Time to explain - ss 425 & 426A
12 Division 4 of Part 7 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the "Migration Act") deals with the manner in which the Tribunal is to conduct the review of protection visa decisions. Within that Division, s 422B(1) provides that the Division "is taken to be an exhaustive statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to the matters it deals with".
13 It is within those constraints that the Appellant must advance his second Ground of Appeal.
14 Within Division 4, s 425(1) provides as follows:
The Tribunal must invite the applicant to appear before the Tribunal to give evidence and present arguments relating to the issues arising in relation to the decision under review.
15 Also within Division 4, s 426A provides as follows:
Failure of applicant to appear before Tribunal
(1) If the applicant:
(a) is invited under section 425 to appear before the Tribunal; and
(b) does not appear before the Tribunal on the day on which, or at the time and place at which, the applicant is scheduled to appear;
the Tribunal may make a decision on the review without taking any further action to allow or enable the applicant to appear before it.
(2) This section does not prevent the Tribunal from rescheduling the applicant's appearance before it, or from delaying its decision on the review in order to enable the applicant's appearance before it as rescheduled.
Section 427(1) provides as follows:
For the purpose of the review of a decision, the Tribunal may:
(a) take evidence on oath or affirmation; or
(b) adjourn the review from time to time; or
(c) subject to sections 438 and 440, give information to the applicant and to the Secretary; or
(d) require the Secretary to arrange for the making of any investigation, or any medical examination, that the Tribunal thinks necessary with respect to the review, and to give to the Tribunal a report of that investigation or examination.
Taken together, these provisions confer a discretion upon the Tribunal as to how it may proceed where an applicant fails to avail himself of the opportunity to attend and "give evidence and present arguments". Sections 362B and 363(1), it may be noted, confer discretionary powers in like terms to ss 426A and 427(1).
16 There has been no failure to comply with the procedural requirements imposed by Division 4. The Appellant was invited to appear before the Tribunal. Whatever may be the deficiencies in the medical certificate forwarded to the Tribunal on 20 January 2014, the hearing was nevertheless re-scheduled. An officer of the Tribunal who contacted the Appellant on 20 January 2014 was told by the Appellant that he had a "headache". The date for the re-scheduled hearing was fixed at 28 January 2014. The Appellant confirmed with the Tribunal's officer that he understood that the Tribunal may proceed to make a decision in his case if he did not seek a further adjournment or attend the hearing. A letter confirming the re-scheduled hearing date and the prospect of a decision being made without further notice was also forwarded to the Appellant. He failed to appear on 28 January 2014. Nor did he contact the Tribunal.
17 The simple fact is that the Appellant was given an opportunity "to give evidence and present arguments…". He did not avail himself of that opportunity. As the reasons of the Tribunal record, he "failed to contact the Tribunal to seek a postponement of the hearing, or to provide any reason why he could not attend at the scheduled time". The Tribunal proceeded to make a decision without taking any further action to enable the now-Appellant to appear. This it was entitled to do pursuant to s 426A: e.g., VNAA v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2004] FCAFC 134 at [15], (2004) 136 FCR 407 at 414 per Sundberg and Hely JJ; SZOJE v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 1405 per Greenwood J; SZOHX v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] FCA 139 per Lander J; SZTLI v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1181 at [16] per Jacobson J; SZSTS v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 1031 at [9] per Gleeson J.
18 Section 425(1) does not impose any obligation on the Tribunal to ensure that an applicant makes the best of the invitation to attend a hearing. Section 425(1) is not expressed in as emphatic terms as s 39 of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth), which provides that that Tribunal "shall ensure that every party to a proceeding … is given a reasonable opportunity to present his or her case…". Even a section so expressed, it has been held, does not require the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to ensure that a party takes the "best advantage" of that opportunity: Secretary, Department of Family and Community Services v Verney [2000] FCA 570 at [45], (2000) 60 ALD 737 at 748 per Cooper J. In Sullivan v Department of Transport (1978) 1 ALD 383 at 403 Deane J (with whom Fisher J agreed) observed that "neither the Act nor the common law imposes upon the Tribunal the impossible task of ensuring that a party takes the best advantage of the opportunity to which he is entitled". Appl'd: De Simone v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] FCAFC 181 at [15], (2009) 51 AAR 161 at 167 per Sundberg, Stone and Edmonds JJ. Similarly, in the present case and with specific reference to s 425(1) of the Migration Act, there is no obligation imposed upon the Tribunal either to ensure that an applicant attends a hearing to which he has been invited or to ensure that a claimant takes the "best advantage" of the hearing if he does attend. Sections 425 and 426A "do not require that the person whose interests are liable to be affected take advantage of that opportunity": SZTDX v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2014] FCA 515 at [16] per Perry J.
19 Nor is any error exposed in the Tribunal exercising the discretion conferred by s 426A(1) to proceed in the absence of the now-Appellant.
20 Subject to any statutory indication to the contrary, a statutory discretion must be exercised in a "legal and regular" manner, and not in a manner which is "arbitrary, vague and fanciful": cf. Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Li [2013] HCA 18 at [63] to [66], (2013) 249 CLR 332 at 362 to 363 per Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ. The discretion is to be exercised "reasonably". In that case, at issue was the refusal of the Migration Review Tribunal to adjourn a hearing to afford the applicant an opportunity to obtain a further skills assessment. In concluding that the Tribunal's decision to refuse an adjournment was unreasonable, their Honours reasoned as follows:
[82] It cannot be suggested that the Tribunal is under an obligation to afford every opportunity to an applicant for review to present his or her best possible case and to improve upon the evidence. Of course it may decide, in an appropriate case, that "enough is enough", but it is not apparent how that conclusion was reached in the present case, having regard to the facts and to the statutory purpose to which the discretion to adjourn is directed.
[83] The purpose of s 360(1) has already been referred to. It is to provide an applicant for review the opportunity to present evidence and arguments "relating to the issues arising in relation to the decision under review". The question which remained in issue when the Tribunal made its decision was the satisfaction of a visa criterion by a complying skills assessment. Although the Tribunal could not be expected to assume that the second skills assessment, when reviewed, would favour Ms Li, it did not suggest that there was no prospect of the second skills assessment being obtained, or that the outcome could not be known, in the near future. In these circumstances it is not apparent why the Tribunal decided, abruptly, to conclude the review.
The discretions conferred by ss 426A(1) and 427(1)(b) are to be exercised in a like manner. The power conferred by s 426A "must be exercised reasonably and cannot be exercised capriciously": SZOZO v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2011] FCA 944 at [22] per Reeves J. The fact is that the Appellant, as submitted on behalf of the Respondent Minister, has simply "not engaged" at any stage with the review process.
21 Without being exhaustive, an exercise of the discretion conferred by s 426A(1) to proceed to make a decision on the review and not to re-schedule a hearing, and the discretion conferred pursuant to s 427(1)(b) not to adjourn a hearing, should take into account:
the previous opportunities (if any) extended to an applicant to appear and give evidence and present argument;
any reasons advanced as to why a hearing should be re-scheduled, together with any evidence adduced in support of those reasons;
the purpose sought to be achieved by an applicant in seeking a re-scheduled hearing, including the nature of any further evidence which may be sought and any prior opportunity to obtain such evidence;
the extent to which any legal or factual issues to be resolved have previously been identified and raised for the consideration of an applicant; and
whether any application to adjourn is opposed.
Also to be taken into account is:
the public interest in ensuring that all applications are resolved in a manner that is "fair, just, economical, informal and quick…" (Migration Act, s 420(1)) and in a manner according to law.
The facts and circumstances of each individual case must always, however, remain of central relevance to a determination by the Tribunal as to how it should proceed.
22 The Tribunal in the present proceeding did not act unreasonably in the exercise of the discretion conferred by s 426A(1) not to again re-schedule the hearing. The now-Appellant had been given an adequate opportunity to present his claim and advanced no real reasons as to why any further indulgence should be extended to him. He failed to attend an interview with the delegate in March 2013 and was on full notice from the terms of the delegate's Decision Record that a series of questions of central relevance to the veracity of his claims remained unaddressed. They remained unaddressed even after he was given an opportunity to appear before the Tribunal. The Tribunal had also itself indicated to him on 6 December 2013, and prior to the postponed hearing to be held on 28 January 2014, that it was "unable to make a favourable decision" on the information presently available to it. The course to be pursued by the now-Appellant was thereafter a matter for him to decide.
23 The second Ground of Appeal should be rejected.