Application in this Court
31 In his affidavit affirmed on 26 March 2018 accompanying his application for an extension of time, the applicant states:
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3. After the hearing of 5 February 2018 I received the Court order that my application was dismissed. But I was waiting for further information from Court in relation to the appeal process.
4. I waited for about 3 weeks and then I contacted a migration agent who told me to contact a migration lawyer. I contacted a lawyer in the city and he asked me for the court decision with reasons. He asked me to contact the Court for that. I contacted the Court and the Court asked me to contact Auscript. I contacted Auscript on 2 March 2018 and they sent me a form to fill and send it to them, which I did. On 14 March Auscript took $2,267.12 from my account. I had spoken to another lawyer around that time and told him about Auscript. He told me that Auscript would give me a transcript of my Court hearing and that it should cost me a couple of hundred dollars. He also told me that I needed to get reasons of decision from the Court. I contacted Auscript and cancelled the order and they refunded my $2,267.12. I then asked Auscript for an estimate of their costs, which on 19 March they told me would be $179.29. I then asked them for the transcript, which I received on 21 March for the cost of $173.50. I also contacted the Court for reasons for the decision, but the Court again sent me the order of 5 February 2018 on 22 March 2018, but not reasons of the decision. I contacted both lawyers again and they said that they could not help me and told me that it could cost me thousands of dollars for the appeal. I could not afford that.
5. On 21 March I got a phone call from Immigration department regarding my visa. They asked me to come to their office. I went there on the same say and they gave me a bridging visa and asked me to leave Australia. I cannot leave Australia immediately as my wife is in prison and I am helping her mother look after our daughter. I am seeking that my partner visa be granted onshore on compassionate and compelling grounds.
6. I request that I be given permission to file my Notice of Appeal out of time. It was only last month that I had my matter in Federal Circuit Court and I am only late for about a month as I did not know the time limits and procedure and could not afford a lawyer.
32 In his draft notice of appeal, the applicant seeks to raise the following grounds of appeal (without alteration):
1. The Federal Circuit Court did not consider that the reason I did not have any legal representation was because I was financially unable to do so and the Court did not give me time to save money and get legal representation.
2. The Federal Circuit Court did not give me time until after my wife was released from prison so that she could personally come to the Court and give her statement and evidence in support of my case.
3. The Federal Circuit Court did not consider my request and ability to provide more documents as may be required by the immigration department in support of my visa application.
4. The Federal Circuit Court did not take into account that I was following the advice of my migration agent whom I trusted that he knew what to do in my case and what documents to provide to the Tribunal. I followed my migration agent's advice and provided all the information and documents he had asked for. He did not tell me what more documents were required. If I had known, I would have provided more documents.
5. The Federal Circuit Court also did not take into account that my migration agent who was acting for me at in the Tribunal case was supposed to let the Tribunal know the reason I could not go the hearing at the Tribunal and arrange another date for hearing at the Tribunal.
6. The Federal Circuit Court did not consider the compassionate ground of sickness of my daughter as being the reason of my absence at the Tribunal hearing.
7. The Federal Circuit Court did not consider the genuineness of my married relationship with my wife.
8. The Federal Circuit Court did not consider the compelling reasons of my wife being in prison and our daughter being looked after me with the help of my wife's mother while my wife is in prison.
9. The Federal Circuit Court and the Tribunal were very strict and did not properly consider my compelling circumstances for making an application in Australia rather than going back to India and making the application there and the time it could have taken before my application was decided and I could come back to be with my wife and daughter. It would have been a long gap in our relationship which would not have been good for anyone.
33 The applicant represented himself. He did not file an outline of written submissions in the proceeding. At the hearing, he made brief oral submissions in relation to his proposed grounds of appeal. In essence, these submissions were directed to the underlying merits of his case rather than identifying any error on the part of either the FCCA or the Tribunal. The applicant placed particular emphasis on his concern for the welfare of his stepdaughter in circumstances where her mother (i.e. the applicant's wife) is in prison. This concern is entirely understandable but, as I pointed out to the applicant, it is a matter which he should take up with the Department. He said that he was particularly concerned not to have to return to India to make a further visa application on account of his wife being in jail, and because of his stepdaughter's welfare and best interests.
34 The Minister, by his outline of written submissions filed on 8 August 2018, contended that the application for an extension of time should be dismissed with costs in a fixed amount.
35 The Minister referred to r 36.03 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) which requires that a notice of appeal be filed and served within 21 days after the date when the orders or judgments were pronounced. He submitted that the applicant's notice of appeal should have been filed by 26 February 2018, however his application for an extension of time was not filed until 26 March 2018.
36 The Minister accepted that there is no prejudice to him if the Court were to grant an extension of time, beyond that of the public interest in the finality of administrative decision-making. He submitted that the 28 delay is not insubstantial and the applicant has not offered a proper explanation for the delay.
37 In this regard, the Minister noted that the applicant acknowledged that he received the Court order dismissing his application and was late filing his appeal notice because he did not know the time limits and procedure and could not afford a lawyer. The Minister contended that this explanation is insufficient, especially as the applicant was present at the hearing before the Circuit Court when the ex tempore judgment was delivered. He submitted that it is the applicant's responsibility to ascertain his review rights and any relevant time limits, citing SZLIH v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2009] FCA 108 at [33].
38 The Minister also contended that the draft grounds do not establish any error of law in the Circuit Court, nor any jurisdictional error in the Tribunal's decision.
39 In relation to draft grounds 1 to 3, the Minister contended at [29] and [30] of his written submissions:
29 Ground one contends that the primary judge 'did not consider that the reason I did not have any legal representation was because I was financially unable to do so and the Court did not give me time to save money to get legal representation'. The primary judge considered the applicant's request for an adjournment on the basis that he wished to provide evidence from the sponsor, which it refused: BD 17 at [16]-[17] (addressed at [31] below). However, there is no evidence that the applicant requested an adjournment on the basis that he wished to obtain legal representation. No error is made out.
30 Grounds two and three challenge the primary judge's refusal to adjourn the hearing so the sponsor could provide evidence to the FCC. Ground two contends that the FCC 'did not give me time until after my wife was released from prison so that she could personally come to the Court and give her statement and evidence in support of my case'. Ground three contends that the FCC 'did not consider my request and ability to provide more documents as may be required by the immigration department in support of my visa application'.
40 The Minister submitted that these grounds confuse the Court's role in judicial review and invite the Court to engage in impermissible merits review. The primary judge stated that it was not necessary for the wife to attend the Circuit Court hearing, or give evidence. Despite orders allowing the applicant to provide documents, no evidence was filed. The Minister submitted that the Circuit Court's refusal to adjourn the proceeding was not unreasonable in the circumstances and no error is made out in that regard.
41 As to the applicant's draft grounds 4 to 6, the Minister contended at [32] and [33] of his submissions:
32 Ground four contends that any deficiencies in the documents the applicant provided to the Tribunal was his migration agent's fault, as he relied on his agent's advice as to what documents to provide. Ground five contends that the applicant's migration agent was supposed to seek an adjournment of the Tribunal hearing. The applicant alleges the FCC did not take these matters into account. There is no evidence that the applicant made any allegations against his migration agent to the Tribunal or the FCC. Accordingly, there is no error in the primary judge's decision not addressing this. Insofar as the applicant is seeking to raise new allegations on appeal, the first respondent submits that these allegations are entirely unsubstantiated and leave to bring these new grounds on appeal should be refused.
33 Ground six contends the primary judge did not consider the applicant's explanation that he did not attend the Tribunal hearing because his daughter was sick. This was clearly considered by the primary judge: BD 19 at [20]. However, the primary judge found the applicant did not send any note or message to the Tribunal either before or after the hearing advising them he was unable to attend for these reasons: BD 19 at [20]. Given the applicant had not sought an adjournment of the Tribunal hearing, HH found the Tribunal did not fail to consider an adjournment request or afford the applicant procedural fairness: BD 19 at [21]. This ground simply expresses the applicant's dissatisfaction with the Court's reasons and discloses no legal error in the primary judge's decision.
42 In respect of the applicant's remaining draft grounds, the Minister submitted at [34] as follows:
34 Grounds seven, eight and nine contend the primary judge did not consider the genuineness of the applicant's and sponsor's relationship or the compelling reasons for not applying the Schedule 3 criteria. In particular, the applicant claims the sponsor is in prison and he and the sponsor's mother look after their daughter. Again, this confuses the Court's role in judicial review proceedings. This evidence was not before the Tribunal and the applicant invites the Court to undertake impermissible merits review. No error in the primary judge's decision is made out. Insofar as these grounds challenge the Tribunal's decision, the first respondent submits the Tribunal correctly considered the evidence that was before it at the time of its decision as to whether there were compelling reasons for not applying the Schedule 3 criteria and its findings were open to it on the available evidence (BD 4 at [22]-[32]) … No jurisdictional error in the Tribunal's decision is made out.