[12] The appellant raised the following grounds of appeal:
…
2. That the Appellants submitted the bundle of evidence before the RRT, the RRT did not gave (sic) any consideration, instead the appearance of the (sic) was said to not (sic) plausible, as such the evidence was not taken in to consideration, the appellant made out a case which really requires the judicial inference of this honourable Court to meet the ends of justice.
3. That the Respondents have failed to assess the claims made by the appellant as per the refugee laws as laid down by the hand book of the UNHCR. The real threat to the life of the Appellant was not considered in the instant case.
32 It is the correspondence between the grounds that is potentially disturbing and was (in part) the subject-matter of the further submissions filed on 19 May 2008 by Counsel for the Respondent Minister.
33 In circumstances where a litigant is unrepresented, it is not considered that any impediment should be placed in the path of such a litigant obtaining the assistance of those upon whom he may properly place reliance. One litigant may have obtained the advice of a legal practitioner and attempted to pass on the benefit of such advice to others. The source of assistance may also be other litigants who have faced comparable circumstances and prevailed in having their grounds accepted by the Federal Magistrates Court or this Court. As Counsel for the Minister submitted, it would be surprising if there was not an exchange of grounds of appeal amongst those persons at immigration detention centres, either within a particular centre or perhaps more broadly throughout the country.
34 Difficulties, however, may emerge for a number of reasons.
35 First, there is a self-evident difficulty if a ground which may have prevailed in one set of circumstances is sought to be transposed to different proceedings in which the ground is simply not apposite. The success of a particular argument in the circumstances of a particular case obviously does not mean that the same argument will always prevail and does not mean that the argument is even appropriate to be advanced in other proceedings.
36 It may well be understandable that an unrepresented litigant may wish to call upon all possible arguments and that an unrepresented litigant may well lack the ability to discern whether an otherwise successful argument is even relevant to his own circumstances. Indiscriminate reliance, however, upon arguments transposed from other proceedings may simply provide false hope to the unrepresented. And indiscriminate reliance upon grounds divorced from the circumstances of the particular proceedings under consideration may well only serve to detract from such prospects of success as an application may otherwise present.
37 Second, and a matter of equal importance, is the prospect that unrepresented litigants may be obtaining the advice of persons holding themselves out as being able to provide advice and assistance. The fact that the same (or substantially the same) grounds are being relied upon in different proceedings extending over a not inconsiderable period of time only provides a basis for speculating as to whether unrepresented litigants are not merely passing between themselves ideas as to how best to present their appeals, but whether there may be a more focussed source of advice being accessed by the unrepresented.
38 It is of importance to ensure that unrepresented litigants have access to advice and assistance. But purported advice and assistance which is not directed to the facts and circumstances of a particular case does indeed lead to uninformed "pro forma" advice which does little to assist the unrepresented and little to assist either the Federal Magistrates Court or this Court in the resolution of challenges to decisions of the Refugee Review Tribunal.
39 If there were to be a more focussed source of advice being proffered to unrepresented litigants, being advice which is merely "pro forma" in nature and divorced from the merits of an individual case, it may be appropriate for costs to be ordered against those providing such advice rather than the unrepresented appellant: SZJJC v Minister for Immigration & Citizenship [2008] FCA 614. Even more fundamental issues may emerge if advice were being provided contrary to legal practitioners' legislation.
40 Reference was also helpfully made by Counsel for the Respondent to ss 486E-486K of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). Section 486E provides in part that "a person must not encourage another person … to commence or continue migration litigation in a court if the migration litigation has no reasonable prospects of success". And s 486F provides an additional and more specific power to order costs against a person who contravenes s 486E. At some stage, and in an appropriate case, consideration may have to be given to invoking that power.
41 The problems faced by unrepresented litigants have of course long been recognised: eg, Managing Justice: A Review of the Federal Civil Justice Scheme (Australian Law Reform Commission, Report No 89, 2000) at [5.147]-[5.157]. Indeed, regrettably, it would appear that little may have changed in a period extending over a decade since the inception of that inquiry. In Muaby v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs (Unreported, Federal Court of Australia, Wilcox J, 20 August 1998), Wilcox J observed:
The number of applications filed in the New South Wales District Registry for judicial review of decisions of the Refugee Review Tribunal is running this year at a rate more than twice that of last year. It is the experience of my colleagues, as well as myself, that a large proportion of these matters are commenced by a stereotyped form of application that is uninformative and bears little relationship to what the applicant says at the hearing. It seems the filing of an application for review has become an almost routine reaction to the receipt of an adverse decision from the Tribunal.
The solution is not to deny a right of judicial review. Experience shows a small proportion of cases have merit, in the sense the Court is satisfied the Tribunal fell into an error of law or failed to observe proper procedures or the like. In my view, the better course is to establish a system whereby people whose applications are refused have assured access to proper interpretation services and independent legal advice. If that were done, the number of applications for judicial review would substantially decrease. Those that proceeded would be better focussed and the grounds of review more helpfully stated. If applicants cannot afford legal advice, as is ordinarily the case, it ought to be provided out of public funds. The cost of doing this would be considerably less than the costs incurred by the Minister under the present system, in instructing a solicitor (and usually briefing counsel) to resist all applications, a substantial number of which have no merit and are ill-prepared. That is to say nothing about the desirability of relieving the Court from the burden of finding hearing dates for cases that should not be in the list at all.
The difficulty, it is respectfully considered, is not to be answered merely by the provision of greater access to legal advice. Challenges to decisions of the Refugee Review Tribunal may not be motivated in all cases by a careful consideration of the relevant legal principles and an assessment of the prospects of success. Those challenges, it is suspected, may in some cases be driven more by a determination to remain in Australia for as long as possible, whatever may be the ultimate prospects of success in the courts. And even more disturbing is the potential that some challenges may be pursued by unrepresented litigants who have been given ill-considered advice as to their prospects.
42 The problems posed by unrepresented litigants are not theirs alone. The unrepresented litigant also presents this Court with peculiar problems, and those problems are not helped by repeated applications being brought with grounds of review or appeal which have little, if any, correlation with the facts of a particular case.