Ground 1: Bias
17 The husband's oral submissions concerning this ground were a generalised complaint that neither the Tribunal nor the Federal Magistrate accepted the facts and evidence provided by the appellants but instead "speculated as to their own reasons" in saying that the appellants claims were false.
18 The Minister's representative submitted that there was no material before the Court to support either an allegation of actual or apprehended bias on behalf of the Federal Magistrate.
19 The Federal Magistrate did make some remarks which might be construed as critical of the husband.
20 The Federal Magistrate remarked on the husband's failure to attend a meeting with a panel lawyer from the Refugee Review Tribunal Legal Advice Scheme organised to assist him and he noted that the appellants had "not exhibited any understanding of the nature of the proceedings they … initiated and sought to prosecute": at [26]-[28]. When I asked the husband about this issue, his response indicated that he did not avail himself of this service because he apprehended that the panel lawyer would have a negative attitude to his case which is why he did not speak to them. On my reading of SZRNF, the essence of the Federal Magistrate's remarks is that the appellants failed to take an opportunity which might have assisted them to put their case in the most effective way. I see no evidence of bias in these remarks and they appear to be well founded.
21 The Federal Magistrate found that the appellants' allegation of bias against the Tribunal was "misguided": at [33]. The Federal Magistrate reviewed the Tribunal's decision record and determined that there was nothing "to support any allegation that the Tribunal failed to bring an open mind to the proceedings … [nor] has the applicant indicated the existence of any other evidence that may have supported his claim in this regard": at [34]. Having considered the Tribunal's decision record, and in the absence of evidence or particulars of the ground which raise issues that are not apparent on the face of the record, I can see no error in this determination; the findings of the Tribunal seem open to have been made by it and do not appear either illogical nor irrational.
22 The Federal Magistrate also refused to view the husband's scars and described the husband's attempt to show them to the Court as "yet another example of the applicant's misunderstanding of the nature of these proceedings": at [37]. The husband also offered this Court the opportunity to view his scars, which I declined. The Tribunal accepted that the husband bears scars, and this issue was not in contention before the Federal Magistrate or this Court. The Tribunal did not accept, having regard to all of the evidence, that the husband got the scars in the manner he claimed: at [75]. That finding is open to the Tribunal and for the Federal Magistrate to view the scars would not have been probative of any issue in contention and may have led to impermissible merits review. I do not consider that the manner in which the Federal Magistrate dealt with this issue is indicative of bias or otherwise inappropriate.
23 The remarks made by the Federal Magistrate about the conduct of the case and the manner in which the appellants prosecuted their claims were ones that were open to him and the husband did not seek to argue otherwise on appeal to this Court. None of these remarks show or even suggest that the Federal Magistrate brought a closed mind to his judicial functions.
24 The husband argued before the Tribunal, the Federal Magistrate and this Court: why would people in their 60s sell their home in China and come to a new country where they are now too old to establish themselves if the reason was not to seek protection? Indeed, the manner in which the Tribunal dealt with this question formed part of the second ground of appeal to the Federal Magistrate. I perceive no error in the Tribunal's rejection at [76] of any obligation to speculate. Nor do I perceive error in the reasons given by the Federal Magistrate at [47]-[54]; it is the Tribunal's obligation to consider the evidence before it and to determine, based on that evidence, whether it has reached the state of satisfaction required by s 65 of the Migration Act. The Tribunal must set out the reasons for its decision, which includes reference to the evidence, but it is not required to speculate about the appellants' motivations above and beyond satisfying itself about whether the appellants have a well founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason. Finally, the question is not so compelling or have only one necessary answer that it would, standing alone, put the Tribunal on enquiry within the concepts discussed by the High Court in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI [2009] HCA 39 at [19]-[25].
25 The husband provided no evidence or particulars in support of his contention of bias which went beyond the face of the reasons of the Tribunal and the Federal Magistrate. The complaint in relation to the decision of the Federal Magistrate, without particulars, is ultimately a complaint about the Federal Magistrate's failure to overturn the decision of the Tribunal. Complaints of this nature were addressed by Katzmann J in SZNYE v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 500 at [25]:
It is rare for bias (actual or presumed) to be made out on the basis of the reasons of a decision-maker alone: cf. SBBS v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2002] FCAFC 361; (2002) 194 ALR 749 at [44] (relating to an allegation of bad faith). It is abundantly clear that, when the applicant complains of bias, he is complaining solely on the basis that the decision went against him: the Tribunal did not believe me, so it must have been biased. In law, that argument is doomed to fail.
26 On the material provided, there is no evidence of circumstances such that a fair minded and informed person might reasonably apprehend that either the Tribunal or the Federal Magistrate might not have brought an impartial mind to bear on their decisions: see NADH v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2004) 214 ALR 264 at [14].
27 Despite the patent disappointment of many of the appellants in cases of this kind, it is not within the power of either the Federal Magistrate or this Court to conduct a merits review of the decision of the Tribunal: Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Wu Shan Liang (1996) 185 CLR 259 at 272. This ground of appeal must fail.