Decision
43 Section 477(1) and (2) provide:
477 Time limits on applications to the Federal Circuit Court
(1) An application to the Federal Circuit Court for a remedy to be granted in exercise of the court's original jurisdiction under section 476 in relation to a migration decision must be made to the court within 35 days of the date of the migration decision.
(2) The Federal Circuit Court may, by order, extend that 35 day period as the Federal Circuit Court considers appropriate if:
(a) an application for that order has been made in writing to the Federal Circuit Court specifying why the applicant considers that it is necessary in the interests of the administration of justice to make the order; and
(b) the Federal Circuit Court is satisfied that it is necessary in the interests of the administration of justice to make the order.
…
44 Section 476A(3)(a) is in the following terms:
476A Limited jurisdiction of the Federal Court
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(3) Despite section 24 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976, an appeal may not be brought to the Federal Court from:
(a) a judgment of the Federal Circuit Court that makes an order or refuses to make an order under subsection 477(2); or
…
45 Section 477(2) requires an applicant for an extension of time to make his or her application in writing and to specify in that application why the applicant considers that it is necessary in the interests of the administration of justice to make the order (s 477(2)(a)). The section also requires that the Federal Magistrates Court be satisfied that it is necessary in the interests of the administration of justice to make the order for an extension of time before making such an order. The material to which the Court's attention will ordinarily be directed for the purpose of the Court's consideration of whether it is so satisfied will be the material relied upon by the applicant for an extension of time. The Federal Magistrates Court will not be confined to a consideration of the applicant's material alone but that material will nonetheless constitute an important part of the material upon which the Federal Magistrates Court might reach the requisite level of satisfaction.
46 There are no particular criteria specified in s 477 which must be satisfied as part of the concept of "the interests of the administration of justice …". The matters which might be taken into account by the Federal Magistrates Court are at large although they must logically and sensibly relate to the interests of the administration of justice.
47 The courts have developed guidelines as to the factors which might ordinarily be taken into account in considering the interests of the administration of justice in this context. Commonly, those factors include:
(a) Whether there has been a reasonable and adequate explanation for the applicant's delay;
(b) Whether there is any prejudice to the Minister;
(c) Whether the applicant's substantive case for judicial review is sufficiently arguable to justify the extension of time.
48 The factors to which I have referred at [47] above, although commonly deployed by judges when considering extensions of time of the character under consideration in the present case, are not prescribed under the relevant statutory provision (s 477(2)(b) of the Act) and cannot be said to exhaust all potentially relevant factors in every case. They are simply sensible guidelines developed by the courts which have utility in most cases.
49 The essence of the applicant's complaint in the present case is that the Federal Magistrate did not weigh all relevant factors in the balance and applied the wrong test in any event.
50 In Craig, at 176-178, the High Court said:
Jurisdictional error
In considering what constitutes "jurisdictional error", it is necessary to distinguish between, on the one hand, the inferior courts which are amenable to certiorari and, on the other, those other tribunals exercising governmental powers which are also amenable to the writ. Putting to one side some anomalous exceptions, the inferior courts of this country are constituted by persons with either formal legal qualifications or practical legal training. They exercise jurisdiction as part of a hierarchical legal system entrusted with the administration of justice under the Commonwealth and State Constitutions. In contrast, the tribunals other than courts which are amenable to certiorari are commonly constituted, wholly or partly, by persons without formal legal qualifications or legal training. While normally subject to administrative review procedures and prima facie bound to observe the requirements of procedural fairness, they are not part of the ordinary hierarchical judicial structure. In what follows, the anomalous courts or tribunals which fall outside the above broad descriptions can be ignored. Since the District Court of South Australia is undoubtedly a court, the primary focus of discussion will be upon what constitutes jurisdictional error on the part of an inferior court.
An inferior court falls into jurisdictional error if it mistakenly asserts or denies the existence of jurisdiction or if it misapprehends or disregards the nature or limits of its functions or powers in a case where it correctly recognises that jurisdiction does exist. Such jurisdictional error can infect either a positive act or a refusal or failure to act. Since certiorari goes only to quash a decision or order, an inferior court will fall into jurisdictional error for the purposes of the writ where it makes an order or decision (including an order or decision to the effect that it lacks, or refuses to exercise, jurisdiction) which is based upon a mistaken assumption or denial of jurisdiction or a misconception or disregard of the nature or limits of jurisdiction.
Jurisdictional error is at its most obvious where the inferior court purports to act wholly or partly outside the general area of its jurisdiction in the sense of entertaining a matter or making a decision or order of a kind which wholly or partly lies outside the theoretical limits of its functions and powers. An inferior court would, for example, act wholly outside the general area of its jurisdiction in that sense if, having jurisdiction strictly limited to civil matters, it purported to hear and determine a criminal charge. Such a court would act partly outside the general area of its jurisdiction if, in a matter coming within the categories of civil cases which it had authority to hear and determine, it purported to make an order of a kind which it lacked power to make, such as an order for specific performance of a contract when its remedial powers were strictly limited to awarding damages for breach. Less obviously, an inferior court can, while acting wholly within the general area of its jurisdiction, fall into jurisdictional error by doing something which it lacks authority to do. If, for example, it is an essential condition of the existence of jurisdiction with respect to a particular matter that a certain event or requirement has in fact occurred or been satisfied, as distinct from the inferior court's own conclusion that it has, there will be jurisdictional error if the court or tribunal purports to act in circumstances where that event has not in fact occurred or that requirement has not in fact been satisfied even though the matter is the kind of matter which the court has jurisdiction to entertain. Similarly, jurisdictional error will occur where an inferior court disregards or takes account of some matter in circumstances where the statute or other instrument establishing it and conferring its jurisdiction requires that that particular matter be taken into account or ignored as a pre-condition of the existence of any authority to make an order or decision in the circumstances of the particular case. Again, an inferior court will exceed its authority and fall into jurisdictional error if it misconstrues that statute or other instrument and thereby misconceives the nature of the function which it is performing or the extent of its powers in the circumstances of the particular case. In the last-mentioned category of case, the line between jurisdictional error and mere error in the exercise of jurisdiction may be particularly difficult to discern (See. eg, R v Dunphy; Ex parte Maynes (1978) 139 CLR 482: R v Gray; Ex parte Marsh (1985) 157 CLR 351 at371; Public Service Association (SA) v Federated Clerks Union (1991) 173 CLR 132.).
51 The High Court went on to say (at 179-180):
In contrast, the ordinary jurisdiction of a court of law encompasses authority to decide questions of law, as well as questions of fact, involved in matters which it has jurisdiction to determine. The identification of relevant issues, the formulation of relevant questions and the determination of what is and what is not relevant evidence are all routine steps in the discharge of that ordinary jurisdiction. Demonstrable mistake in the identification of such issues or the formulation of such questions will commonly involve error of law which may, if an appeal is available and is pursued, be corrected by an appellate court and, depending on the circumstances, found an order setting aside the order or decision of the inferior court. Such a mistake on the part of an inferior court entrusted with authority to identify, formulate and determine such issues and questions will not, however, ordinarily constitute jurisdictional error. Similarly, a failure by an inferior court to take into account some matter which it was, as a matter of law, required to take into account in determining a question within jurisdiction or reliance by such a court upon some irrelevant matter upon which it was, as a matter of law, not entitled to rely in determining such a question will not ordinarily involve jurisdictional error.
52 In my judgment, it was within the power which the Federal Magistrate was exercising in the present case for him to choose which factors he regarded as relevant to the exercise of his discretion and thus to select those factors which he intended to take into account when determining whether it was necessary in the interests of the administration of justice to grant an extension of time to the applicant. The Federal Magistrate did so in conventional terms. In particular, he expressed the third factor which he intended to take into account as "… whether, if time were to be extended, the substantive application would have reasonable prospects of success" (at [23] of his Honour's Reasons). This is not different, in substance, from other expressions used to state the test such as "reasonably arguable" or "arguable". In addressing that factor, his Honour gave close attention to the merits of the applicant's foreshadowed grounds of review. He did so, in my view, because he was mindful of the fact that the critical question in the present case was whether the grounds of review had sufficient substance to justify an extension of time. It was for this reason that his Honour paid close attention to those grounds of review. Having done so, the substance of his Honour's conclusion was that none of the three grounds of review relied upon had any merit whatsoever. All that his Honour did was to express, in rather firm language, his ultimate conclusion that the merits of the applicant's grounds of review were so weak as not to justify any extension of time.
53 For these reasons, I do not think that his Honour fell into the error attributed to him by the applicant. Furthermore, even if it could be said that his Honour did fall into the error attributed to him, I do not think that that error was a jurisdictional error. His Honour did not misconceive his task nor the extent of his powers. His Honour addressed the relevant statutory task by considering a number of relevant factors. They were of his choosing and were relevant considerations. His Honour committed no error in taking the approach which he did.
54 It will be apparent from what I have said that I think that the Minister's submissions in respect of ground 1 are correct and I accept them.
55 I therefore reject ground 1.