Federal Circuit Court Decision
13 The applicant applied to the Federal Circuit Court for judicial review of the Tribunal's decision by an application filed 23 June 2014. On 11 February 2015, a Federal Court Registrar dismissed the application because the applicants did not appear. On 19 February 2015, the applicants filed an "Application in a Case" seeking to set aside the orders made on 11 February 2015. The application was listed on 18 March 2015, but the matter was adjourned because the primary judge was satisfied that the applicants had failed to serve the application on the Minister.
14 The application to set aside the orders made on 11 February 2015 was heard by the primary judge and judgment was reserved on 25 March 2015. On 6 May 2015, the primary judge dismissed the application.
15 The grounds in the applicants' substantive application to the Federal Circuit Court were as follows (as written):
1. I am not satisfied with the Refugee Review Tribunal Member's decision on the issue of fairness and natural justice. I claim to be a victim of domestic violence and that the Refugee Review Tribunal rejected my claims because the Member displays a lack of Nepalese cultural awareness that is necessary to examine information from the point of view the environment in which it occurred rather than from the point of her arbitrary view.
2. I am not agreed with the decision because the RRT Member did not consider the concern I expressed. I believe the RRT Member was biased because the Member took an irrelevant view and consideration as to how my husband allowed me and my children to leave Singapore as well as my husband's mentality and his abuse towards me. Therefore taking an irrelevant consideration and the mere commentary into account to refuse my claims is a legal error.
3. I argue that I am a victim of the RRT Member's purported decision.
16 First, the primary judge was not satisfied that the applicant provided a satisfactory explanation for her non-attendance before the Registrar on 11 February 2015: SZUOB at [23]. The explanation she provided was that she forgot about the hearing because she was required to take food to her sister and look after her in hospital following the birth of her sister's baby.
17 Second, the primary judge found that the substantive application did not raise an arguable case "such that is in the interests of justice to reinstate it and proceed to a final hearing": SZUOB at [26]. The primary judge considered, and dismissed, each of the grounds in the applicants' substantive application and arguments raised in written submissions.
18 In respect of ground one, the primary judge held that the applicant seemed only to be expressing dissatisfaction with the Tribunal's findings which were adverse to her credit and its rejection of the factual basis of her claim to fear harm. In the primary judge's view, the findings on credibility were reasonably open to the Tribunal to make on what was before it. The primary judge also found that the Tribunal did not base any findings on a misunderstanding of relevant cultural attitudes, but the inconsistency of the applicant's evidence: SZUOB at [41]-[43].
19 In relation to ground two, having considered the relevant authorities, the primary judge found that no bias was revealed. The bias was said to arise because the Tribunal did not accept the applicant's claims of domestic violence perpetrated by her husband but that finding, and the findings that informed it were reasonably open to the Tribunal based on its views of the applicant's own evidence. Further, the husband's claimed conduct could not be said to be an irrelevant consideration when his conduct formed the basis for the applicant's claim to fear harm: SZUOB at [44]-[50].
20 The primary judge does not seem to have separately dealt with ground three. However, it is clear that it does not allege any particular error on the part of the Tribunal, but rather simply expressed disagreement with the overall decision.
21 The primary judge then dealt with six numbered paragraphs in the applicants' written submissions because they appeared, in part, to raise additional complaints about the Tribunal's decision: SZUOB at [51].
22 Paragraph one alleged that the Tribunal "overlooked" the applicant's claims. The primary judge found that if "overlooked" meant failed to "consider" it was clear from a fair reading of the Statement that the Tribunal considered the applicant's claims and rejected them on the basis of findings which were reasonably open to it: SZUOB at [52].
23 Paragraph two asserted bias on the part of the Tribunal and failure to bring an open mind to the proceedings. This was rejected for the same reason as ground two; the primary judge noted that there was nothing in the Tribunal's Statement to support that assertion and the applicant provided no evidence to support it: SZUOB at [53].
24 Paragraph three said that it was unfair that the Tribunal had ignored expert evidence given by a psychologist in support of the applicant's claims. Paragraph six alleged that the Tribunal ignored evidence of the applicant's "traumatised mental state". The primary judge gave detailed consideration to this claim and held that the Tribunal had not ignored the report. Although the substance of the report was not referred to in the Tribunal's reasons, it was referred to by date of the letter under which the report was received in a list of documents considered by the Tribunal set out in the Statement. The primary judge noted that the applicant was represented by a registered migration agent before the delegate and the Tribunal, but that agent did not make clear the purpose for submitting the report. The primary judge found that the report only recounted the applicant's account of events and "could not be said to be independently corroborative of the applicant's claims as to past events and to fear harm because of them", nor did it say anything about the applicant's capacity to participate at the hearing. The primary judge accepted that on the evidence, the Tribunal did not ignore the report and it was open to him to find that it had not been ignored or overlooked: SZUOB at [54]-[64].
25 Paragraph four complained about the Tribunal's finding that the applicant's claims were unsupported by country information. The primary judge held that the Tribunal explained why the country information concerning witchcraft in Nepal was not of relevance, and that country information submitted by the applicant's representatives was of no assistance to the applicant: SZUOB at [65]-[66].
26 The primary judge considered that paragraph five appeared to assert a failure by the Tribunal to put to the applicant information the Tribunal considered adverse to her case but she could not identify the information to which she referred. The primary judge concluded that the Tribunal's adverse view of her credibility was not information for the purposes of s 424A of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), relying on SZBYR v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2007) 235 ALR 609; [2007] HCA 26. Further, country information falls within the exception in s 424A(3)(a) and in relation to information in the applicant's application for a visitor's visa, it is clear from [19] of the Statement that the Tribunal discussed the information with the applicant and gave her an opportunity to comment on it: SZUOB at [67]-[70].