the application once made would stand good the whole time for
either, and the grounds of the decision in the Acetylene Co.'s Case 1 would have been wrong. But he cannot have a Jekyll and Hyde application; he must choose, and his choice is to be as to what application he is to make, and this is necessary, as Buckley J. points out in the course of his judgment, in fairness to other applicants. It may be that, apart from prohibitory limitations, he may, after one application is ended by withdrawal or other- wise, make the other; but, if SO, it is an entirely new application,
I am, therefore, clearly of opinion the mandamus as to the June decision should be refused on every ground. Mr. Starke also pressed that, failing all else, it should be refused on the ground of discretion. The delay from 24th June to 14th Sep- tember, he urged, was SO great that the members of the public might have relied upon the refusal to act to their prejudice. I give no opinion on this as unnecessary, though it has considerable weight.
With respect to the August decision, if the June determination was a complete refusal, of course the decision was right. If it was not, that must be SO because the application, divested of its intercolonial character, remained an ordinary application. If so, the amendment asked for was unnecessary, and, indeed, super- fluous-and although a wrong reason would in that case have been given, the decision was right. No request was made to hear the application itself, in its simple form, and consequently neither appeal nor mandamus can be properly allowed.
In my opinion the whole of the present applications were very properly opposed, and should be dismissed with costs.
GAVAN DUFFY J. Counsel in this case agree in thinking that the non-compliance with reg. 31 can have no further effect than to deprive the applicant of the benefit of sec. 121. The point of difference between them is whether the applicant, not having appealed against the decision of the Commissioner intimated in his letter of 12th June, is now without a remedy. I agree with the Chief Justice in thinking that appeal is not the proper remedy
119 R.P.C., 213.