Consideration
49 The appellant's submissions can be reduced to three contentions, namely that the Tribunal breached its procedural fairness obligations by failing to:
(1) be aware of, or to consider, the biodata interview;
(2) make reasonable efforts to obtain the biodata interview; and
(3) failing to listen to the audio recording of the entry interview and the appellant's claims made during the interview that were not recorded in the written record.
50 The Minister accepts that the biodata interview was before the delegate but was not before the Tribunal. The appellant contends, in effect, that he advanced a claim in his biodata interview that he was beaten by the army and that he fled Sri Lanka because of his fear of the army. He says that the Tribunal failed to consider that claim or make inquiries to discover it and that, in failing to consider the claim, its credibility findings were materially affected.
51 The Tribunal's obligation to consider claims made by an applicant did not appear to be in dispute.
52 In Htun v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2001) 233 FCR 136 at [42] Allsop J (with whom Spender J agreed) relevantly said:
… The requirement to review the decision under s 414 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the Act) requires the Tribunal to consider the claims of the applicant. To make a decision without having considered all the claims is to fail to complete the exercise of jurisdiction embarked on. The claim or claims and its or their component integers are considerations made mandatorily relevant by the Act for consideration in the sense discussed in Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24; and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323. See also Sellamuthu v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1999) 90 FCR 287 at [18], [19], [21] and [50]. It is to be distinguished from errant fact finding. The nature and extent of the task of the Tribunal revealed by the terms of the Act, eg ss 54, 57, 65, 414, 415, 423, 424, 425, 427 and 428 and the express reference in reg 866 to the "claims" of the applicant eg 866.211, make it clear that the Tribunal's statutorily required task is to examine and deal with the claims for asylum made by the applicant. …
53 The Tribunal is required to consider claims that are expressly made and to consider claims that clearly arise from the materials before it: see NABE at [60], [68].
54 As the Minister submits, the appellant did not make any claim, either in his protection visa application or to the Tribunal, including in the submissions provided by his representatives, that he had been beaten by the army or that he specifically feared harm from the army. Nor did any such claim "arise squarely" from the material before the Tribunal. It was a matter for the appellant to advance evidence and argument in support of his claim for protection to the Minister's Department and to the Tribunal on review: see Abebe v The Commonwealth of Australia (1999) 197 CLR 510 at [187] (Gummow and Hayne JJ).
55 By analogy, the Minister relied on the decision in Hong v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2019) 269 FCR 47. In that case the appellant contended that the primary judge erred in not upholding her submission that the Tribunal had not given proper, genuine and realistic consideration to her claim that in China she assisted people "from organisation of social justice called 'Falong Gong'" (referred to as the Falun Gong point).
56 The Falun Gong point was made by the appellant in her personal circumstances form seeking revocation of the cancellation of her visa pursuant to s 501CA(4) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). A delegate of the Minister refused revocation of the cancellation of the appellant's visa and the appellant sought review of that decision by the Tribunal. Before the Tribunal the appellant gave evidence that everything in her personal circumstances form was true and about the difficulties she would face if she returned to China but did not mention the Falun Gong point in doing so. Nor was that point mentioned by the appellant or her lawyer in the course of the hearing or in her statement of facts, issues and contentions. The Tribunal did not make a specific finding in relation to the Falun Gong point.
57 At [70] of Hong, Bromwich and Wheelahan JJ held that in the circumstances of that case, and without more, "it was not enough for a claim to be advanced before the Tribunal, so as to require it to be considered as part of its irreducible jurisdictional task, for the appellant to rely upon two sentences in the original personal circumstances form accompanying the appellant's visa cancellation revocation request". Their Honours referred to the manner in which the appellant had made her claims including that:
(3) The appellant had adequate opportunity to advance and develop any material matter before the Tribunal through evidence, written contentions, and submissions at the hearing.
(4) Although the appellant stated in her evidence in a compendious way that everything in the personal circumstances form was true, her evidence fell to be considered in its totality. When the appellant was asked about difficulties that she believed she would experience if she went back to China, she gave the evidence that we have set out under [31] and [32] above, which referred to her claimed health issues as an impediment to gaining employment. In response to questions in examination-in-chief, and in cross-examination, the appellant made no reference to having helped people who had an association with Falun Gong as being a possible impediment to employment. Furthermore, no reference to Falun Gong featured in the appellant's statement of facts, issues and contentions that was prepared by the legal practitioner who represented her before the Tribunal, or in the submissions that were made to the Tribunal on her behalf at the hearing.
58 As the Minister submits, the same can be said here. The biodata interview material was before the delegate. However, the delegate did not consider any claim that the appellant had been beaten by the army and feared the army. Despite that, the appellant did not complain to the Tribunal about any oversight on the part of the delegate nor did he make a claim that he feared the army.
59 The Tribunal was not under any obligation to consider the reference to the army that appeared in the record of the biodata interview. That interview preceded the appellant's application for the visa. In making the visa application the appellant did not refer at any point to fearing the army or to having been beaten by the army. The Tribunal did not fall into error, by denying the appellant procedural fairness or otherwise, in failing to "indicate an awareness" of the existence of the biodata interview.
60 Neither was the Tribunal's failure to address the biodata interview relevant to its credibility findings. Those findings were made by the Tribunal in two parts of its reasons.
61 First, at [22] of its reasons where the Tribunal said:
I acknowledge that it not uncommon for honest applicants to give differing accounts of past events. I also acknowledge that the applicant's youth and background and the stressful nature of providing information in formal setting could have contributed to some of the confusion in his evidence. However, I do not accept that he would have been confused about whether he himself had been questioned by officials about his brother or his father had been questioned about him. I believe that the applicant gave inconsistent evidence regarding these events because his claims are not true.
62 The findings at [22] were based on the inconsistencies found by the Tribunal between the claims made by the appellant in the appellant's 2012 statement and the evidence he gave before the Tribunal, which the Tribunal recorded at [20]-[21] of its reasons.
63 Secondly, at [33] where the Tribunal said:
It is certainly true that the applicant's evidence during both his interview with the delegate and the hearing was sometimes confused and I accept that this may sometimes have occurred because he misunderstood questions he was asked. However, this does not explain why he initially claimed that he had gone into hiding in 2011 because he was fearful of masked men but stated at the hearing that he had gone into hiding after being detained by the CID and accused of belonging to the LTTE. While these claims are not mutually exclusive, I do not accept that the applicant would have failed to mention that he had been detained by the CID and accused of belonging to the LTTE prior to the hearing if this had occurred. And if fear of abduction or detention by masked men in 2011 was a major reason for his decision to go into hiding at his sister's house in 2011,1 believe that he would have repeated this claim during the hearing. I believe these inconsistencies occurred because the applicant has not given truthful evidence. I do not accept that he was questioned by the CID in 2011 and accused of being an LTTE member or that he went into hiding in 2011 because he feared that he would be abducted by masked men or for any other reason. I find that he concocted these claims to support his application for protection.
64 The findings at [33] were based on the fact that the appellant made the claim that he had been detained by the CID and accused of belonging to the LTTE for the first time at the hearing. The appellant does not contend that this claim was made at the biodata interview.
65 The Tribunal's findings of inconsistency in the appellant's claims were based on evidence given after the biodata and entry interviews and properly supported the credibility findings made by the Tribunal.
66 The appellant suggests that the Tribunal was obliged to make inquiries in order to obtain the biodata interview. However, the Tribunal does not have a general obligation to inquire. Its duty is to review although "[i]t may be that a failure to make an obvious inquiry about a critical fact, the existence of which is easily ascertained, could, in some circumstances, supply a sufficient link to the outcome to constitute a failure to review" and thus give rise to a jurisdictional error for constructive failure to exercise jurisdiction: see Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI (2009) 111 ALD 15 at [25]. Here there was no obvious inquiry to make about a critical fact. The information before the Tribunal, including that provided by the appellant, did not suggest that the appellant had made any additional claims in the biodata interview.
67 I turn to consider the appellant's contentions concerning the Tribunal's failure to listen to the audio recording of the entry interview. I do not accept that there was any obligation on the Tribunal to listen to the audio recording, particularly in circumstances where it had the written record of the entry interview available to it and that record included a summary of the answers given by the appellant in relation to the reason why he left his country of nationality or residence, which the appellant does not submit is inaccurate.
68 The appellant submits, by reference to a transcript of the entry interview annexed to Mr Simion's affidavit, that there were material matters omitted from the written record. He relies on the following passages (emphasis added):
1102 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. This one and the suspicious reason.
1103
1104 Case officer: this one and the suspicious reason… Was there any incident in these last two
1105 years where you were put under suspicion?
1106
1107 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. They have come to taking me away sometimes I just
1108 hide or sometimes I'm not at home when they coming to take me.
And:
1156 Case officer: How many times altogether do you think they came searching for you?
1157
1158 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. Two or three times.
1159
1160 Case officer: And are these the reasons you left Sri Lanka.
1161
1162 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. Ys.
1163
1164 Case officer: I got enough information there, I think.
And:
1195 Case officer: Okay, but you said before, you told me before the CID, what organisation is
1196 that?
1197
1198 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer].
1199
1200 Case officer: What is the CID?
1201
1202 Interpreter: [Continues to interpret]. He said yes.
1203
1204 Case officer: So, what is the CID is that an intelligence organisation?
1205
1206 Interpreter: Yeah, Central Intelligence Department.
1207
1208 Case officer: Sorry
1209
1210 Interpreter: Central Intelligence Department, that's the narration
1211
1212 Case officer: Okay, Central, Intelligence
1213
1214 Interpreter: Department
1215
1216 Case officer: And they came looking for you, didn't they?
1217
1218 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. Yes.
1219
1220 Case officer: why would they come looking for you?
1221
1222 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. For this reason.
1223
1224 Case officer: For what reason you tell me.
1225
1226 Interpreter: [Translates Case officer]. Because my brother was in LTTE they thought I was in
1227 LTTE as well.
69 The effect of this evidence is a claim by the appellant that the CID came looking for him at his home because his brother was in the LTTE. However, that was a matter that was before the Tribunal. At [30] of its reasons the Tribunal recorded that:
At the hearing the applicant confirmed that he had returned from India in May 2011 and then worked as a fisherman for about 3 or 4 months and again claimed that he went into hiding at his married sister's house and in the nearby jungle after this. He also worked casually at a quarry. When asked why he had gone into hiding he said he said he had been questioned by the CID at a camp who told him that they believed that he was involved in the LTTE because his brother was a member and because so many Tamils were recruited in the final stages of the war. They threatened to detain him but he was released after 30 minutes. After that he went home and then to his sister's house. …
(Emphasis added.)
70 That being so, I do not accept that the transcript relied upon by the appellant (see above) reveals any material matter which was absent from the written record of the entry interview or not otherwise before the Tribunal.
71 The appellant relies on AAI20 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs [2022] FCA 1252. That case concerned a review by the Immigration Assessment Authority of a decision of a delegate of the Minister refusing a protection visa under Pt 7AA of the Act. On 3 December 2012 the appellant had attended an enhanced screening process interview on Christmas Island with the assistance of a Tamil interpreter. The written record of the interview was not provided to the Authority for its review. It was not in dispute that the record of the enhanced screening process interview was relevant to the review and was in the Secretary's possession at the time of the referral to the Authority.
72 At [63] Stewart J identified the issue in relation to the written record of the enhanced screening process interview to be "whether or not the Secretary's failure to give it to the Authority under their obligation to do so pursuant to s 473CB(1) of the Act was material in the sense that the failure could realistically have deprived the appellant of the opportunity of a successful outcome".
73 In considering that issue, Stewart J observed that the earliest account of the appellant's claims that was before the Authority was the form in which information from his arrival interview, which took place on 31 December 2012, was recorded by a Departmental officer, and the audio recording of that interview. At [66] his Honour referred to the earlier enhanced screening process interview and observed that no transcript or recording of that interview was before the Authority but that a record of it was before the primary judge.
74 Justice Stewart summarised the information given by the appellant in the enhanced screening process interview and noted that it is "detailed and extensive" in contrast to the brief responses recorded in the arrival interview form. His Honour was of the view that there were a number of ways in which the enhanced screening process interview transcript may have assisted the appellant had it been available to the Authority: AAI20 at [67]-[68]. Justice Stewart then proceeded to explain each of those matters and how the absence of any record of the enhanced screening process interview before the Authority affected its findings. In doing so his Honour also referred at one stage to the transcript of the arrival interview on which the appellant sought to rely on the appeal, noting (at [72]) that the Authority's reliance "on the summarised answers recorded by the interviewing officer in the arrival interview form, rather than on the answers actually given by the appellant in the interview" did not assist.
75 However, the appellant's reliance on AAI20 is inapt. The facts of this case are different to those before the Court in AAI20. First, in AAI20 the Authority undertook its review pursuant to the strict regime in Pt 7AA of the Act. Secondly, the parties accepted that the written record of the enhanced screening process interview was relevant to the review and that the Secretary had failed to provide it to the Authority contrary to s 473CB of the Act. It was against that acknowledged failure that Stewart J undertook his analysis. Thirdly, in AAI20 the Authority had neither the written record of the enhanced screening process interview nor an audio recording of it. None of those facts can be found here: the review was carried out under Pt 7 of the Act; the appellant had an opportunity to appear before Tribunal; the Tribunal had available to it the record of the entry interview which the appellant did not contend was inaccurate; and, in any event, to the extent the appellant relies on a transcript of the entry interview, the matters he highlights were before the Tribunal and considered by it.
76 The final aspect to consider of proposed ground 1 is the contention at particular (e) that the "[t]ribunal breached the obligation of procedural fairness because the [appellant] did not know what information which he had previously given to the Tribunal was or was not being considered".
77 The appellant makes no submissions in support of this particular. That said, the Minister considers, I assume inferentially, that the appellant relies on BBS15 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 248 FCR 159 in support of the contention.
78 In BBS15 the then Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) rejected the appellant's claim that he was a Christian convert because there was no material to corroborate his claim that he attended church. However, there was uncontested evidence before the primary judge that an officer of the Minister's Department had received a supporting letter from the appellant's pastor as part of his application for a visa but, because of an administrative error, the letter was not provided by the Secretary to the Tribunal with the review documents.
79 The appellant contended that the RRT had failed to provide him with a reasonable opportunity to be heard in accordance with s 422B and s 425 of the Act in that: the RRT, by representations it made, had caused him to understand that the documents he had provided to the Department in support of his visa application and relevant to his review would be obtained and considered by it; he had relied on that understanding; and, as a consequence, he had conducted his part of the review on a false premise.
80 The Full Court (Griffiths, Kerr and Farrell JJ) held that the RRT had denied the appellant procedural fairness because it had conducted the review in a manner that created an impression in the appellant that it had all of the documents relevant to the review which the appellant had provided to the Department. At [106] their Honours said:
None of the cases purports to narrow the principle established by the High Court in Muin and Aala. That is, it is a failure of s 425 of the Act if the failure to provide information causes the Tribunal (even innocently) to mislead an applicant to mistakenly believe that a state of affairs exists and that in turn affects the manner in which the case is conducted to the applicant's detriment. In any event we would be bound by the hierarchy of precedent to apply the reasoning of the High Court.
81 The appellant seems to suggest that he was under a misapprehension that his biodata interview was before the Tribunal. However, as the Minister submits, the appellant does not give any evidence that he laboured under such a misapprehension; the biodata interview was not connected to the appellant's protection visa application, such that he could have reasonably expected it to be before the Tribunal; and, in contrast to the position in BBS15, the Tribunal did not say anything to the appellant during the hearing that would give him the impression that it possessed or considered the biodata interview. There is no evidence before me capable of leading to conclusions of the type referred to in BBS15 at [7].
82 In my view proposed ground 1 lacks merit.