Ground 2: errors in addressing the merits of the proposed review application
48 The applicant's submissions in support of ground 2 of his application appeared to misconceive the nature of the Court's jurisdiction in this proceeding. For the most part, the submissions appeared to be directed towards establishing that the Tribunal made jurisdictional errors in determining his review application. To the extent that the submissions addressed the judgment of the Circuit Court judge, it was simply asserted that his Honour had erred in finding, contrary to the applicant's submissions, that the Tribunal had not made the jurisdictional errors particularised in his proposed judicial review application. In that regard, the applicant's submissions essentially proceeded as if this was simply an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court dismissing his review application.
49 There are a number of difficulties with that approach.
50 First, this is not an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court. As already indicated, it is an application for relief pursuant to s 39B of the Judiciary Act. To obtain that relief, it is necessary for the applicant to demonstrate that the Circuit Court acted beyond its jurisdiction, or failed to exercise its jurisdiction, in considering whether to extend time under subs 477(2) of the Act.
51 Second, the Circuit Court judge did not, and did not purport to, conclusively determine whether the Tribunal had in fact made any jurisdictional error or errors in determining the applicant's review case. Rather, in considering whether it was in the interests of the administration of justice to grant the applicant an extension of time, the Circuit Court judge considered whether the applicant's proposed grounds of review had any apparent merit. His Honour did not finally determine that the grounds had no merit. Rather, he found that they had "little, if any, merit".
52 Third, given the nature of this proceeding, it was incumbent on the applicant to establish that, in considering the applicant's review grounds and in finding that they had little, if any, merit, the Circuit Court judge erred in a jurisdictional sense. The applicant failed to articulate how the errors that he contended were made by the Circuit Court judge in considering his review grounds constituted jurisdictional errors. In some cases the "line between jurisdictional error and mere error in the exercise of jurisdiction may be particularly difficult to discern": Craig v The State of South Australia (1995) 184 CLR 163 at 178. That does not, however, alleviate the requirement to establish jurisdictional error in the case at hand.
53 Even putting those difficulties to one side, the applicant failed to demonstrate that the Circuit Court judge made any errors in his consideration of the merits of the applicant's grounds of review in relation to the Tribunal's decision.
54 The applicant appeared to contend that the Circuit Court judge made four errors.
55 First, the applicant appeared to contend that the Tribunal failed to consider his claim to be a conscientious objector. He contended that his claim to be a conscientious objector arose from the fact that he had claimed that he was not given the opportunity to study because of his military service. The Circuit Court judge found, in effect, that that did not amount to a claim that he was a conscientious objector: "[t]he applicant did not refuse to undertake military service and, if he objected to it, it was not for any reason of his conscience, which is an essential element of being a conscientious objector": Judgment [21]. The applicant contended that that finding was "a nonsense" and that "the simple fact that he [the applicant] would have preferred to study than go to the army" made him a conscientious objector. That highly doubtful proposition, however, was and is unsupported by authority. The Circuit Court judge's finding that the material before the Tribunal did not amount to a claim by the applicant that he was a conscientious objector and that "there was no error in the Tribunal failing, if indeed it did fail, to consider that claim" (Judgment at [22]) was correct.
56 Second, the applicant contended that the Circuit Court judge erred in finding (Judgment at [25]) that there was nothing wrong with the Tribunal's finding that there was no "Convention reason" for the mistreatment he suffered during his military service. The applicant did not, however, explain why that finding was said to be in error, let alone advance any persuasive submissions in that regard. While the applicant did appear to assert that the "Convention reason" was that he was a member of a social group comprising people with mental illness, as the Circuit Court judge found (Judgment at [23]), there was no evidence that the applicant was mistreated because of his mental illness.
57 Third, the applicant contended that the Circuit Court judge erred in finding (Judgment at [30]) that the Tribunal found that there was no real risk that the applicant would be called upon to perform reserve duty and that the logical consequence of that finding was that there was no real risk that the applicant would be harmed as a result of him being a reservist. There is no basis for concluding that his Honour's finding in that regard was erroneous and none was suggested.
58 Fourth, and finally, the applicant contended that the Circuit Court judge erred in finding (Judgment at [31]) that the Tribunal's finding that there was no real risk that the applicant would be called upon to perform reserve duty was illogical. The applicant did not, however, put forward any basis for finding that the Tribunal's findings in that regard were illogical or irrational. Nor is there any basis for such a finding.
59 The applicant was unable to demonstrate that the Circuit Court judge erred in finding that the applicant's proposed grounds of review of the Tribunal's decision had little, if any, merit. In any event, even if any of the applicant's arguments concerning the alleged errors had any merit, the applicant failed to demonstrate that any of the errors were jurisdictional errors, as opposed to errors within jurisdiction. Ground 2 of the applicant's application in this proceeding accordingly fails.