Consideration of the applicant's submissions
56 The submissions of the applicant on why the Registrar's decision of 9 July 2024 should be quashed are set out briefly below, along with a consideration of each argument.
57 The applicant submitted that the Documents should have been accepted for filing as the errors identified in the leave to appeal judgment should be able to be remedied by the Court pursuant to ss 22, 23, 28 and 51 of the FC Act and r 39.04 or r 39.05 of the FCR. These sections relate to final determination of matters before the Court (s 22), the power of the Court to make such orders as it thinks appropriate (s 23) and the principle that formal defects should not invalidate proceedings (s 51). Section 28 deals with the form of judgment on appeal and does not appear relevant, and was not the subject of separate submissions.
58 The applicant made extensive submissions on the timeframes in which leave to appeal applications can be made, and set out her reasons for not doing so in time. She submitted that she should not be subject to the time limit of 14 days to seek to set aside the orders by reason of r 39.32(3) of the FCR, as the applicant had drawn the Court's attention to the errors of the leave to appeal judgment within this timeframe by email on 31 May 2024, or alternatively, the Applicant could have applied for an extension under r 1.39 of the FCR. The applicant relied on Kitoko v Registrar of the Federal Court of Australia [2024] FCAFC 14 where the Full Court (Thawley, Cheeseman and Shariff JJ) said at [40]:
… Under subrule 39.32(3), where an order is authenticated under subrule 39.35(1), it is taken to be entered 14 days after that authentication unless the Court directs otherwise. The 14-day period commences on the day after the order is authenticated: r 1.61.
59 The applicant relied on the decision in Kitoko to submit that that case determined that an application under r 39.04 provided "a right to … address matters in [her] leave to appeal". She submitted that the Registrar could not have properly characterised the Documents as being an abuse of process because they sought relief under r 39.04, and it could not be an abuse of process when "there is a rule that says you can do that".
60 In argument, it was raised with the applicant that the Registrar did not rely on the time in which she sought to file the Documents as a reason to reject them. The Full Court's decision in Kitoko does not provide the applicant with a ground for judicial review. Additionally, in Kitoko the issue was that the Court incorrectly assumed that the orders in the appellate jurisdiction had been entered. That is a very different case from the present, where the Registrar reviewed the orders sought and found that on their face, they were an abuse of process, and so refused permission for them to be filed.
61 In support of this contention, the applicant also referred to Autodesk Inc v Dyason (No 2) (1993) 176 CLR 300; [1993] HCA 6 and R v Pettigrew [1997] 1 Qd R 601; [1996] QCA 235; to establish that a matter which has been otherwise determined can be re-opened.
62 Again, this argument is misplaced; there is a clear power in r 39.04 (and r 39.05 after an order has been entered) to vary or set aside a judgment or order; the existence of a power to do something does not exclude the possibility that a reliance on that power is still an abuse of process. Autodesk (at 301-302 per Mason CJ; 308 per Brennan J; 316-317 per Dawson J) dealt with a grant of a rehearing where the applicant has not been heard. It was not a case which deals with an administrative refusal to allow documents to be filed, but rather with the grant of a rehearing after a substantive breach of the right to be heard. Pettigrew is likewise not apposite, given that it deals with sentence appeals.
63 In the context of this argument about the timing of the provision of the Documents, the applicant submitted that the Registrar had failed to provide proper procedural directions as requested by the Applicant in order to re-open leave to appeal, which led to a delay in lodging the application on 4 July 2024. In relation to this ground, it was not clear whether the applicant was relying on ADJR s 5(1)(b) (procedures required by law to be observed), as she also referred to the power of the Court to issue directions (including r 38.03 of the FCR and s 37P of the FC Act). These sections do not require a Registrar to provide guidance to applicants seeking to engage the processes of the Court; the Registrar is not required to provide legal advice (see Thompson v Hird [2023] FCA 1530 at [24] per Downes J). In any event, as noted above, the time when the applicant sought to file her documents was not a matter which was relied on by the Registrar in refusing to accept them.
64 A further ground raised by the Applicant was that the Registrar failed to consider the substance of the application and the errors of the leave to appeal judgment identified by the Applicant. This ground calls into assistance subs 5(1)(c) and (f) of the ADJR Act. Again, it is misconceived; the Registrar did not, and cannot, per Nyoni, make a substantive judgment about the underlying merit of the claims in proposed proceedings when refusing to accept an originating application for filing under FCR 2.26.
65 The Registrar made it clear in his letter that the refusal to accept the Documents for filing was on the basis that the Documents were an abuse of process of the Court, in that they sought to re-open the orders made by Kennett J and Abraham J without a proper basis being shown. As the Registrar correctly determined, the Applicant has not established a basis on which to re-open the leave to appeal judgment of Abraham J in circumstances where the application for leave to appeal Kennett J's decision has already been refused.
66 It was submitted that the Registrar's decision was an improper use of the power conferred by r 2.26 of the FCR and that he used his discretion under r 2.26 frivolously and vexatiously and abused his own process as the Registrar did not send the application to a Judge in breach of s 35A(7)(b) of the FCA. Section 35A states (relevantly):
(1) Subject to subsection (2), the following powers of the Court may, if the Court or a Judge so directs, be exercised by a Registrar:
(a) the power to dispense with the service of any process of the Court;
(b) the power to make orders in relation to substituted service;
(c) the power to make orders in relation to discovery, inspection and production of documents in the possession, power or custody of a party to proceedings in the Court or of any other person;
(d) the power to make orders in relation to interrogatories;
(e) the power, in proceedings in the Court, to make an order adjourning the hearing of the proceedings;
(ea) the power to make orders under section 32AE (about transferring certain criminal proceedings to other courts);
(f) the power to make an order as to costs;
(g) the power to make an order exempting a party to proceedings in the Court from compliance with a provision of the Rules of Court;
(h) a power of the Court prescribed by Rules of Court.
(2) A Registrar shall not exercise the powers referred to in paragraph (1)(f) except in relation to costs of or in connection with an application heard by a Registrar.
…
(7) Where an application for the exercise of a power referred to in subsection (1) is being heard by a Registrar and:
(a) the Registrar considers that it is not appropriate for the application to be determined by a Registrar acting under this section; or
(b) an application is made to the Registrar to arrange for the first-mentioned application to be determined by the Court;
he or she shall not hear, or continue to hear, the application and shall make appropriate arrangements for the application to be heard by the Court.
67 The power under r 2.26 is not one of the powers referred to in s 35A(1) of the FC Act.
68 As the Registrar stated in his letter dated 9 July 2024, "the power to make a decision under r 2.26 of the Rules is an administrative power and not a judicial power that has been delegated to a Registrar pursuant to s 35A(1) of the [FC] Act. Accordingly, section 35A(7) has no operation in respect of [his] exercise of the power under r 2.26." The Registrar's position is correct.
69 The applicant contended that there was a lack of procedural fairness in the Registrar's decision. This submission is based, again, on the Registrar not considering the underlying aspects of the Documents including "fresh evidence" and the Registrar "not really considering what the substance of the application was" and "what's at stake to me". The applicant contended that this was a ground under s 5(2)(f) of the ADJR Act, being an improper exercise of a power which was "an exercise of a discretionary power in accordance with a rule or policy without regard to the merits of the particular case". When asked what the rule or policy was being referred to, the applicant said it was the Registrar "overstep[ing] the mark" and using r 2.26 in "an improper" way.
70 There is no basis to this submission, because, again, the Registrar was not required to consider substantive issues of the Documents as per Nyoni.
71 The applicant made a wider submission that the Documents should be accepted for filing because she considered that it was her best chance of getting the orders she sought. She submitted that the High Court did not accept many special leave applications, particularly interlocutory applications, a position which is undoubtedly correct. However, that barrier to success in the High Court does not mean that a litigant may, instead, seek to revisit dismissed applications in this Court because, as the applicant agreed, she felt she had "a better chance" here. This is not a ground for setting aside the order of the Registrar.