Briot v Riedel
[1988] FCA 856
•8 Apr 1988
IN TEE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA ) 1
| DIVISION | GENERAL | ) | No. G 837 of 1988 |
| 1 | |||
| NEW SOUTE WALES DISTRICT | ) |
Between: GEOFFREY THOMAS BRIOT
LEONARD NOEL BRIOT
JOHN MAITLAND GRAHAMEApplicants
- And : ARTEUR MANNING RIEDEL Magistrate First Respondent
And :
- SHANE FRANCIS CASTLES Second Respondent
CORAM: Einfeld J.
- DATE: 8 April 1988 PLACE: Sydney
EX-TEMPORE JUDGMENT
This is an application by the applicants to extend the time for the
bringing of an application for an order of review of two decisions of a magistrate in respect of committal proceedings brought by the second
respondent as informant against the applicants in the Local Court of New that the delay between the last of those decisions and the bringing of
South Wales. The decisions were given respectively on 5 September 1986 and 15 July 1987. The decisions were that there was a case to answer in the relevant proceedings and that the applicants be committed for trial.
Briefly, and for present purposes only, the parties wish to raise the
following points on the motion to extend time. The applicants argue the application for judicial review is explained and should be accepted
as having been caused by, inter alia, the delay in the transcript of the committal proceedings becoming available. The second respondent argues
that even if the delay was explicable on that basis, the application for judicial review has no substantive merit and wishes to argue the
jurisdiction of the Federal Court to entertain this application.
From that summary of the respective positions, it can be seen that the
application for extension of time would itself be lengthy, because it would involve a jurisdictional argument and a consideration of whether several of the substantive matters contained in the application for
judicial review could raise an arguable case or are of sufficient cogency that they should be entertained.
The committal proceeding, I am informed, went for a considerable period of time and has involved several thousand pages of transcript together with many exhibits. It is therefore my view that I should deal with this matter by entertaining both the application for an extension of time and the substantive application f o r an order of review together.
It seems inevitable that virtually the same matters will have to be
investigated in both matters if the application for extension of time is successful. The application for extension of time is therefore stood
over part heard to a date on which the substantive application can also be argued. The second respondent is anxious that the trial proceed at the earliest possible time, if it is to proceed at all. Notwithstanding the fact
that at the present time the ordinary delays in the New South Wales courts for criminal matters of this kind is likely to delay a trial for some time, the second respondent does not wish that these judicial
review proceedings should delay the fixing of the first available date.
For that reason it seems to me that these two applications should be
brought on for hearing at the earliest possible time. I therefore propose, after adjourning today, to investigate whether and to what
extent any days in the week commencing 2 May 1988 will be available
either to me or to another Judge of the Court. In order to enable me to do that, and to enable the parties to agree on appropriate directions
to be given for the readying of the application for an order of review
by that date, I adjourn both matters to Tuesday next, April 12 1988 at
9.30am for directions. On that day I hope to be able to announce
hearing dates in the week commencing 2 May 1988. I reserve the question of costs of the notice of motion.
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