THE FEDERAL MAGISTRATE'S DECISION
15 On 1 November 2010 the appellants filed an application for review in the Federal Magistrates Court. At the hearing before the Federal Magistrate on 3 March 2011, the appellants lodged an amended application relying upon the following grounds:
1. The Tribunal failed to consider whether there was a real chance that the applicant father or the third applicant, if required to return to China, would suffer persecution in China as a result of the Falun Gong activities undertaken by the applicant mother in Australia, and disregarded the involvement of the applicant mother in Falun Gong in Australia in assessing whether Australia had protection obligations to the applicant father and the third applicant.
2. The applicant father claimed that the applicant mother "was suffering from back pain and Falun Gong cured her". The Tribunal failed to consider this claim.
3. One reason the Tribunal rejected the claims of the applicant mother was because it found that "the only apparent benefit she was able to identify in Falun Gong was relief from back pain which in the Tribunal's view is a rather superficial appraisal of Falun Gong". The Tribunal overlooked evidence given by the applicant mother in making this finding.
4. The witness Zeng Lin gave written and oral evidence that the applicant mother was a "genuine Falun Gong practitioner". The Tribunal failed to have regard to this evidence in the course of making a finding to the contrary.
16 Generally, the grounds alleged that the Tribunal had failed to consider relevant evidence in making its decision, thereby resulting in jurisdictional error. The Federal Magistrate considered each of the grounds separately and ultimately dismissed the application for review on the basis that his Honour was satisfied that the Tribunal had considered all the relevant evidence in making its decision.
17 The first ground was put as an instance of the Tribunal failing to consider a claim made by the second and third appellants which was said to be raised by the materials and evidence before the Tribunal. However, the Federal Magistrate held that the Tribunal did not need to consider the impact of the first appellant's Falun Gong activities in Australia on the likelihood of the second and third appellants facing persecution in China because that claim was not made to the Tribunal. The Federal Magistrate held that there was no obligation for the Tribunal to consider a claim for protection which was never articulated by the second and third appellants.
18 At [45], the Federal Magistrate dismissed the appellants' second ground on the basis that the Tribunal had dealt with the second appellant's evidence that the first appellant's practice of Falun Gong had alleviated her back pain. The Federal Magistrate found that the Tribunal had considered the evidence given by the second appellant regarding the first appellant's back pain and that no claims had been raised by the second appellant which the Tribunal had not addressed.
19 The Federal Magistrate dismissed the third ground on the basis that the Tribunal had specifically addressed the question of the appellant's claims regarding the benefits she had obtained through practicing Falun Gong, including the spiritual benefits she had experienced in addition to her back pain relief. The Federal Magistrate was satisfied that the Tribunal had not overlooked evidence relating to the benefits of Falun Gong claimed by the appellant.
20 The Federal Magistrate dismissed the fourth ground on the basis that the Tribunal had considered the first appellant's claim that she was a genuine Falun Gong practitioner and in doing so it had regard to Mr Lin's evidence. The Tribunal noted that Mr Lin's evidence clearly related only to her Falun Gong practice in Australia, about which there was no dispute. The Federal Magistrate noted that in his evidence Mr Lin clearly stated that he was not informed by the first appellant as to the nature of her problems in China. Therefore, the Federal Magistrate noted that Mr Zeng Lin's evidence was not relevant to the Tribunal's determination of the appellants' claims and dismissed the fourth ground. The appellant's application was dismissed on the basis that no jurisdictional error was revealed by the appellant's grounds of review.