Inquisitorial Adjudication: The Duty to Enquire in Merits Review Tribunals
Date
2010
Authors
Dunlea Smyth, Mark
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Melbourne University Law Review Association
Abstract
This article examines the duty to inquire in Australian merits review tribunals. Following the High Court's recent decision in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZIAI, there has been some uncertainty surrounding the duty's status in a number of Federal Court and Federal Magistrates Court decisions. This article essays a conflicted conceptual basis for the duty to inquire derived from five (competing) aspects of merits review: the institutional, the procedural, the orientational, the substantive and the managerial. These five aspects of merits review underlie the development of the duty to inquire case law. Through an analysis of 25 years of this case law, a set of core principles to guide the confined circumstances in which a duty to inquire should arise is identified. These core principles consist of two threshold requirements and a number of further relevant circumstances concerning statutory structure, the circumstances of the particular hearing and the applicant's situation. The implications of this limited duty to inquire for the system of administrative review are then considered.
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Melbourne University Law Review
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Journal article
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2037-12-31