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HCAL 1654/2018
[2020] HKCFI 2914
IN THE HIGH COURT OF THE
HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION
COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
CONSTITUTIONAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE LAW LIST
NO 1654 OF 2018
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BETWEEN
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BARROW ABASS |
Applicant |
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and
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TORTURE CLAIMS APPEAL BOARD / NON-REFOULEMENT CLAIMS PETITION OFFICE |
Putative Respondent |
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and
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DIRECTOR OF IMMIGRATION |
Putative Interested Party |
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Before: Hon Campbell-Moffat J in Chambers
Date of Hearing: 13 November 2020
Date of Decision: 13 November 2020
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D E C I S I O N
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Introduction
1. This is an application dated 8 September 2020 to appeal my decision of 26 June 2020 refusing leave to apply for judicial review. The applicant had 14 days in which to apply to appeal that decision. He did not do so. He now requires leave to extend time to appeal against that order. The applicant attended the Court with the benefit of an interpreter although he did not need one as his English is excellent.
Procedural Background
2. The applicant is a claimant under Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. He entered Hong Kong legally on 7 May 2014 and thereafter overstayed. He submitted a non-refoulement claim on 13 April 2017 and was interviewed by the Director of Immigration (“the Director”) on 12 May 2017. The Director dismissed his claim under all heads, by Notice of Decision on 29 June 2017. He appealed those Decisions to the Torture Claims Appeal Board (“the TCAB”). The adjudicator of the TCAB, Mr Hayson Tse (“the Adjudicator”), heard him on 22 March 2018. The Adjudicator refused his appeal on 30 July 2018.
3. The applicant filed a notice of application on a Form 86 seeking leave to apply for judicial review on 16 August 2018 and did not request an oral hearing. The matter was therefore considered on the papers. His application for leave to apply for judicial review was refused on 26 June 2020. He had 14 days from that date to appeal that decision which would have expired on 10 July 2020. By way of summons dated 8 September 2020, he seeks leave to appeal out of time.
4. An applicant does not require leave to appeal against a CFI judge’s refusal to grant leave to apply for judicial review (Order 59, rule 21(1)(g)). The applicant may appeal as of right. However, an applicant who wishes to appeal against a CFI judge’s refusal to grant leave to apply for judicial review, which is an interlocutory order, has to observe the time limits for appeal under Order 53, rule 3(4) the Rules of the High Court which allows 14 days. Where the applicant is out of time to appeal against a judge’s refusal to grant leave to apply for judicial review, an extension of time may be granted by a judge of the Court of First Instance under Order 59, rule 2B(6). The Court is required to consider (1) the length of the delay; (2) the reasons for the delay; (3) the prospect of success in the intended appeal; and (4) the prejudice to the respondent if an extension of time were granted[1].
5. In order to obtain that leave, an application must be made promptly and it must be supported by an affirmation or affidavit deposing to any facts relied upon by the applicant and giving a full account of and explanation for the whole of the delay since time expired.
6. Whilst the granting of an extension of time is entirely within the discretion of the court, the applicant is required to explain the reasons for his delay as this forms part of the consideration of whether there is good reason to allow an extension of time. The applicant accepted he was late and gave no reason within his Affidavit as to why that was the case other than to say he did not receive the Form CALL-1. The Court file suggests that it was properly served upon the address given at that time, which is the same address the applicant uses today. The applicant maintains that he only learnt of the refusal of leave when an officer from the Immigration Department contacted him to deal with his return to his home country. It is the duty of a litigant to give the Court an address to which correspondence or notice can come to his attention in a timely manner[2]. The consequences of any delay arising from failing to do so will fall upon the litigant.[3]
7. Even if the Court does accept that the explanation given for the delay is a reasonable one, the Court is required to examine whether there is any merit in the applicant’s appeal[4]. Whether there is any such merit will depend upon well-established legal principles[5] including the fact that the Court in judicial review is not to provide a further avenue of appeal on the merits of the underlying claim. The applicant had no submissions to make in this regard. The question for the Court is whether any submissions truly seek to review the exercise of a judicial function and in so doing indicate a reasonable prospect of success in the intended appeal[6].
8. As the role of the Court in judicial review is not to provide a further avenue of appeal from the Decisions of the Director and the Adjudicator, it follows that an appeal from this Court should not be founded upon any attempt to appeal those same decisions. It is an appeal from the decision of this Court and the applicant should look to draft grounds of appeal on that basis. This was explained in some detail to the applicant when he appeared.
Conclusion
9. The applicant has now been in Hong Kong since 2014. He has been interacting with various government agencies since that date. The explanation he has offered to this Court, as to why he did not receive the order is not acceptable. He is well-educated and has good English. There is no obvious reason why he has been prejudiced from understanding the judicial system operating in Hong Kong which is almost identical to that operating in Gambia.
10. In any event, I have considered his underlying application. It has no merit as explained in the initial refusal of leave. There were no grounds of review and none could be ascertained from the papers. There was no complaint before the Court as to the decision to refuse leave. The applicant merely wishes the Court of Appeal to consider his situation afresh. Having considered the length of delay, reason for the delay and underlying merits of his application, it would not be in the interest of justice to grant an extension of time in all the circumstances of this case
11. The applicant’s summons dated 8 September 2020 be dismissed.
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(A P Campbell-Moffat) |
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Judge of the Court of First Instance |
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High Court |
The applicant appeared in person.
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