The Tribunal's decision
37 Pursuant to s 500(1)(c) of the Act, the Tribunal reviewed the decision of the Minister's delegate and decided that the applicant did not meet the requirements for the grant of a protection visa.
38 The issue before the Tribunal concerned whether there were serious reasons for considering that the applicant committed a serious non-political crime before entering Australia: at AAT[19]. The subject matter of the Shu affidavit and the NSWSC proceedings were central to that inquiry.
39 However, somewhat strangely, it is not apparent from the Tribunal's reasons exactly what the crime was at issue. There are general references in the Tribunal's reasons to "the allegations of fraud" as arising from the press release from the Chinese Embassy (extracted at [9] above). The Tribunal then introduced (at AAT[27]) the allegation, in the context of "some factual findings", and referred to the applicant's denial of "any misleading or deceptive conduct and any fraud" and described the alleged events as the "alleged fraud": at AAT[30]. There is no identification of what the Tribunal understood comprised the elements of "fraud" nor any indication that they were considered.
40 The Tribunal determined that "there is no significant dispute about much of the factual substratum deposed to by Mr Shu" including in relation to (at AAT[27]):
(a) transferring considerable sums of money to the applicant to invest in a car importation investment scheme (the Car Project) based on representations of significant returns;
(b) the Shanghai Property was not available to be mortgaged in favour of Shu and the investment funds have not been repaid; and,
(c) that in November 2019 the Shanghai police published a statement that the applicant is a fraud and owes money to Shu.
41 The Tribunal determined that there was "strong evidence to support" the following (at AAT [28]):
(a) The Applicant's wife became pregnant in 2017 and Mr XX said that he could help them buy the Shanghai Property. They chose a property and told Mr XX who said, "Ok, I'll do it for you". A month later, Mr XX said, "You'd better buy this property in your wife's name";
(b) The Applicant's wife had formed an acquaintance with Mr Shu and asked him if she and her husband could borrow 300,000 Yuan for the purpose of paying a tax liability arising from the purchase of the Shanghai Property. Mr Shu agreed and paid 300,000 Yuan to the Applicant's bank account on 25 September 2018;
(c) The sum of 300,000 Yuan was used by the Applicant to pay a liability for legal fees arising from a dispute with the developer of three properties unrelated to the Shanghai Property. The money paid by Mr Shu was not used to pay the purchase tax liability on the Shanghai Property which, on the Applicant's own evidence, was for an amount of 1,401,000 Yuan. It follows that the Applicant's wife misled Mr Shu about the purpose for making the loan;
(d) In late September 2018, the Applicant's wife introduced Mr Shu to the Applicant who informed him of an investment opportunity in the Car Project which would provide a prospective return of 26 million Yuan by the end of February 2019. At first, Mr Shu said he would invest 1 million Yuan (less the 300,000 Yuan loan) but on 11 October 2018 he agreed to invest 6 million Yuan. The total investment in the Car Project was 14 million Yuan. The Applicant would provide the balance of 8 million Yuan;
(e) The investment vehicle for the Car Project was Duoda Innovation, a company controlled by Mr XX. On 19 October 2018, Mr Shu entered into a written Entrusted Shareholding Agreement with the Applicant which recorded Mr Shu's entitlement to a 42.85% share of the Car Project of Duoda Innovation;
(f) Between 17 October 2018 and 30 January 2019, the Applicant transferred the sum of 6,246,326 Yuan to the Applicant's bank account;
(g) The Applicant provided Mr Shu with a copy of his bank transaction record purporting to show that he had transferred 14 million Yuan on 18 October 2018 for the purposes of the Car Project;
(h) In late February the Applicant sent to Mr Shu via WeChat an image of what appeared to be a text message from the Bank of China advising that a transfer to him of 30,070,000 HKD was in transit. The Applicant then informed Mr Shu that the sum of 30,070,000 HKD was frozen by the Chinese government and that it had been returned to the original account.
(i) In late February 2019, the Applicant advised Mr Shu that he and his wife needed more time to pay the outstanding money. It was agreed between them that the total outstanding money due to Mr Shu was 14,957,428 Yuan and that to secure this money, a mortgage would be granted over the Shanghai Property, with interest payable at 2% per month;
(j) Mr Shu received the sum of 2,898,227 Yuan from the Applicant in March 2019 but no further monies have been paid, nor has the mortgage over the Shanghai Property been granted in favour of Mr Shu;
(k) In late March 2019, Mr Shu spoke to the Applicant and his wife who said that they were in Australia but agreed to enter into a written loan agreement reflecting the amount outstanding;
(l) In early April 2019, the Applicant offered the Shanghai Property as security for the amount outstanding. The Applicant, his wife and Mr Shu met at the Real Estate Trading Centre. The Applicant and his wife told Mr Shu that a mortgage could not be granted as the Shanghai Property was not in the name of the Applicant's wife. Later that evening Mr Shu entered into a written loan agreement with the Applicant and his wife;
(m) On 18 April 2019, the Applicant attended the Shanghai Public Security Bureau and provided a detailed report of the conduct of the Applicant and his wife. The Shanghai Public Security Bureau told Mr Shu that documents purporting to show ownership of the Shanghai Property and transfer of funds were fraudulent documents;
(n) Mr Shu believes that the Shanghai Property was never owned by the Applicant or his wife and that the money he provided to the Applicant was not invested in the Car Project;
(o) A "Notification of Filing" records that the Shanghai Public Security Bureau will be filing a criminal case against the Applicant and his wife. On 23 Nov 2019, the Shanghai police published a statement which said that the Applicant is a fraud and owes Mr Shu 4.6 million Yuan.
42 The Tribunal then proceeded to state what it considered to be the "critical and most contentious facts": first whether the applicant or his wife ever owned the Shanghai Property; and second whether the applicant invested Shu's money in the Car Project or transferred it to Duoda Innovations for that purpose: at AAT[29].
43 However, before considering each of these purported critical facts, the Tribunal determined, relevant to ground 2 of this review, that despite the parties placing considerable emphasis on the evidence relating to whether the applicant was employed by Duoda Innovations and Mr XX, the Tribunal did not consider this to be an "essential element of the alleged fraud" and therefore did not attempt to make findings of fact in that regard: at AAT[30].
44 In their determination of whether there were serious reasons for considering that the applicant had committed a serious non-political crime before entering Australia, the Tribunal agreed with the question posed by the delegate which was (at AAT[31]):
What is to be considered is whether the applicant or both applicants committed fraud in their dealings with Mr Shu in relation to Mr Shu's transfer of funds to the applicant for the purpose of a loan to pay the purchase tax on their alleged purchase of the Shanghai property and the later investment in the car project (described by Shanghai police as the Shanghai fraud), and whether these dealings amount to a serious non-political crime.
45 Under the heading of "Is there evidence of fraud?" the Tribunal then posited two main questions, "[d]id the [a]pplicant invest Mr Shu's money in the Car Project?" and "[w]as the Shanghai property owned by the [a]pplicant's wife?", before their "[c]onclusion as to fraud". The Tribunal then proceeded to address each of these two questions, again without identifying what species of "fraud" they were considering and how these questions were relevant to its determination.
46 Thereafter, the Tribunal came to the following conclusion as to fraud (at AAT[69]):
Having considered all of the evidence before us, we consider that there is strong evidence of fraudulent conduct by the Applicant in relation to the Shanghai Property and the investment of Mr Shu's money in the Car Project. There is no dispute that Mr Shu is owed a considerable sum of money and that the Applicant failed to provide him with the security he offered over the Shanghai Property. That in itself may not amount to fraud but there is strong evidence to support a finding that Mr Shu's money was never invested with Duoda Investments and that the Applicant (or his wife) never owned the Shanghai Property.
47 At no point prior to making this conclusion as to whether there was "strong evidence of fraudulent conduct" was there any identification of the alleged "crime" or its elements and how the alleged fraudulent conduct morphed into a crime.
48 The Tribunal then went on to consider "the issue" as to whether there were "serious reasons for considering that the applicant had committed a serious non-political crime" by identifying the following four limbs as requiring analysis (at AAT[70]):
(a) [t]here are "serious reasons for considering" that the Applicant committed a crime;
(b) [t]he crime is "serious";
(c) [t]he crime is "non-political" in nature; and
(d) [t]he crime was committed by the applicant "before entering Australia".
49 After summarising the holdings of certain authorities concerned with the meaning of "serious reasons for considering", and with reference to the Explanatory Memorandum of the Migration and Maritime Powers Legislation Amendment (Resolving the Asylum Legacy Caseload) Bill 2014 (Cth) and FTZK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] HCA 26; 88 ALJR 754 at [14], the Tribunal made a finding in respect of there being "serious reasons to believe" the applicant has committed the crime of fraud (at AAT[78]-[79]):
78. We are of the view that the Applicant's conduct, and the evidence he has produced to purportedly explain it, clearly demonstrates that there are serious reasons to believe that the Applicant committed a serious non-political crime prior to arriving in Australia. Our findings set out above with respect to the fraudulent conduct of the Applicant establish that there is strong evidence that the Applicant has committed a fraud by misrepresenting that he would invest Mr Shu's funds as agreed in the Car Project and by misrepresenting that a mortgage would be granted because he (or his wife) owned the Shanghai Property. The "serious reasons" are supported by the fact (as deposed to by the Applicant's wife) that the Shanghai police published a statement that the Applicant is a fraud and by the statements of the Shanghai Public Security Bureau made to Mr Shu in April 2019 including that the Chinese police would be charging the Applicant for fraud.
79. We therefore arrive at the conclusion that there is sufficient evidence before the Tribunal to cause us to have serious reasons for believing this Applicant has committed the crime of fraud.
50 The statement of French CJ and Gageler J in FTZK at [14], which the Tribunal had extracted immediately above their finding (at AAT[78]-[79]), provided as follows:
The qualifying term 'serious' indicates that the reasons must be sufficient to support a strong inference… Underpinning the requirement for strong evidence is a consciousness of the potentially profound adverse consequences of exclusion from the protection of the Refugees Convention for a person otherwise entitled to that protection.
51 Relevantly, for the purpose of the first review ground, in the two extracted paragraphs above, the Tribunal uses the verb "believe" rather than "consider". More critically, the Tribunal does not identify what the alleged "crime of fraud" is, nor by what definition, and how, by elemental analysis, there are serious reasons for considering, that the applicant has committed that crime.
52 The Tribunal then turned to whether the applicant's unspecified crime had the requisite seriousness. The Tribunal began by noting that the delegate's analysis approached the question by reference to "relevant provisions" of the Chinese criminal law (at AAT[80]) and stated that "[f]raud in the nature of the applicant's conduct would be regarded as a crime of significant magnitude in China attracting a custodial sentence up to life imprisonment": at AAT[81].
53 The Tribunal then reasoned that in determining whether a crime was "serious" regard could be had to the s 5(1) definition of "serious foreign offence" and "serious Australian offence" to the undefined term of a "serious non-political crime" (at AAT[82]) stating, at AAT[83]:
In the definition of "serious foreign offence" at s 5(1), there is reference to an assumption, "…that the act or omission constituting the offence had taken place in the Australian Capital Territory…" and that, "the act or omission would have constituted an offence…against a law in force in that Territory".
54 The Tribunal then turned to the Criminal Code and gave the following explanation and cursory findings as to there being serious reasons for considering that the applicant's conduct as found could have constituted several breaches of the Criminal Code and that there was thereby strong evidence that the applicant committed both a "serious foreign offence" and "serious Australian offence" punishable with a term of imprisonment of up to 10 years (at AAT[84]-[89]):
84. The Criminal Code 2002 (ACT) (ACT Criminal Code) relevantly contains specific provisions relating to fraud-type conduct. Both the Respondent in its Statement of Facts Issues and Contentions and the delegate in the decision under review have referenced relevant provisions in that legislation that deal with fraud-type conduct. Those provisions comprise:
(a) Section 326 - obtaining property by deception which stipulates a maximum term of imprisonment of 10 years;
(b) Section 332 - obtaining financial advantage by deception which stipulates a maximum term of imprisonment of 10 years;
(c) Section 333 - general dishonesty which provides for a maximum term of imprisonment of five years; and
(d) Section 347 - using false document which provides for a maximum term of imprisonment of 10 years.
85. We consider that there is strong evidence to support a finding that the Applicant has breached s 326 of the ACT Criminal Code by inducing Mr Shu to pay him money by deceptive conduct. Mr Shu was also told (falsely) that he could safely secure his money over a property the Applicant owned in Shanghai when there is strong evidence that the Applicant never owned the Shanghai Property. The Applicant thus dishonestly and deceptively put these matters to Mr Shu, who, in reliance upon those falsities, acted to his financial detriment.
86. Second, there is strong evidence to support a finding that, in breach of s 332 of the ACT Criminal Code, the Applicant has obtained a financial advantage from Mr Shu by means of deceptive conduct towards him. The "financial advantage" derived by the Applicant consequent upon deceiving Mr Shu comprises the obtaining of further funds from Mr Shu for investment in the Car Project which are yet to be repaid to Mr Shu.
87. Third, there is strong evidence to support a finding that, in breach of s 333 of the ACT Criminal Code, the Applicant has acted in a generally dishonest manner towards Mr Shu and that he did, as a consequence, obtain a financial advantage from Mr Shu and otherwise cause him quantifiable loss.
88. Fourth, there is strong evidence to support a finding that the Applicant's conduct has breached s 347 of the ACT Criminal Code by using false documents. Mr Shu deposed in his affidavit that the Shanghai Public Security Bureau told him in April 2019 that the documents provided to him by the Applicant purporting to show ownership of the Shanghai Property were false and that the image provided to him by the Applicant of the HKD30,000,000 entering his account was a fraudulent document.
55 Relevantly, the Tribunal did not identify all of the requisite elements of each of these offences nor how they were satisfied, by an elemental analysis, that there was strong evidence to support a finding of a breach of each of the sections of the Criminal Code. But it then concluded by reason of this finding, that the applicant's fraudulent conduct towards Mr Shu was a serious crime (at AAT[90]).
56 In relation to whether the crime as found was relevantly "non-political", the Tribunal found that there was strong evidence that the applicant's crime of fraud was for personal gain, and the "alleged conduct" (at AAT[101]) did not fall within the s 5 definitions of what a political offence "does not include" in the Extradition Act 1988 (Cth), meant that the s 5(1) Act definition of "non-political crime" was satisfied.
57 Lastly, the Tribunal found that there was no dispute before it that the fraudulent conduct did not occur before the applicant entered Australia and concluded at AAT[104]:
We are satisfied that there is strong evidence of fraudulent conduct by the Applicant. Mr Shu's considerable investment in the Car Project has not been repaid and we are not satisfied that the Applicant invested the funds in accordance with their agreement. We do not accept the Applicant's explanation that his bank statements were modified and that the Shanghai Property was wrongfully transferred. We acknowledge that the Applicant has not been charged with any offence in China but there is undisputed evidence that the Shanghai police investigated the Applicant and published a statement that he was a fraud. For the reasons outlined above, we are satisfied that there are serious reasons to consider that the Applicant committed a serious non-political crime prior to entering Australia.