THE PRESENT APPEAL
10 The notice of appeal in this Court raises four grounds, only three of which were pressed at the hearing. One ground of appeal is that the Federal Magistrate erred in not finding that the Tribunal failed to comply with its obligations under s 425 of the Act or alternatively, failed to give genuine and proper consideration to relevant evidence. This ground arises from the Tribunal's treatment of the letters that were provided by the appellant after the hearing. The complaint, as set out in the appellant's written submissions, is that:
The RRT stated that it disregarded the letters and gave them no weight in determining his claims for the reasons set out above.
However, the letters were used to assess the Applicant's credibility. They were used for the purpose of showing that the Applicant had had the letters written to assist in is [sic] application for refugee status. In other words, the RRT first used the letters as stating that the applicant had no credibility and then stated that it was entitled to give no weight to the evidence because it had found the applicant to be completely lacking in credibility.
11 In so doing, the Tribunal is alleged to have engaged in "circular reasoning" which in the circumstances engaged the operation of s 425; using the documents to support a finding that the appellant lacked credibility rendered them, according to the appellant, an issue arising in relation to the decision under review.
12 This submission, which was not put to the Federal Magistrate, is in my view misplaced. The findings of the Tribunal appear on my reading to conform to the principle outlined in Applicant S20/2002. I accept the point made in the written submissions of the first respondent:
The Tribunal's adverse credibility finding was anterior to its findings on the letter of support: it did not accept the appellant's claimed involvement with the [Awami League], that he had been harmed or threatened, or that he would face relevant future harm … and then, on this basis, it did not accept that the contents of the letters in support of his membership and involvement were true.
I am satisfied that the Tribunal did not rely on the letters to make the adverse credibility finding, although clearly they did nothing to undermine that finding. They were not determinative of the decision. Section 425 does not apply in these circumstances and so this ground must fail.
13 The other two grounds of appeal are that the Federal Magistrate erred in finding that the Tribunal was entitled to rely on Applicant S20/2002 to disregard evidence, and that in so doing, it erred in not finding that the Tribunal's decision gave rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias. The appellant claimed that a reasonable apprehension of bias arose in the following way:
The use of the decision in S20 as an a priori basis on which to reject evidence showed that the mind of the RRT had become closed to the probative value of any evidence which the Appellant might submit to the RRT. Yet the RRT used that same evidence to find that the letters which it otherwise disregarded had been written for a sinister purpose, to assist the Appellant in his application for refugee status to which he was not entitled and which letters provided an untruthful account of the Appellant's membership or history with the [Awami League].
14 In my view, it was open to the Tribunal to conclude, as it appears to have done at the end of the hearing, that the appellant's claims were not to be believed. This does not mean that the Tribunal had closed its mind to the possibility that further documents provided by the appellant might change its mind. There is no evidence to suggest that the Tribunal did so close its mind. Having considered that the "appellant completely lacked credibility in relation to his claims of involvement with the Awami League", it appears that in fact the letters simply did not have the probative value required to sway the Tribunal. No error is disclosed in this approach. In any event, even if the letters bolstered the Tribunal's adverse credibility finding or were an additional reason for it, it would still not have been necessary for the Tribunal to convene an additional hearing, as the issue of the appellant's credibility was already squarely before him.
15 The appellant also alleged that her Honour misstated the applicable law when she said, at [77], "Insofar as it may be intended to suggest that there was actual bias on the part of the Tribunal, such a serious allegation involves personal fault on the part of the decision-maker". This was said to be contrary to the views expressed by the High Court in SZFDE v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2007) 237 ALR 64 at 67-68. The appellant's submission on this point is misconceived. In SZFDE the High Court was concerned with the meaning of "references in the public law decisions to good and bad faith and the like". The question was whether fraud perpetrated by a third party on an applicant before the Refugee Review Tribunal was also fraud on the Tribunal leading to the Tribunal's constructive failure to exercise its jurisdiction. There was no question of the Tribunal being in any way responsible for what occurred, much less being in any way to blame for it. There is nothing in the observations of the High Court that would suggest that the Court intended to resile from the views it expressed in Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng (2000) 205 CLR 507. In other words, actual, as opposed to apprehended bias plainly involves personal fault, which is precisely the point the Federal Magistrate made. In my view, the Federal Magistrate correctly identified and applied the relevant principles and these grounds of appeal must fail.
16 The decision of the Federal Magistrate was correct for the reasons her Honour gave. Those reasons were comprehensive and compelling. Accordingly the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding sixteen (16) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Stone.