CONSIDERATION
18 The Tribunal considered in detail the appellant's account of events in India, and accepted (at [58]-[61] of the Tribunal's reasons) that:
He had worked in the financial services industry, including selling financial products to customers on behalf of a multi-national corporation.
As a result of the global financial crisis in 2010 and its impact on the Indian stock market many of those customers lost - or believed that they had lost - a significant portion of the investments which they had purchased on the appellant's personal recommendation.
Many of his customers felt that the appellant had betrayed or swindled them, and accordingly wished to kill him.
Many of those customers had his home address in India.
If he returned to his area of origin it would not be difficult for former customers to find him and kill him if they wished to.
19 Significantly, however, at [72] of the Reasons for Decision the Tribunal said:
I accept that if the applicant were to return to his home region now, there is both a real chance and a real risk that those who had sought him in the past, will come to know that he is present at home. I have found that they have no intention of killing him. I find, however, that there is both a real chance and real risk that they, presented with the opportunity in his home area, will continue to harass, intimidate and threaten, the applicant and his family. I accept that over time, cumulatively, that such treatment can amount to serious harm and might amount to significant harm.
20 The Tribunal then went on to find that there is no reason why the appellant could not relocate elsewhere in India ([76]-[80]).
21 As his Honour below observed at [37]-[39], the Tribunal appears to find that the appellant has a well-founded fear of persecution in his home area without expressly finding that such persecution would be for a Convention reason. The Minister submits that the inference which should properly be drawn from this is that, presumably, the Tribunal considered that there was an unstated Convention nexus for its finding that the appellant had a well-founded fear of persecution in his home area. The Minister submits further, however, that even if the Tribunal did not, any error in the decision could only have been in the appellant's favour and would not justify the grant of relief as it could not have affected the outcome: Jankovic v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1995) 56 FCR 474 at 477, House v Defence Force Retirement and Death Benefits Authority (2011) 193 FCR 112.
22 I am not persuaded by the Minister's submissions on this issue.
23 At [39] of the primary judgment his Honour observed that:
… the obligation of decision makers under the Migration Act in relation to a claim that a person is a refugee is to consider whether the applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution in his country of origin for a Convention reason. There are no shortcuts to that reasoning process.
(Emphasis in original.)
24 I consider that this statement of his Honour accurately states the law.
25 In Jankovic at 477 the Full Court observed that an immaterial error does not vitiate the decision. In my view the apparent failure of the Tribunal in this case to come to grips with the question whether the appellant actually had a well-founded fear of persecution for a Convention reason goes to the heart of its decision. Although the Tribunal found that the appellant could relocate, it is difficult to see how such a finding could be made without a proper appreciation of the appellant's circumstances and whether there was a Convention reason for his well-founded fear of persecution.
26 Although this is not a ground specifically pleaded by the appellant, it was clear this morning that the Minister's legal representatives were in a position to meet this issue.
27 I consider that this is an error of the Tribunal which warrants the decision of the Tribunal being set aside. The appropriate order is to allow the appeal, set aside the decision of the Tribunal, and remit the case to the Tribunal for rehearing.
I certify that the preceding twenty-seven (27) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Collier.