The Appeal Proceedings
17 Because the judgment of the Federal Circuit Court is an interlocutory judgment, leave to appeal is required: s 24(1A) Federal Court at Australia Act 1976 (Cth). The judgment does not fall within the exception in s 24(1C), which concerns, inter alia, interlocutory judgments affecting "the liberty of an individual" because it does not involve orders which would subject the applicant (or anyone else) to direct incarceration or deprivation of liberty: Talacka v Talacko [2010] FCA 239 at [43]; Perg Gao v Fair Work Ombudsman [2013] FCA 754 at [18].
18 On 13 September 2013, the applicant filed an application for leave to appeal that advanced three grounds. Those grounds are:
1. The RRT fell into jurisdictional error in failing to apply the correct test for the detention, question and harassment when I returned to Sri Lanka as a Tamil failed asylum seekers.
2. The RRT fell into jurisdictional error in not putting to me fully for comment the reports about failed Tamil asylum seekers who are deported to Sri Lanka.
3. I have information to submit to the court that how mistreated of Tamil failed asylum seekers on arrival in Sri Lanka.
19 The applicant has filed an affidavit in these proceedings dated 12 September 2013. The affidavit states that the applicant will file and serve an amended notice of appeal when required. On 13 September 2013, the applicant filed a draft notice of appeal. It contains three proposed grounds of appeal. Those grounds of appeal are identical to the grounds relied on by the applicant in the Federal Circuit Court.
20 The applicant has also filed a further draft notice of appeal on 1 October 2013. Somewhat unhelpfully, this notice of appeal raises a further three grounds of appeal. Those three grounds are:
1. The RRT has accepted that I have departed Sri Lanka illegally and has further accepted being a Tamil asylum seeker returning from western country I will be questioned and encounter some harassment on return to Sri Lanka.
2. The RRT has not considered my claim in regard to my detention on my arrival in degrading conditions for time periods up to months in Negombo prison.
3. The RRT has failed to deal with my claim that I could be held for some months in Negombo prison.
21 At the hearing of the application the applicant made oral submissions that were global in nature and not directed to any particular grounds in the application for leave or the draft notices of appeal. The applicant was asked to provide submissions as best he could in relation to each of the grounds in his application for leave and the draft notices of appeal. His submissions were, however, essentially the same in relation to each of the grounds or proposed grounds. In short, the applicant repeated his claim that if he was to return to Sri Lanka he would be arrested and tortured, that all Tamil people are mistreated in Sri Lanka and that he would be tortured because he had provided accommodation to the LTTE. The applicant submitted that the Tribunal did not take these claims into account.
22 In reality, as effectively conceded by the applicant during his oral submissions, his real complaint was that the Tribunal did not believe him or accept his claims.
23 Despite the fact that the applicant's submissions were global in nature, I will address each of the grounds raised by the applicant in the application for leave to appeal and the two draft notices of appeal. As will be seen, there is a good deal of overlap between these grounds.
24 In relation to ground 1 of the application for leave to appeal the applicant provided no particulars or meaningful submissions in support of his contention that the Tribunal failed to apply the correct test. This was not a ground argued before the Federal Circuit Court. That alone might be a reason to refuse leave to appeal in relation to this ground. In any event, the ground has no merit. It is clear from the Tribunal's reasons at paragraphs [4]-[18] that the Tribunal did apply the correct test and the relevant law in relation to whether the applicant had satisfied the criteria for a protection visa.
25 In relation to ground 2 of the application for leave to appeal, the applicant did raise in the Federal Circuit Court an argument that there had been a failure to follow proper procedures. The applicant did not, however, contend in the Federal Circuit Court that the Tribunal had failed to put to him for comment reports concerning failed asylum seekers who are deported to Sri Lanka. At the hearing in this Court, the applicant was unable to provide any detail in relation to the reports that he said were not put to him for comment. It is clear, from the Tribunal's reasons, however, that the Tribunal did rely on various country reports concerning failed Tamil asylum seekers and their treatment upon return to Sri Lanka. These reports and the Tribunal's acceptance of them was generally favourable to the applicant's case.
26 In any event, those reports were not required to be put to the applicant under s 424A of the Act because they fell within the terms of s 424A(3)(a) of the Act, which provides as follows:
424A (3) This section does not apply to information:
(a) that is not specifically about the applicant or another person and is just about a class of person of which the applicant or other person is a member.
27 There was accordingly no failure to comply with s 424A of the Act. Nor was it suggested, let alone demonstrated, that the Tribunal failed to comply with any other procedure in Division 4 of Part 7 of the Act. Because Division 4 is taken to be an exhaustive statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to the matters it deals with (see 422B of the Act), there is no scope for the applicant to argue that there was some more general failure to afford him procedural fairness or natural justice in relation to the way it dealt with the country reports. In any event, it is difficult to see how there could be any unfairness given that the reports were accepted as being favourable to the applicant's case.
28 In relation to ground 3 of the application for leave to appeal, it is somewhat unclear what this ground means. In oral submissions in this Court the applicant submitted that whilst he put all of his claims to the Tribunal, the Tribunal did not have regard to those claims. He did not suggest that he had any further information to provide to the Court. If he did have further information, it was incumbent on him to put that information before the Tribunal. It was not a matter for the Tribunal to make the applicant's case for him.
29 In any event, it is clear from a fair reading of the Tribunal's reasons that the Tribunal did give consideration to all of the applicant's claims, including his claims concerning the mistreatment of failed Tamil asylum seekers upon their return to Sri Lanka.
30 As already noted, the Tribunal's findings in relation to the treatment of failed Tamil asylum seekers were generally favourable to the applicant. The basis for the Tribunal's decision that this did not provide a basis for the grant of a protection visa was that the Tribunal was not satisfied that any mistreatment that the applicant would suffer if he returns to Sri Lanka would amount to serious harm or involve discriminatory conduct. That finding was based on the Tribunal's rejection of the applicant's claim that the Sri Lankan authorities believed he had links to the LTTE or that he was otherwise of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities. That finding in turn flowed from the Tribunal's rejection of many of the applicant's specific factual claims and its adverse findings about the applicant's credibility.
31 In relation to the draft notice of appeal filed on 13 September 2013, these grounds of appeal essentially repeat the grounds relied upon in the Federal Circuit Court. These grounds have no merit for the reasons given by the learned primary judge. The applicant did not advance, let alone establish, any error in the way the Federal Circuit Court dealt with these grounds. No error is disclosed on the reasons for judgment of the Federal Circuit Court.
32 In relation to grounds 1 and 2, a fair reading of the Tribunal's decision and reasons reveals that the Tribunal gave careful attention to all of the applicant's claims and the evidence that he gave to the effect that he feared persecution in Sri Lanka. Whilst the applicant may, and undoubtedly does, disagree with the Tribunal's findings in this respect, the Federal Circuit Court does not have jurisdiction to consider the merits of the Tribunal's decision. The primary judge correctly found that the Tribunal was not in error, let alone jurisdictional error, in relation to its findings.
33 In relation to ground 3 of the first of the draft notices of appeal, the applicant was again unable to give any details or particulars of the proper procedures required by law that he said the Tribunal did not follow. For the reasons given by the primary judge, there is no basis for the applicant's contention that the Tribunal failed to follow any procedure required by law.
34 In relation to the draft notice of appeal filed on 1 October 2013, the three grounds of appeal in that draft notice should be read together.
35 What the applicant appears to contend is that the Tribunal, having found that failed Tamil asylum seekers were often detained and questioned upon their return to Sri Lanka, should have accepted his claims that it was likely that he would be detained for some months upon his return to Sri Lanka. In the applicant's oral submissions in relation to these grounds it was apparent again that the applicant's real complaint concerned the merits of the Tribunal's factual findings. A fair reading of the Tribunal's reasons reveals that it did consider the applicant's claims. Having considered them, it rejected them. There is no basis for any contention that the Tribunal failed to properly exercise its jurisdiction in relation to the way it dealt with the claims.
36 It follows that none of the grounds or submissions that the applicant has put forward on this application have any merit. I am unable to discern any error made by the Federal Circuit Court in dismissing the applicant's application. Nor am I able to discern any jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal. Accordingly, the application for leave to appeal should be dismissed.
37 No reason has been advanced as to why costs should not follow the event. Accordingly the applicant must pay the costs of the first respondent as agreed or assessed.
38 The Court has been advised that the name of the first respondent has been changed to the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection. To the extent that it is necessary, I will order that the relevant documents will be amended to reflect that change.
I certify that the preceding thirty-eight (38) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Wigney.