GROUNDS OF APPEAL IN THIS COURT
13 On 2 December 2011, the appellant filed a notice of appeal in this Court which contained the following stated grounds of appeal:
1. The Tribunal based its decision on the understanding that the applicant told the Minister's delegate at an interview on 13 October 2010, that his home had been attacked twice, in August 2004 and on 1 February 2005. In fact, the applicant told the Minister's delegate at the interview on 13 October 2010 that his home had been attacked once and not twice. In the circumstances, the Tribunal:
a. misled the applicant, resulting in a denial of procedural fairness and jurisdictional error, and
b. based its decision on a fact when there was no evidence to support the fact, resulting in jurisdictional error.
The Federal Magistrates Court erred in failing to find that the Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error on this basis.
14 The appellant's grounds of appeal were not particularised. Despite orders made on 5 December 2011 allowing the appellant to file and serve written submissions 10 clear working days before the hearing date (by 7 February 2012), none were filed or served. At the hearing on 21 February 2012 the appellant was self-represented and assisted by an interpreter.
15 The appellant relied on written submissions handed to the court. In those written submissions, the appellant complained that the Tribunal failed to provide him time in which to provide the Tribunal documents relevant to his claims, and that the Tribunal failed to take into account those documents. This is a new ground of appeal which was not agitated before the Federal Magistrate.
RAISING NEW GROUNDS OF APPEAL
16 The principles regarding the raising of new grounds of appeal were the subject of detailed consideration in SZKCQ v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2009] FCA 578 at [7]-[11] (Flick J). Leave should only be granted to raise new grounds on appeal where it is expedient in the interests of justice. For a ground to be argued and determined for the first time on appeal, it must at least be shown that the ground has a reasonable prospect of success.
THE APPELLANT'S GROUNDS OF APPEAL
17 In relation to the new ground of appeal referred to above, I note that the applicant was provided with an opportunity to participate in the Tribunal hearing and provide arguments and documentary evidence in support of his claims. The applicant had twice applied for, and the Tribunal had granted, an extension of time of two weeks in order for the applicant to file documentary evidence relevant to his claims. The first such extension of time was granted on 4 March 2011, and the second extension was granted on 17 March 2011. Having afforded the applicant these opportunities, the Tribunal was under no obligation to provide a further extension of time, applied for by the applicant on 30 March 2011, and the Tribunal's refusal does not amount to a jurisdictional error.
18 For the above reasons, there is no reasonable prospect of success in relation to this new ground of appeal agitated at the hearing. On this basis, I have determined to deny leave for the applicant to raise the new ground of appeal.
19 The ground of appeal stated in the notice of appeal filed in this Court, had been agitated before the Federal Magistrate and rejected. Before the Federal Magistrate, the appellant argued that the Tribunal had misled the appellant and made a credibility finding against him without an evidentiary basis. That was said to be so because the Tribunal had mischaracterised evidence given by the appellant at his interview with the Minister's delegate on the subject matter of attacks upon the appellant's home.
20 The appellant relied upon a written point form summary of the delegate's account of the interview with him as evidence of what the appellant had said at the interview on the subject of attacks upon his home. That document records that the appellant referred to only one attack on his home and that the evidence given by the appellant was initially that the ransacking and attack on his home occurred in August 2004 but that later in the interview the appellant claimed it had occurred on 1 February 2005.
21 At the hearing before the Tribunal, the appellant initially referred to his home being attacked once in August 2004 or August 2005. The Tribunal put to the appellant that this was inconsistent with the evidence he gave at the interview with the Minister's delegate where he had stated that his home had been attacked twice. After some further discussion, the appellant said that "most probably" there had been two incidents, in August 2004 and on 1 February 2005.
22 Although it was not the only basis for the Tribunal's view that the appellant lacked credibility, by its findings, the Tribunal determined that the evidence given by the appellant about the attacks on his home demonstrated his willingness to alter his evidence to attempt to address the problems raised by the Tribunal with the appellant.
23 Before the Federal Magistrate, the appellant contended that the Tribunal was wrong to have asserted to him that he had claimed at the interview with the delegate that his home was attacked twice because that was not the fact. To prove that fact, the appellant sought to rely upon the written summary prepared by the Minister's delegate of the interview with the appellant.
24 The Federal Magistrate was not satisfied that the appellant had established that in the interview with the delegate the appellant had not in fact claimed that his home had been attacked twice. As the Federal Magistrate noted, there was a conflict between the delegate's account recorded in the delegate's summary and the account of the Tribunal Member who had listened to the digital voice recording of the interview. The reasons for decision of the Tribunal set out in greater length, than does the summary prepared by the delegate, what the Tribunal understood to have been said in the interview with the delegate.
25 The Federal Magistrate took the view that the appellant bore the onus of establishing jurisdictional error. The discharge of that onus required the appellant to establish the fact that the Tribunal's account of what had occurred at the interview was incorrect. The Federal Magistrate was of the view that in the absence of evidence such as the transcript of the interview, the voice recording of the interview or evidence from the appellant as to what he had said at the interview, there was no sufficient evidentiary basis upon which the Federal Magistrate could be satisfied that the Tribunal had misstated what the appellant had said at the interview.
26 There is no legal error in the analysis made by the Federal Magistrate. The starting point for establishing either that the Tribunal had misled the appellant or had acted without evidence, was the need for the appellant to establish what in fact had been said at the interview with the delegate. The appellant was legally represented before the Federal Magistrate. As the Federal Magistrate states, the appellant had been provided with a digital recording of the interview with the delegate. The appellant bore the onus of establishing what had happened at the interview. He failed to discharge that onus and the Federal Magistrate was right to have so found.
27 The Federal Magistrate also rejected this ground on the alternative basis that the conduct alleged, even if proven, did not constitute jurisdictional error. Given the view I have taken as to the primary basis for the rejection of this challenge by the Federal Magistrate, I need not deal with the alternative basis relied upon by the Federal Magistrate.