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HCAL 580/2018
[2020] HKCFI 512
IN THE HIGH COURT OF THE
HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION
COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
CONSTITUTIONAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE LAW LIST
NO 580 OF 2018
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| Before: |
Deputy High Court Judge Bruno Chan in Chambers |
| Date of Hearing: |
17 January 2020 |
| Date of Decision: |
29 June 2020 |
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D E C I S I O N
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1. On 9 December 2019 I refused to extend time to the Applicant’s late application for leave to apply for judicial review of the decision of the Torture Claims Appeal Board (“the Board”) in dismissing his appeal regarding his non-refoulement claim upon finding that there was no good reason for his more than 6 months delay with his application, that he had failed to put forward any reasonably arguable ground for his intended challenge, that there was no error of law or procedural unfairness in his process before the Director of Immigration or the Board or in their decisions, and that there was no reasonable prospect of success in his intended application.
2. The Applicant now by a summons issued on 17 December 2019 seeks leave to appeal against that decision which was interlocutory in nature: see Kwok Cheuk Kin v Leung Chun Ying [2018] HKCA 419, and that section 14AA of the High Court Ordinance, Cap 4 (“the Ordinance”) stipulates that no appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal from an interlocutory judgment or order of the Court of First Instance in any civil cause or matter unless leave to appeal has been granted.
3. In considering whether to grant leave to appeal, section 14AA(4) of the Ordinance provides that leave shall not be granted unless the court hearing the application for leave is satisfied that –
(a) the appeal has a reasonable prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other reason in the interest of justice why the appeal should be heard.
4. The threshold test for reasonable prospect of success was given by Hon Le Pichon JA in SMSE v KL [2009] 4 HKLRD 125 at [17]:
“The section requires that the court be satisfied that the appeal has a reasonable prospect of success or there is some other reason in the interests of justice why the appeal should be heard before granting leave. Reasonable prospects of success involves the notion that the prospects of succeeding must be ‘reasonable’ and therefore more than ‘fanciful’ without having to be ‘probable’.”
5. In the present case, the Applicant did not in his summons or affirmation provide any draft or proposed ground of appeal, or show any particulars of any error in the decision, or why it may be argued that the decision was unfair or unreasonable, and at the hearing he conceded that he could not find any error or mistake in the decision, but repeated his claim that his life would be in danger in his home country, and that he just needed more time to remain in Hong Kong. As such and in the absence of any error in the decision being clearly and properly identified by the Applicant, I do not see any prospect of success in his intended appeal, nor do I find any other reason in the interest of justice why the appeal should be heard.
6. In the premises and for the reasons given, I refuse to grant leave for the Applicant to appeal, and accordingly dismiss his summons.
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(Bruno Chan) |
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Deputy High Court Judge |
The applicant appeared in person
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