SZUAR v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
[2016] FCA 742
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2016-05-18
Before
Bromwich J
Catchwords
- Number of paragraphs: 38
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
The application in this Court 28 I have already outlined the application made before this Court and the legal principles attaching to the related applications for an extension of time and for leave to appeal. I have also outlined the terms of the draft notice of appeal. 29 The Minister made submissions in support of the dismissal of both applications. The Minister submitted that the power being exercised by the primary judge in dismissing the set aside application was discretionary, which is undoubtedly correct. The Minister submits that to succeed in challenging the exercise of discretion by the primary judge to refuse reinstatement, the applicant would need to show that his Honour made an error of the kind identified in House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 505; that is, the applicant needed to show that the exercise of discretion had miscarried because the primary judge acted upon a wrong principle, was guided by extraneous or irrelevant matters, ignored relevant matters or made a mistake of fact. Alternatively, a failure to exercise properly a discretion may be inferred where the discretionary judgment is unreasonably or plainly unjust, which can apply when there is no error apparent on the face of the reasons given. 30 The Minister submits that the primary judge correctly identified the principles which govern the exercise of power under r 16.05(2) of the FCC Rules, citing the decision in MZYEZ v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2010] FCA 530 at [7]. The Minister points out that the primary judge did not accept the explanations offered by the applicant for his failure to appear on 20 October 2015. That was a matter within the prerogative of the primary judge, and I can see no error on the part of his Honour. 31 As the Minister points out, in the second proposed ground of appeal the applicant asserts that he did not attend due to human error, having forgotten the date and time of the hearing. However, this is not the explanation that was offered to the primary judge on 28 January 2016. In his evidence at that hearing, the applicant claimed not to have been aware of the scheduled hearing date and to have been sick on the hearing date. This evidence was rejected by the primary judge. I accept the Minister's submission that those findings were reasonably open to his Honour and can discern no error. 32 The primary judge found that the applicant did not have reasonably arguable prospects of success in the application for review before that Court. In reaching that finding, his Honour had regard to the grounds of the amended application filed by the applicant, which are effectively replicated by the applicant in the second proposed ground of appeal in the draft notice of appeal filed in this Court on 19 February 2016. It is submitted by the Minister that to the extent the applicant asserts in the proposed grounds of appeal that the amended application had prospects of success, his Honour was correct to find that it did not have such prospects for the reasons given by his Honour. I agree. 33 The Minister further contends that the proposed grounds do not point to any error in the primary judge's finding in this regard, nor do they point to any jurisdictional error on the part of the Tribunal such that there would not be any basis, let alone a sufficient basis, to doubt his Honour's conclusions. Again, I agree.