The text of Part 7AA makes it plain that Parliament uses "review material" and "information" as distinct terms
53 "Review material" is a defined term (see s 473BB), by reference to s 473CB of the Act. "Information" is not defined, although "new information" is, by reference to s 473DC(1) (see s 473BB).
54 Section 473CB does not use the term "information" at all. When the provision is describing what is encompassed by the term "review material", it uses the terms "material" and "details". In paragraph (a), it uses the term "statement". Read as a whole, it is clear that this provision is dealing with the form in which information has come to be embodied or stored. This might be a physical document - a letter or a photograph, or a witness statement. Equally, it could be a digital file possessed of no tangible, physical existence, but stored in a way which will constitute a record. Of course, it can be said at a general or colloquial level that all such records will contain "information" in the sense of facts, knowledge and opinion but it is not the "information" that the Secretary is required to give to the Authority; it is the media or record in which that information is stored or located. We do not consider paragraph (d) suggests otherwise, contrary to the submissions of the first respondent. While that paragraph concerns "details" relating to the visa applicant, those are all details which are inherently susceptible to being stored in a written or digital form. Whether or not those "details" are conveyed to the Authority through a newly created record or document expressly for that purpose, or by sending copies of existing records, either way paragraph (d), and s 473CB as a whole are concerned with the sending of the equivalent of what might have in the past been described as a "file", so that the Authority is not only able to conduct its review in the way Part 7AA requires, but is also able to contact the visa applicant. That this is the correct view is reinforced by the use of the concepts of "possession or control" in s 473CB(1)(c), which again indicates Parliament is intending to refer to information only in so far as is embodied in a form capable of being "given" to the Authority. While the term "review material" may not be confined to tangible "things", we respectfully agree with the underlying logic of the approach taken both by Anderson J in BNB17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2020] FCA 304 at [95] and Derrington J in AWV18 v Minister for Home Affairs (No 3) [2020] FCA 365 at [67]. This construction is supported by the plurality's view in DVO16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2021] HCA 12 at [15] that:
Words spoken by the applicant during the interview, having no enduring physical existence, are not themselves within the category of "material provided by the referred applicant to the person making the decision before the decision was made". Rather, the physical embodiment of the totality of the words spoken during the interview (by the applicant, the delegate and the interpreter) in the form of the recording of the interview is within the separate category of "other material that is in the Secretary's possession or control."
(Citations omitted.)
55 As the plurality in ABT17 recognise (at [8]) the purpose of obliging the Secretary to provide the review material to the Authority and of obliging the Authority to consider the review material provided to it by the Secretary is to ensure that the Authority, in conducting its de novo consideration of the merits of the referred decision, has and can examine for itself the same information that was before the Minister. That, at least, is intended by s 473DB(1), to be the primary method by which a review will be conducted.
56 Nevertheless, what constitutes "review material" has been held not to be confined to the "material" before the delegate. That would appear to be the additional purpose served by the phrase "any other material" in s 473CB(1)(c) of the Act. The High Court has held the phrase extends to material in the possession of the Secretary but, at the point of it being given to the Authority, not known to the applicant and not known to the delegate. The Secretary must consider that material to be "relevant" to the review. In Plaintiff M174 at [25], the plurality of the High Court said:
There is no inherent dichotomy between new information which meets the two conditions set out in s 473DC(1)(a) and (b) and review material which the Secretary is required to give the Authority under s 473CB. That is because review material is not limited to information that was before the Minister or delegate at the time of making the decision to refuse to grant the protection visa.
57 In those circumstances, the plurality explained at [27]:
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.
58 In Plaintiff M174, although there was material obtained by a delegate which the visa applicant was not given an opportunity to deal with before the delegate's refusal decision, and although that material was sent by the Secretary to the Authority, the plurality held it was open to the Authority to decide, conformably with Part 7AA that there were no exceptional circumstances justifying the receipt of what the visa applicant put forward as supplementary or answering information.
59 Their Honours' observations recognise another category of material, known and defined because it exists in some recorded or documented form, which might be necessary for the Authority to be given for the purposes of its review. Like the other categories, the plurality's observations recognise that the review materials which must be given by the Secretary to the Authority will "contain" information. But nothing in those passages suggests the plurality was equating the term "review material" with the underlying facts, knowledge or opinions that might be contained in the departmental records. Rather, the plurality was describing the transmission of the departmental records as "material", subject to the condition that the Secretary formed an opinion, reasonably and rationally, that those were records that were relevant to the review to be conducted by the Authority. The premise is that there are records which can be readily and specifically identified: see the description of the Secretary's task in CNY17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection & Anor [2019] HCA 50; 375 ALR 47 at [6], Kiefel and Gageler JJ (in dissent on the outcome, but not in this particular respect).
60 In contrast "information" is used in Part 7AA in a deliberately open-ended context. The boundaries of the "information" are not known. That is because it is "new" - that is, "new" to the consideration of the visa application, although it need not be chronologically "new", as the definition in s 473DC makes plain. It is also not a term used in Part 7AA without adjectival qualification: mostly the qualification is the statutory term "new information", but at least once it is a differently defined statutory term "non-disclosable information" (see s 473DE(3)(b)). The term "information" is also the term used in respect of the delegate's decision making: see ss 54-56, and also s 57 which uses the term "relevant information". For example, s 56 provides:
56 Further information may be sought
(1) In considering an application for a visa, the Minister may, if he or she wants to, get any information that he or she considers relevant but, if the Minister gets such information, the Minister must have regard to that information in making the decision whether to grant or refuse the visa.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the Minister may invite, orally or in writing, the applicant for a visa to give additional information in a specified way.
61 In all these provisions, the term "information" is used in this open-ended way - facts, knowledge or opinions that might be given to a delegate for the purposes of the delegate deciding whether or not to grant a visa. With the extra layer of qualification imposed by the precise terms of s 473DC(1)(a) and (b), that is the same sense in which the term is used in Part 7AA. It is not used to refer to a closed category of facts, knowledge and opinion employed on a previous occasion to make a previous decision about whether or not to grant a visa, or otherwise in the possession or control of the Secretary. The term "review material" is used in that closed sense.
62 This is consistent with the construction given in Plaintiff M174 at [24] to the phrase "new information":
The term "new information" must be read consistently when used in ss 473DC, 473DD and 473DE as concerned with "information" (which may or may not be recorded in a document), in the ordinary sense of a communication of knowledge about some particular fact, subject or event, that meets the two conditions set out in s 473DC(1)(a) and (b).
63 Of course s 473DC(1)(a) and (b) qualify what might otherwise be considered "new information". Paragraph (a) reinforces the distinction between "information" and "review material". Paragraph (b) emphasises the responsibility given to the Authority to make up its own mind about what additional facts, knowledge or opinion it should, acting reasonably, consider in the review. It must do so conscious of its primary task under s 473DB(1) to perform its review in the ordinary course without new information.