Ground 2 - materiality of the Authority's misapplication of s 473DD of the Act
23 The substance of the second ground was that the Authority erred in its application of s 473DD of the Act by failing to consider whether certain "new information" met the criteria stated in s 473DD(b)(ii), and that error had a material effect on the outcome of the review.
24 Relevantly, s 473DD of the Act provides:
473DD Considering new information in exceptional circumstances
For the purposes of making a decision in relation to a fast track reviewable decision, the Immigration Assessment Authority must not consider any new information unless:
(a) the Authority is satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering the new information; and
(b) the referred applicant satisfies the Authority that, in relation to any new information given, or proposed to be given, to the Authority by the referred applicant, the new information:
(i) was not, and could not have been, provided to the Minister before the Minister made the decision under section 65; or
(ii) is credible personal information which was not previously known and, had it been known, may have affected the consideration of the referred applicant's claims.
25 The issue in relation to the "new information" arose as a consequence of the Authority having invited the appellants to comment on the 2017 DFAT Report that it had obtained, as noted earlier in these reasons. That report concerned, inter alia, the socio-political conditions in Sri Lanka - including, specifically, the treatment of Tamils. The appellants' submissions in response to the Authority's invitation included a new claim that, as young Tamils living in Colombo, they had been subjected to search and round up operations conducted by the police and were always subject to harsh treatment at checkpoints, where they were asked to produce their ID cards and were interrogated about their movements. In an attempt to explain their failure to raise this new claim at an earlier time, the appellants pointed to a number of factors. Essentially, it was said that they had lacked capacity and had been too timid or afraid to raise the issue of their alleged mistreatment in Colombo when they first arrived in Australia.
26 The Authority's conclusion as to whether or not it ought to consider this claim, applying s 473DD of the Act, was stated as follows at [18] of its decision:
I do not consider that this information was provided by way of a response to or comment on the information in the 2017 DFAT Report, and I am not satisfied that this new information about the applicants' claimed circumstances prior to their departure from Sri Lanka could not have been provided to the Minister before the decision was made. Even accepting that their circumstances at the time of the entry interviews were as claimed in the submission and prevented the applicants from providing this information, they were legally represented in relation to their SHEV application which was made three years after their arrival in Australia, and I am satisfied that they had every opportunity to put these claims forward when completing that application, and at the SHEV interview, at which they were accompanied by their representative and were specifically asked about any problems they had experienced in Colombo. I am not satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering the information and I have not done so.
27 It was not in doubt by the time the matter reached this Court that, in applying s 473DD, the Authority was required to adhere to the process of reasoning described by a majority of the High Court in AUS17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2020) 269 CLR 494, 501 - 502 [11] - [12] (AUS17). Specifically, it was required to assess any new information that it obtained first against the criteria in s 473DD(b)(i) and (ii), and then, only if the information satisfied the criteria in either or both of those paragraphs, against the criterion in s 473DD(a). As part of the latter assessment, it was required to take into account the circumstances by which the relevant criteria in s 473DD(b) had been satisfied. Put another way, if the new information satisfied either or both of sub-s (b)(i) or (ii), then sub-s (a) fell to be considered, at which point the fact that the information had satisfied either (b)(i) or (ii) was to be taken into account.
28 As set out above, the Authority concluded at [18] that it was not satisfied that the appellants' new claim as to their alleged mistreatment in Colombo could not have been provided to the Minister before the decision was made. That was, in effect, a finding that s 473DD(b)(i) was not met. The Authority then went on to conclude that it was not satisfied that there were exceptional circumstances to justify considering the new information. Thus, the criterion in s 473DD(a) was found not to have been met. Having so concluded, the Authority declined to consider the new claim advanced by the appellants in their submissions.
29 It has not since been argued that the Authority erred in its conclusion as to s 473DD(b)(i). The appellants have submitted, instead, that the Authority failed altogether to consider s 473DD(b)(ii) and the criteria within it, such that it failed to take account of a mandatory relevant consideration in its purported application of the criterion in s 473DD(a): see AUS17 at 502 [12].
30 That submission should be accepted. It is apparent that the Authority did not consider whether it was satisfied that the appellants' new claim met the criteria in s 473DD(b)(ii) before it turned its attention to s 473DD(a). The High Court's decision in AUS17 (in particular, at 501 - 502 [11] - [12], 503 - 504 [17] - [20]) requires that, in applying s 473DD, "the Authority assess the new information against each of the criterion in s 473DD(b)(i) and s 473DD(b)(ii), assuming it is capable of such assessment, and then take the outcome of that assessment into account in its subsequent assessment of the criterion in s 473DD(a)": BXT17 v Minister for Home Affairs (2021) 283 FCR 248, 285 - 286 [139] (BXT17). It follows, and it was not seriously suggested otherwise, that the Authority misapplied s 473DD in this case in relation to the appellants' new claim as to their alleged mistreatment in Colombo.
31 The possible existence of that error was appreciated by the primary judge, who held (at [27] - [28]) that, even if the Authority had failed to consider s 473DD(b)(ii), that error was immaterial. Accordingly, there was no jurisdictional error.
32 Materiality is by now a familiar concept in administrative law: see Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZMTA (2019) 264 CLR 421, 445 [45] - [48]; MZAPC v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2021) 273 CLR 506, 520 - 524 [29] - [39]. In the recent decision of Nathanson v Minister for Home Affairs (2022) 96 ALJR 737 (Nathanson), the plurality (comprising Kiefel CJ, Keane and Gleeson JJ) identified the proper approach to assessing materiality as an element of jurisdictional error in the following terms (747 - 748 [32] - [33]):
[32] As explained in MZAPC, the materiality of a breach requires consideration of "the basal factual question of how the decision that was in fact made was in fact made". This question is determined by proof of historical facts on the balance of probabilities. Then, it is necessary to consider whether the decision that was in fact made could have been different had the relevant condition been complied with "as a matter of reasonable conjecture within the parameters set by the historical facts that have been determined". The burden falls on the plaintiff to prove "on the balance of probabilities the historical facts necessary to enable the court to be satisfied of the realistic possibility that a different decision could have been made had there been compliance with that condition".
[33] There will generally be a realistic possibility that a decision-making process could have resulted in a different outcome if a party was denied an opportunity to present evidence or make submissions on an issue that required consideration. The standard of "reasonable conjecture" is undemanding. It recognises that a fundamental purpose of affording procedural fairness is to afford an opportunity to raise relevant matters which are not already obvious, or not liable to be advanced by the apparently persuasive "story" of the opposing party. Where a Tribunal errs by denying a party a reasonable opportunity to present their case, "reasonable conjecture" does not require demonstration of how that party might have taken advantage of that lost opportunity. Nothing said in MZAPC denies this. To the contrary, the standard of "reasonable conjecture", correctly applied, proceeds on assumptions that are derived from the rationale for procedural fairness, namely that, if given a fair opportunity to present their case, a party will take advantage of that opportunity and that, by doing so, the party could achieve a favourable outcome.
(Citations omitted).
33 Their Honours' comments, particularly at 748 [33], were made in relation to an error that took the form of a denial of procedural fairness. The appellant had not been afforded an opportunity to respond to allegations made in the course of a Tribunal hearing, which were later taken into account in the Tribunal's reasons.
34 The circumstances in the present case are rather different. Here, during its review, the Authority afforded the appellants an opportunity to make submissions in relation to new information on which it was intending to rely, being the 2017 DFAT Report. In their submissions, the appellants included a new claim - effectively seeking to rely on additional evidence relating to their experiences in Colombo. The Authority was not required to accept that claim or the evidence underlying it insofar as it constituted new information: s 473DC(2). However, it appears that it did accept it, at least for the purpose of assessing whether the new information could be considered in accordance with s 473DD. In carrying out that assessment, it misapplied the statutory provision, as explained above.
35 This was not a case where the appellants were denied a right to be heard (or procedural fairness in any other form). They had no right to make the new claim in relation to their experiences in Colombo. On the contrary, the Authority was entitled to determine the matter without receiving that claim. It does not matter that the claim was included in the appellants' submissions in response to the invitation to comment on the 2017 DFAT Report. All that the Authority was required to do, having invited the appellants' comments in relation to the updated country information, was to receive and consider the response that it obtained insofar as it pertained to that country information. It could not reasonably be required to consider whatever material the appellants sent back, no matter its connection to the original invitation. In that respect, it should be noted that the Authority expressly stated (at [17] of its decision) that it did not consider the new claim to have been put forward in response to the invitation to comment on the 2017 DFAT Report. Despite that, it purported to apply s 473DD to ascertain whether or not it was permissible to consider the new claim.
36 Another important distinction from the circumstances in Nathanson is that, here, the appellants in fact advanced before the Authority the further evidence in relation to the new claim that they sought to have considered. That being so, the Court is not left to speculate about what evidence might have been called, as it generally is in a situation where a party is denied a right to be heard. Instead, the Court can assess the potential effect that the appellants' new information and the evidence underlying it could have had on the Authority's decision.
37 In this connection, the Minister sought to demonstrate the correctness of the primary judge's conclusion as to the materiality by submitting that there was no realistic possibility that, had the Authority accepted and considered the appellants' new claim as to their mistreatment by the authorities in Colombo, a different conclusion would have been reached. For the reasons set out below, that submission should be accepted.
38 First, the new allegations that the appellants had been subject to search and round up operations conducted by the police, and were always subject to harsh treatment at checkpoints, were pitched at a very high level of generality without supporting detail. Their new claim was, in effect, a mere assertion that certain events had occurred. The claim was made in a set of submissions that appears to have been authored by the appellants' legal representatives (given that it described the appellants in the third person), even though the documents were signed by the appellants personally. There was no direct statement from the appellants, or either of them, about the events in question. They had not mentioned the events at either their entry interview or their SHEV interview, or at any stage during the several years that they were in the country prior to the Authority issuing its invitation to respond to the 2017 DFAT Report. This is despite the fact that, at all times throughout the visa application process, they had legal representatives to assist them to advance the relevant allegations and evidence. In effect, then, the new claim was a belated, high-level assertion, which was not supported by any evidence or any adequate explanation as to why it had not surfaced earlier. The Authority would have been entitled to deal with the claim in accordance with the amount of detail that was provided. Even if it is assumed that the claim was received and considered as new information, there is no realistic prospect that it could have affected the outcome of the review: cf AXV17 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2023] FCA 121 [45].
39 Secondly, and more importantly, the Authority did in fact consider whether the appellants, if they were to be returned to Sri Lanka, would suffer harm due to their status as young Tamil males. At [33] of its decision, the Authority specifically noted that it had considered whether they would be imputed to hold pro-LTTE opinions because of their personal characteristics, including their Tamil ethnicity. In this context, at [34], it addressed country information indicating that, at the end of the civil war, a large number of LTTE members were arrested and detained, and many civilians were questioned and monitored. It also noted that the Sri Lankan security authorities remained sensitive to the potential re-emergence of the LTTE, and continued to monitor Tamil populations in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, although it appeared that the highly oppressive monitoring and registration regime in place just after the war was being eased. Some Tamils continued to be monitored, arrested and detained, and there continued to be security crackdowns. It accepted, in the circumstances, that some people "may continue to be at risk of harm because of their actual or imputed political opinions, especially if they are taken into detention by security authorities". However, it then found at [35] that:
… the applicants have no direct connection with the LTTE and have never been imputed by the authorities to have any direct connection with the LTTE. In these circumstances, and given the changed security conditions in Sri Lanka, indicating a different focus on the part of the authorities as to who might be of adverse interest in relation to LTTE connections or activity, I am satisfied that there is no real chance that they would be subjected to harm now or on return to Sri Lanka in the reasonably foreseeable future as persons with suspected LTTE connections for any reason including … the fact that they are young Tamil males …
40 In this way, the Authority found that, whilst certain groups in Sri Lanka continued to face a risk of mistreatment because of their actual or imputed political affiliations, the appellants did not fall within those groups. In particular, there was no reason to believe that they would be subjected to harm on account of the fact that they were young Tamil males. Accordingly, it seems unrealistic to expect that the Authority's decision could have been affected by consideration of the new claim that, at some unspecified time in the past, the appellants had been subjected to search and round up operations and harsh treatment at checkpoints because they were young Tamils.
41 It is necessary, also, to keep in mind the temporal distance between the alleged events the subject of the appellants' new claim and the Authority's decision. The claimed mistreatment of the appellants must have occurred at some time prior to their arrival in Australia in September 2012. The Authority delivered its decision on 4 May 2017. Within the intervening period - but, relevantly, much closer to the later end of it - the 2017 DFAT Report was published, which indicated (inter alia) that the political environment in Sri Lanka had changed, that there had been a dramatic improvement in the security situation since the end of the civil war, and that there had been a decrease in instances of discrimination against Tamils (as recounted by the Authority at [14] of its decision). The Authority clearly had regard to the country information contained in the 2017 DFAT Report. Therefore, even assuming that it had accepted the appellants' new claim, it would have been open to it to regard the events the subject of the claim as having diminished significance in light of the circumstances now prevailing in Sri Lanka. In other words, because the appellants' new claim related to historical conditions, it could have little to no tangible impact on the Authority's acceptance of the veracity of the contemporaneous 2017 DFAT Report.
42 For these reasons, there was no realistic possibility that the new claim could have affected the Authority's decision. The misapplication of s 473DD that led to the erroneous exclusion of the claim from the Authority's consideration was immaterial. The finding of the primary judge to this effect was correct.
43 Having drawn this interim conclusion, it is appropriate to step through the various arguments put by the appellants against it. With respect, none of those arguments warrants reconsideration of the result.
44 In their written submissions, the appellants complained that the primary judge gave no reasons for his finding of immateriality, save to reproduce a passage from the Full Court's judgment in BXT17 - which, they contended, was irrelevant since it concerned distinguishable circumstances. The same complaint was also advanced in more detail by Counsel for the appellants during the hearing of the appeals. Plainly, it has merit. In his reasons, the primary judge made a finding as to the immateriality of the s 473DD error and then "adopted", apparently in support of that finding, what was said at 285 - 287 [139] - [146] of BXT17. However, the reasoning of the Full Court in the lengthy passage that his Honour quoted does not lend any clear support to such a finding in the present case, since the Full Court was there addressing a relevantly different set of facts: in BXT17, the Authority was found effectively to have had regard to the s 473DD(b)(ii) criteria in its consideration of s 473DD(a), such that its omission to consider those criteria before turning to the latter sub-section had no real consequences for its decision. It may be that the primary judge's intention was to convey a similar conclusion in this case, to the effect that the Authority's misapplication of s 473DD was immaterial because it had, in substance, considered the new claim. It is debatable whether that conclusion could actually be open on the facts at present. Regardless, the process of reasoning adopted by the primary judge, with respect, leaves his Honour's intention far from clear. The appellants' submission that the primary judge's reasoning on this point involved an appellable error should be accepted. However, that does not detract from the interim conclusion drawn above. The very general terms in which the appellants' new claim was raised, and the Authority's findings as to the appellants' circumstances in light of the country information before it, still suffice to show that its misapplication of s 473DD was immaterial.
45 The next point made in the appellants' written submissions was that the misapplication of s 473DD was material because the new information contained "claims, or integers of claims, that were capable of supporting a finding that the appellants were owed protection". It was said that this was "particularly clear when one has regard to [34] of the [Authority's] reasons, where [it] referred to country information that some Tamils still continued to be monitored, arrested and detained and the fact they had experienced police searches and round up operations, harsh treatment at checkpoints and interrogation about their movements was an indication of likely future harsh treatment". There is an unfortunate gap in this submission, in that it has not actually been explained how the Authority's reasoning at [34] lends support to the proposition that the appellants' new claim could encourage a finding that they were owed protection. As explained above, the reasoning in that paragraph seemingly has the opposite effect. The Authority's consideration, at [34], of the country information before it allowed it to identify a class of persons that might face a risk of harm in Sri Lanka. At [35], it found that the appellants did not fall within that class - notwithstanding the fact that they were young Tamil males. This does not support the proposition that, if the appellants' claim as to their mistreatment as young Tamil males had been considered, a finding that they were owed protection would more likely have been made.
46 In the hearing, a different complexion appeared to be cast on this submission. Counsel for the appellants directed the Court to [34] of the Authority's reasons in order to point out two alleged problems:
(a) first, that the assessment in that paragraph had been performed "in the absence of the evidence that the appellants put forward", such that it was realistically possible that the Authority could have been persuaded that "checks are still being carried out in Colombo … and that young Tamil males are frequently being detained and interrogated"; and
(b) secondly, that the paragraph made no mention of the treatment of the Tamil minority in Colombo, which was the geographical focus of the appellants' new claim.
47 The overall thrust of the submission was explained as being that, in the counterfactual scenario where the new claim was considered, there was a realistic possibility of a different conclusion being drawn because the Authority would have been required to weigh the claim against the generic country information before it. In doing so, it could have preferred the "direct evidence" of the appellants over that country information, or permitted the evidence to change its perception, or exercised its power under s 473DC to seek further information from the appellants about the new claim.
48 With respect, these contentions cannot be accepted.
49 The first contention essentially theorises that, if the appellants' new claim was considered, then the Authority could have been persuaded that the events the subject of the claim were still ongoing in Colombo, and this might have led it to conclude that the appellants were owed protection obligations. However, the possibility of the Authority having engaged in that process of reasoning is unrealistic on its face. In the first place, as noted above, a significant period of time passed between the events the subject of the appellants' new claim and the Authority's decision, during which it received the 2017 DFAT Report indicating (amongst other things) that the security situation in Sri Lanka had dramatically improved. The appellants' new claim did not purport to speak to the situation in Sri Lanka as at the time of the decision. Even assuming that the events to which the appellants referred had in fact taken place prior to September 2012 in the manner claimed (which is no easy step), the natural conclusion to be drawn would be that those events had been overtaken by socio-political changes in the country. The conclusion for which the appellants now advocate would, by contrast, require the Authority to assume that those historical events were continuing at least four years later, despite the appellants not having said that they were and despite contemporaneous country information suggesting that circumstances in Sri Lanka had changed. It would then have to rely on the possibility of those events reoccurring to overcome its finding, derived from the country information, that the appellants did not fall into a class of persons that faced a risk of harm in Sri Lanka. That is not a path down which the Authority could realistically have been expected to go. The first contention does not show that the misapplication of s 473DD was material.
50 The second contention places considerable emphasis on the references in the country information to the Northern and Eastern Provinces of Sri Lanka. It proceeds on the basis that the mention of the risks in those areas is to be contrasted with the lack of mention of any risks in Colombo, which in the appellants' view leaves uncontradicted their new claim about events specifically in that city, allowing that intact claim to have had a material impact on the decision. So understood, the contention seems to overlook the implications to be drawn from the focus in the country information on the Northern and Eastern Provinces, being that the risks of harm that remained in Sri Lanka after the change in government and the end of the civil war were concentrated in those regions and not elsewhere. The overall tenor of the country information was that the security situation in the country had improved, but there were still risks for certain people in particular areas. There is considerable difficulty in taking it, instead, as an indication that, while there were those risks in particular areas that warranted mention, there might also be other risks in different areas that, for whatever reason, did not warrant mention. That approach arguably entails too formulaic an analysis, fixating on the inclusion or omission of specific concepts in the reasoning without appreciating the broader point that it conveys.
51 In any event, neither of the two contentions addresses the inherent weakness of the appellants' new claim, as explained above. While Counsel for the appellants described the claim on multiple occasions as "direct evidence" and "specific evidence", it was not actually susceptible to either of those descriptions. Though it was suggested that, if the claim had been considered, it might at least have inspired the Authority to seek further information under s 473DC, that suggestion assumes a course of action that could not realistically be expected to be undertaken in the circumstances. Section 473DC(2) expressly recognises that the Authority has no duty to get or request new information in this way. Moreover, the Authority in this case specifically found (at [18]) that the appellants "had every opportunity" to put these matters forward in their SHEV application and their SHEV interview, at which they were accompanied by their representative and specifically asked about any problems that they had experienced in Colombo. This suggests that the Authority was, quite fairly, sceptical of the appellants' belated introduction of a new claim about events several years prior that were described in very general terms.
52 Finally, the appellants' written submissions advanced the proposition that:
… there is a realistic possibility that [the Authority] might have inferred that the police searches and round up operations, harsh treatment at checkpoints and interrogation about their movements that the appellant[s] … had experienced demonstrated that there was a risk of harm due to the boys' connections with their uncle.
53 This proposition is dealt with sufficiently in the Minister's written submissions. As pointed out there, the appellants' new claim did not suggest any connection with their uncle. Instead, it explicitly said in the case of the appellant (and, separately, for CCL17) that the alleged events the subject of the claim took place "all because he was a young Tamil". It was therefore pure speculation to suggest that, if the Authority considered the claim, it would have drawn a link between the alleged events and the appellants' connection with their uncle. It could not realistically be expected that the Authority would go beyond the limits of the new information provided by the appellants in this way.
54 It follows that the appellants have not established that the Authority's misapplication of s 473DD was material. They have not demonstrated any error in the primary judge's conclusion on this ground.
55 It might also be added that the appellants did not make any concerted attempt to persuade the Court that, had the Authority not erred in its application of s 473DD, it would then have concluded that it should consider the appellants' new information. Their written submissions merely asserted that the Authority "could have found that there were exceptional circumstances to justify considering the information". In this sense, a logical step in the progression of the second ground of appeal seemed to have been overlooked. It was for the appellants to establish that there was a realistic possibility that the Authority would have accepted that there were exceptional circumstances warranting consideration of the new claim. That task may have been rather difficult in circumstances where the Authority had already rejected the proposition that the new claim could not have been provided to the Minister before his decision was made (pursuant to s 473DD(b)(i)). Indeed, as noted above, it expressly pointed out that the appellants had been afforded clear opportunities to put forward the information on prior occasions, during which time they were legally represented. Ultimately, as this aspect of the materiality counterfactual was not argued, there is no need to address it further.
56 For the foregoing reasons, the Authority's misapplication of s 473DD was immaterial. The primary judge was correct so to conclude. The second ground of appeal fails.