The additional grounds of appeal - the amendment application
51 The two additional arguments now sought to be relied upon on behalf of the Appellant were arguments that:
the Tribunal failed to deal with an "integer" of the claims being made by the Appellant, namely the claim to fear persecution if he were to be returned to China by reason of an asserted acknowledgment he has a Taiwanese passport; and
a further contravention of s 424A was exposed by reliance placed by the Tribunal upon information provided orally to the Department, within the meaning of s 424A(3)(ba) of the Migration Act.
52 Counsel for the Appellant frankly acknowledges that these were both arguments that could have been raised before the Federal Circuit Court where he had been represented by Counsel, albeit not the Counsel presently appearing. The written submissions now filed on behalf of the Appellant also quite properly acknowledges that the "points only arise because of a different view taken by fresh counsel briefed on the appeal". Notwithstanding these bases upon which a departure from the manner in which the case was advanced before the Federal Circuit Curt, it is nevertheless now submitted that leave should be granted to rely upon these additional arguments because "it would be in the interests of justice to permit the ventilation of such matters on appeal where no prejudice would preclude the Court doing so".
53 Counsel for the Appellant expressly disavowed any proposition that a change in the legal representatives for a party was a sufficient reason in itself to justify leave being granted to raise on appeal arguments not previously relied upon. A change in legal representation may explain (at least in part) why arguments are being raised for the first two on appeal - but would rarely be in itself a basis upon which the discretion should be exercised.
54 Normally a party is bound by the way in which a case is conducted at first instance: University of Wollongong v Metwally (No 2) (1985) 59 ALJR 481 at 483. Gibbs CJ, Mason, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ there observed:
It is elementary that a party is bound by the conduct of his case. Except in the most exceptional circumstances, it would be contrary to all principle to allow a party, after a case had been decided against him, to raise a new argument which, whether deliberately or by inadvertence, he failed to put during the hearing when he had an opportunity to do so.
Similarly, in Coulton v Holcombe (1986) 162 CLR 1 at 7 Gibbs CJ, Wilson, Brennan and Dawson JJ observed:
… It is fundamental to the due administration of justice that the substantial issues between the parties are ordinarily settled at the trial. If it were not so the main arena for the settlement of disputes would move from the court of first instance to the appellate court, tending to reduce the proceedings in the former court to little more than a preliminary skirmish…
Notwithstanding this general proposition, the Court is nevertheless given a discretion to permit a new argument on appeal. One factor to be taken into account when exercising that discretion, and a factor which will normally preclude a new argument being raised for the first time on appeal is the prospect that the new argument could have been met by evidence if raised earlier: e.g., Water Board v Moustakas (1988) 180 CLR 491 at 496 to 497 per Mason CJ, Wilson, Brennan and Dawson JJ. But the factors to be taken into account are not so confined. After referring to Coulton v Holcombe, supra, Allsop J (as his Honour then was) in Branir v Owston Nominees (No 2) Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1833, (2001) 117 FCR 424 set forth further considerations as follows:
[37] It is beyond question that if a new matter is raised and evidence could have been given which by any possibility could have prevented the point from succeeding, the point cannot be taken…
[38] However, to say as much does not exhaust the description of the considerations for an appellate court when faced with a party raising a fresh point. First, the finality of litigation and the importance of parties being bound to the cases they make at trial should never be overlooked… Secondly, the difficulty of the party against whom the new point is raised reaching back in time to assess, necessarily hypothetically, how the conduct of the trial would, or may, have been different should not be underestimated. Such judgments or assessments can require re-agitation or reconsideration of decisions taken before and at trial (which may be privileged) and which can be very difficult to assess and articulate after the event. The entitlement of a party to the benefit of the opportunity of informed and reasonably contemporaneous assessment of relevant evidence, or inquiry, should be respected. Thirdly, the potential unfairness on counsel conducting an appeal who will be expected to assist the court in respect of the prejudice, or lack of it, to his or her client in the face of such matters being raised should not lightly be brushed aside. Even when counsel cannot positively say that something in particular would have been done differently, that does not mean that the court will be satisfied of a lack of prejudice. The possibility of evidence or the possibility that the hearing would have taken a different course, if not fanciful, may well suffice to deny raising of the new point. These considerations should not be seen as not requiring counsel frankly and candidly to say that the trial would not have been conducted differently if he or she is of that view. Fourthly, and in conclusion, before any new point be allowed, the court should be able to be satisfied that the raising of it could work no injustice on the other party and is otherwise in the interests of justice. The extent of the consideration of "the interests of justice" was discussed by Branson J and Katz J in H v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, supra, at [8]. For my part, I would reserve comment upon the matters there discussed in this context concerning the relevance of the growing pressure on the time of courts. Considerations of the kind there discussed by their Honours have not formed part of my reasons, expressed later, for refusing to entertain certain issues on appeal. Nothing I have said is intended to be in any way contrary to, or inconsistent with, what was said by R D Nicholson J in Jones v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1995) 63 FCR 32 at 47 or with the cases there discussed, that being an authority specifically relied on by the appellants in argument.
More recently, in VUAX v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 158 at [46], Kiefel, Weinberg and Stone JJ simply stated that "[l]eave to argue a new ground of appeal not raised before the primary judge should only be granted if it is expedient in the interests of justice to do so". See also: Austral Masonry (NSW) Pty Ltd v Cementech Pty Limited [2014] FCAFC 72 at [9] per Jagot, Nicholas and Yates JJ.
55 The expression "the interests of justice" is undoubtedly a useful touchstone; but its recitation is sometimes more the expression of a conclusion than a reason. It is necessarily an expression which must remain flexible in content to accommodate the infinite variety of cases and circumstances in which appeals are conducted. There may well be different considerations as to what may be relevant to an assessment as to "the interests of justice" in private litigation as opposed to public law matters. Thus, for instance, it has long been recognised that there is a legitimate interest in public law matters being resolved in a timely and efficient manner: Iyer v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 929 at [62], (2001) 192 ALR 71 at 86 per Gyles J. There is thus a legitimate public interest in the timely disposal of applications for protection visas: cf. SZKMS v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2008] FCA 499 at [30] per Lander J. There may also be a legitimate public interest and, accordingly in "the interests of justice", to permit new arguments to be raised on appeal which expose excesses of statutory power by public officials. The "serious consequences that may attend a wrongful refusal of a protection visa" is also relevant to an assessment as to "the interests of justice": cf. SZEPN v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2006] FCA 886 at [16] per Branson J. Regrettably it is seldom the case that all of the relevant considerations point in one direction or the other as to the manner in which the discretion is to be exercised.
56 One factor which remains constant, however, in the exercise of the discretion is an assessment as to whether the new argument has any merit.
57 As to the former proposed new ground, namely that there had been a failure to consider an "integer" of the claim being advanced by reason of the asserted acknowledgment that the Appellant has a Taiwanese passport, the argument has no self-evident merit. The argument proceeded from a comparison of the following two paragraphs of the reasons for decision of the Tribunal, namely:
191. Australia has acknowledged that he has a Taiwanese passport in the Australian Federal Court and the Federal Magistrates Court. The Chinese have said that he is a Taiwanese spy.
214. The applicant claims that the Chinese authorities have been alerted that he has claimed protection because of references made to his having a Taiwanese passport, his passport number, information about his daughter and to his having applied for protection, in decisions of the Federal Magistrates and Federal Court. The Tribunal is not satisfied that those claims have been made out on the evidence before it. It does not accept the applicant's evidence that the Chinese government knows about the protection visa application which is treason under Chinese law, have obtained a copy of the Tribunal's refusal decision and copies of the court reports, that they have boasted about it to his father and pressured his father for the applicant to return, and that they have said that he is a Taiwanese spy, because it does not accept that he is a credible witness or that the documents he has provided are credible.
58 There was some divergence of views between the parties as to whether paragraph [191] was the mere recitation of a claim being made by the Appellant or a finding made by the Tribunal. On behalf of the Appellant it was submitted that it was a finding which was "not qualified in any way" and that paragraph [214] was "a rolled amalgam of findings and cannot be disaggregated to suggest departure from what is otherwise a clear finding at [191]". If paragraph [191] was a finding, Counsel for the Appellant submitted that the "finding" as to the Appellant having a Taiwanese passport was an integer of the claim being made and not addressed or resolved by the Tribunal: Dranichnikov v Minister for Immigration (2003) 77 ALJR 1088.
59 Such a reading of paragraphs [191] and [214], it is respectfully considered, is a reading of the reasons for decision with an eye attuned to the perception of error: cf. Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 271 to 272 per Brennan CJ, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ. Properly read, it is concluded that the reasons for decision of the Tribunal address this aspect of the claim being made by the Appellant.
60 As to the second of the proposed new grounds, namely the reliance upon a further contravention of s 424A, the argument is again one which lacks sufficient merit to warrant it being now relied upon. The information said to have been communicated orally to the Department focussed upon the Appellant's reasons for not applying for a protection visa when he entered Australia. The Tribunal, it was said, was aware of the information he had orally provided. So much emerged from the following paragraph of the Tribunal's reasons:
42. The applicant is known as David Wang in Australia. The applicant did not intend to apply for protection here before arriving in Australia and so did not bring any documents relating to his employment or occupation. He came to Australia to visit his mother for two weeks. He had already purchased a return ticket for 14 November 2010 and souvenirs for people in China. He stayed longer because on the evening of 12 November, he was told he was wanted in a private way. He wanted to verify that information which took time and to find out why he was wanted and how to fix that problem. If he wanted to seek protection then, he would not have left Australia on 24 January 2011.
The fact that the Tribunal relied upon this information emerged from the following paragraph of those reasons:
200. The Tribunal has also taken into account his evidence that if he had wanted to seek protection, he would not have left Australia on 24 January 2011 to go to Fiji for three days before returning, because his multiple entry tourist visa only allowed him to stay for three months at any one time, and that he wanted to resolve the issues in China and then return there. This evidence reinforces the Tribunal's finding that he did not fear harm of he returned to China when he applied for the protection visa because he wanted to "resolve" the issues in China and then return there.
61 The explanation provided to the Department, it would appear, was substantially similar to the information that he had provided to the Tribunal. Such information would fall within s 424A(3)(b). Any argument founded upon a further contravention of s 424A, it is considered, does not have sufficient merit to warrant it being now pursued further on appeal.
62 Having considered the factors relevant to the exercise of the discretion, including the fact that the proposed new arguments were available to be raised before the primary Judge and the apparent merit of the two new arguments, it is concluded that leave to raise the two grounds should be refused.