Consideration
20 In AYX 17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 262 FCR 317 at 331-332 [48], Tracey and Mortimer JJ said of the analogues of ss 361(3) and 363(1)(a) in Pt 7 of the Act (ss 426(3) and 427(1)(a)):
The work to be done by the second aspect of s 426(3) (namely that the Tribunal is "not required" to obtain evidence from a person named in the notice) is, in our opinion, to make clear that the Tribunal has a discretion whether or not to take evidence from a nominated person. It emphasises the nature of the power in s 427(1)(a). The only express control or condition on that discretion is that the Tribunal must "have regard to" an applicant's wishes. In our opinion this means the Tribunal must, through inquiries of the applicant, understand why the applicant wants the Tribunal to take evidence from the nominated person, and how that person's evidence is said by an applicant to relate to the Tribunal's review. It is to these matters the Tribunal must give real and genuine consideration, in the way explained by Kenny and Lander JJ in Maltsin [88 ALD 304] at [38] (Spender J agreeing).
(emphasis added)
21 Their Honours said that the analogue of s 363(1)(a) conferred a wide discretion on the Tribunal, consistent with its inquisitorial function, to determine whether or not to hear from witnesses proposed by an applicant for review (at 332 [49]) and that the discretion was conditioned by a requirement that it be exercised in a legally reasonable way (at 336 [75]). They also approved what Rangiah J had said in CZBH v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1023 at [53]-[59], that a well-recognised function of a decision-maker hearing oral evidence is to assist him or her in determining issues of credibility and reliability of a principal witness or party (at 337-338 [80]). Tracey and Mortimer JJ also held at that it is open to the Tribunal, in an appropriate case, to decide that the evidence of an applicant for review is so compromised that hearing oral evidence of a corroborating witness would not affect the outcome, but that it is necessary for the Tribunal to exercise some caution before coming to that conclusion (262 FCR at 338 [81]-[82], 339-340 [85]-[86]), as held by Lee and Finkelstein JJ in W360/01A v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2002) 124 FCR 449 at 450 [3].
22 It is not necessary for the Tribunal to make reference in its reasons to the disposition of a request for a medical examination or for any other investigation sought by an applicant for review under an analogue of s 363(1): Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZGUR (2011) 241 CLR 594 at 605-606 [31]-[33] per French CJ and Kiefel J, at 616-617 [69]-[70] per Gummow J (Heydon J and Crennan J agreed with both judgments at 623 [91] and [92]). There, Gummow J said (at 619 [76]):
First, the decision in Maltsin [88 ALD 304] concerned the obligation of the Migration Review Tribunal (the MRT) under s 361(3) of the Migration Act, the analogue of s 426(3) with respect to the Refugee Review Tribunal. Sub-section (3) of s 361 provides that the MRT "must have regard" to any notice given by an applicant, under sub-s (2) or (2A), that the applicant wishes the MRT to obtain oral or written evidence. The reasoning in Maltsin [88 ALD 304] respecting consideration of an applicant's wishes is not relevant to the power conferred in discretionary terms by s 427(1). Indeed, the Full Court in WAGJ v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs ([2002] FCAFC 277 at [24]-[25]), when specifically addressing s 427(1)(d), concluded that there was no obligation on the Tribunal to consider whether to exercise the power there conferred.
23 In my opinion, there is no reason to conclude that the Tribunal failed to have regard to Mr Singh's request that it call Mr Sharma as a witness. Rather, the only information which Mr Singh provided to the Tribunal was that Mr Sharma was a colleague who could confirm his employment with the current employer. There was no issue that Mr Singh was actually employed by his current employer. The issue on review was what the nature of Mr Singh's duties were. Based on the employee staff list, which the agent provided to the Tribunal, Mr Sharma was not a senior employee or even a person named on the list. The job description identified the current employer's director as the person to whom Mr Singh reported. It is unlikely that a subordinate employee would be able to give useful or other evidence relating to the nature of the duties which Mr Singh performed, and the response to the hearing invitation did not suggest that Mr Sharma could.
24 Moreover, at no point during the hearing, including when, towards the end of the hearing, the Tribunal raised with Mr Singh that it found his evidence about his current job to be quite vague and the member may be concerned about this, did Mr Singh or the agent suggest that Mr Sharma could support his account of what his duties as equipment hire manager involved. Nor did he or the agent suggest or enquire, at any point before the conclusion of the hearing, about the Tribunal's intention as to whether Mr Sharma might be called. Nor did he or the agent assert to the Tribunal that Mr Sharma's evidence could be relevant or, after the hearing, seek that Mr Sharma be called.
25 In those circumstances, it was open to the Tribunal to have regard to Mr Singh's request to call Mr Sharma, but to proceed on the basis that taking evidence from him was unnecessary because there was no issue about the evidence which he could give based on the hearing request statement that he could "confirm employment with sponsoring company" and it did not need to refer to this in its reasons: SZGUR 241 CLR 594.
26 In addition, there is no evidence or basis to infer that there was a reasonable possibility that Mr Sharma's evidence could have produced a different result. There is no evidence of what Mr Sharma was going to say, if anything, in addition to what was in the request to call him that could have been evidence that there was a realistic possibility that a different result could have occurred had Mr Sharma given evidence: MZAPC v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2021) 390 ALR 590 at 600 [39] per Kiefel CJ, Gageler, Keane and Gleeson JJ. Accordingly, in my opinion, ground 1 must fail.
27 Ground 2 must fail because at the conclusion of the hearing, the Tribunal told Mr Singh and his agent that if no contact were made with it by 15 February 2017, it would assume that the sponsorship nomination for him had been refused and it may proceed to make its decision on that basis. When the agent wrote to the Tribunal on 13 February 2017 she requested a further 4 week extension before the Tribunal made its decision and promised to provide the decision notification record to the Tribunal as soon as it had been received. The Tribunal wrote in its email of 16 February 2017 that it would wait until 15 March 2017. In fact, it waited more than a month after that before publishing its decision in circumstances that it had heard nothing further from Mr Singh or his agent. Thus, Mr Singh was on notice that the Tribunal had been prepared to grant an extension of time to receive information about the sponsorship nomination and, had indicated that if nothing further were heard, it would make its decision on the evidence before it. Mr Singh did not seek any further extension or provide the Tribunal with any further information relating to the sponsorship application.
28 The Tribunal had said in its email of 16 February 2017 that it would proceed to make its decision on the evidence before it after 15 March 2017, but in that email did not convey that it would refuse to entertain any further application for an extension of time to learn of the fate of the sponsorship nomination.
29 The particulars to ground 2 in the proposed amended notice of appeal referred to the Tribunal's failure to allow an adjournment for his employer to appeal to the Tribunal in relation to the refusal of its sponsorship nomination of him. However, on the material in the appeal papers, the only information before the Tribunal and the Court was that the current employer's sponsorship nomination for Mr Singh was being considered by the Department and, at the time of the Tribunal's decision, had not been determined. I have treated the new ground 2 as being based on the failure to allow any further adjournment until the fate of the current employer's pending sponsorship nomination was known. The Tribunal left it to Mr Singh to apply for an extension of time and had not reached the point of communicating an inflexible determination to proceed to making a decision, regardless of whether it knew the outcome of the Department's consideration of his current employer's sponsorship nomination.
30 In those circumstances, not having heard further from Mr Singh or his agent after 16 February 2017, it was not unreasonable for the Tribunal to make its decision on 21 April 2017.