CONSIDERATION
17 The grounds of appeal to this Court, while restated and restructured somewhat, raise essentially the same issues as were raised before the Federal Magistrate. I will deal briefly with each of the three grounds in turn.
18 In ground 1, the appellant claims the respondents (he must mean the Tribunal): "has not gone into the virtual and legal facts of the matter of the applicant". He then claims that, on one hand the Federal Magistrate "ignores the content of the written statements" submitted by him and yet, on the other hand, observes that those statements are "untruthful and fraudulent". He concludes by saying this is "a clear violation of the law".
19 In my view, the appellant has completely misunderstood and misrepresented the import of the Federal Magistrate's decision. The Federal Magistrate did not consider it was necessary to set out the appellant's lengthy claims because "they do not go to whether or not the Tribunal made an error of law in the manner in which it reached its decision, but rather dispute the decision itself": see [2011] FMCA 382 at [6]. There can be no doubt about the correctness of this statement. It is well-established that neither the Federal Magistrates Court, nor this Court, can review the merits of the Tribunal's decision: Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272 and 291 and NAHI v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 10 at [10].
20 As to the expression "untruthful and fraudulent", the only use the Federal Magistrate made of that expression was to record that the Tribunal had identified this as a possibility arising from some of the claims made by the appellant, which the Tribunal was unable to explore with the appellant because he elected not to attend the hearing before it. What the Federal Magistrate actually said was: "The Tribunal also noted other matters which it could not explore with the applicant, including the possibility that some evidence he had produced consisted of a fraudulent or untruthful claim." It is patently clear from this that the Federal Magistrate did not conclude that the appellant's claims were untruthful and fraudulent.
21 For these reasons, there is no merit to ground 1 of the appellant's notice of appeal.
22 Ground 2 of the notice of appeal falls, at least partially, into the same category as ground 1. The appellant makes a number of assertions about the persecution of Muslims in Gujarat. He also asserts that, as a lawyer, he faces particular persecution in Gujarat State. These assertions seek to dispute the factual findings of the Tribunal rather than identify any jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal. Accordingly the Federal Magistrate did not err in refusing to review the Tribunal's factual findings based on any of these assertions.
23 Ground 2 also alleges that the Tribunal exceeded its jurisdiction by referring to the appellant as a "fraudulent person" and that the Federal Magistrate breached the principles of natural justice. As I have observed above, these allegations involve a complete misrepresentation of the way in which this expression was used by the Tribunal and the Federal Magistrate.
24 For these reasons, there is also no merit to ground 2.
25 Ground 3 of the notice of appeal asserts that the Tribunal failed to apply "the proper law and procedure" and that the appellant satisfies the "four key elements of being a refugee". The appellant has not particularised what law and procedure the Tribunal allegedly failed to follow and without such particulars this assertion is meaningless. As to the claim that the appellant met the four key elements of being a refugee, this represents yet another attempt by the appellant to argue the merits of the Tribunal's decision and, for the reasons stated above, cannot be entertained in an appeal before this Court. There is also no merit to ground 3.
26 Finally, the appellant has filed an affidavit in support of this appeal. That affidavit simply repeats the grounds of appeal contained in the appellant's amended application to the Federal Magistrate's Court. For this reason, it does not advance the matter and I do not need to consider it any further.
27 Before leaving this appeal, I would add this. The irony that emerges from the whole of the appellant's three grounds of appeal is that he is dissatisfied with the way in which the Tribunal dealt with his factual claims, yet he passed up his only opportunity for a full merits review by the Tribunal by electing not to accept its invitation for him to attend before it and elaborate on his claims. As the Full Court said in NAVX v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 287 (at [8]), once he did that: "the inevitable consequence was the rejection of his application".
28 For these reasons, I am unable to detect any error on the part of the Federal Magistrate. Accordingly, the appellant's appeal must be dismissed. I will hear the parties on the question of costs.
I certify that the preceding twenty-eight (28) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Reeves.