amended application
12 The amended application claims writs of certiorari, mandamus and prohibition in respect of the Tribunal's decision but does not in fact refer to any grounds for relief. The amended application states that the grounds for relief are to be found in the affidavit of the applicant's solicitor sworn on 4 February 2002. At the hearing it was confirmed that the amended application should instead refer to an affidavit of Mr Diab sworn on 16 April 2002. That affidavit states that the grounds upon which the applicant seeks orders under s 39B of the Judiciary Act are:
"1. The [Tribunal] made jurisdictional error by failing to apply the Refugee Convention as amended by the Refugees Protocol to the application in question.
2. The [Tribunal] made jurisdictional error by misdirecting itself as to the nature of persecution under Article 1A(2) of the Convention.
3. The [Tribunal] made jurisdictional error in that the Tribunal made an error of law in its construction of Australia's protection obligations under the Convention and Sections 36(2) and 65(1) of the Migration Act 1958."
13 Although three grounds were identified in the affidavit of Mr Diab it is clear, as indicated in [2] above, that the gravamen of the applicant's complaint is the Tribunal erred in its conclusion that the applicant's political opinion would not result in him being persecuted if he returned to Lebanon. Counsel for the applicant, Mr Young, argued that the Tribunal's error was a jurisdictional error of the kind described by the High Court in Craig v South Australia (1995) 184 CLR 163 at 179 ("Craig") and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323 at 351, namely that the Tribunal "was clearly wrong in law in its interpretation of what constitutes the harm threatened for the purposes of the persecution." Mr Young argued that the Tribunal had found that sporadic harassment, short-term arrest and "relatively minor" or not "particularly severe" sentences of imprisonment, do not amount to persecution for a Convention reason. Mr Young argued that this error meant, in effect, that there was no privative clause decision for the purposes of Pt 8 of the Act. It was said that the privative clause does not, therefore, protect the decision made by the Tribunal and that the Tribunal's decision is susceptible to the relief claimed under s 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act.
14 Mr Lloyd, counsel for the respondent, submitted that whether or not particular harm constitutes persecution is a question of fact and degree for the Tribunal. Mr Lloyd referred to decisions in Saha v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 520 at [57] - [59] and Prahastono v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1997) 77 FCR 260 in support of his submission. The question of whether the treatment that could await the applicant was treatment amounting to persecution for the purposes of the Convention was therefore said to be a matter within the Tribunal's jurisdiction. Even if this was not the case, Mr Lloyd submitted that because the decision was a privative clause decision, and in the absence of any of the so-called Hickman grounds, the application should be dismissed.
PRIVATIVE CLAUSE
15 Mr Lloyd's submissions are plainly correct. Whether or not the Tribunal erred in finding that the treatment the applicant could suffer on his return did not amount to persecution for the purposes of the Convention, the applicant cannot succeed in his application for a review of the Tribunal's decision.
16 As indicated in [7] above, the Tribunal's decision is a privative clause decision within the meaning of s 474(2) of the Act. The effect of s 474(1) of the Act was considered by a five member Full Court in NAAV where the majority held that the effect of s 474(1) was to expand the jurisdiction of relevant decision makers under the Act, including the Tribunal, so that a decision affected by irregularities that would, in the absence of s 474(1), amount to jurisdictional error will be within power, subject to satisfying the so-called Hickman conditions; at [630], [635] - [636] per von Doussa J, with whom, on this point, Black CJ and Beaumont J agreed. A Tribunal decision containing a jurisdictional error of the type described by the High Court in Craig would thus be validated by s 474(1) of the Act; per von Doussa J at [639]; see also NAAG v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2002] FCA 713 at [59]. The Full Court in NABM also noted, at [24], that it followed from the reasons of the majority in NAAV "that a decision will not be protected from judicial review if it contravenes what is variously described as an "inviolable" condition, "jurisdictional factor" or "structural elements" found in the [Act]".
17 The Hickman conditions (as derived from R v Hickman; Ex parte Fox and Clinton (1945) 70 CLR 598) referred to above may be formulated in interrogatory form as follows:
· was the Tribunal's decision made bona fide?
· was the Tribunal's decision related to the subject with which the Act deals?
· was the Tribunal's decision reasonably capable of reference to the power possessed by the Tribunal?
I do not need to explore in detail any of the above questions. It is clear that in this matter all three questions must be answered in the affirmative. There is no question that the authority and powers of the Tribunal had been properly engaged by a valid application made to the Tribunal and the decision was a Tribunal-reviewable decision. Any failure in assessing whether certain treatment could constitute persecution does not constitute an infringement of an inviolable condition, jurisdictional factor or structural element found in the Act.
18 It follows that, even if the Tribunal made a "Craig-like"jurisdictional error, the application cannot succeed. For these reasons the application must be dismissed. The respondent has sought an order for costs. However, given the respondent's notice of objection to competency must be dismissed, the respondent has not been completely successful. It follows, in my opinion, that the respondent should only be awarded 50% of his costs.