Ground 1
56 CSR16 represents the law on the question of the correct approach to s 473DD(b)(ii), unless this Court declares the law differently. The standard that a three-member bench should apply to a challenge to a decision of a single judge, where both are exercising appellate jurisdiction, remains something of a vexed question. However, it is important to commence with the way CSR16 has been treated by other judges on this Court, to this point.
57 The Full Court has referred to CSR16 without disapproval: see BDY18 at [55], although in a context where the Minister did not press the argument which might have required the Full Court to engage with the reasoning in CSR16.
58 CSR16 was also cited with apparent approval by the Full Court in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v CLV16 [2018] FCAFC 80; 260 FCR 482 at [17]. As the first respondent's submissions note, the decision has also been referred to without disapproval by a large number of single judges exercising appellate jurisdiction, and on a number of occasions with express approval or agreement: see BNV18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2018] FCA 1788 at [17]; AYK17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2019] FCA 1053 at [38]; DUZ17 v Minister for Home Affairs [2019] FCA 1593 at [56]; FBR18 v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs [2019] FCA 1620 at [60]-[61]; BOS17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2020] FCA 75 at [43]; ALJ18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCA 491 at [29]; ABH18 v Minister for Home Affairs [2020] FCA 620 at [43].
59 While CSR16 may not properly be described as a decision of long standing, it is a decision which has been referred to and applied on a large number of occasions, because of the volume of migration cases in this Court. In other areas, it may take a decade for a case to be cited that often. It is therefore relevant to take into account that the decision has been referred to and relied upon consistently since 2018, in the same way the authorities discuss this matter in situations where a court is deciding whether there are compelling reasons to depart from a previous decision: see Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Personnel Contracting Pty Ltd [2020] FCAFC 122 at [125]-[126]. It is also relevant to note that CSR16 was not the subject of any special leave application.
60 Comity in the exercise of judicial power at levels considered equivalent (intermediate appellate courts, appellate jurisdiction) serves institutional purposes, "uphold[ing] the authority of the courts and confidence in the law by the value it places upon consistency in judicial decision-making and mutual respect between judges": see Hicks v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 757 at [74]-[76] (affd [2004] FCAFC 114; 138 FCR 475), cited with approval in Batterham v QSR Limited [2006] HCA 23; 225 CLR 237 at [73] and Frugtniet v Australian Securities and Investments Commission [2017] FCAFC 162; 255 FCR 96 at [93].
61 Whatever be the appropriate descriptor for the level of judicial conviction which must be held as between courts exercising appellate jurisdiction but constituted by different numbers of judges, there would need to be, in our respectful opinion, compelling reasons to depart from CSR16 in the present circumstances. Otherwise, principles of judicial comity, institutional integrity and of the settled and consistent application of the law are brought into question.
62 In our respectful opinion, for the following reasons, CSR16 is correctly decided, and Bromberg J's construction of s 473DD(b)(ii) is correct.
63 A number of points should be made about the legislative scheme in Pt 7AA which inform the proper construction of s 473DD(b)(ii).
64 In Plaintiff M174/2016 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] HCA 16; 264 CLR 217 at [22], the plurality described the "primary rule" applicable to the Authority's review under Pt 7AA:
Within Div 3, s 473DB sets out the primary requirement that, subject to the Part, the Authority is to review a fast track reviewable decision referred to it under s 473CA by considering the review material provided to the Authority under s 473CB without accepting or requesting new information and without interviewing the referred applicant. To that primary rule, subdiv C of Div 3 admits of exceptions. The principal provisions of subdiv C providing for those exceptions are contained in ss 473DC, 473DD and 473DE.
65 At [27], noting that it was possible for the Secretary, in the review material given to the Authority, to provide information that was not before the delegate, the plurality said:
Information contained in review material given to the Authority by the Secretary that was not before the Minister or delegate at the time of making the decision to refuse to grant the protection visa will become new information if and when the Authority considers that the information may be relevant. The Authority will not need to invoke s 473DC in order to receive that new information. However, given that the Authority's obligation under s 473DB(1) to conduct its review by considering the review material is subject to Pt 7AA, the Authority will need to comply with s 473DD, and where applicable s 473DE, if the Authority is to take that new information into consideration.
(Emphasis added.)
66 In that context, the plurality then described s 473DD as imposing "restrictions on when the Authority can consider new information": at [28]. That position, as the Minister correctly submitted on the appeal, reflects a policy decision articulated in the extrinsic material which introduced Pt 7AA to limit the circumstances in which the Authority can consider new information: see Explanatory Memorandum to the Migration and Maritime Powers Legislation Amendment (Resolving the Asylum Legacy Caseload) Bill 2014 at [909].
67 Having explained at [29] that the "exceptional circumstances" "precondition set out in s 473DD(a) must always be met", the plurality then said of s 473DD(b) (at [34]):
Accordingly, all that the Authority needs to be satisfied of in order to meet the precondition to its consideration of new information given, or proposed to be given, by the referred applicant set out in s 473DD(b)(ii) is that: (1) the information is credible information about an identified individual, or an individual who is reasonably identifiable; (2) the information was not previously known by either the Minister or the referred applicant; and (3) had the information been known by either the Minister or the referred applicant, the information may have affected the consideration of the referred applicant's claims.
(Emphasis added.)
68 Two matters should be noted about this passage, and the proper approach described by the plurality. First, what is contained in s 473DD is described as a "precondition". That is, although it is part of the review function of the Authority, the exercise of power under s 473DD comes before the Authority can "consider new information that is given to it" by a referred applicant. It is thus part of the Authority's preliminary decision-making about what is the complete scope of the material it will be considering on its review for the purpose of its statutory task, which is, as the plurality in Plaintiff M174 outlined at [17],
to consider the application for a protection visa afresh and to determine for itself whether or not it is satisfied that the criteria for the grant of the visa have been met.
69 As the plurality observed at [32], the precondition in s 473DD(b)(i) needs "[n]o explication". It is a matter of objective fact, and straightforward. It would be curious if the precondition in s 473DD(b)(ii) were not also treated as involving a relatively straightforward assessment, being, as we have explained, a preliminary step the Authority must take before settling on the scope of the material which is to be before it on its review, so that it can consider afresh the protection visa application, and make its own decision.
70 Thus, the parameters for the Authority's review task are set by the "primary rule" in s 473DB, read with the additional powers conferred on it by ss 473DC, 473DD and 473DE. The purpose of each of those additional powers is the same: it is to regulate the circumstances in which the Authority can depart from the "primary rule" in s 473DB. In each case, in deciding whether or not to exercise those powers, the Authority is doing so for the purposes of deciding what should be the scope of the material available to it for its review task.
71 The precondition in s 473DD(b)(ii) is but one aspect of these powers, and the approach taken to its construction should reflect its purpose as we have described it. In substance, it is no different to the Authority deciding whether to invite a person to an interview under s 473DC(3)(b): in both cases, the Authority is deciding what material should be before it on its review.
72 Just as when a Tribunal decides whether to receive evidence or information, the exercise of these powers can and should occur in the context of the review material already before the Authority, and on which according to the primary rule it should conduct its review. Whether to invite a person to an interview, whether to "get" new information of its own motion, or whether to accept "new information" proffered to it by a visa applicant - in all these circumstances the Authority is entitled to reflect on and assess the review material already before it - but for the purpose of deciding whether to depart from the primary rule and, importantly, bearing in mind its function of considering the protection visa application afresh and for itself. Assessing the proposed new material (or interview) in this context will assist the Authority in assessing relevance, in assessing how critical the additional information is to its review, and in assessing whether the preconditions laid out by Parliament can be established. To take an obvious example from the suite of provisions - in order to decide if new information could have been put before the delegate, the Authority is likely to have to consider what was put before the delegate.
73 However, there comes a point at which such an assessment will go too far, and in reality will equate to, or become indistinguishable from, the Authority's reasoning on its own - fresh - consideration of the protection visa application. That would not be the correct approach, because that is not the purpose for which the power is conferred.
74 As procedural powers designed to permit the Authority in specified and limited circumstances to depart from the primary rule in s 473DB and to have available to itself more material than the delegate did, the Authority is confined to a consideration which is compatible and consistent with this purpose.
75 That is why, in our opinion, Parliament has used the word "credible" in s 473DD(b)(ii) to describe the character of the information a visa applicant seeks to put forward. As Bromberg J said, "credible" means capable of being believed: it is the decision whether the information has that character, as well as the character of being "personal" to the visa applicant, which is to be made at this procedural stage, for the purpose of deciding what the scope of the review material should be, and whether there should be a departure from the primary rule.
76 Particularly in a scheme premised on a review "on the papers", there is a real difficulty with the Authority undertaking some kind of substantively evaluative process at this point, and weighing the new information, the visa applicant's explanation of why it should be considered, and the existing review material together, and then reaching some relatively definitive findings about the credibility of the visa applicant (which would occur in deciding if the new information were "true"). That difficulty is that the Authority is, in substance, taking into account material that is not before it on the review in determining the credibility of the visa applicant. That is neither what the legislative scheme of Pt 7AA contemplates nor what it permits. Fresh decisions on the review must be based on the review material before the Authority: they cannot be based on extraneous material, which is what "new information" is, until it is admitted. That, in our opinion, is an important reason why the approach identified by Bromberg J in CSR16 is correct.
77 Viewed in its context, as Bromberg J identified at [42], the terms of s 473DD(b)(ii) operate as a filter, which the Authority is required to apply to "new information" proposed to be presented by a visa applicant. The subsection sets a threshold, requiring a visa applicant to satisfy the Authority the new information has that character, or, if it does not have that character, that it was not and could not have been provided to the Minister or her or his delegate prior to the s 65 decision (s 473DD(b)(i)). In either case the Authority must still be satisfied there are "exceptional circumstances" justifying including the new information in the material to be considered by the Authority on its review. Considering s 473DD as a whole, there is no basis to suppose Parliament intended some kind of intensive and final analysis of the probative value of new information to occur within the confines of s 473DD(b)(ii). As the Full Court observed in BDY18 at [23]-[26], there is some overlap, and the factors in (b) may well inform the factors in (a).
78 Specifically, as to the Minister's submissions:
(a) It is not to the point that the word "credible" is not qualified. What matters is, as we have explained, the meaning of the word Parliament has chosen to use, which is "credible". As Bromberg J identified, its meaning is not the same as "true".
(b) The approach in CSR16 does not require any additional or different text to be implied into s 473DD(b)(ii). It simply requires assigning the appropriate meaning, in context, to the word "credible".
(c) There is no inconsistency between the approach in CSR16 and the proposition that the Authority may examine other review material as part of its exercise of power under any of ss 473DC; 473DD or 473DE. However, the Authority must not in substance embark on the conduct of its review - making a fresh decision - by using material to determine a visa applicant's credibility that it then decides to exclude from the review. The scheme does not intend that this can occur. That would be a substantively unfair process, and there would need to be clear words to give this part of the scheme such an operation.
(d) The purpose of s 473DD is not undermined at all by construing s 473DD(b)(ii) in the way we have explained. This argument ignores any holistic consideration of s 473DD, which erects a considerable threshold to the receipt of new information. Further, the purpose of the scheme of Pt 7AA would be undermined by an approach that enabled the Authority to make adverse credibility findings against a visa applicant which were material to the outcome of the review on the basis of "new information" which then did not form part of the review material before it. That would be inconsistent with s 473DB.
79 A question which could arise on both ground 1 and ground 2, but which was not advanced by the first respondent, is how it is that the second Authority needed to make a fresh decision about the 2015 newspaper article, and the other material, when the first Authority had exercised its power under s 473DD and considered the material as part of its review. On one view, just as with any new interview conducted, or any information an Authority decided to "get" under s 473DC, material or information admitted into a review by an exercise of power under s 473DD might well thereafter form part of the record of the Authority, for the purpose of the review, including any further review which may occur on remitter. However, that is a question which need not be resolved on this appeal.
80 Ground 1 fails.