When his Honour referred in the passage which we
have quoted above to "the Minister's decision" he may have
been intending to refer to the reasons given by the Minister
in the statement which he furnished to the Tribunal pursuant
to s.37 of the Act. As we have already indicated, that
statement did include a reference to the reasons for his
decision and to government policy. Drake's Case itself makes
it clear that the Tribunal is entitled to give weight to
government policy, and in a normal case would be expected to
do so. The Tribunal must, however, act in accordance with
law and this requires it to form its own view on the merits
of the case. Moreover, we do not doubt that, in an
appropriate case, the expressed reasons of the Minister may
carry weight with the Tribunal because of the fact that the
Tribunal is impressed by, or finds itself in agreement with,
a line of reasoning or an analysis of established fact which
those reasons contain. In such circumstances, the Tribunal
may give weight to the Minister's reasons in the same way as
it gives weight to the oral argument of the legal or other
representatives of the parties appearing before it. There
is, however, no presumption that the Minister's decision is
correct and the Tribunal is neither required nor entitled to
place weight, in the ultimate weighing process, upon the fact
that the Minister has decided the issue before him, on the
material before him, in a particular way. Putting to one