Consideration
21 The question in the appeal is whether, on a fair reading, the Authority properly considered the appellant's complementary protection claim under s 36(2)(aa). That is, whether there are substantial grounds for believing that as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the appellant being returned to Sri Lanka there is a real risk that he will suffer "significant harm" as defined in s 36(2A) . The notice of appeal refers to "serious" rather than "significant" harm and I will treat that as a typographical error.
22 The central issue raised by the appeal is whether the Authority fell into jurisdictional error by viewing each of the appellant's claims in isolation rather than considering them cumulatively when reaching its conclusion that the appellant did not face a real chance of significant harm. The further particulars the appellant advances relate to specific paragraphs of the Authority's reasons and draw to the Court's attention the Authority's acceptance that:
(a) the appellant had been harassed by the police in 1997, but that the incident was isolated;
(b) the appellant's brother in law disappeared in 2008, but that there was no evidence to indicate that event would cause the appellant serious harm;
(c) the appellant participated in several protests by auto rickshaw drivers and was stopped and questioned by the CID in relation to having LTTE connections;
(d) the appellant was assaulted in 2008, but this was an unfortunate accident; and
(e) the appellant was assaulted and questioned by members of the Special Task Force in 2009, but this was an isolated incident more than a decade after 1997 incident and not linked to it.
The appeal alleges that having accepted those claims the Authority erred in viewing them in isolation when considering whether the appellant faced a real chance of suffering significant harm. It alleges that the harm the appellant suffered in the past was significant enough to warrant an inference that there is a real chance that he may suffer harm in the future if he is returned to Sri Lanka.
23 The appellant contends that paragraph 43 of the Authority's decision (set out above at [14]) does not constitute a cumulative assessment of the appellant's claims to complementary protection. He argues that paragraph 43 does not expressly state that the Authority assessed the claims cumulatively, and the use of a comma between each claim and the disjunctive "or" shows that it assessed the claims singularly rather than cumulatively. He submits that on a fair reading of paragraph 43 it was not open to the primary judge to conclude that the Authority assessed the claims cumulatively.
24 The appellant also contends, having regard to the primary judgment at [31], that the Minister impliedly accepted in the hearing below that the Authority failed to assess the appellant's complementary protection claims cumulatively. He submits that in reliance on the decision in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v DDK16 [2017] FCAFC 188 (DDK16) the Minister instead argued that there was no obligation on the Authority to make a cumulative assessment.
25 I do not accept the appellant's contentions.
26 I commence by noting that the primary judge said (at [29]) that the appellant's solicitor accepted that the Authority referred to considering the appellant's claims cumulatively by referring back to its consideration of his evidence in relation to his s 36(2)(a) claim. His Honour said that, rather than arguing that the Authority's assessment was not cumulative, the appellant contended that the Authority's cumulative assessment only dealt with those of the appellant's claims listed in paragraph 43 of the decision and not all of them.
27 Parties to an appeal are ordinarily bound by the way the case was put below, but the Court has discretion to permit new grounds to be raised on appeal where it is expedient and in the interests of justice to do so: Water Board v Moustakas [1988] HCA 12; (1988) 180 CLR 491 at 497; Hird v Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority [2015] FCAFC 7; (2015) 227 FCR 95 at [161]-[162]. In the circumstances of the present case it is appropriate to grant leave to the appellant to advance the appeal on the basis set out in his written submissions. Among other things, although his argument was narrowed during the hearing before the Federal Circuit Court it was initially advanced in these terms, was maintained in the written submissions filed in the appeal, and the Minister makes no objection to the appeal being decided on the basis of the broader ground set out in the appellant's written submissions.
28 In my view there is little merit in the appeal.
29 First, the conclusion as to the appellant's complementary protection claim set out in paragraph 43 refers back to the Authority's consideration of the appellant's claim under the refugee criterion. On a fair reading this paragraph states that having found there was no real chance of the appellant facing "serious harm" on the basis of the various matters upon which he relied in relation to that claim, the Authority was not satisfied that the appellant faced a real risk of "significant harm" as required by ss 36(2)(aa) and (2A) and his complementary protection claim also failed.
30 In setting out its view in relation to the appellant's refugee claim, the Authority said at paragraph 37 (set out at [15] above) that it considered the appellant's evidence "in totality" and that it was not satisfied that the appellant has a real chance of being seriously harmed "as a returnee (voluntary or otherwise), former asylum seeker, a person returning on a temporary travel document or for any of the reasons claimed" (emphasis added). The Authority's reasons for rejecting the appellant's claims based on the refugee criterion apply to its rejection of his claims based on the complementary protection criterion.
31 While the Authority did not expressly state that the assessment at paragraph 43 was cumulative and it used the disjunctive "or", on a fair reading of that paragraph in light of the entirety of the reasons, the assessment was cumulative. Paragraph 43 picked up the Authority's individual and cumulative rejection of the claims the appellant advanced under the refugee criterion. It is open to a decision-maker to rely on anterior factual findings in relation to an assessment under the refugee criterion in its consideration of the complementary protection criterion: see SZSGA v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship [2013] FCA 774 at [56]; SZSHK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2013] FCAFC 125 at [32]. The rejection of the appellant's complementary protection claims was open to the Authority on the material before it.
32 It would have been preferable for the Authority to use clearer language, but it was not necessary for the Authority to restate the same matters in relation to the complementary protection claim as it had already said in relation to the claim under the refugee criterion. On a fair reading the meaning of the decision is plain. As the Full Court said in in DDK16 at [37]:
…in circumstances where there was, as the primary judge put it, "no doubt" that the IAA had demonstrated "active intellectual engagement with those issues" concerning the refugee claim ([103]), the submission that it was a jurisdictional error not again to rehearse the same treatment of those issues under the rubric of the complementary protection claim need only to be stated to [be] rejected. Both claims involve the considered and detailed assessment of risks and it was entirely appropriate for the IAA to reason and conclude as it did, by relying on the reasons that it had already stated.
33 Second, the appellant's contention that the Minister conceded, in the hearing below, that the Authority failed to assess his claims in relation to the complementary protection criterion cumulatively is misconceived. I accept that the Minister contended below that there was generally no obligation to deal with those claims cumulatively if they were already rejected under the refugee criterion, but the Minister did not accept that the Authority failed to consider the claims cumulatively.
34 I have made orders to dismiss the appeal and for the appellant to pay the first respondent's costs of the appeal.
I certify that the preceding thirty-four (34) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Murphy.