Ground Two
25 In order to consider ground two, the relevant legislative regime should be set out. Subdiv C of in Pt 7AA of the Act is in these terms:
473DC Getting new information
(1) Subject to this Part, the Immigration Assessment Authority may, in relation to a fast track decision, get any documents or information (new information) that:
(a) were not before the Minister when the Minister made the decision under section 65; and
(b) the Authority considers may be relevant.
(2) The Immigration Assessment Authority does not have a duty to get, request or accept, any new information whether the Authority is requested to do so by a referred applicant or by any other person, or in any other circumstances.
(3) Without limiting subsection (1), the Immigration Assessment Authority may invite a person, orally or in writing, to give new information:
(a) in writing; or
(b) at an interview, whether conducted in person, by telephone or in any other way.
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.
473DE Certain new information must be given to referred applicant
(1) The Immigration Assessment Authority must, in relation to a fast track reviewable decision:
(a) give to the referred applicant particulars of any new information, but only if the new information:
(i) has been, or is to be, considered by the Authority under section 473DD; and
(ii) would be the reason, or a part of the reason, for affirming the fast track reviewable decision; and
(b) explain to the referred applicant why the new information is relevant to the review; and
(c) invite the referred applicant, orally or in writing, to give comments on the new information:
(i) in writing; or
(ii) at an interview, whether conducted in person, by telephone or in any other way.
(2) The Immigration Assessment Authority may give the particulars mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) in the way that the Authority thinks appropriate in the circumstances.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to new information that:
(a) is not specifically about the referred applicant and is just about a class of persons of which the referred applicant is a member; or
(b) is non-disclosable information; or
(c) is prescribed by regulation for the purposes of this paragraph.
473DF Invitation to give new information or comments in writing or at interview
(1) This section applies if a referred applicant is:
(a) invited under section 473DC to give new information in writing or at an interview; or
(b) invited under section 473DE to give comments on new information in writing or at an interview.
(2) The information or comments are to be given within a period that is prescribed by regulation and specified in the invitation.
(3) The Immigration Assessment Authority may determine the manner in which, and the place and time at which, an interview is to be conducted.
(4) If the referred applicant does not give the new information or comments in accordance with the invitation, the Immigration Assessment Authority may make a decision on the review:
(a) without taking any further action to get the information or the referred applicant's comments on the information; or
(b) without taking any further action to allow or enable the referred applicant to take part in a further interview.
Section 473DB is also relevant and is in these terms:
473DB Immigration Assessment Authority to review decisions on the papers
(1) Subject to this Part, the Immigration Assessment Authority must review a fast track reviewable decision referred to it under section 473CA by considering the review material provided to the Authority under section 473CB:
(a) without accepting or requesting new information; and
(b) without interviewing the referred applicant.
(2) Subject to this Part, the Immigration Assessment Authority may make a decision on a fast track reviewable decision at any time after the decision has been referred to the Authority.
26 Mr Chia's submission was that the Authority had acted legally unreasonably in either not inviting the applicant to give evidence at a hearing or in not considering whether it should exercise its power in s 473DC(3). Before me, my impression is that this was mostly because of the acceptance as "new information" of the wife's unsworn statement. This should have, according to Mr Chia, prompted the Authority to obtain further details from the applicant about the incident alleged by the wife. The Authority addressed that statement at [24] in the following terms:
While I accept, as claimed by the applicant consistently in his arrival interview and current application, there were inquiries and threats to his wife after his departure, I have some doubt over the 2017 incident claimed in the statement of the applicant's wife. Firstly, this event is said to have occurred in early April, but the information was only given to the IAA in late May. The claim is new and significant: a person had identified the applicant as having assisted the LTTE and the CID were asking about him for this reason. I find it difficult to accept that if this were true, the information would not have been provided to the IAA earlier, such as in the response to the IAA's invitation to comment submitted on 15 May, or even prior to that time. Secondly, the applicant claims no connection to the LTTE and no such allegations were previously made against him other than those in 2009. The claim is reminiscent of the earlier accusations against the applicant and I find it highly coincidental that what appear to be new allegations would be made against the applicant some five years after his departure from Sri Lanka and following the refusal of his protection visa. Further, the statement is vague, saying only that the CID asked about the applicant and were advised he was not home but as, on the evidence in the statement, the CID were already aware of his whereabouts, it is difficult to understand the utility of these alleged CID visits. In addition, while not entirely implausible, the apparent interest in the applicant eight years after the end of the Sri Lankan civil war because of alleged past assistance to the LTTE is contrary to country information indicating that the focus of the Sri Lankan authorities is on preventing the re-emergence of Tamil separatism. Considering these matters together, I am not satisfied that the applicant has been identified as having assisted the LTTE or that his wife or mother was visited by the CID in April 2017.
(Footnote omitted.)
27 Mr Chia relied upon the decision of the Full Court of this Court in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CRY16 (2017) 253 FCR 475. In that case the Authority affirmed a delegate's decision to refuse to grant a visa but on different grounds. It decided that the applicant in that case would not face a real risk of serious harm if returned to Beirut, as distinct from other areas of Lebanon. The Full Court decided that the Authority had acted legally unreasonably in failing to consider whether the applicant should have been given an effective opportunity to address the issue of internal relocation to Beirut. The Court said at [81]-[82]:
We do not accept the Minister's submission that where there is a new situation in the referred applicant's country of nationality, or if new information were obtained that meant there was a complete change of circumstances in the referred applicant's country of nationality after the delegate's decision, there was no obligation on the Authority to consider whether to bring it to the referred applicant's attention. We understood this submission to mean that those circumstances could not give rise to legal unreasonableness.
Our conclusion is that it was legally unreasonable, in the circumstances, not to consider getting documents or information from the respondent. The legislature is to be taken to intend that the Authority's statutory power in s 473DC will be exercised reasonably. The failure to consider the exercise of that discretionary power lacks an evident and intelligible justification in circumstances where the Authority knew that it did not have, but the respondent was likely to have, information on his particular circumstances and the impact upon him of relocation to Beirut. The Authority did not have that information because the question of relocation, either at all or to Beirut, was not explored, or the subject of findings, by the delegate. The Authority's failure to consider the exercise of that discretionary power meant that it disabled itself from considering what was reasonable, in the sense of "practicable", in terms of relocation. In our opinion, as a consequence, the review by the Authority under s 473CC miscarried for jurisdictional error.
28 The obligation to exercise a power within the bounds of reasonableness is an implied limitation drawn by the Court from a construction of the applicable power conferred by Parliament. That the power conferred by s 473DC(3) (and s 473DC(1)) should, if exercised, be exercised reasonably, is not doubted: Plaintiff M174/2016 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] HCA 16; 92 ALJR 481 at [21]. Different considerations might have arisen in relation to the proposition that a decision maker must also consider whether or not to exercise that power reasonably. That is so for two reasons. First, the terms of s 473DC(2), on one view, make that implied limitation more difficult to draw. If the Authority is under no "duty" to get "new information", why is it necessary to imply a requirement that the issue of the consideration of whether to exercise the power (as distinct from its exercise) be subject to a limitation of legal reasonableness? That difficulty is, however, foreclosed by what was said by the Full Court of this Court in CRY16 at [72]. Secondly, what does it mean to observe that the consideration of whether or not to exercise a power must be undertaken in a legally reasonable way? Legal reasonableness usually informs the active exercise of a power. Suffice to say, a mistaken or wrongful failure to exercise a power, simpliciter, would not be sufficient to demonstrate the presence of jurisdictional error. More would be needed. For the reasons expressed below, because the Authority did consider the exercise of its powers in s 473DC, the second difficulty need not be considered further.
29 Mr Reilly submitted that the applicant's submission was contrary to the statutory scheme of Pt 7AA of the Act, in particular s 473DB, and that CRY16 was distinguishable. This is not a case, he submitted, where the Authority had relied on a new finding unknown to the applicant. Rather, this was a case where the Authority had regard only to information which was known to the applicant. This included the wife's statement that he had provided. For that purpose, Mr Reilly relied upon DGZ16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 12. In that case, the Authority affirmed the decision of the delegate to refuse the grant of a visa, but again based upon different findings. It was contended by the applicant in that case that it was legally unreasonable for the Authority to have failed to have exercised its power under s 473DC(3) to have invited the applicant in that case to comment upon the new findings. This contention was rejected by the Full Court of this Court. Reeves, Robertson and Rangiah JJ commenced their analysis with the following observations about Pt 7AA at [69]:
In our opinion, the starting point for analysis is not the different regime under Pt 7 and the cases decided in relation to those statutory provisions. Instead, the starting point must be the terms of Pt 7AA and, subject to Pt 7AA, the obligation on the Authority to review a fast track reviewable decision by considering the review material without accepting or requesting new information and without interviewing the referred applicant: s 473DB(1). Also, by s 473DA, Div 3 is taken to be an exhaustive statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to reviews conducted by the Authority. In our view, SZBEL [(2006) 228 CLR 152] is not the appropriate starting point.
30 The Court then distinguished CRY16 in the following terms at [70]:
It is to be noted that the present case is not one where the Authority has decided a point which was not the point decided by the delegate, but rather one where additional information is necessary in order to complete the review. We refer to Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CRY16 [2017] FCAFC 210, where the Authority affirmed the decision of the delegate to refuse to grant the SHEV but on the different basis of relocation which the delegate had not addressed. Thus there may be circumstances in which it is legally unreasonable not to consider the exercise of the discretionary power in s 473DC(3).
31 In DGZ16 the Authority "reassessed" the material which the delegate had considered. This did not, however, oblige it to invite the appellant in that case to comment upon that reassessment. The Court said at [72]-[76]:
72 In our opinion, Pt 7AA contemplates that the Authority will evaluate for itself the material considered by the delegate. We do not consider that the fast track statutory regime of Pt 7AA requires the Authority to notify the referred applicant that it is considering taking a different view, adverse to the referred applicant, of the material considered by the delegate. To that extent we agree with the primary judge, at [106], that the Authority is not required to inform the appellant of specific reservations about the appellant's case and to provide the appellant with an opportunity to respond.
73 We would not however approach the resolution of the appeal by considering whether or not the delegate's decision indicated that all aspects of the appellant's credit were at issue in the Authority's review. That is to view the procedure through a natural justice lens.
74 We do not accept the submission put on behalf of the appellant that the fact that the Authority in the present case accepted as being before it the submissions made by the appellant, and accepted the new information involved in those submissions, implies that the Authority was required, as a matter of legal reasonableness or otherwise, to seek further submissions from the appellant once it formed specific reservations about the appellant's case, and to provide the appellant with an opportunity to respond.
75 There is no requirement in Pt 7AA, equivalent to s 425, which provides that the Tribunal must invite the applicant to appear before it to give evidence and present arguments relating to the issues arising in relation to the decision under review. Indeed, as we have noted, by s 473DB, subject to Pt 7AA, the Authority must review the fast track reviewable decision by considering the review material provided to it without accepting or requesting new information and without interviewing the referred applicant.
76 It was open to the Authority to disagree with the delegate's evaluation of the material without providing to the appellant an opportunity to respond.
32 The first respondent submitted that the Authority had not acted unreasonably:
(a) in not acceding to the applicant's request made in January 2017 that he be given an opportunity to respond to any adverse credibility or plausibility findings; and
(b) in rejecting the probative value of the unsworn statement at [24], supra.
I agree with each submission. As to the first request - only faintly pressed before me - it was addressed by the Authority at [7], set out above at [5]. In that paragraph the applicant's request was denied because of the statutory scheme created by Pt 7AA and, in particular, ss 473DB and 473DD of the Act. That decision was not arbitrary or capricious or devoid of logical reasoning. In my view, requests of the kind made by the applicant in January 2017 should not be permitted to undo the statutory scheme of Pt 7AA. Without more, they do not impose any obligation on the Authority to invite an applicant to a hearing. What was said at [7] also shows that in this matter the Authority did consider whether to exercise its powers in s 473DC.
33 As to the second contention, Mr Chia did not contend that the reasoning contained in [24] was itself legally unreasonable. He did not appear to attack the Authority's rejection of the probative value of the unsworn statement. Rather, he submitted that its probative weight should not have been measured without first asking the applicant to comment upon the concerns the Authority had with it. With respect, I reject that submission. In the first instance, it is unlikely that the applicant himself was in a position to give reliable evidence in support of an event concerning his wife which he had not witnessed. Whilst the Authority is free to consider hearsay evidence, and does so regularly, in relation to a specific alleged event, hearsay evidence would unlikely have been greatly probative. In that respect, what the applicant might have said was not identified: cf Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI [2009] HCA 39; 83 ALJR 1123 at [26]. Secondly, the concerns expressed by the Authority about the statement, such as its vagueness and its timing, constituted the Authority taking a "different view" of the evidence which was "adverse to the referred applicant", to use the language of DGZ16. Reservations of this kind need not be put to the applicant for comment under the statutory scheme of Pt 7AA. In my view, for these reasons, the Authority did not act in a legally unreasonable way in not giving the applicant an opportunity to comment upon its concerns with the unsworn statement given the particular statutory scheme contained in Pt 7AA.
34 The second ground is rejected.
35 The application for an extension of time should be granted, but the resulting appeal should be dismissed with costs as assessed or agreed.
I certify that the preceding thirty-five (35) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Steward.