articulated that claim and to refer to the delegate's discussion and findings in relation to it.
42 In a document entitled "Statement of Claims" dated 30 November 2012 which accompanied the appellant's protection visa application, he stated that:
From January 2010 to June 2012 when I fled the country, whenever any form of unrest happened in Colombo, my father, my brothers and I were questioned, harassed and beaten up by the CID. It happened 5-6 times over a period of more than [sic] years. My brother … moved out of the house to avoid the CID harassments.
43 He then went on to make the claim the subject of this ground of appeal. He stated:
The last incident occurred after I came back from India January this year. Two CID officers came to our house in plain clothes. They questioned my father and I about why we had travelled to India. We responded that it was only for pilgrimage purposes. They were not convinced. They suspected us that we had gone to India to pass on information to the LTTE members who are living in India. We denied the allegations. They raised their voice and treated us harshly. We reiterated that the only reason for our travel to India was to worship in a Hindu temple. They subsequently left.
44 The appellant's migration agent reiterated that claim in written submissions to the delegate of the Minister dated 8 January 2013.
45 The claim was expressly referred to in some detail in the delegate's reasons for decision. The delegate accepted "that the [appellant] and his father may have been questioned by the CID upon return from India", but found that it was "more likely … due to general questioning which was occurring during that period of time". The delegate did not find that the appellant "was genuinely suspected of having LTTE connections."
46 For the reasons that follow, reading the Tribunal's reasons fairly and as a whole, and in conformity with the approached approved in Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang [1996] HCA 6; 185 CLR 259, I am unable to accept the appellant's submissions. It seems to me that, when read as a whole, it is apparent that the Tribunal did consider the appellant's claim that he and his father were subjected to questioning and harsh treatment by CID officers in January 2012 after returning from India. Although there are some difficulties with the Tribunal's reasons, to which I will refer, in my view, they do not disclose jurisdictional error.
47 First, the Tribunal specifically referred (at [16] of its reasons) to the appellant's claim that "[i]n January 2012 … CID officers visited their family home … and beat all of them (that is him, his father, and his brother)", and that "[a]fter this incident he decided to leave Sri Lanka". Relevantly, the reference to this claim is in a passage of the Tribunal's reasons summarising the appellant's claims relating to his questioning and mistreatment by the CID between July 2010 and June 2012 as follows:
[16] The [appellant] told the Tribunal that they experienced ongoing problems from the CID after their father was released from prison in July 2010. He said they would "come and go": in total about four or five times from July 2010 until the [appellant] left the country in June 2012. The CID officers would ask whether they were working for the LTTE and if they considered they answered incorrectly or angrily, they beat them. When asked who specifically, the [appellant] said he thinks his father was beaten two or three times, his brother once, and himself twice. In January 2012 he said CID officers visited their family home … and beat all of them (that is him, his father, and his brother). After this incident he decided to leave Sri Lanka. The [appellant] told the Tribunal that after he left Sri Lanka in mid-2012 the CID officers visited his parents … another three or four times, asking about his whereabouts: the first time his mother told them that he had gone to the shop, and the second and third time that he had gone to Jaffna. When asked if his family were ever physically harmed during these visits, the [appellant] said that "once or twice" they beat his father and his brother was beaten too, but he did not know how many times exactly.
48 Paragraph [16] contains relatively few details concerning the claim about the January 2012 incident. Having regard to the way that claim was made, one might have expected the Tribunal to refer expressly to the appellant's explanation that that particular visit from the CID was a consequence of his and his father's travels to India, which he said generated suspicion regarding LTTE connections. It should also be noted that statement that the January 2012 incident involved CID officers beating the appellant, his father and his brother did not entirely align with the claim in the appellant's written statement of claims (see at [44]-[45] above). The claim in this written statement did not specifically refer to the appellant's brother. This difference was not, however, the subject of argument at the hearing; and even if the Tribunal mistakenly believed that the claim about the January 2012 incident also concerned the appellant's brother, this would not, in my view, be sufficient to establish that the Tribunal failed to consider the claim as it affected the appellant.
49 Notwithstanding the matters mentioned in [48] above, the Tribunal's reasons at [16]:
(1) contain a clear indication that the Tribunal was aware of the claim regarding the January 2012 incident; and
(2) indicate that the Tribunal construed that claim as part of the appellant's claims regarding instances of questioning and mistreatment in the period between July 2010 and July 2012.
50 Secondly, I accept that, as counsel for the Minister maintained, the Tribunal further considered the appellant's claim about the January 2012 incident at [22] of its reasons. Although the Tribunal did not make an explicit finding here with respect to this particular claim, I accept that it addressed the claim in the context of considering (and rejecting) the appellant's broader claims that he and his family were questioned, harassed, and beaten by the CID a number of times from July 2010 to July 2012. At [22], the Tribunal recorded:
[22] The Tribunal has considered the [appellant's] claims about ongoing harassment and questioning from the authorities after his father was released from prison in July 2010. The Tribunal has some concerns with his evidence in this respect for reasons that follow. The Tribunal found the [appellant's] oral evidence about aspects of his claims of ongoing interest by the CID after his father's release from prison to be vague and lacking in details. For instance he told the Tribunal that in the period from when his father was released from prison (July 2010) to the time he left Sri Lanka (July 2012) the CID would "come and go" regularly to their house, in total four or five times, and that during those times his father was beaten two or three times, his brother once and himself twice yet he did not provide any particular details or context. Given these concerns, combined with the Tribunal's finding that the [appellant's] father was not considered an LTTE suspect on release from prison for reasons set out above, the Tribunal does not accept the [appellant's] claims to have been questioned, harassed, and beaten by the CID a number of times from July 2010 to July 2012. Nor does it accept that the [appellant's] father or brother were harassed, questioned or beaten in this period as claimed.
51 As already indicated, I accept that [22] does not expressly mention the appellant's claim about his father's and his own questioning and mistreatment after returning from India. One might have expected that the Tribunal would allude to this particular claim, having regard to the fact that the appellant had made specific written submissions about the January 2012 incident. It should be borne in mind, however, that the Tribunal's reasons at [22] broadly reflect the way in which the Tribunal had earlier (at [16]) characterised the appellant's claim about the January 2012 incident as subsumed generally within the claims of CID mistreatment between July 2010 to July 2012. This may explain why the Tribunal did not refer more particularly at [22] to the claim concerning the January 2012 incident.
52 Thirdly, in my view, the Tribunal's findings that the appellant and his father returned from India in 2012 without experiencing any problems (at [21] and [36]) should be understood as relating to their free passage through the Sri Lankan airport during their travels, having regard to the context in which they appear. The Tribunal's references to the appellant and his father returning from India with no problems might, on their face, seem directly to contradict the appellant's claim that he and his father did experience problems from the CID after they returned from India. This interpretation of the Tribunal's reasons does not, however, sit comfortably with the discussion at [21] and [36], which is primarily concerned with the appellant's and his father's capacity to travel to and from India, notwithstanding that the appellant's father's release from prison was said to be subject to a condition requiring him to stay in his home area. These passages of the Tribunal's reasons are in the following terms:
[21] [T]he [appellant] told the Tribunal that he and his father visited India for a pilgrimage in December 2011, returning in January 2012. They left Sri Lanka and returned on their own passports issued in their own names and did not experience any problems. The [appellant] said at hearing that they went with 100 or so other people … . When asked how his father was able to leave the country at that time given he claimed a condition of his release from prison in July 2010 was that his father could not leave [his home area], the [appellant] did not answer the question and instead reiterated that they did not go alone, and that the trip was the responsibility of [a person], who takes people every year. In his written statement to the Tribunal the [appellant] explained that they were part of a large group, their visa was organised and all arrangements made through [the] Temple group who regularly organise group pilgrimages. In his written submission to the Tribunal the representative referred to numerous internet references to the … pilgrimage, noting that it appears to have the support of the Sri Lankan government, as well as a report from the Danish Immigration Authorities regarding the departure of Tamils through Colombo airport in which it is stated that immigration officials told them that further checks on travellers are only carried out in cases where such documents (such as a passport) arouse suspicion, and that it is not possible to check all departing travellers on the basis of lists of wanted persons. It is submitted therefore, that there is no logical basis to assume (as the delegate did) that if the [appellant] and his father were able to leave Sri Lanka they were no longer of interest to the authorities. The Tribunal has had regard to this submission and the relevant country information contained within it. The Tribunal notes the date of the report from the Danish Immigration Authorities about the departure of Tamils through the Colombo airport is not obvious on the webpage cited. The Tribunal accepts that the temple organised the pilgrimage to India for a number of people, including the [appellant] and his father, however this would not prevent the authorities from registering his father's departure from the country (and from [their home] area in breach of a condition of his prison release). Given these considerations, the Tribunal is of the view that neither the [appellant] nor his father was of particular interest to the authorities at that time, or that there was any real consequences to breaching the condition on the [appellant's] father's release to remain in [their home] area.
…
[36] The Tribunal has considered the [appellant's] claim that the CID will harm him on return because they told him to stay in [his home area], yet he did not (and his mother told them he was in Jaffna). The Tribunal notes in this regard the [appellant's] oral evidence that his parents, who were also told to stay in [their home area], moved … in 2014 with no apparent repercussions. Also the [appellant] and his father travelled to India in late 2011, returning in early 2012 with no problems. The Tribunal therefore finds remote the chance the [appellant] would be seriously harmed by the CID because he did not stay in [his home area] on return to Sri Lanka.
(Emphasis added)
53 For the reasons stated, and bearing in mind that "[t]he inference that the Tribunal has failed to consider an issue … is an inference not too readily to be drawn where the reasons are otherwise comprehensive and the issue has at least been identified at some point" (Applicant WAEE at [47]), I would not infer that the Tribunal failed to consider the appellant's claim regarding the January 2012 incident.
54 In my view, neither the possibility that the Tribunal mistakenly referred to the appellant's brother, nor the Tribunal's limited engagement with the details of claim concerning the January 2012 incident, are sufficient to support a finding of jurisdictional error: see Yusuf at [89].