The appeal to this Court
7 The Notice of Appeal to this Court does not disclose any recognisable ground of appeal. Ground 3 asserts that more details would be provided later, but this has not occurred. On 27 July 2005 I ordered that the appellant should file and serve written submissions no later than five clear working days before the hearing date of the appeal, but no such submissions have been provided. The appellant did file a document styled 'Ammended Application' on 29 August 2005 but this document does not show any recognisable ground of appeal.
8 When the matter came on for hearing before me the appellant appeared for himself with the assistance of an interpreter. I invited him to put before me any matters which he wished me to take into account in support of his appeal, but the appellant was unable to identify any error on the part of Smith FM. That would ordinarily result in the dismissal of the appeal, however, like Smith FM, I have given independent consideration to the potential operation of s 424A of the Act.
9 Subsection 424A(1) obliges the RRT to give to the appellant for comment particulars of any information that the RRT considers would be the reason, or part of the reason, for affirming the decision under review. Subsection 424A(3)(b) provides that the section does not apply to information that the appellant gave for the purpose of the application. In Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Al Shamry (2001) 110 FCR 27 ('Al Shamry'), a Full Court held that the information to which subs 424A(3)(b) refers is information given by an applicant to the RRT for the purpose of the application for review, and not to information given on the original application for a protection visa: see [17] per Ryan and Conti JJ; [35] per Merkel J. The 'information' (assuming it to be such) referred to in the passage of the RRT's reasons quoted above was derived from the original application for a protection visa and the Departmental file. It was not information given by the appellant to the RRT for the purpose of the application for review, hence subs 424A(3)(b) has no application.
10 Two considerations therefore arise:
(a) whether there is 'any information' for the purposes of subs 424A(1)(a); and
(b) if so, whether it can be said to be information the RRT considered would be the reason or part of the reason for affirming the decision under review.
These questions have been the subject of consideration by Full Courts in WAGP of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs (2002) 124 FCR 276; VAF v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs (2004) 206 ALR 471 ('VAF'), by North J in VBAP of 2002 v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs (2005) FCA 965 ('VBAP') and by Allsop J in SZECF v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2005] FCA 1200.
11 Those Full Court decisions establish that 'information' in s 424A does not encompass a failure to mention a matter to the RRT. An observation that an applicant failed to refer to a particular matter may constitute nothing more than an aspect of the RRT's reasoning concerning a deficiency in his evidence. Subjective appraisal and thought processes are not 'information' for the purpose of s 424A. At [24] of VAF Finn and Stone JJ extracted a number of propositions derived from the cases concerned with the compass of the term 'information' in its subs 424A(1) setting. One such proposition (omitting case citations) is as follows:
'(iii) the word does not encompass the tribunal's subjective appraisals, thought processes or determinations; nor does it extend to identified gaps, defects or lack of detail or specificity in evidence or to conclusions arrived at by the tribunal in weighing up the evidence by reference to those gaps, etc.'
12 VAF is also authority for the proposition that information which is merely consistent, in its own way, with, and thus confirmatory of, a conclusion taken for other reasons, is not for s 424A purposes a part of the reason for that conclusion. In VBAP North J explains that if there are a number of independent bases for the decision, then there is no jurisdictional error if at least one of them is immune from attack on s 424A or other grounds.
13 Three matters are referred to by the RRT in the passage quoted above, namely:
(a) the lack of detail in the appellant's statement;
(b) that the persecutory acts occurred in 1997, yet the appellant return to Pakistan in 1999 to see his mother; and
(c) the delay in lodging the application for a protection visa.
14 In the passage from the RRT's reasons quoted above, the RRT has, in effect, stated that the appellant had provided little detail in support of his claims, and then gone on to identify two aspects of the appellant's claims about which it wished to have further detail. It was the absence of any explanation of the fact that the appellant returned to Pakistan in 1999 to see his mother, and the absence of any explanation for the delay in applying for a protection visa that was of concern to the RRT having regard to the appellant's claimed fears.
15 On the authorities referred to above, the RRT's assessment of the inadequacy of the appellant's statement is not 'information' disclosable under s 424A. The two illustrations which it gives of that inadequacy fall into the same category.
16 The RRT made it pellucidly clear in its letter of 12 March 2004 that it was unable to make a decision in the appellant's favour on the basis of the information before it, and as the Full Court observed in NAVX v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs[2004] FCAFC 287,when the appellant failed to accept the opportunity to elaborate on that information at the scheduled hearing, the inevitable consequence was the rejection of his application. Thus, even though the RRT adverted to matters (b) and (c) in its reasons, what was integral to the RRT's reasoning process was the notified inadequacy of the information provided by the appellant in support of his claims, and his rejection of the invitation to appear at a hearing designed to afford him the opportunity to elaborate on that information.
17 Thus, even if I were wrong in my view that matters (b) and (c) were not disclosable 'information', the RRT did not commit a jurisdictional error because the matter referred to in (a) is sufficient to sustain the RRT's decision.
18 For those reasons I agree with the conclusions expressed by Smith FM on the issue of whether the RRT committed a jurisdictional error having regard to the provisions of s 424A of the Act. The appeal should therefore be dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding eighteen (18) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Hely.