The Federal Circuit Court decision
11 The appellant was represented by solicitors and counsel in the Federal Circuit Court. He raised four grounds of review.
12 The first was that the Tribunal failed to consider an integer of his claim that he remained a target for the Sri Lankan authorities by reason of imputed support for the LTTE in light of his detention in India. The primary judge recorded the submission in support of that ground as being that the Tribunal did not consider or make any finding on whether the appellant remained a target for the Sri Lankan authorities by reason of imputed political opinion of support for the LTTE, as enlivened through a prolonged period of detention in India for many years on charges of supporting the LTTE.
13 His Honour held that since the Tribunal found that the appellant had not, in fact, been charged in India for supporting the LTTE, but had only been detained due to lack of documentation, the factual basis for that asserted integer of the appellant's claim fell away. In any event, his Honour quoted passages from the Tribunal's decision that acknowledged the claim that his fear of imputed links with the LTTE arose, in part, from his record of arrest and imprisonment in India. Having found that the arrest was not on charges of support for the LTTE, the Tribunal made findings of greater generality to the effect that in the absence of substantive links to the LTTE, the appellant would not be of any interest to the Sri Lankan authorities if he were to return. Therefore ground 1 was not made out.
14 Ground 2 asserted jurisdictional error by the Tribunal in finding that there was no evidence that the appellant had been involved in facilitating or organising people smuggling. That involvement would, it was said, mean that the appellant would face persecution on return to Sri Lanka. The appellant claimed that he had said in his entry interview that everyone on the people smuggler's boat to Australia 'took turns to drive the boat', and had also claimed that he had said in his entry interview that he stayed with a people smuggler for 12 months in Sri Lanka before his departure from there to Australia.
15 The primary judge found that in various submissions made by the migration agent who represented the appellant before the Tribunal there was no claim that the appellant was or ought to be considered a people smuggler. When it was put to the appellant that failed asylum seekers of Tamil ethnicity would not be treated any differently to others on return to Sri Lanka, he did not raise any claim that he would be treated differently because he was a people smuggler. His Honour held that the evidence on which the appellant relied before him was not sufficient to put the Tribunal on notice of any such claim. It did not follow from merely having driven the boat along with everyone else on it, and having stayed with a people smuggler, that the appellant would be imputed with involvement in people smuggling. Ground 2 was not made out.
16 To that conclusion could be added the point that the claim of having lived with the people smuggler in 2012 in Sri Lanka was only consistent with the first account given by the appellant, that he left Sri Lanka for Australia in that year, which the Tribunal found to be false. The appellant could not have lived with a people smuggler in Sri Lanka in 2012 if he was in fact in a prison camp in India in that year before departing for Australia. But his Honour did not advert to that additional difficulty with ground 2.
17 The third ground of review claimed that the Tribunal had denied procedural fairness to the appellant by failing to put to him an inconsistency in his evidence, on which it relied. The inconsistency was identified in the Tribunal's reasons as being that, on the one hand, he claimed that in 2011 the authorities came to his house and took his mother away, and this happened intermittently but only in 2011, and on the other hand the navy has harassed his mother about his whereabouts from 2007 to date. The Tribunal did not accept the claims as plausible.
18 The primary judge referred to the terms of s 424A of the Act which, subject to certain exceptions, requires the Tribunal to put to an applicant for comment clear particulars of any information that it considers would be the reason, or part of the reason, for affirming the decision under review. His Honour noted the exception to that requirement found at s 424A(3)(b), namely that it does not apply to information where the applicant gave it to the Tribunal for the purposes of the application for review.
19 His Honour found that the conflict between the two claims was readily apparent to the appellant and that the adverse conclusion the Tribunal reached was obviously open on the material before the Tribunal that was known to the appellant. His Honour thus held that there was no denial of procedural fairness in the Tribunal omitting to put the inconsistency to the appellant. His Honour relied on Kaur v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCA 1 at [57], where Robertson J encapsulated the relevant principles as being that a decision-maker must identify for the person affected any critical issue that is not apparent from the nature of the decision or the terms of the statutory power, and must also advise of any adverse conclusion that would not obviously be open on the known material, but is not otherwise required to expose his or her thought processes or provisional views. The primary judge also held that, in any event, the appellant had given to the Tribunal for the purposes of its review all the information which the Tribunal identified as inconsistent, so it was covered by the exception to s 424A of the Act that is found in s 424A(3)(b). Ground of review 3 was not made out.
20 The fourth and final ground asserted that the Tribunal had erred by failing to evaluate the appellant's claim of fearing persecution from his experience of arrest and violence and detention in Sri Lanka due to suspected links to the LTTE. This appeared to be based on a contention that it was not enough for the Tribunal to find that he had been found not guilty of transporting goods for the LTTE; it was still possible that he could have a well-founded fear of persecution for imputed links.
21 The primary judge found that the Tribunal had evaluated the claim. While it accepted that the appellant had been subject to adverse treatment in from 2000 to 2002 and from 2006 up to his departure for India in 2007, it found based on country information that the situation after 2009 in Sri Lanka was vastly different. So it did not accept that the appellant would be of any interest to the authorities in Sri Lanka should he return. The Tribunal did not base its finding solely on the evidence that the appellant had been found not guilty of transporting goods for the LTTE. His Honour held that the ground was an invitation for the court to engage in impermissible merits review. Ground 4 was not made out and the application was dismissed.