Fraud unravels everything
13 But a disturbing feature of the present proceeding emerged from the Appellant's repeated assertion that a person had promised to help him and had provided assurances that he should not "worry".
14 The letter dated 6 October 2011 which was forwarded to the Refugee Review Tribunal stated in relevant part (without alteration) as follows:
…
Submission:
I am agreed with the Tribunal that I did not lodge this review application within the relevant time limit.
The real fact is that after I received the primary decision of the DIAC I consulted with one of the person who promised to help me lodging this review application. I left the decision with him and he advised me in words that he would lodge the review application. Since I left the primary decision with him I had regular contact with him. He also helped me to prepare my primary decision application lodged with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship. On my question he continuously told me that he had lodged my review application and I would receive an acknowledgement from the Tribunal soon. He confirmed with me that he had lodged the application at MRT and advised me not to worry. After this conversation I received an acknowledgement letter on 9 September 2011 from the Tribunal.
I received another letter from the Tribunal on 15 September 2011. This letter advised me that I have not lodged my review application within the relevant time limit.
I was very shocked and straightway asked him what was happening. He again advised me not to worry. He also advised me that he would make a submission to the Tribunal.
However, I cannot rely on him further. I am preparing this response myself for your kind consideration.
I am not sure how the above fact will help me to make my review application valid. However the fact is true in every word and as a result my life became very hard now.
I may contact with the relevant authority to lodge a complaint against the person who promised to help me. I am consulting with my friends and getting preparation how and where I will make a complaint against the person.
By the time I submit that I lodge this review application after the 23 days period run out. However I also submit that it was beyond my control as I relied on a wrong person to help me lodging this review application.
I apologized for lodging this review application after the 28 days period run out.
I request the Tribunal to consider the above fact and make a favourable decision that my review application is valid.
…
15 The substance of these assertions equally disturbed Greenwood J. His Honour characterised the "appellant's contended arguable case" as a "a fraud … perpetrated upon him as a potential party to a review proceeding which was not commenced within time due to the conduct of the third party": [2012] FCA 871 at [50]. Any such conduct of the third party was properly characterised by his Honour as "not only a fraud on the applicant but also a fraud on the Tribunal as the conduct has prevented the applicant from engaging the review processes of the Tribunal at all …": at [58].
16 Where the jurisdiction of the Refugee Review Tribunal has been invoked within time, the conduct of a third party may nevertheless thereafter operate to stultify the claims for review being resolved according to law: SZFDE v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2007] HCA 35, 232 CLR 189. The Appellant wife had there claimed a well-founded fear of persecution by reason of her published views questioning the position of women in the Islamic tradition. Other family members relied upon their familial relationship with her and her claims. A delegate of the Minister had refused the application and review had been sought by the Refugee Review Tribunal. After the application had been made to the Tribunal, the conduct of a third party (Mr Hussain) caused the Appellants to not appear before the Tribunal. The Tribunal was obliged to offer the invitation to appear and give evidence and present arguments by reason of s 425 of the Migration Act. The conduct of Mr Hussain was characterised as fraudulent. He had falsely held himself out to be both a solicitor and a migration agent. He had advised the Appellants not to appear before the Tribunal. His advice amounted to a representation that the Tribunal process was a "sham".
17 In concluding that the decision of the Tribunal was "properly regarded, in law, as no decision at all" ([2007] HCA 35 at [52], 232 CLR 189 at 206), Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan, Heydon and Crennan JJ initially placed emphasis upon the importance of s 425 in ensuring procedural fairness as follows:
[30] Part 7 (ss 410-473) of the Act establishes a detailed regime for the review by the Tribunal of particular visa decisions. (Part 8 (ss 474-486Q) provides for Judicial Review). Division 4 of Pt 7 (ss 422B-429A) lays down the procedure for the conduct of reviews by the Tribunal. …
[31] The importance of the requirement in s 425 that the Tribunal invite the applicant to appear to give evidence and present arguments is emphasised by s 422B. This states that Div 4 "is taken to be an exhaustive statement of the requirement of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to the matters it deals with".
[32] An effective subversion of the operation of s 425 also subverts the observance by the Tribunal of its obligation to accord procedural fairness to applicants for review. Given the significance of procedural fairness for the principles concerned with jurisdictional error, sourced in s 75(v) of the Constitution, the subversion of the processes of the Tribunal in the manner alleged by the present appellants is a matter of the first magnitude in the due administration of Pt 7 of the Act.
Their Honours went on to conclude:
[49] The fraud of Mr Hussain had the immediate consequence of stultifying the operation of the legislative scheme to afford natural justice to the appellants. …
…
[51] No doubt Mr Hussain was fraudulent in his dealings with the appellants. But the concomitant was the stultification of the operation of the critically important natural justice provisions made by Div 4 of Pt 7 of the Act. In short, while the Tribunal undoubtedly acted on an assumption of regularity, in truth, by reason of the fraud of Mr Hussain, it was disabled from the due discharge of its imperative statutory functions with respect to the conduct of the review. That state of affairs merits the description of the practice of fraud "on" the Tribunal.
In so concluding, their Honours clearly distinguished between the conduct of a third party which was fraudulent and conduct that was negligent. Their Honours, at the end of their reasons for decision, thus expressly noted the limitations upon their decision as follows:
[53] The significance of the outcome in this appeal should not be misunderstood. The appeal has turned upon the particular importance of the provisions of Div 4 of Pt 7 of the Act for the conduct by the Tribunal of reviews and the place therein of the ss 425 and 426A. In the Full Court French J correctly emphasised that there are sound reasons of policy why a person whose conduct before an administrative tribunal has been affected, to the detriment of that person, by bad or negligent advice or some other mishap should not be heard to complain that the detriment vitiates the decision made. The outcome in the present appeal stands apart from and above such considerations.
18 The decision in SZFDE, it was nevertheless contended on behalf of the Minister, is distinguishable. There, the fraudulent conduct arose after the jurisdiction of the Tribunal had been invoked; in the present case, it was correctly submitted that any conduct that could potentially be characterised as fraud arose before the jurisdiction of the Tribunal had been invoked.
19 But the conduct of a third party can unquestionably stultify any attempt by a claimant to even invoke the Tribunal's jurisdiction. Had it been necessary to resolve the Minister's submission, it would most probably have been concluded that the principles set forth in SZFDE are not to be confined to fraudulent circumstances which arise only after the jurisdiction of the Tribunal has been properly invoked. Indeed, to so conclude would be to run the risk of potentially encouraging even more reprehensible conduct on the part of third parties by frustrating an individual's ability to even lodge a claim with the Tribunal. Such cannot be the necessary limitations upon the principles set forth in SZFDE.
20 Such a conclusion, however, is unnecessary for the purposes of the present proceeding.