Appeal ground one
14 As to appeal ground one, the appellant contended in his written submissions that the Tribunal was preoccupied with the reliability of the appellant's evidence, in particular in relation to its consideration of country information, the prevalence of document fraud in Bangladesh, and its concerns about the appellant's credibility. In so doing, the appellant contended that he was not given "an opportunity in accordance with the s 424AA(a) and (b) of the Act or s 424A (sic)".
15 It is clearly apparent from the delegate's reasons (see at [4] above) and those of the Tribunal (see at [6]-[8] above) that the credibility of the appellant's claims was in issue before both. That is so, even though a slightly differing list of inconsistencies and evidentiary deficiencies were focused on by each decision-maker. Hence, I consider the appellant was clearly on notice, both from the delegate's reasons for decision and from the Tribunal's questions at the hearing, that this was the case. Accordingly, I accept the Minister's contention that "the appellant could not reasonably have been misled by the [Minister's] decision that anything else was the case".
16 On this aspect, the Minister referred for support to the decision of the High Court in SZBEL v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2006) 228 CLR 152; [2006] HCA 63 (SZBEL), as follows:
47 … there may well be cases, perhaps many cases, where either the delegate's decision, or the Tribunal's statements or questions during a hearing, sufficiently indicate to an applicant that everything he or she says in support of the application is in issue. That indication may be given in many ways. It is not necessary (and often would be inappropriate) for the Tribunal to put to an applicant, in so many words, that he or she is lying, that he or she may not be accepted as a witness of truth, or that he or she may be thought to be embellishing the account that is given of certain events. The proceedings are not adversarial and the Tribunal is not, and is not to adopt the position of, a contradictor …
48 …
Procedural fairness does not require the Tribunal to give an applicant a running commentary upon what it thinks about the evidence that is given. On the contrary, to adopt such a course would be likely to run a serious risk of conveying an impression of prejudgment.
(Emphasis added)
17 I consider that each of the particulars ultimately pressed in the Federal Circuit Court (see at [10] above) comprise information that the Tribunal did not need to put to the appellant under the procedural code prescribed in ss 424A and 425 of the Act. Adopting the terminology used at [48] in SZBEL (at [14] above), I do not think procedural fairness required the Tribunal to give the appellant a "running commentary" on the evidence that he gave to it.
18 I do not therefore consider that the Federal Circuit Court judge erred in any way in his consideration of this issue. His Honour carefully considered the scope of the term "issues" and concluded, correctly in my view, that the appellant's credibility was generally put in issue by the Tribunal. In relation to the four particulars put to the Court by the appellant, his Honour stated (at [43]):
… It is not necessary to seek to engage in some lengthy consideration as to whether these matters are "issues" in themselves, or are a part of the substratum of facts, relating to the issue, or issues. That is because, even proceeding on the basis that they are "issues", the applicant would have been reasonably on notice of the Tribunal's concerns, and was given the opportunity to address them.
19 His Honour did not consider that any of the authorities put to him by the appellant provided a basis for him "to argue that every finding made by the Tribunal [had to be] squarely put to [him] for comment by the Tribunal, or to have specific reference to the delegate's decision": see SZSWC at [48]. Despite this conclusion, his Honour proceeded to dedicate some 36 paragraphs of his decision to considering each of the particulars identified by the appellant.
20 I do not therefore consider the Federal Circuit Court judge made any error as claimed by the appellant in appeal ground one.