Ground 2
29 Ground 2 of the appeal is as follows:
The Federal Circuit Court misdirected itself by holding that the finding by the Tribunal that the Appellant had obtained a new Passport "suggests the Bangladeshi authorities had no adverse interest in him" was neither unreasonable, irrational or illogical.
30 This ground of appeal relates to paragraph [47] of the Tribunal's reasons:
The Tribunal has also considered the claim by the applicant that he left the country on a false passport. The applicant now has a new Bangladeshi passport issued while he was in Australia. This suggests that the Bangladeshi authorities have no adverse interest in him and in particular there are no outstanding police charges against him. The Tribunal does not accept that the applicant has a real risk of significant harm for this reason.
31 The appellant submits that the Federal Circuit Court's conclusions at [40] and [41] also lack "an intelligible justification" and may be "regarded as assertion based". It should be noted that ground two before the Federal Circuit Court is different to ground two before this Court.
32 It is important to see how this issue arose before the Tribunal and its significance to the ultimate conclusions. It became clear during the Tribunal hearing that the appellant had used a false passport to leave Bangladesh and that he had realised it might be difficult returning to Bangladesh using that false passport: Transcript pages 5-7. The appellant gave this evidence: "I thought I might have trouble if I use my - use that [false] passport to get back to my country…": Transcript page 7. However, he had obtained a new Bangladeshi passport whilst in Australia and so would not need to return on a false passport. To the extent this can be regarded as a claim raised "squarely" on the material within the meaning of NABE v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (No 2) [2004] FCAFC 263; (2004) 144 FCR 1 at [68] or SZSHK v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2013] FCAFC 125; (2013) 138 ALD 26 at [37], the Tribunal dealt with it.
33 No claim had been made that there was a fear about returning to Bangladesh because some adverse consequence would follow from the fact that he had used a false passport to leave Bangladesh. It was not suggested that such a claim was made, expressly or implicitly.
34 In relation to the question of whether there were outstanding charges against the appellant in Bangladesh, the position was as follows. In the context of his First Application, the appellant had asserted that charges had been filed against him and that a warrant had been issued for his arrest from the Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrates Court - see: Tribunal reasons at [16v]. He had asserted that the case against him had been fabricated. The appellant's assertions were not abandoned at the time of making the Second Application for a protection visa, but were abandoned before the Tribunal (which was reviewing the delegate's decision on the Second Application). The appellant submitted a statutory declaration to the Tribunal, declared 24 October 2016, in which he stated that his assertions about cases filed against him in the context of his First Application were incorrect - see: Tribunal reasons at [19iii] and Statutory Declaration at [3] at AB247. On this appeal, it was confirmed that the charges and warrant referred to in the Tribunal's decision at [16v] put forward in support of the First Application were not correct and that no cases had been filed against him.
35 It is for the Tribunal to make findings of fact from the material before it and to draw inferences. The question for the Federal Circuit Court was whether jurisdictional error was established and this could not be established merely by showing that a different conclusion was open or even that a different conclusion might be preferred by the court hearing the judicial review application. A decision may be vitiated on the ground of jurisdictional error if it is based on illogical or irrational findings of fact or reasoning, although it is not every lapse in logic that will constitute jurisdictional error: Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZMDS (2010) 240 CLR 611 at [135]; Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZRKT (2013) 212 FCR 99 at [148]; Haritos v Commissioner of Taxation (2015) 233 FCR 315 at [213].
36 In SZMDS, Crennan and Bell JJ said at [130]:
In the context of the Tribunal's decision here, "illogicality" or "irrationality" sufficient to give rise to jurisdictional error must mean the decision to which the Tribunal came, in relation to the state of satisfaction required under s 65, is one at which no rational or logical decision maker could arrive on the same evidence. In other words, accepting, for the sake of argument, that an allegation of illogicality or irrationality provides some distinct basis for seeking judicial review of a decision as to a jurisdictional fact, it is nevertheless an allegation of the same order as a complaint that a decision is "clearly unjust" or "arbitrary" or "capricious" or "unreasonable" in the sense that the state of satisfaction mandated by the statute imports a requirement that the opinion as to the state of satisfaction must be one that could be formed by a reasonable person. The same applies in the case of an opinion that a mandated state of satisfaction has not been reached. Not every lapse in logic will give rise to jurisdictional error. A court should be slow, although not unwilling, to interfere in an appropriate case.
37 In DAO16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2018] FCAFC 2 at [30], the Full Court of this court stressed that "to establish jurisdictional error based on illogical or irrational findings of fact or reasoning, extreme illogicality must be demonstrated measured against the standard that it is not enough for the question of fact to be one on which reasonable minds may come to different conclusions". Their Honours noted that "even emphatic disagreement with the Tribunal's reasoning would not be sufficient to make out illogicality".
38 The Tribunal did not reject the claim by the appellant that he left Bangladesh on a false passport. It did not make any express finding in that respect, but implicitly accepted that he had: at [47]. The Tribunal noted that the appellant had a new passport issued while he was in Australia. It is clear enough that the Tribunal was making the point that the appellant would not need to use his false passport to return to Bangladesh. The appellant did not give evidence that there were outstanding police charges against him; the effect of his evidence to the Tribunal was that his earlier evidence to the contrary was false. It is true that it is not obvious why the issuing of a new passport "suggests that the Bangladeshi authorities have no adverse interest" in the appellant: [47]. However, it is not every lapse in logic in otherwise sound reasoning that gives rise to jurisdictional error. Noting that there was no express claim by the appellant that he feared adverse consequences on his return as a result of having left Bangladesh on a false passport, the Tribunal's observation that the appellant's obtaining a new Passport "suggests the Bangladeshi authorities had no adverse interest in him" is not something which shows that the Tribunal's decision was one which was affected by jurisdictional error.
39 Accepting that paragraph [47] could have been better expressed, I do not understand the second and third sentences as meaning that the Tribunal considered there were "no outstanding police charges" against him because a new passport had been issued. Those sentences were:
The applicant now has a new Bangladeshi passport issued while he was in Australia. This suggests that the Bangladeshi authorities have no adverse interest in him and in particular there are no outstanding police charges against him.
Rather, the finding concerning the absence of police charges appears to be an independent or stand-alone finding not connected to the issuing of a new passport. I reach that conclusion because the appellant's previous allegations and evidence concerning police charges had been incorrect and had been withdrawn by him before the Tribunal. No new allegations of outstanding charges or arrest warrants had been put forward. His case did not revolve in any way around the existence of outstanding charges. Even if this interpretation of those two sentences is wrong, and there is an intended link between the absence of police charges and the issuing of a new passport, the arguable consequent lapse in logic is not one which constitutes jurisdictional error.
40 This ground of appeal therefore also fails.
41 The appeal is dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding forty-one (41) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Thawley.