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High Court of Australia Transcripts |
Last Updated: 25 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Office of the
Registry
Brisbane No B28 of 2022
B e t w e e n -
BARON PHILLIP MATSON
Applicant
and
THE ATTORNEY‑GENERAL OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Respondent
EDELMAN J
GLEESON J
TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS
AT CANBERRA AND BY VIDEO CONNECTION
ON MONDAY, 25 JULY 2022, AT 10.15 AM
Copyright in the High Court of Australia
EDELMAN J: By application filed on 19 July
2022, the applicant seeks leave to reopen proceeding B28 of 2022 and other
interlocutory relief.
For reasons that I now publish Justice Gleeson and I
would dismiss the application. The orders are:
I publish those orders. I direct that the reasons
as published be incorporated into the transcript.
By application filed on 19 July 2022, Mr Matson seeks leave to reopen the decision of the Full Court, given by us on 14 July 2022, refusing leave to appeal from a decision of Gageler J. Mr Matson submits that, contrary to our reasons: (i) he had raised the issue of legal unreasonableness before Gageler J but that issue had not been addressed by his Honour; and (ii) the Minister had not acted on advice that referred to Mr Matson’s Aboriginal heritage in respect of the general discretion exercised under s 22(3)(f) of the Extradition Act 1988 (Cth).
The power to reopen a decision is one that is exercised with caution. It is not sufficient to reopen a decision to establish, still less merely to allege, factual or legal error. Otherwise the power could provide a “backdoor method by which unsuccessful litigants can seek to re‑argue their cases”: Autodesk Inc v Dyason [No 2] [1993] HCA 6; (1993) 176 CLR 300 at 303. The power to reopen should be refused for three reasons.
First, neither matter raised by Mr Matson was a determinative factor in our reasons for decision. As we explained, in order for Mr Matson to obtain leave to appeal it was necessary, in the circumstances of his case, for him to show prospects of establishing error in Gageler J’s conclusion that the two matters to which Mr Matson referred were not mandatory relevant considerations. We concluded that the reasons of Gageler J were plainly correct and that neither matter was a mandatory relevant consideration.
Secondly, and in circumstances in which a copy of the application for constitutional or other writ filed 27 May 2022 now relied upon by Mr Matson could have been, but was not, part of Mr Matson’s evidence before us, we rejected the legal unreasonableness point as lacking in prospects of success whether or not it had been raised before Gageler J. Any misapprehension about whether the point had been raised was irrelevant.
Thirdly, we were under no misapprehension as to the reference to Mr Matson’s Aboriginal heritage in the departmental advice. As we said in our reasons, the departmental advice explained that the department “does not consider that Mr Matson’s ... indigenous heritage warrants the exercise of your discretion to refuse to surrender him to the US”. Although that was said in relation to s 22(3)(e) of the Extradition Act, it was, as we said, part of the advice upon which the Minister acted. That advice included the later observation by the department in relation to s 22(3)(f) that the department “is not aware of any circumstances that should cause you, in the exercise of your general discretion, to determine not to surrender Mr Matson to the US”.
The application to reopen should be dismissed without an oral hearing under r 13.03.1. Consequently, the associated application for interlocutory relief filed on 19 July 2022 must also be dismissed under r 13.03.1.
The orders of the Court
are:
Please adjourn the Court.
AT 10.16 AM THE MATTER WAS CONCLUDED
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCATrans/2022/121.html