Consideration
9 In my opinion, the application is entirely without merit. First, the matter had been set down some months beforehand for a show cause hearing for the purposes of the applicant demonstrating that he could satisfy the requirements of r 44.12, namely:
(1) At a hearing of an application for an order to show cause, the Court may:
(a) if it is not satisfied that the application has raised an arguable case for the relief claimed - dismiss the application.
10 Here, the applicant, with the benefit of counsel, sought to rely upon an amended application for which counsel provided written submissions and addressed his Honour orally. Counsel for the Minister today briefly read out that part of the written submissions dealing with ground 1. The solicitor for the applicant not only had not seen the submissions that the applicant's counsel had relied on before his Honour, but had no evidence that that counsel had experienced or raised any difficulty in seeking to justify the amendment, based on his own supporting submissions for it, when the show cause hearing occurred. Nor did the applicant put in evidence before me any transcript or other account of the hearing. The affidavit of the applicant affirmed 28 March 2017 in support of his application for leave to appeal showed that he was present in court before his Honour. I am unable to discern any basis in the material before me on which it could be arguable that his Honour did not sufficiently summarise, in [34] of his judgment quoted above, the nature of the argument which the applicant wished to make in respect of ground 1.
11 Relevantly, the scheme of Pt 7AA of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) is that the Minister must refer a decision that falls within the definition, in s 473BB, of a fast track reviewable decision to the Authority as soon as reasonably practicable after the decision is made (s 473CA). A fast track reviewable decision is one that, relevantly, is a decision to refuse to grant a protection visa to a person who is a fast track applicant, as defined in s 5(1), which includes a person in the present applicant's position, about which there is no dispute. At the same time as the Minister refers a decision to the Authority, or as soon as reasonably practicable thereafter, under s 473CA, the Secretary of his Department must provide the Authority with, relevantly, the material prescribed in s 473CB(1), namely, the delegate's decision, the material that the applicant for the visa provided to the delegate and any other material in the Secretary's possession or control that he considered at the time of the reference to be relevant to the review.
12 The Authority must review the decision under s 473CC, but can only either affirm or remit it for reconsideration (s 473CC(2)). Section 473DA, Div 3 of Pt 7AA, together with ss 473GA and 473GB, are deemed to be an exhaustive statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to a review under Pt 7AA.
13 Importantly, s 473DA(2) provides that the Authority has no obligation to give the applicant for a visa anything that was before the delegate, although he or she will already have the delegate's reasons for decision. The Authority must conduct its review ordinarily only on the papers before it, under s 473CB, without accepting or requesting any new information or interviewing the applicant for the visa (s 473DB(1)). However, under Subdiv C of Div 3 of Pt 7AA, the Authority can obtain additional information in limited circumstances, but s 473DC(2) provides that it has no duty to do so. Moreover, s 473DD prevents the Authority from considering any new information unless one or two conditions are satisfied, namely that, first, there are exceptional circumstances to justify considering the new information and, secondly, where the applicant gives or proposes to give the new information, he or she satisfies the Authority that either it was, and could, not have been given to the delegate before the decision under review was made, or it is credible personal information that was not previously known and, had it been known, may have affected consideration of his or her claims.
14 However, where the Authority itself obtains new information other than from an applicant, s 473DA requires it to give the applicant particulars of the new information, if the Authority considers it under s 473DD(a) and it would be a reason, or part of the reason, for affirming the decision, (s 473DE(1)(a)). Next, s 473DE(3)(a) provides that the obligation under s 473DE(1) does not apply to new information, such as country information, that was not specifically about the referred applicant but was just about a class of persons of which the referred applicant was a member.
15 Critically, in the circumstances of the present case, the information before the Authority concerning the DFAT report was not new information. It had been before the delegate and, moreover, it was country information of the kind referred to in s 473DE(3)(a) about which the Authority had no obligation to inform the applicant. In addition, the delegate had considered the document referred to in ground 1 of the amended application below, on which the applicant relied, being a police report dated 27 April 2012 concerning an incident that allegedly had occurred three years earlier, on 6 May 2009. The delegate observed as set out in ground 1(a) that the document had no official letterhead which could be expected to be present on an official report, or reflected in its translation. In those circumstances, the delegate placed no weight on that document as supporting the applicant's claims.
16 As set out in the particulars of the amended application before his Honour, when the Authority dealt with the same document, it referred to inconsistencies within the document itself, adding that those inconsistencies may have been a misdescription. The Authority observed that, given its credibility concerns about the applicant (whose claims it had found "are not credible") and the country information regarding document fraud, the Authority gave it "little weight", instead of placing no weight on the document, as the delegate had done.
17 In my opinion, nothing in s 473DE, as articulated in ground 1 below, in any submissions before me or as summarised by his Honour, suggested that the Authority had been required under Pt 7AA to notify the applicant of how it proposed to use the DFAT report in relation to document fraud. Indeed, the delegate's decision suggests that the delegate did not regard the document as genuine. That is because he referred to the absence of any official letterhead that could be expected on a genuine police report which appeared to explain why the delegate gave the document no weight.
18 The Court had given the applicant notice that it would consider his case to ascertain whether he could satisfy his Honour that he had raised an arguable case for the relief claimed in accordance with r 44.12(1)(a). His Honour was hearing an application for an order that the applicant to show cause that he had an arguable case and his counsel was prepared and ready to do so relying on his very recently amended application and written submissions in support.
19 The obvious reason why counsel then appearing for the applicant had sought to amend his application and provided written submissions in support of that amended application was that the applicant was clearly on notice that the hearing would deal with the matter on the basis that, whatever was before the Court on 17 March 2017, he had to demonstrate that it would be sufficient to raise an arguable case under r 44.12(1)(a).
20 As I have noted, there is no evidence of a transcript before his Honour to support any suggestion that the trial judge did not deal with the amended application fairly, nor was there evidence from counsel then appearing for the applicant that the applicant had not been given a fair hearing.
21 The solicitor for the applicant before me explained that he did not have a relationship with counsel then appearing for the applicant sufficient to enable him to obtain an affidavit. Nonetheless, in my opinion, there is nothing in the material before me to justify the improper submissions that the solicitor made, without any factual support or other proper basis, that his Honour did not afford the applicant procedural fairness or wrongly exercised his power under r 44.12 to dismiss the amended application.
22 The Federal Circuit Court is a busy court. The purpose of setting matters down for show cause hearings under r 44.12(1)(a) is to enable that Court to deal with cases in accordance with the objects in s 3 of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia Act 1999 (Cth), including the use of streamlined procedures in s 3(2)(b).
23 The fact is that the applicant has not identified, even today, any arguable case that, had an application for an adjournment been made (which, on the material before me, it was not) he could have been able to demonstrate after the adjournment something that would have been capable of showing cause why the proceeding should not have been summarily dismissed. In my opinion, there was no basis for the argument advanced in ground 1 of the draft notice of appeal. That ground was an abuse of process because it was clearly foredoomed to fail: Walton v Gardiner (1993) 177 CLR 378 at 393 per Mason CJ, Deane and Dawson JJ.
24 Ground 2 below, of course, had been precluded by reason of the then decision of the Full Court in SZTAL 243 FCR 556, that subsequently was affirmed by the High Court. Having regard to the lack of any arguable case in ground 1, there would have been no point in standing the show cause application over, since his Honour was bound by the Full Court's decision to dismiss ground 2. Because there was nothing else in the application, his Honour made no error in dismissing it.
25 An applicant for leave to appeal must show that, first, the decision in question is attended with sufficient doubt to warrant the grant of leave and, secondly, substantial injustice will result from a refusal of leave to appeal: Bienstein v Bienstein (2003) 195 ALR 225 at 231 [29] per McHugh, Kirby and Callinan JJ. In my opinion, neither of those conditions has been remotely made out on the material before me.