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Australian constitutional law

Australian constitutional law is the area of the law of Australia relating to the interpretation and application of the Constitution of Australia. Legal cases regarding Australian constitutional law are often handled by the High Court of Australia, the highest court in the Australian judicial system. Several major doctrines of Australian constitutional law have developed.

Background edit

Constitutional law in the Commonwealth of Australia consists mostly of that body of doctrine which interprets the Commonwealth Constitution. The Constitution itself is embodied in clause 9 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act, which was passed by the British Parliament in 1900 after its text had been negotiated in Australian Constitutional Conventions in the 1890s and approved by the voters in each of the Australian colonies. The British government did, however, insist on one change to the text, to allow a greater range of appeals to the Privy Council in London.[1] It came into force on 1 January 1901, at which time the Commonwealth of Australia came into being.

The Constitution created a framework of government some of whose main features, and sources of inspiration, were the following:[2][3][4][5][6][7]

  • constitutional monarchy (British and existing colonial models)
  • federalism (United States model)
  • parliamentary, or "responsible", government (British and existing colonial models)
  • distinct textual separation of powers (US model)
  • direct election to both Houses of Parliament (then a novelty)
  • Governor-General as a representative of a monarch (existing colonial models, notably Canada)
  • requirement of a referendum for amendment of the Constitution (Swiss model)
  • only very limited guarantees of personal rights (rejection of the US model)
  • judicial review (US model)

The Constitution and the High Court edit

The process of judicial review – the ability of The High Court of Australia to declare legislation unconstitutional and therefore invalid – has its origin in American experience, where the right of the Supreme Court of the United States to strike down legislation deemed incompatible with the Constitution was first asserted by the Supreme Court itself in the seminal case of Marbury v. Madison in 1803. Although completely foreign to both British and Australian colonial experience, the framers of the Australian Constitution clearly intended that the practice would take hold in Australia, and even expressly adverted to it in the Constitutional text (in section 76). This power of judicial review of legislation for conformity with the Constitution has been exercised almost exclusively by the High Court of Australia, and almost invariably with a full bench of all its members, such as in the Communist Party case.[8] Influence from American jurisprudence has occurred in specific cases.[9][10][11][12]

A brief overview of the other listed features will provide a background for the doctrinal developments examined below.

Constitutional monarchy edit

Australia is a constitutional monarchy.[13] Although the term "Head of State" is not used in the Constitution, it was intended that the Commonwealth (like the colonies) would continue to recognise the British Sovereign. "The Queen" (meaning Queen Victoria, defined to include "Her Majesty's heirs and successors in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom"), was one of the three elements of Parliament, along with the Senate and the House of Representatives (section 1). Today, the King of Australia has replaced the King of the United Kingdom within Australia's parliament, but they happen to be the same person. The Monarch is represented in Australia by an appointed Governor-General. The executive power is vested in the Governor-General "as the Queen's representative" (section 61), as is the command-in-chief of the armed forces (section 68).

The Australian Constitution provides the Governor-General with a number of powers, including; the power to dissolve Parliament (Sections 5, 57), the power to refuse assent to bills presented to her (section 58) and the power to dismiss the government Ministers (section 64).,[14] however, the practical use of such powers is restricted by constitutional convention, which mandate the Governor General to act on ministerial advice, except in exceptional circumstances. Because the conventions are not written in The Constitution, the limits of the Governor General's powers are unclear. Convention does, however, allow The Governor General to exercise some powers without ministerial advice in exceptional circumstances. These powers are known as reserve powers.[15]

The reserve powers allow The Governor General to commission a Prime Minister when no party, or coalition of parties has a majority of seats in The House of Representatives and the power to dismiss a Prime Minister, who has been subject to a vote of no confidence in the House of Representatives.[15]

The reserve powers may also include the power to dismiss a Prime Minister who is engaging in persistent illegal action (Governor Sir Philip Game of New South Wales dismissed Premier Jack Lang on this ground in 1932). However, it remains controversial whether they include the power to dismiss a Prime Minister who, while retaining the confidence of the House of Representatives, is not able to get the annual supply Bill passed by the Senate, as happened during the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975 when the Governor-General acted against the advice of Ministers.[15]

The role of the Monarch is today even more circumscribed and amounts only to appointing (and, in theory, dismissing) a Governor-General on the advice of the Prime Minister, as well as performing (by invitation) certain ceremonial functions when personally present in Australia. See Constitutional history of Australia for further details on the development of the monarch's role in relation to Australia.

The importance of constitutional conventions in this area means that Australia cannot be said, strictly, to operate entirely under a written constitution, but has to some extent a system like the British unwritten constitution. However, it would be a mistake to exaggerate the importance of this aspect of Australia's constitutional arrangements:

Federalism edit

Division of powers edit

The Constitution sets up the Commonwealth of Australia as a federal polity, with enumerated limited specific powers conferred on the Federal Parliament. The State Parliaments are not assigned specific enumerated powers; rather the powers of their predecessor colonial Parliaments are continued except insofar as they are expressly withdrawn or vested exclusively in the Federal Parliament by the Constitution. The framers rejected an alternative model, the Canadian,[16] which has been described as "an allocation of exclusive powers to both levels of government, not concurrent powers."[17]

The bulk of enumerated powers are contained in section 51 and section 52. Section 52 powers are 'exclusive' to the Commonwealth (although some section 51 powers are in practice necessarily exclusive, such as the power with respect to borrowing money on the public credit of the Commonwealth in paragraph (iv), and the power to legislate with respect to matters referred to the Commonwealth by a State in paragraph (xxxvii)). By contrast, the subjects in section 51 can be legislated on by both state and Commonwealth parliaments. However, in the event of inconsistency or an intention by the Commonwealth to cover the field the Commonwealth law prevails (section 109).

Both concurrent (section 51) and exclusive (section 52) powers are stated to be "subject to this Constitution". As a result, the Commonwealth's law-making power is subject to the limitations and guarantees in the Constitution (both express and implied). For example, section 99 forbids the Commonwealth from giving preference to any State or part of a State "by any law or regulation of trade, commerce, or revenue". And as discussed below, an implied guarantee of freedom of political communication has been held to limit the Commonwealth's power to regulate political discourse.

The list of powers assigned to the Federal Parliament is quite similar to that assigned by the United States Constitution to the Congress, but is in some respects broader: for instance, it includes "astronomical and meteorological observations", marriage and divorce, and interstate industrial relations. The interpretation of similar heads of power – for instance the Trade and Commerce Power in Australia and the Commerce Clause in the US – has in some cases been different.

The constitution also provides some opportunities for Federal-State co-operation: any State can "refer" a "matter" to the Commonwealth Parliament, and the Commonwealth Parliament can exercise, "at the request or with the concurrence of the Parliaments of all the States directly concerned", any power which, at the time of Federation, could be exercised only by the British Parliament.

Parliamentary structures edit

Representation in the House of Representatives is based on population and ‘original states’ have equal numbers in the Senate. The two houses are equal in power except for certain restrictions in financial matters. For example, the Senate may not amend a supply Bill, although as the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975 demonstrates, it may defer or refuse to pass such a Bill altogether; Bills to impose taxation or appropriate revenue may not originate in the Senate; and the Senate may not amend a Bill so as to increase taxation.

Again, federalism is evident in the process of constitutional amendment, which requires that the Bill to amend the Constitution be approved by a majority of electors overall and a majority of electors in a majority of States (that is, four out of the six).

Additionally, amendments "altering the limits" of a State or diminishing its proportional representation in Parliament require the approval of electors in that State.

Parliamentary government edit

It was assumed by the framers, in line with British and local colonial tradition, that the executive government would consist of Ministers who were members of Parliament and "responsible", that is, answerable, to it, and that the continued existence of the government would depend on it maintaining the confidence in the House of Representatives.

These arrangements, however, are only hinted at in the text of the Constitution. There is a requirement (section 64) that the "Queen's Ministers of State", who are nominally appointed by the Governor-General, be or swiftly become members of either House of Parliament. The existence of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, and the requirement for them to have the confidence of the House of Representatives, are not mentioned. Nonetheless, these have been fundamental features of Australian constitutional practice from the start.[18] More recently, the principle of responsible government was reinforced by the High Court of Australia which upheld orders for a Minister of the government to table documents in the NSW Legislative Council after he refused to do so.[19]

Separation of powers edit

The Constitution features a distinct separation of powers. Legislative power is dealt with in Chapter I, and is vested in the Federal Parliament (section 1). Executive power is dealt with in Chapter II, and is vested in the Governor-General as the Queen's representative (section 61). The judicature is dealt with in Chapter III, and is vested in the Federal High Court and "in such other federal courts as the Parliament creates, and in such other courts as it invests with federal jurisdiction" (section 71).

However, the Queen is an element of the Parliament as well as being head of the executive; and the Ministers of State who "advise" the Governor-General are actually required to be or become members of Parliament.

While there is no significant separation of the legislative and executive powers (the "political branches"), the High Court has developed an increasingly stringent doctrine of the separation of the judicial power from the other two.[20][21][22]

Direct election to both Houses of Parliament edit

The Constitution required direct election of members to both Houses of Parliament from the beginning (sections 7 and 24). This was a novelty at the time, since the national upper houses with which the framers were best acquainted were chosen by other means: indirect election by the State legislatures (United States Senate before the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913), executive appointment for life (Senate of Canada), or a combination of appointment for life and hereditary succession (British House of Lords).

Referendum for constitutional amendment edit

The text of the Constitution was not presented to the British Parliament for formal enactment until it had been approved by the electors of the colonies.

On the same principle, any amendment to the Constitution requires approval at a referendum, by the process set out in section 128 of the Constitution. A double majority – a majority of electors and of a majority of states – is required.

Constitutional referendums were based on the Swiss practice. However, the Swiss use of the popular initiative in constitutional amendment was not followed, so that constitutional alterations, although they must be approved by the people, can only be initiated by Parliament.

The use of the referendum in initially adopting the Constitution, and its requirement for constitutional amendment, has been cited by justices of the High Court to argue that the Constitution is fundamentally based on popular sovereignty (rather than on the supremacy of the British Parliament, which is its technical legal foundation). This doctrine has achieved greater prominence since the cessation, in 1986, of all authority of that Parliament over Australia: see Constitutional history of Australia for details.

There have been 44 proposals for constitutional amendment put to the people since Federation. Of these, only 8 have passed.

Growth of federal power edit

Probably the most obvious development in Australian constitutional law has been the steady growth in the power of the federal government relative to the states. Several factors could account for this, including:

  • doctrines of constitutional interpretation which favour a broad reading of Commonwealth powers
  • the "fiscal imbalance" between the Commonwealth and the States (see Constitutional basis of taxation in Australia)
  • the development of new areas of competence which did not exist at Federation, and which have fallen to the Commonwealth
  • the growing importance of legislative areas that were always Commonwealth powers (for example, external affairs and trading corporations)
  • constitutional amendment or referral by the States
  • the willingness of Australian governments, including supporters of States' rights, to exercise their powers to the full

Centralising interpretations edit

Reserved State powers doctrine and the Engineers case edit

Prior to 1920 the "reserved State powers" doctrine and "implied inter-governmental immunities" were used to preserve state power. Reserved state powers holds that the Constitution should be read in a restrictive way so as to preserve as much autonomy as possible for the States.[23] Implied intergovernmental immunities holds that Commonwealth and States are immune to each other's laws and cannot mutually regulate each other's governmental apparatus.[24]

In 1920, the Engineer's case (after changes in the composition of the Court) swept away this doctrine.[25] The court now insisted on adhering only to interpreting a statute "expounded according to the intent of the Parliament that made it; and that intention has to be found by an examination of the language used in the statute as a whole".[25] There was to be no reading in of implications by reference to the presumed intentions of the framers.

As a result, the constitution is no longer read in a way which attempts to preserve the power of the states.

Broad interpretation of Commonwealth powers edit

Even before the Engineer's case,[25] a line of judicial reasoning asserted that Commonwealth powers should be interpreted broadly rather than narrowly wherever possible.[26]

After Engineers,[25] this approach was reinforced. For example, Section 109, regarding inconsistency between Commonwealth and State laws, was broadly interpreted. Commonwealth law prevails not only where inconsistent obligations are imposed, but where Commonwealth legislation evinces an intention to "cover the field" by being the whole law on a particular subject.[27] The Commonwealth can "manufacture" inconsistency by expressly stating that its legislation is intended to cover the field.[28] However, an issue that was raised, without being conclusively resolved, in the Workplace Relations Challenge was whether the Commonwealth can "clear the field" by stating an intention that State laws are not to apply even if the Commonwealth does not enact other laws in their place.[29]

The Commonwealth can only legislate with respect to an enumerated head of power, This does not mean that the law must be solely, or even predominantly, directed at that head of power. As long as it can be "fairly characterized" as a law with respect to an enumerated power, it is irrelevant that it could also be categorised as a law regarding some other subject matter.[30]

Likewise, Parliament's motivation in passing the law is irrelevant.[31] An example is environmental legislation. The Constitution does not provide the Commonwealth Parliament with any power to control the environment or its use. Nonetheless, a very broad-ranging environmental protection Act could be passed relying on a combination of powers such as interstate and international trade, corporations, taxation, foreign affairs and so on. The law can be supported by those powers although Parliament intended it to be an 'environmental law'. Particularly in the last two decades, many Acts of very wide-ranging effect have been passed on just these bases, in fields as diverse as environment protection, privacy, and anti-discrimination, fields in which the Commonwealth has no direct power.

Fiscal imbalance edit

At the time of Federation, the colonies' main source of revenue consisted of customs and excise duties (income tax being still a newer notion). Since one of the main reasons for Federation was to create a common market, inevitably authority over these taxes was vested exclusively in the Commonwealth Parliament (section 90). It was acknowledged that this would create a situation where the Commonwealth would raise much more money than it could spend, whereas the States, being still responsible for most areas of law and of social infrastructure, would need to spend much more money than they could raise (the problem now known as "vertical fiscal imbalance"). Although the framers were able to agree on a formula for distribution of the Commonwealth's surplus to the States in the first few years after Federation, they could not agree on a long-term formula. Accordingly, section 96 of the Constitution provides that the Commonwealth Parliament "may grant financial assistance to any State on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit".

One result of this has been that the Commonwealth has been able to make grants to the States on terms so specific as to amount to the virtual takeover of particular fields of competence. For instance, although the Constitution gives the Commonwealth no express power over education, by means of "tied grants" it has in fact become paramount in the field of tertiary education. Although any state has the option to refuse a grant, the consequences of doing so make this unattractive. Similarly, the Commonwealth has become dominant in the field of public hospitals, and a major player in the field of roads and other major infrastructure.

The Commonwealth has also come to monopolise income tax. Once the advantages of income tax were recognised, both the Commonwealth and the States levied income taxes. However, during World War II, the Commonwealth government decided to take over the collection of income taxes and return some proceeds to the States as grants. The Commonwealth passed legislation to levy income tax at a nationwide rate similar to the previous combination of Commonwealth tax and the various state taxes. Separate legislation then granted section 96 monetary grants to states if the State did not levy income taxes. In practice, it would be difficult for States to continue taxing.

This arrangement was twice challenged by the States in the High Court and twice upheld.[31][32] In the Second Uniform Tax case the taxation part of the scheme was held to be valid based on the taxation power, and the grants held to be valid on the basis of the words 'terms and conditions' of section 96.[32]

States are also at the mercy of the High Court's definition of an "excise duty," which states cannot levy. The High Court has long stated the definition in terms such as "an inland tax on a step in production, manufacture, sale or distribution of goods". However, it does not include a mere fee for a licence to carry on a particular business or profession. Accordingly, the States had for a long time levied, with the compliance of the High Court, "business franchise fees" on retailers of products, particularly liquor and tobacco products.

These "franchise fees" were mostly calculated according to the value of the retailer's sales in a specific preceding period, rather than on the value of goods currently being sold. Although these seem similar to excise duties, a series of High Court precedents had effectively "quarantined" such fees from disallowance in the areas of liquor retailing, tobacco retailing, and petrol distribution. In 1997, by a bare majority, the High Court decided that this area of doctrinal quarantine was incoherent with the rest of the law relating to excise duties and removed it. [33] The immediate result was the loss of some $5 billion (Australian) in the annual revenues of the States and Territories.

In 1999, the Commonwealth Parliament passed legislation introducing a new broad-based Federal indirect tax, the Goods and Services Tax; the revenue from this tax was to go entirely to the States and Territories in exchange for abolishing a range of other indirect taxes. By this stage, the financial dependence of the States on the Commonwealth had become almost complete.

New areas of competence edit

The development of various technologies during the twentieth century also added to the power of the centre. Section 51(v) of the Australian Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament power over "postal, telegraphic, telephonic, and other like services". With little controversy, this power now covers radio, television, satellite, cable, and optic fibre technologies.

A greater struggle occurred over Commonwealth legislation in the field of aviation. Commonwealth regulation is based on the interstate and international trade and commerce power. Prima facie, it does not cover intrastate aviation. However, a purely intrastate aviation industry is no longer economically feasible and separate systems of state regulation pose safety concerns.[clarification needed] As a result, the High Court held that all aviation has an interstate character, placing it within Commonwealth legislative power. In 1937 a referendum was submitted to the people giving the Commonwealth power over aviation, and that the referendum was rejected by the people. The rejection of a power by the people has never persuaded the Court that the Commonwealth should not exercise the power.

Another example concerns intellectual property. Although the Constitution gave the Commonwealth Parliament power over "copyrights, patents of inventions and designs, and trade marks", the enormous growth of electronic media content has given this power a much wider scope than could possibly have been envisaged at Federation.

New powers edit

The Commonwealth power has been extended by four constitutional amendments. An amendment in 1910 and an amendment in 1928 allowed the Commonwealth to take over and manage state debts. An amendment passed in 1967 gave the Commonwealth power over Aboriginal affairs, which has had a significant effect particularly in the pastoral and central regions of Australia.

An amendment passed in 1946 gave the Commonwealth power to provide a wide range of social services. This included unemployment and sickness benefits, maternity allowances, child endowment, and medical and dental services. Apart from defence, social services is the largest area of Commonwealth expenditure. Along with the grants power, it is the basis for the Medicare scheme of universal health insurance.

The High Court decided that the corporations power was not broad enough to cover incorporation itself.[34] This decision threatened the validity of Australian companies incorporated under commonwealth law. The states used 'the referral power' to refer the power over incorporation to the Commonwealth Parliament.

The external affairs power edit

The Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament power over "external affairs". Originally this power had little content, because Australia's foreign relations were managed by the United Kingdom. As Australia gained independence and international personality, so did the significance of this power.

Australia's relations with other countries fall directly under the subject of external affairs.[35][36] It includes relations with other British Dominions and further extends to relations with international organisations.[37] The pursuit and advancement of friendliness with foreign governments is another vital aspect under the external affairs power.[38] The High Court has held that the power covers the regulation of conduct that takes place outside Australia, suggesting that mere externality to Australia could enliven the power.[39] In particular, Commonwealth legislation of 1998 that retroactively criminalised war crimes committed during World War II in Europe by Australian citizens was held a valid exercise of the external affairs power.[39]

The power has also been held to extend to the implementation of international treaties, even if the subject matter of the treaty is otherwise not within Commonwealth power. In the case of Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen,[37] the High Court found that the Commonwealth had the power to implement the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination in the form of the Racial Discrimination Act. In the case of Tasmanian Dams Case,[36] the High Court has upheld Commonwealth legislation forbidding the Tasmanian government from proceeding with a dam that would have submerged an area of Tasmanian government-owned land that had been declared a World Heritage Area under the World Heritage Convention to which Australia is a party.[36][40] Land use is otherwise a State responsibility.

More recently, the external affairs power has been used to remove the States' power to criminalise male homosexual activity. This followed an adverse report by the Human Rights Committee on Tasmanian provisions. The Human Rights Committee was established under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Australia is a party. Rather than challenge the resulting Commonwealth Human Rights (Sexual Conduct) Act of 1994, the Tasmanian Parliament repealed the legislation in question.[41]

Although it would appear that there is an open-ended potential for the Commonwealth to encroach on areas of traditional State competence through the external affairs power, to date it has been used with some discretion, if only because the use of the power in this way inevitably excites considerable political controversy.[original research?]

The corporations power edit

The corporations power allows the Commonwealth to legislate on "foreign corporations, and trading or financial corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth". Although the width of the expression "trading or financial corporations" has never been authoritatively settled, it appears that it covers at least all commercial enterprises carried out under the corporate form.[42]

As corporations have come to dominate the economy, the practical scope the corporations power has increased. For example, in 2005 the Commonwealth Parliament enacted the WorkChoices legislation,[43] which, relying primarily on the corporations power, seeks to create a uniform national industrial relations system to the exclusion of both the States' and the Commonwealth's own industrial relations systems. Previous systems were based on the 'conciliation and arbitration' power. The new legislation applies to all employees of a "constitutional corporation." A constitutional corporation is a corporation within the meaning of section 51(xx) of the Constitution. The legislation also applies to employees of the Commonwealth and its agencies, and some others. The expected coverage of this law is approximately 85% of the Australian workforce. That proportion is likely to increase as employers who operate as sole traders or in partnerships incorporate to take advantage of the new legislation's relatively "employer-friendly" provisions.

On 14 November 2006, the High Court by a 5-to-2 majority upheld the validity of the WorkChoices legislation[43] against all the challenges that had been made to it in an action brought by each of the States and mainland Territories, as well as certain trade unions.[29] The single majority judgment, while it did not expressly adopt, waved aside all the objections that had been argued against the "object of command" test for the validity of the exercise of the corporations power. Accordingly, the judgment suggests that, henceforth, it may be a sufficient basis of validity that Federal legislation be specifically addressed to constitutional corporations ("A constitutional corporation must...", "A constitutional corporation must not..."), without any additional requirement that the legislation also address some aspect of the status or activities of corporations which is specific to such entities.[original research?] If this is correct, then given the preponderant role of corporations in the modern economy, the possibility exists for substantial Federal control of the greater part of the economy, with little if any regard to the traditional constitutional "heads of power".

Protection of rights edit

Access to the High Court edit

To a very large extent, the Constitution leaves it to Parliament to determine both the High Court's original jurisdiction (section 76), and the exceptions to, and conditions on, its power to hear appeals (section 73). However, the Constitution grants the Court some original jurisdiction directly, without the possibility of Parliamentary limitation (section 75). This includes matters in which "a writ of Mandamus or prohibition or an injunction is sought against an officer of the Commonwealth".

In recent years, the Parliament has all but eliminated the possibility of appeal against many decisions in the area of migration, especially in regard to applications for refugee status. However, since the Parliament is not constitutionally able to limit or abolish access to the High Court for the purpose of applying for one of these "constitutional writs", such applications have become a major means of challenging migration decisions.[44] In 2014–15 94% of the applications for constitutional writs involved immigration matters.[45]

No Bill of Rights edit

The Constitution contains no comprehensive set of human rights guarantees. Factors sometimes cited for this include faith in the common law's protection of rights and a belief that a powerful Senate would effectively resist overzealous governments. The Constitution does contain protection for several specific rights. These include:

  • right to vote in Commonwealth elections if one can vote in State ones (section 41)
  • freedom of religion, and prohibition of religious tests for Federal offices (section 116)
  • trial by jury in Federal cases tried on indictment (section 80)
  • "just terms" for the compulsory "acquisition" of property by the Commonwealth (section 51(xxxi))
  • an ambiguously worded prohibition on discrimination against residents of other States (section 117)[46][47]

All but the last of these have been read down by the High Court, at least relative to the content of the corresponding United States guarantees. On the other hand, since the 1990s the High Court has been developing a jurisprudence of rights said to be implied in the text and structure of the Constitution.

In addition, a constitutional requirement that "trade, commerce, and intercourse among the States ... shall be absolutely free" (section 92) was, for a time, interpreted as a guarantee of some degree of freedom from economic regulation by either Commonwealth or State Parliaments. The reference to "intercourse", on the other hand, has always been understood as guaranteeing a right to movement across State boundaries.

Although express protections for human and civil rights in the Constitution are scant, and have mostly been read down, some protections have been created by the High Court through its jurisprudence on the separation of powers and through its findings of rights implied by the text and structure of the constitutional document.

Express rights edit

As mentioned, there are five rights which the Constitution guarantees against the Commonwealth – religious freedom, trial by jury, "just terms" compensation, free trade between the states, and protection against discrimination based on the state an individual lives in. (A referendum proposal to amend the Constitution to clarify these rights and to make them good also against the States was defeated in 1988.) As will be seen, guaranteed access to the High Court can itself amount to an important right. And the guarantee of free trade and commerce was for a time interpreted as something like an individual right.

Freedom of religion edit

The Constitution states that the Commonwealth "shall not make any law for establishing any religion, or for imposing any religious observance, or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion, and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth" (section 116).

In determining what is considered a religion, the High Court has adopted a broad approach; demonstrating an unwillingness to create a limiting definition.[48]

The prohibition on establishing any religion has had nothing like the impact that the corresponding ban on making a law "respecting an establishment of religion" in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution has had in that country. The High Court, in rejecting a challenge to Federal funding of church schools, [49] seemed to take the view that nothing less than an explicit establishment of a State Church as the official religion of the Commonwealth would come within the terms of the prohibition.

Section 116 also protects the right of a person to have no religion by prohibiting the Commonwealth from "imposing any religious observance".[50]

"Just terms" compensation edit

The Constitution gives the Commonwealth power "with respect to ... the acquisition of property on just terms" in Section 51(xxxi). By contrast, the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution contains a prohibition: "nor shall private property be taken ... without just compensation". The differences between acquisition and taking, and between terms and compensation, combined with the fact that the Australian provision is expressed as a positive grant of power coupled with a limitation, have been read so as to weaken the Australian guarantee relative to the American one.

The use of the term "acquisition" has been interpreted so as to require that the Commonwealth (or some other party for a Commonwealth purpose) actually acquire possessory or proprietary rights over the property in question, or at least some benefit: the mere extinguishment of a person's proprietary rights by the Commonwealth (or a prohibition on effectively exercising them) is insufficient to amount to an acquisition.[36][37][40] And "just terms" has been taken to mean something less than "just compensation"; in particular, it does not necessarily require payment to the owner of the value of the property when it was compulsorily acquired[51]

The Australian film The Castle addresses this issue.

Protection against residency discrimination edit

Section 117 of the Constitution of Australia provides protection against discrimination on the basis of State of residence.

Historically, section 117 had been read down by the High Court so as to be devoid of any real meaning.[52] For example, in 1904 it was found that discrimination in favour of people who are "residents of and domiciled in Western Australia" was permissible, as the Constitution only prohibited discrimination on the basis of a person's State of residence, not their State of domicile.[53]

In the 1989 landmark case Street v Queensland Bar Association, the modern approach to interpretation was developed. The court held that the purpose of the section was national unity, and consequentially, residence should be given a broader meaning. In addition, the court overruled a case in which the historical approach was used.[52]

In reaching its conclusion, each of the seven Justices issued a separate opinion. Combining this with the fact that there is little case law referencing section 117, there remains significant debate over the nature and extent of the right contained within it.[54]

Trial by jury for indictable offences edit

The constitutional guarantee that a trial on indictment for a federal offence must be by jury (section 80) has been rendered virtually worthless because the High Court has decided that it is applicable only to a trial that proceeds formally by way of indictment, and it is completely in Parliament's discretion to decide which offences are triable on indictment and which are not. This narrow view is confirmed in the majority judgement of Kingswell v the Queen.[51] Powerful dissents to the effect that the section must be given some substantive meaning (the trial of offences of some specific degree of gravity must be by jury) have not prevailed.[51]

On the other hand, where Parliament has prescribed jury trial, the Court has been willing to impose some content on that notion. In particular, it has insisted that conviction by a jury for a Federal offence must be by the unanimous agreement of the jurors – a majority verdict will not suffice.[55][56][57]

Freedom from economic regulation edit

The constitutional requirement that "trade, commerce, and intercourse amongst the States ... shall be absolutely free" (section 92) was for a considerable time interpreted as a guarantee of some degree of freedom from government regulation. A notable example of this line of jurisprudence was the High Court's disallowance of a Commonwealth Act which had the aim of nationalising the banking industry.[58][59][60]

In 1988 following the decision in Cole v Whitfield,[61] which was notable also for the Court's willingness to use the transcripts of the Convention debates as an aid to interpretation, the Court unanimously decided that what the section prohibited, in relation to interstate trade and commerce, were only "discriminatory burdens of a protectionist kind".[61][62] That is, the section did no more than guarantee "free trade" (in the conventional sense) among the States. But in relation to "intercourse" (i.e. personal movement between States), the Court suggested that the scope of the guarantee would be much wider, and may even, in relation to some forms of such intercourse, be truly absolute.[63][64][65]

Implied rights edit

Implied rights are the political and civil freedoms that necessarily underlie the actual words of the constitution but are not themselves expressly stated directly in the constitution.[66] The High Court has held that no implication can be drawn from the Constitution which is not based on the actual terms of the Constitution, or on its structure.[67] Since the 1990s the High Court has discovered rights which are said to be implied by the very structure and textual form of the Constitution.[68] Chief amongst these is an implied right to freedom of communication on political matters. In addition, some protections of civil liberties have been the result of the High Court's zealous attempts to safeguard the independence of, and confidence in, the Federal judiciary.

Freedom of political communication edit

Two cases decided in 1992 established a new implied right to freedom of communication on political matters. The first case, Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Wills, concerned a Federal provision criminalising the "bringing into disrepute" of members of an industrial relations tribunal, and a prosecution under that provision of a person who had published a newspaper article repeatedly describing such members as "corrupt" and "compliant".[69] The second case, Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Commonwealth, concerned a Federal attempt to ban political advertising on radio and television during election periods and to strictly control it at other times, via a system of "free time" entitlements.[70]

In both cases, the majority of the High Court reasoned that, since the Constitution required direct election of members of the Federal Parliament, and since moreover the Ministers of State were required to be or swiftly become members of that Parliament, the result was that "representative democracy is constitutionally entrenched". That being so, freedom of public discussion of political and economic matters is essential to allow the people to make their political judgments so as to exercise their right to vote effectively. Furthermore, since "public affairs and political discussion are indivisible", it is impossible to limit this necessary freedom to purely Federal issues: it applies also to issues which might be the preserve of the State or local levels of government. Therefore, there is implied in the Constitution a guarantee of freedom of communication on all political matters.[70]

The Court stressed that this freedom is not absolute, but the result in both cases was that the relevant Federal legislation was struck down. In the latter case, some strong dissents to the effect that limiting expenditure on political advertising in the electronic media might actually enhance representative democracy did not prevail.

Both these cases concerned the validity of Federal legislation. But two years later, the Court extended the implied guarantee into the area of private law, by holding that it also applied to limit the statutory and common law of defamation. A former chairman of a Commonwealth Parliamentary Committee on Migration claimed to have been defamed by a newspaper which had published a letter accusing him of bias, in his official capacity, towards people of his own ethnic background.[71][72] By trial, it was conceded that the accusation was false. However the Court accepted a "constitutional defence" which was said (by three Justices) to operate when otherwise defamatory statements concerning the fitness of a public official to hold office were published without knowledge of, or recklessness as to, their falsity, and when publication was reasonable in the circumstances.

This case, however, and a series of following cases, failed to produce a clear statement of the operative principle which commanded the support of a majority of the Court. But in 1997 in Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation which involved the alleged defamation of a former Prime Minister of New Zealand a unanimous Court did state the operative principle. It rejected the "constitutional defence" of the migration-bias case just discussed, and instead expanded the scope of "qualified privilege", requiring the defendant to have actively taken reasonable steps to verify the accuracy of the published material, and also, in most circumstances, to have given the defamed person an opportunity to respond.[73][74] On the other hand, the Court made it clear that the qualified privilege may extend to discussion concerning the United Nations and other countries, even where there is no direct nexus with the exercise of political choice in Australia. In McCloy v New South Wales, the High Court further endorsed the view that a qualified freedom of political communication exists and provided an updated and more detailed legal test.[75]

The constitutional guarantee of freedom of political communication is, prima facie, far more restricted than the generalised guarantee of freedom of speech and of the press in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. But it remains to be seen whether a suitable expansion of the notion of "political communication" may not lead, in time, to a similar result. In the migration-bias case, some of the Justices, while being careful to quarantine "commercial speech without political content", seemed to imply that the scope of "political speech" may nevertheless be very broad indeed. Mitchell Landrigan goes as far as arguing that the exception to the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW) permitting the exclusion of women from ordination as priests infringes the right of women to "rise to positions from which they may take part in political speech as [politically persuasive] religious leaders."[76] Any such constitutional protection would depend on a court finding that the anti-discrimination laws, first, effectively burdened political speech (as relevant to the Commonwealth Parliament) and, secondly, disproportionately burdened such speech.

Right to vote edit

The Constitution is silent as to many aspects of the democratic process, leaving these details to be provided by Parliament. The Constitution does however require in sections 7 and 24 that the members of Parliament be "directly chosen by the people".[77] In 1975 two judges of the High Court suggested that these requirements may amount to a right to vote, holding "the long established universal adult suffrage may now be recognized as a fact and as a result it is doubtful whether ... anything less than this could be described as a choice by the people."[78] In 1983 the High Court took a limited view of the right to vote in R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka.[79] The High Court Judge Michael Kirby, writing extrajudicially in 2000, said that "...in Australia, there may be a basic right to vote implied in the text of the constitution itself".[80] Prior to 2006 prisoners were only disenfranchised if they were serving sentences of three years or more.[81][82] 2006 legislation sought to disenfranchise all prisoners, regardless of the length of their sentence.[83] The validity of the disenfranchisement was challenged by Vickie Roach who was serving a four-year gaol term for negligently causing serious injury in a car accident and her legal team comprised Ron Merkel, QC and Michael Pearce, SC.[84]

In 2007 the High Court held in Roach v Electoral Commissioner that the requirement that members be "directly chosen by the people" conferred a limited "right to vote".[85] In principle, these words guaranteed qualified universal franchise, and limited the Federal government's legislative power to limit that franchise. The court held that removing right to vote for serious misconduct was acceptable and that the previous legislation was valid, however imprisonment failed as a method of identifying serious criminal misconduct such that the 2006 amendments[83] were invalid.[85][86]

The 2006 legislation[83] was again considered in Rowe v Electoral Commissioner, where the High Court held that amendments restricting the enrolment of voters once an election has been called were also invalid.[66] * The High Court subsequently held that closing the electoral roles 7 days after the issuing of writs was not a burden on the constitutional mandate that members of Parliament be directly chosen by the people.[87] The right to vote does not involve a corresponding right not to vote.[88] The High Court rejected a challenge to the 2016 Senate voting changes holding that both above the line and below the line voting were constitutionally valid methods for the people to choose their Senators.[89]

Right to due process edit

As mentioned above, the fact that the Constitution prescribes a system of "responsible", or parliamentary, government means that there can be no meaningful separation of the legislative and executive powers, despite their distinct textual separation in the Constitution. However, the same consideration does not militate against a separation of the judicial power from the other two, and in fact the High Court has come to insist on this with some force. It has also held that the separation of the judicial power implies that a body exercising that power must do so in a manner that is consistent with traditional notions of what constitutes judicial process. The result may be a limited constitutional guarantee of due process.

The judicial power of the Commonwealth is vested, in Chapter III of the Constitution, in the High Court and such other courts as the Parliament creates or invests with Federal jurisdiction.[90][91] In Australian constitutional jargon, such courts are called "Chapter III courts". The members of Chapter III courts may not be removed except by the Governor-General on an address from both Houses of Parliament on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity; they otherwise hold office until the age of 70.[92]

In separate cases in 1915,[93] and 1918,[94] the High Court held that "judicial power" (essentially, the power of interpretation of the law and enforcement of decisions) could not be invested in anything other than a Chapter III court, and specifically, in anything other than a body whose members have life tenure. In Kruger v Commonwealth (1997) the High Court considered claims by members of the Stolen Generation,[95] including that their removal and subsequent detention without due process was in contravention of the Constitution.[96] Dawson J,[96]: p. 61  and McHugh J,[96]: p. 142  held that the Constitution contained no general guarantee of due process of law. Toohey, Gaudron and Gummow JJ held that the removal of Indigenous children was not the exercise of judicial power, hence no question of due process arose.[97]

The converse of the separation of powers is the decision of the High Court in Boilermakers' Case in 1956, that Chapter III courts cannot be invested with anything other than judicial power.[20][98][99][100] To some extent the rigour of the separation of powers doctrine was softened by the Court's subsequent acceptance that judges could, constitutionally, be assigned functions in their personal capacity as judges rather than as members of a Chapter III court.[101][102] But this raised the question of which such functions were compatible with the simultaneous holding of Federal judicial office. The answers offered by the Court have been controversial and involved some very fine distinctions: for instance, it has held that a power to authorise telephone interceptions is compatible,[103] while a power to make recommendations concerning the protection of land which might be of heritage significance to Aboriginals is not compatible.[104][105] The most striking application (and extension) of this "incompatibility" doctrine, however, has involved the Supreme Court of the State of New South Wales, a court that may be invested with Federal jurisdiction.[91] Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions (1996)[99][106] concerned a criminal law passed by the New South Parliament and directed at a single named individual (somewhat in the manner of a Bill of attainder).

The individual was a prisoner (under state law) whose sentence was about to expire but who was alleged to have made threats against the safety of various persons, to be carried out when released. The State Parliament enacted a law, applying only to him, which authorised the Supreme Court of New South Wales to make "preventive detention orders" for periods up to six months, with the possibility of renewal.[107] The orders were to be made if the Court was satisfied, "on the balance of probabilities", that the person to whom the Act applied was "more likely than not to commit a serious act of violence".

It is clear that, had the Federal Parliament passed such an Act, it would be found invalid, as it was in effect a legislative judgment and so violated of the constitutional separation of the judicial power. However, the High Court found that the separation of powers was not a feature of the New South Wales constitution, so the State Act was not invalid on that ground.

The Act was found invalid, however, on the ground that since the Supreme Court of New South Wales had been invested with federal jurisdiction, it must not be required to perform a function "incompatible" with the exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth. To that extent, the States are not free to legislate as they please with respect to their own courts. A requirement to order the "preventive detention" of someone who has not been charged with any criminal offence was found "incompatible" with the exercise of Federal judicial power. In this rather circuitous manner, the High Court has found a limited constitutional guarantee of due process.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The Honourable Murray Gleeson (18 June 2008). "The Privy Council – an Australian Perspective" (PDF). High Court of Australia.
  2. ^ Aroney, Nicholas (2009). The constitution of a federal commonwealth : the making and meaning of the Australian constitution. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-12968-8. OCLC 774393122.
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  11. ^ UNITED STATES INFLUENCE ON THE AUSTRALIAN LEGAL SYSTEM, THE HON ROBERT FRENCH AC
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  17. ^ Canadian Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22 at par. 32, [2007] 2 SCR 3 (31 May 2007), Supreme Court (Canada)
  18. ^ "House of Representatives Practice" (6th ed.). Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 12 September 2012.
  19. ^ Egan v Willis [1998] HCA 71, (1998) 95 CLR 424; Egan v Chadwick [1999] NSWCA 176, (1999) 46 NSWLR 563, Court of Appeal (NSW, Australia)
  20. ^ a b c R v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society of Australia ("Boilermakers' case") [1956] HCA 110, (1956) 94 CLR 254.
    See also Attorney-General (Commonwealth) v The Queen [1957] UKPC 4, [1957] AC 288; (1957) 95 CLR 529, Privy Council (on appeal from Australia).
  21. ^ Re Wakim; Ex parte McNally [1999] HCA 27, (1999) 198 CLR 51173
  22. ^ White v Director of Military Prosecutions [2007] HCA 29, (2007) 231 CLR 570.
  23. ^ Attorney-General for NSW v Brewery Employees Union of NSW (Union Label Case) [1908] HCA 94, (1908) 6 CLR 469.
  24. ^ D'Emden v Pedder [1904] HCA 1, (1904) 1 CLR 91.
  25. ^ a b c d Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd (Engineers Case) [1920] HCA 54, (1920) 28 CLR 129.
  26. ^ Jumbunna Coal Mine NL v Victorian Coal Miners' Association [1908] HCA 95, (1908) 6 CLR 309.
  27. ^ Ex parte McLean [1930] HCA 12, (1930) 43 CLR 472; see also Clyde Engineering Co Ltd v Cowburn [1926] HCA 6, (1926) 37 CLR 466
  28. ^ Wenn v Attorney-General (Victoria) [1948] HCA 134, (1948) 77 CLR 84.
  29. ^ a b NSW v Commonwealth (WorkChoices case) [2006] HCA 52, (2006) 229 CLR 1.
  30. ^ Actors and Announcers Equity Association v Fontana Films Pty Ltd [1982] HCA 23, (1982) 150 CLR 169; See also: Fairfax v Commissioner of Taxation [1965] HCA 64, (1965) 114 CLR 1.
  31. ^ a b South Australia v Commonwealth ("the First Uniform Tax case") [1942] HCA 14, (1942) 65 CLR 373.
  32. ^ a b Victoria v Commonwealth ("the Second Uniform Tax case") [1957] HCA 54, (1957) 99 CLR 575.
  33. ^ Ha v New South Wales [1997] HCA 34, (1997) 189 CLR 465; see also Matthews v Chicory Marketing Board (Vic) [1938] HCA 38, (1938) 60 CLR 263.
  34. ^ NSW v Commonwealth (Incorporation case) [1990] HCA 2, (1990) 169 CLR 482.
  35. ^ R v Sharkey [1949] HCA 46, (1949) 79 CLR 121
  36. ^ a b c d Commonwealth v Tasmania (the Tasmanian Dams Case) [1983] HCA 21, (1983) 158 CLR 1.
  37. ^ a b c Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen [1982] HCA 27, (1983) 153 CLR 168.
  38. ^ Thomas v Mowbray [2007] HCA 33, (2007) 233 CLR 307.
  39. ^ a b Polyukhovich v Commonwealth (War Crimes Act Case) [1991] HCA 32, (1991) 172 CLR 501.
  40. ^ a b Richardson v Forestry Commission [1988] HCA 10, (1988) 164 CLR 261.
  41. ^ See also Toonen v Australia (1994) UNHCR
  42. ^ R v Federal Court of Australia; Ex parte WA National Football League [1979] HCA 6, (1979) 143 CLR 190.
  43. ^ a b "Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005". Commonwealth of Australia.
  44. ^ Chief Justice Robert French (25 March 2011). "The Role of the Courts in Migration Law" (PDF). High Court.
  45. ^ "High Court of Australia Annual Report 2014-15" (PDF). High Court. p. 19.
  46. ^ Henry v Boehm [1973] HCA 32, (1973) 128 CLR 482
  47. ^ Street v Queensland Bar Association [1989] HCA 53, (1989) 168 CLR 461
  48. ^ Church of the New Faith v Commissioner of Pay-roll Tax (Scientology case) [1983] HCA 40, (1983) 154 CLR 120.
  49. ^ Attorney-General (Vic); Ex Rel Black v Commonwealth (DOGS Case) [1981] HCA 2, (1981) 146 CLR 559.
  50. ^ Adelaide Co of Jehovah's Witnesses Inc v Commonwealth [1943] HCA 12, (1943) 67 CLR 116) at p. 123 per Latham CJ.
  51. ^ a b c Kingswell v The Queen [1985] HCA 72, (1985) 159 CLR 264.
  52. ^ a b Matheison, Michael (1999). "Section 117 of the Constitution: The Unfinished Rehabilitation". Archived from the original on 25 October 2000. (1999) 27(3) Federal Law Review 393 ISSN 0067-205X
  53. ^ Davies v Western Australia [1904] HCA 46, (1904) 2 CLR 29 (23 December 1904), High Court (Australia)
  54. ^ Simpson, Amelia (2008). "The (Limited) Significance of the Individual in Section 117 State Residence Discrimination". Melbourne University Law Review. (2008) 32(2) Melbourne University Law Review 639 ISSN 0025-8938.
  55. ^ Cheatle v The Queen [1993] HCA 44, (1993) 177 CLR 541.
  56. ^ R v Bernasconi [1915] HCA 13, (1915) 19 CLR 629.
  57. ^ Brownlee v The Queen [2000] HCATrans 687.
  58. ^ Bank of NSW v Commonwealth (the Bank Nationalisation Case) [1948] HCA 7, (1948) 76 CLR 1.
  59. ^ McCarter v Brodie [1950] HCA 18, (1950) 80 CLR 432.
  60. ^ North Eastern Dairy Co Ltd v Dairy Industry Authority of NSW [1975] HCA 45, (1975) 134CLR 559.
  61. ^ a b Cole v Whitfield [1988] HCA 18, (1988) 165 CLR 360.
  62. ^ Bath v Alston Holdings Pty Ltd [1988] HCA 27, (1988) 165 CLR 411.
  63. ^ Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia [1990] HCA 1, (1990) 169 CLR 436.
  64. ^ Betfair Pty Limited v Western Australia [2008] HCA 11, (2008) 234 CLR 418.
  65. ^ Sportsbet Pty Ltd v New South Wales [2012] HCA 18, (2012) 249 CLR 298.
  66. ^ a b Rowe v Electoral Commissioner [2010] HCA 46, (2010) 243 CLR 1.
  67. ^ McGinty v Western Australia [1996] HCA 48, (1996) 186 CLR 140.
  68. ^ Burns, R (1997). "Political Discussion as a Defence to Defamation: Lange v Australian Broadcasting Commission". [1997] High Court Review 13.
  69. ^ Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Wills [1992] HCA 46, (1992) 177 CLR 1;
    See also Suntory (Aust) Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2009] FCAFC 80, Federal Court (Full Court) (Australia)
  70. ^ a b Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Commonwealth [1992] HCA 45, (1992) 177 CLR 106.
  71. ^ Theophanous v Herald & Weekly Times Ltd [1994] HCA 46, (1994) 182 CLR 104.
  72. ^ See also Williams, George (1996–97). "The State of Play in the Constitutionally Implied Freedom of Political Discussion and Bans on Electoral Canvassing in Australia". Parliamentary Library of Australia.
  73. ^ Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation [1997] HCA 25, (1997) 189 CLR 520.
  74. ^ see also Bass v Roberts [2000] SADC 35;
    Adelaide v Corneloup [2011] SASCFC 84;
    Monis v The Queen [2013] HCA 4, (2013) 249 CLR 9;
    Unions NSW v NSW [2013] HCA 58, (2013) 252 CLR 530;
    Gibbs v Christies Beach Sports & Social Club (No 1) [2000] SADC 28
  75. ^ McCloy v New South Wales [2015] HCA 34, (2015) 257 CLR 17 (7 October 2015), High Court.
  76. ^ Landrigan, Mitchell (2009). "Voices in the Political Wilderness: Women in the Sydney Anglican Diocese". (2009) 34(3) Alternative Law Journal 177. doi:10.1177/1037969X0903400307. S2CID 220052381.
  77. ^ section 7 and section 24 Commonwealth of Australia Constitution.
  78. ^ Attorney-General (Cth); Ex rel McKinlay v Commonwealth [1975] HCA 653, (1975) 135 CLR 1 per McTeirnnan & Jacobs JJ at [6].
  79. ^ R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka [1983] HCA 6, (1983) 152 CLR 254
  80. ^ The Hon Justice Michael Kirby. "Upholding The Franchise". (2001) 21 Australian Bar Review 1. ISSN 0814-8589. from the original on 26 April 2013.
  81. ^ "Section 93(8)(b) Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918". Commonwealth of Australia. 16 May 2005.
  82. ^ Jerome Davidson (24 May 2004). (PDF). Parliamentary Library of Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2004.
  83. ^ a b c "Electoral and Referendum Amendment (Electoral Integrity and Other Measures) Act 2006 (Cth)". Commonwealth of Australia.
  84. ^ Kenneth Nguyen (25 April 2007). "Prisoner goes to High Court to win right to vote". The Age. p. 3.
  85. ^ a b Roach v Electoral Commissioner [2007] HCA 43, (2007) 233 CLR 162.
  86. ^ . Human Rights Law Resource Centre. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008.
  87. ^ Murphy v Electoral Commissioner [2016] HCA 36.
  88. ^ Holmdahl v Australian Electoral Commission (No 2) [2012] SASCFC 110.
  89. ^ Day v Australian Electoral Officer for the State of South Australia [2016] HCA 20.
  90. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 71 Judicial power and Courts.
  91. ^ a b High Court Justice Sir Owen Dixon described the power of the Australian Parliament to invest State courts with Federal jurisdiction as an "autochthonous expedient", essentially an economy measure in a country of small population.[20]
  92. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 72 Judges' appointment, tenure, and remuneration. Judicial office was originally for life; the age limit was introduced by a referendum in 1977.
  93. ^ New South Wales v Commonwealth (Wheat Case) [1915] HCA 17, (1915) 20 CLR 54.
  94. ^ Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd [1918] HCA 56, (1918) 25 CLR 434.
  95. ^ Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children who had been systematically removed from their families by the Australian Federal and State government agencies: "Community Guide" (PDF). Bringing Them Home. Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. 1997. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 December 2005.
  96. ^ a b c Kruger v Commonwealth (Stolen Generation case) [1997] HCA 27, (1997) 190 CLR 1, High Court (Australia).
  97. ^ Kruger v Commonwealth [1997] HCA 27, (1997) 190 CLR 1 per Toohey J at p. 84, Gaudron J at p. 110 and Gummow J at p. 162.
  98. ^ See also Victorian Stevedoring & General Contracting Company Pty Ltd v Dignan [1931] HCA 34, (1931) 46 CLR 73.
  99. ^ a b Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) [1996] HCA 24, (1996) 189 CLR 51
  100. ^ By this decision, the system of industrial arbitration that had been in place for 30 years, and which involved judges of the Conciliation and Arbitration Court acting in both a judicial and an administrative capacity, was overturned.
  101. ^ See also Brandy v Human Rights & Equal Opportunity Commission [1995] HCA 10, (1995) 183 CLR 245
  102. ^ As of June 2017 judges of the Federal Court have been appointed as the President of the Fair Work Commission, Iain Ross, and President of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, John Logan.
  103. ^ Grollo v Palmer [1995] HCA 26, (1995) 184 CLR 348;
    Wainohu v New South Wales [2011] HCA 24, (2011) 243 CLR 181;
    Hilton v Wells [1985] HCA 16, (1985) 157 CLR 57;
    KS v Veitch (No 2) [2012] NSWCA 266;
    Gypsy Jokers Motorcycle Club INC v Commissioner of Police [No2] [2008] WASC 166
  104. ^ Wilson v Minister for Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Affairs (Hindmarsh Island case) [1996] HCA 18, (1996) 189 CLR 1
  105. ^ Al-Kateb v Godwin [2004] HCA 37, (2004) 219 CLR 562.
  106. ^ See also Kable v State of NSW [2012] NSWCA 243;
    Fencott v Muller [1983] HCA 12, (1983) 152 CLR 570;
    Kirk v Industrial Relations Commission [2010] HCA 1, (2010) 239 CLR 531;
    Attorney-General [NT] v Emmerson [2014] HCA 13, (2010) 253 CLR 393
  107. ^ Community Protection Act 1994 (NSW).

Bibliography edit

  • Tony Blackshield and George Williams, Australian Constitutional Law and Theory: Commentary and Materials (3rd ed., Federation Press, Annandale NSW, 2002)
  • John Quick and Robert Garran, The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (LexisNexis Butterworths, Sydney, [1901] 2002)
  • Leslie Zines, The High Court and the Constitution (4th ed., Butterworths, Sydney, 1997)
  • Greg Craven, "Conversations with the Constitution" (1st ed, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2004)

External links edit

  • from the Australian Attorney-General's Department

australian, constitutional, story, australia, evolved, from, british, colonies, independent, nation, constitutional, history, australia, discussion, australia, federal, system, federalism, australia, briefer, outline, basic, structure, constitution, commonweal. For the story of how Australia evolved from a set of British colonies to an independent nation see constitutional history of Australia and for a discussion of Australia s federal system see Federalism in Australia For a briefer outline of the basic structure of the Constitution see Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act For an overview of constitutional law generally see constitutional law Australian constitutional law is the area of the law of Australia relating to the interpretation and application of the Constitution of Australia Legal cases regarding Australian constitutional law are often handled by the High Court of Australia the highest court in the Australian judicial system Several major doctrines of Australian constitutional law have developed Contents 1 Background 2 The Constitution and the High Court 3 Constitutional monarchy 4 Federalism 4 1 Division of powers 4 2 Parliamentary structures 5 Parliamentary government 6 Separation of powers 7 Direct election to both Houses of Parliament 8 Referendum for constitutional amendment 9 Growth of federal power 9 1 Centralising interpretations 9 1 1 Reserved State powers doctrine and the Engineers case 9 1 2 Broad interpretation of Commonwealth powers 9 2 Fiscal imbalance 9 3 New areas of competence 9 4 New powers 9 5 The external affairs power 9 6 The corporations power 10 Protection of rights 10 1 Access to the High Court 10 2 No Bill of Rights 10 3 Express rights 10 3 1 Freedom of religion 10 3 2 Just terms compensation 10 3 3 Protection against residency discrimination 10 3 4 Trial by jury for indictable offences 10 3 5 Freedom from economic regulation 10 4 Implied rights 10 4 1 Freedom of political communication 10 4 2 Right to vote 10 4 3 Right to due process 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksBackground editSee also Constitution of Australia History Constitutional law in the Commonwealth of Australia consists mostly of that body of doctrine which interprets the Commonwealth Constitution The Constitution itself is embodied in clause 9 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act which was passed by the British Parliament in 1900 after its text had been negotiated in Australian Constitutional Conventions in the 1890s and approved by the voters in each of the Australian colonies The British government did however insist on one change to the text to allow a greater range of appeals to the Privy Council in London 1 It came into force on 1 January 1901 at which time the Commonwealth of Australia came into being The Constitution created a framework of government some of whose main features and sources of inspiration were the following 2 3 4 5 6 7 constitutional monarchy British and existing colonial models federalism United States model parliamentary or responsible government British and existing colonial models distinct textual separation of powers US model direct election to both Houses of Parliament then a novelty Governor General as a representative of a monarch existing colonial models notably Canada requirement of a referendum for amendment of the Constitution Swiss model only very limited guarantees of personal rights rejection of the US model judicial review US model The Constitution and the High Court editMain article Judicial review in Australia The process of judicial review the ability of The High Court of Australia to declare legislation unconstitutional and therefore invalid has its origin in American experience where the right of the Supreme Court of the United States to strike down legislation deemed incompatible with the Constitution was first asserted by the Supreme Court itself in the seminal case of Marbury v Madison in 1803 Although completely foreign to both British and Australian colonial experience the framers of the Australian Constitution clearly intended that the practice would take hold in Australia and even expressly adverted to it in the Constitutional text in section 76 This power of judicial review of legislation for conformity with the Constitution has been exercised almost exclusively by the High Court of Australia and almost invariably with a full bench of all its members such as in the Communist Party case 8 Influence from American jurisprudence has occurred in specific cases 9 10 11 12 A brief overview of the other listed features will provide a background for the doctrinal developments examined below Constitutional monarchy editMain article Monarchy in Australia Australia is a constitutional monarchy 13 Although the term Head of State is not used in the Constitution it was intended that the Commonwealth like the colonies would continue to recognise the British Sovereign The Queen meaning Queen Victoria defined to include Her Majesty s heirs and successors in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom was one of the three elements of Parliament along with the Senate and the House of Representatives section 1 Today the King of Australia has replaced the King of the United Kingdom within Australia s parliament but they happen to be the same person The Monarch is represented in Australia by an appointed Governor General The executive power is vested in the Governor General as the Queen s representative section 61 as is the command in chief of the armed forces section 68 The Australian Constitution provides the Governor General with a number of powers including the power to dissolve Parliament Sections 5 57 the power to refuse assent to bills presented to her section 58 and the power to dismiss the government Ministers section 64 14 however the practical use of such powers is restricted by constitutional convention which mandate the Governor General to act on ministerial advice except in exceptional circumstances Because the conventions are not written in The Constitution the limits of the Governor General s powers are unclear Convention does however allow The Governor General to exercise some powers without ministerial advice in exceptional circumstances These powers are known as reserve powers 15 The reserve powers allow The Governor General to commission a Prime Minister when no party or coalition of parties has a majority of seats in The House of Representatives and the power to dismiss a Prime Minister who has been subject to a vote of no confidence in the House of Representatives 15 The reserve powers may also include the power to dismiss a Prime Minister who is engaging in persistent illegal action Governor Sir Philip Game of New South Wales dismissed Premier Jack Lang on this ground in 1932 However it remains controversial whether they include the power to dismiss a Prime Minister who while retaining the confidence of the House of Representatives is not able to get the annual supply Bill passed by the Senate as happened during the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975 when the Governor General acted against the advice of Ministers 15 The role of the Monarch is today even more circumscribed and amounts only to appointing and in theory dismissing a Governor General on the advice of the Prime Minister as well as performing by invitation certain ceremonial functions when personally present in Australia See Constitutional history of Australia for further details on the development of the monarch s role in relation to Australia The importance of constitutional conventions in this area means that Australia cannot be said strictly to operate entirely under a written constitution but has to some extent a system like the British unwritten constitution However it would be a mistake to exaggerate the importance of this aspect of Australia s constitutional arrangements the reliance on constitutional convention is confined almost entirely to the relations between the Queen Governor General and the Ministers of State and more completely written constitutional systems also develop binding conventions for instance popular election to the Electoral College of the United States though not mandated by the United States Constitution has probably become a binding norm Federalism editDivision of powers edit Main article Federalism in Australia The Constitution sets up the Commonwealth of Australia as a federal polity with enumerated limited specific powers conferred on the Federal Parliament The State Parliaments are not assigned specific enumerated powers rather the powers of their predecessor colonial Parliaments are continued except insofar as they are expressly withdrawn or vested exclusively in the Federal Parliament by the Constitution The framers rejected an alternative model the Canadian 16 which has been described as an allocation of exclusive powers to both levels of government not concurrent powers 17 The bulk of enumerated powers are contained in section 51 and section 52 Section 52 powers are exclusive to the Commonwealth although some section 51 powers are in practice necessarily exclusive such as the power with respect to borrowing money on the public credit of the Commonwealth in paragraph iv and the power to legislate with respect to matters referred to the Commonwealth by a State in paragraph xxxvii By contrast the subjects in section 51 can be legislated on by both state and Commonwealth parliaments However in the event of inconsistency or an intention by the Commonwealth to cover the field the Commonwealth law prevails section 109 Both concurrent section 51 and exclusive section 52 powers are stated to be subject to this Constitution As a result the Commonwealth s law making power is subject to the limitations and guarantees in the Constitution both express and implied For example section 99 forbids the Commonwealth from giving preference to any State or part of a State by any law or regulation of trade commerce or revenue And as discussed below an implied guarantee of freedom of political communication has been held to limit the Commonwealth s power to regulate political discourse The list of powers assigned to the Federal Parliament is quite similar to that assigned by the United States Constitution to the Congress but is in some respects broader for instance it includes astronomical and meteorological observations marriage and divorce and interstate industrial relations The interpretation of similar heads of power for instance the Trade and Commerce Power in Australia and the Commerce Clause in the US has in some cases been different The constitution also provides some opportunities for Federal State co operation any State can refer a matter to the Commonwealth Parliament and the Commonwealth Parliament can exercise at the request or with the concurrence of the Parliaments of all the States directly concerned any power which at the time of Federation could be exercised only by the British Parliament Parliamentary structures edit Representation in the House of Representatives is based on population and original states have equal numbers in the Senate The two houses are equal in power except for certain restrictions in financial matters For example the Senate may not amend a supply Bill although as the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975 demonstrates it may defer or refuse to pass such a Bill altogether Bills to impose taxation or appropriate revenue may not originate in the Senate and the Senate may not amend a Bill so as to increase taxation Again federalism is evident in the process of constitutional amendment which requires that the Bill to amend the Constitution be approved by a majority of electors overall and a majority of electors in a majority of States that is four out of the six Additionally amendments altering the limits of a State or diminishing its proportional representation in Parliament require the approval of electors in that State Parliamentary government editIt was assumed by the framers in line with British and local colonial tradition that the executive government would consist of Ministers who were members of Parliament and responsible that is answerable to it and that the continued existence of the government would depend on it maintaining the confidence in the House of Representatives These arrangements however are only hinted at in the text of the Constitution There is a requirement section 64 that the Queen s Ministers of State who are nominally appointed by the Governor General be or swiftly become members of either House of Parliament The existence of the Prime Minister and Cabinet and the requirement for them to have the confidence of the House of Representatives are not mentioned Nonetheless these have been fundamental features of Australian constitutional practice from the start 18 More recently the principle of responsible government was reinforced by the High Court of Australia which upheld orders for a Minister of the government to table documents in the NSW Legislative Council after he refused to do so 19 Separation of powers editMain article Separation of powers in Australia The Constitution features a distinct separation of powers Legislative power is dealt with in Chapter I and is vested in the Federal Parliament section 1 Executive power is dealt with in Chapter II and is vested in the Governor General as the Queen s representative section 61 The judicature is dealt with in Chapter III and is vested in the Federal High Court and in such other federal courts as the Parliament creates and in such other courts as it invests with federal jurisdiction section 71 However the Queen is an element of the Parliament as well as being head of the executive and the Ministers of State who advise the Governor General are actually required to be or become members of Parliament While there is no significant separation of the legislative and executive powers the political branches the High Court has developed an increasingly stringent doctrine of the separation of the judicial power from the other two 20 21 22 Direct election to both Houses of Parliament editThe Constitution required direct election of members to both Houses of Parliament from the beginning sections 7 and 24 This was a novelty at the time since the national upper houses with which the framers were best acquainted were chosen by other means indirect election by the State legislatures United States Senate before the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913 executive appointment for life Senate of Canada or a combination of appointment for life and hereditary succession British House of Lords Referendum for constitutional amendment editMain article Referendums in Australia The text of the Constitution was not presented to the British Parliament for formal enactment until it had been approved by the electors of the colonies On the same principle any amendment to the Constitution requires approval at a referendum by the process set out in section 128 of the Constitution A double majority a majority of electors and of a majority of states is required Constitutional referendums were based on the Swiss practice However the Swiss use of the popular initiative in constitutional amendment was not followed so that constitutional alterations although they must be approved by the people can only be initiated by Parliament The use of the referendum in initially adopting the Constitution and its requirement for constitutional amendment has been cited by justices of the High Court to argue that the Constitution is fundamentally based on popular sovereignty rather than on the supremacy of the British Parliament which is its technical legal foundation This doctrine has achieved greater prominence since the cessation in 1986 of all authority of that Parliament over Australia see Constitutional history of Australia for details There have been 44 proposals for constitutional amendment put to the people since Federation Of these only 8 have passed Growth of federal power editProbably the most obvious development in Australian constitutional law has been the steady growth in the power of the federal government relative to the states Several factors could account for this including doctrines of constitutional interpretation which favour a broad reading of Commonwealth powers the fiscal imbalance between the Commonwealth and the States see Constitutional basis of taxation in Australia the development of new areas of competence which did not exist at Federation and which have fallen to the Commonwealth the growing importance of legislative areas that were always Commonwealth powers for example external affairs and trading corporations constitutional amendment or referral by the States the willingness of Australian governments including supporters of States rights to exercise their powers to the fullCentralising interpretations edit Reserved State powers doctrine and the Engineers case edit Main article Reserved State powers Prior to 1920 the reserved State powers doctrine and implied inter governmental immunities were used to preserve state power Reserved state powers holds that the Constitution should be read in a restrictive way so as to preserve as much autonomy as possible for the States 23 Implied intergovernmental immunities holds that Commonwealth and States are immune to each other s laws and cannot mutually regulate each other s governmental apparatus 24 In 1920 the Engineer s case after changes in the composition of the Court swept away this doctrine 25 The court now insisted on adhering only to interpreting a statute expounded according to the intent of the Parliament that made it and that intention has to be found by an examination of the language used in the statute as a whole 25 There was to be no reading in of implications by reference to the presumed intentions of the framers As a result the constitution is no longer read in a way which attempts to preserve the power of the states Broad interpretation of Commonwealth powers edit Even before the Engineer s case 25 a line of judicial reasoning asserted that Commonwealth powers should be interpreted broadly rather than narrowly wherever possible 26 After Engineers 25 this approach was reinforced For example Section 109 regarding inconsistency between Commonwealth and State laws was broadly interpreted Commonwealth law prevails not only where inconsistent obligations are imposed but where Commonwealth legislation evinces an intention to cover the field by being the whole law on a particular subject 27 The Commonwealth can manufacture inconsistency by expressly stating that its legislation is intended to cover the field 28 However an issue that was raised without being conclusively resolved in the Workplace Relations Challenge was whether the Commonwealth can clear the field by stating an intention that State laws are not to apply even if the Commonwealth does not enact other laws in their place 29 The Commonwealth can only legislate with respect to an enumerated head of power This does not mean that the law must be solely or even predominantly directed at that head of power As long as it can be fairly characterized as a law with respect to an enumerated power it is irrelevant that it could also be categorised as a law regarding some other subject matter 30 Likewise Parliament s motivation in passing the law is irrelevant 31 An example is environmental legislation The Constitution does not provide the Commonwealth Parliament with any power to control the environment or its use Nonetheless a very broad ranging environmental protection Act could be passed relying on a combination of powers such as interstate and international trade corporations taxation foreign affairs and so on The law can be supported by those powers although Parliament intended it to be an environmental law Particularly in the last two decades many Acts of very wide ranging effect have been passed on just these bases in fields as diverse as environment protection privacy and anti discrimination fields in which the Commonwealth has no direct power Fiscal imbalance edit See also Constitutional basis of taxation in Australia At the time of Federation the colonies main source of revenue consisted of customs and excise duties income tax being still a newer notion Since one of the main reasons for Federation was to create a common market inevitably authority over these taxes was vested exclusively in the Commonwealth Parliament section 90 It was acknowledged that this would create a situation where the Commonwealth would raise much more money than it could spend whereas the States being still responsible for most areas of law and of social infrastructure would need to spend much more money than they could raise the problem now known as vertical fiscal imbalance Although the framers were able to agree on a formula for distribution of the Commonwealth s surplus to the States in the first few years after Federation they could not agree on a long term formula Accordingly section 96 of the Constitution provides that the Commonwealth Parliament may grant financial assistance to any State on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit One result of this has been that the Commonwealth has been able to make grants to the States on terms so specific as to amount to the virtual takeover of particular fields of competence For instance although the Constitution gives the Commonwealth no express power over education by means of tied grants it has in fact become paramount in the field of tertiary education Although any state has the option to refuse a grant the consequences of doing so make this unattractive Similarly the Commonwealth has become dominant in the field of public hospitals and a major player in the field of roads and other major infrastructure The Commonwealth has also come to monopolise income tax Once the advantages of income tax were recognised both the Commonwealth and the States levied income taxes However during World War II the Commonwealth government decided to take over the collection of income taxes and return some proceeds to the States as grants The Commonwealth passed legislation to levy income tax at a nationwide rate similar to the previous combination of Commonwealth tax and the various state taxes Separate legislation then granted section 96 monetary grants to states if the State did not levy income taxes In practice it would be difficult for States to continue taxing This arrangement was twice challenged by the States in the High Court and twice upheld 31 32 In the Second Uniform Tax case the taxation part of the scheme was held to be valid based on the taxation power and the grants held to be valid on the basis of the words terms and conditions of section 96 32 States are also at the mercy of the High Court s definition of an excise duty which states cannot levy The High Court has long stated the definition in terms such as an inland tax on a step in production manufacture sale or distribution of goods However it does not include a mere fee for a licence to carry on a particular business or profession Accordingly the States had for a long time levied with the compliance of the High Court business franchise fees on retailers of products particularly liquor and tobacco products These franchise fees were mostly calculated according to the value of the retailer s sales in a specific preceding period rather than on the value of goods currently being sold Although these seem similar to excise duties a series of High Court precedents had effectively quarantined such fees from disallowance in the areas of liquor retailing tobacco retailing and petrol distribution In 1997 by a bare majority the High Court decided that this area of doctrinal quarantine was incoherent with the rest of the law relating to excise duties and removed it 33 The immediate result was the loss of some 5 billion Australian in the annual revenues of the States and Territories In 1999 the Commonwealth Parliament passed legislation introducing a new broad based Federal indirect tax the Goods and Services Tax the revenue from this tax was to go entirely to the States and Territories in exchange for abolishing a range of other indirect taxes By this stage the financial dependence of the States on the Commonwealth had become almost complete New areas of competence edit The development of various technologies during the twentieth century also added to the power of the centre Section 51 v of the Australian Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament power over postal telegraphic telephonic and other like services With little controversy this power now covers radio television satellite cable and optic fibre technologies A greater struggle occurred over Commonwealth legislation in the field of aviation Commonwealth regulation is based on the interstate and international trade and commerce power Prima facie it does not cover intrastate aviation However a purely intrastate aviation industry is no longer economically feasible and separate systems of state regulation pose safety concerns clarification needed As a result the High Court held that all aviation has an interstate character placing it within Commonwealth legislative power In 1937 a referendum was submitted to the people giving the Commonwealth power over aviation and that the referendum was rejected by the people The rejection of a power by the people has never persuaded the Court that the Commonwealth should not exercise the power Another example concerns intellectual property Although the Constitution gave the Commonwealth Parliament power over copyrights patents of inventions and designs and trade marks the enormous growth of electronic media content has given this power a much wider scope than could possibly have been envisaged at Federation New powers edit The Commonwealth power has been extended by four constitutional amendments An amendment in 1910 and an amendment in 1928 allowed the Commonwealth to take over and manage state debts An amendment passed in 1967 gave the Commonwealth power over Aboriginal affairs which has had a significant effect particularly in the pastoral and central regions of Australia An amendment passed in 1946 gave the Commonwealth power to provide a wide range of social services This included unemployment and sickness benefits maternity allowances child endowment and medical and dental services Apart from defence social services is the largest area of Commonwealth expenditure Along with the grants power it is the basis for the Medicare scheme of universal health insurance The High Court decided that the corporations power was not broad enough to cover incorporation itself 34 This decision threatened the validity of Australian companies incorporated under commonwealth law The states used the referral power to refer the power over incorporation to the Commonwealth Parliament The external affairs power edit Main article Section 51 xxix of the Australian Constitution The Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament power over external affairs Originally this power had little content because Australia s foreign relations were managed by the United Kingdom As Australia gained independence and international personality so did the significance of this power Australia s relations with other countries fall directly under the subject of external affairs 35 36 It includes relations with other British Dominions and further extends to relations with international organisations 37 The pursuit and advancement of friendliness with foreign governments is another vital aspect under the external affairs power 38 The High Court has held that the power covers the regulation of conduct that takes place outside Australia suggesting that mere externality to Australia could enliven the power 39 In particular Commonwealth legislation of 1998 that retroactively criminalised war crimes committed during World War II in Europe by Australian citizens was held a valid exercise of the external affairs power 39 The power has also been held to extend to the implementation of international treaties even if the subject matter of the treaty is otherwise not within Commonwealth power In the case of Koowarta v Bjelke Petersen 37 the High Court found that the Commonwealth had the power to implement the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination in the form of the Racial Discrimination Act In the case of Tasmanian Dams Case 36 the High Court has upheld Commonwealth legislation forbidding the Tasmanian government from proceeding with a dam that would have submerged an area of Tasmanian government owned land that had been declared a World Heritage Area under the World Heritage Convention to which Australia is a party 36 40 Land use is otherwise a State responsibility More recently the external affairs power has been used to remove the States power to criminalise male homosexual activity This followed an adverse report by the Human Rights Committee on Tasmanian provisions The Human Rights Committee was established under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Australia is a party Rather than challenge the resulting Commonwealth Human Rights Sexual Conduct Act of 1994 the Tasmanian Parliament repealed the legislation in question 41 Although it would appear that there is an open ended potential for the Commonwealth to encroach on areas of traditional State competence through the external affairs power to date it has been used with some discretion if only because the use of the power in this way inevitably excites considerable political controversy original research The corporations power edit Main article Section 51 xx of the Australian Constitution The corporations power allows the Commonwealth to legislate on foreign corporations and trading or financial corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth Although the width of the expression trading or financial corporations has never been authoritatively settled it appears that it covers at least all commercial enterprises carried out under the corporate form 42 As corporations have come to dominate the economy the practical scope the corporations power has increased For example in 2005 the Commonwealth Parliament enacted the WorkChoices legislation 43 which relying primarily on the corporations power seeks to create a uniform national industrial relations system to the exclusion of both the States and the Commonwealth s own industrial relations systems Previous systems were based on the conciliation and arbitration power The new legislation applies to all employees of a constitutional corporation A constitutional corporation is a corporation within the meaning of section 51 xx of the Constitution The legislation also applies to employees of the Commonwealth and its agencies and some others The expected coverage of this law is approximately 85 of the Australian workforce That proportion is likely to increase as employers who operate as sole traders or in partnerships incorporate to take advantage of the new legislation s relatively employer friendly provisions On 14 November 2006 the High Court by a 5 to 2 majority upheld the validity of the WorkChoices legislation 43 against all the challenges that had been made to it in an action brought by each of the States and mainland Territories as well as certain trade unions 29 The single majority judgment while it did not expressly adopt waved aside all the objections that had been argued against the object of command test for the validity of the exercise of the corporations power Accordingly the judgment suggests that henceforth it may be a sufficient basis of validity that Federal legislation be specifically addressed to constitutional corporations A constitutional corporation must A constitutional corporation must not without any additional requirement that the legislation also address some aspect of the status or activities of corporations which is specific to such entities original research If this is correct then given the preponderant role of corporations in the modern economy the possibility exists for substantial Federal control of the greater part of the economy with little if any regard to the traditional constitutional heads of power Protection of rights editAccess to the High Court edit To a very large extent the Constitution leaves it to Parliament to determine both the High Court s original jurisdiction section 76 and the exceptions to and conditions on its power to hear appeals section 73 However the Constitution grants the Court some original jurisdiction directly without the possibility of Parliamentary limitation section 75 This includes matters in which a writ of Mandamus or prohibition or an injunction is sought against an officer of the Commonwealth In recent years the Parliament has all but eliminated the possibility of appeal against many decisions in the area of migration especially in regard to applications for refugee status However since the Parliament is not constitutionally able to limit or abolish access to the High Court for the purpose of applying for one of these constitutional writs such applications have become a major means of challenging migration decisions 44 In 2014 15 94 of the applications for constitutional writs involved immigration matters 45 No Bill of Rights edit The Constitution contains no comprehensive set of human rights guarantees Factors sometimes cited for this include faith in the common law s protection of rights and a belief that a powerful Senate would effectively resist overzealous governments The Constitution does contain protection for several specific rights These include right to vote in Commonwealth elections if one can vote in State ones section 41 freedom of religion and prohibition of religious tests for Federal offices section 116 trial by jury in Federal cases tried on indictment section 80 just terms for the compulsory acquisition of property by the Commonwealth section 51 xxxi an ambiguously worded prohibition on discrimination against residents of other States section 117 46 47 All but the last of these have been read down by the High Court at least relative to the content of the corresponding United States guarantees On the other hand since the 1990s the High Court has been developing a jurisprudence of rights said to be implied in the text and structure of the Constitution In addition a constitutional requirement that trade commerce and intercourse among the States shall be absolutely free section 92 was for a time interpreted as a guarantee of some degree of freedom from economic regulation by either Commonwealth or State Parliaments The reference to intercourse on the other hand has always been understood as guaranteeing a right to movement across State boundaries Although express protections for human and civil rights in the Constitution are scant and have mostly been read down some protections have been created by the High Court through its jurisprudence on the separation of powers and through its findings of rights implied by the text and structure of the constitutional document Express rights edit As mentioned there are five rights which the Constitution guarantees against the Commonwealth religious freedom trial by jury just terms compensation free trade between the states and protection against discrimination based on the state an individual lives in A referendum proposal to amend the Constitution to clarify these rights and to make them good also against the States was defeated in 1988 As will be seen guaranteed access to the High Court can itself amount to an important right And the guarantee of free trade and commerce was for a time interpreted as something like an individual right Freedom of religion edit Main article Section 116 of the Constitution of Australia The Constitution states that the Commonwealth shall not make any law for establishing any religion or for imposing any religious observance or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion and no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth section 116 In determining what is considered a religion the High Court has adopted a broad approach demonstrating an unwillingness to create a limiting definition 48 The prohibition on establishing any religion has had nothing like the impact that the corresponding ban on making a law respecting an establishment of religion in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution has had in that country The High Court in rejecting a challenge to Federal funding of church schools 49 seemed to take the view that nothing less than an explicit establishment of a State Church as the official religion of the Commonwealth would come within the terms of the prohibition Section 116 also protects the right of a person to have no religion by prohibiting the Commonwealth from imposing any religious observance 50 Just terms compensation edit Main article Section 51 xxxi of the Constitution of Australia The Constitution gives the Commonwealth power with respect to the acquisition of property on just terms in Section 51 xxxi By contrast the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution contains a prohibition nor shall private property be taken without just compensation The differences between acquisition and taking and between terms and compensation combined with the fact that the Australian provision is expressed as a positive grant of power coupled with a limitation have been read so as to weaken the Australian guarantee relative to the American one The use of the term acquisition has been interpreted so as to require that the Commonwealth or some other party for a Commonwealth purpose actually acquire possessory or proprietary rights over the property in question or at least some benefit the mere extinguishment of a person s proprietary rights by the Commonwealth or a prohibition on effectively exercising them is insufficient to amount to an acquisition 36 37 40 And just terms has been taken to mean something less than just compensation in particular it does not necessarily require payment to the owner of the value of the property when it was compulsorily acquired 51 The Australian film The Castle addresses this issue Protection against residency discrimination edit This section is an excerpt from Section 117 of the Constitution of Australia edit Section 117 of the Constitution of Australia provides protection against discrimination on the basis of State of residence Historically section 117 had been read down by the High Court so as to be devoid of any real meaning 52 For example in 1904 it was found that discrimination in favour of people who are residents of and domiciled in Western Australia was permissible as the Constitution only prohibited discrimination on the basis of a person s State of residence not their State of domicile 53 In the 1989 landmark case Street v Queensland Bar Association the modern approach to interpretation was developed The court held that the purpose of the section was national unity and consequentially residence should be given a broader meaning In addition the court overruled a case in which the historical approach was used 52 In reaching its conclusion each of the seven Justices issued a separate opinion Combining this with the fact that there is little case law referencing section 117 there remains significant debate over the nature and extent of the right contained within it 54 Trial by jury for indictable offences edit The constitutional guarantee that a trial on indictment for a federal offence must be by jury section 80 has been rendered virtually worthless because the High Court has decided that it is applicable only to a trial that proceeds formally by way of indictment and it is completely in Parliament s discretion to decide which offences are triable on indictment and which are not This narrow view is confirmed in the majority judgement of Kingswell v the Queen 51 Powerful dissents to the effect that the section must be given some substantive meaning the trial of offences of some specific degree of gravity must be by jury have not prevailed 51 On the other hand where Parliament has prescribed jury trial the Court has been willing to impose some content on that notion In particular it has insisted that conviction by a jury for a Federal offence must be by the unanimous agreement of the jurors a majority verdict will not suffice 55 56 57 Freedom from economic regulation edit Main article Section 92 of the Constitution of Australia The constitutional requirement that trade commerce and intercourse amongst the States shall be absolutely free section 92 was for a considerable time interpreted as a guarantee of some degree of freedom from government regulation A notable example of this line of jurisprudence was the High Court s disallowance of a Commonwealth Act which had the aim of nationalising the banking industry 58 59 60 In 1988 following the decision in Cole v Whitfield 61 which was notable also for the Court s willingness to use the transcripts of the Convention debates as an aid to interpretation the Court unanimously decided that what the section prohibited in relation to interstate trade and commerce were only discriminatory burdens of a protectionist kind 61 62 That is the section did no more than guarantee free trade in the conventional sense among the States But in relation to intercourse i e personal movement between States the Court suggested that the scope of the guarantee would be much wider and may even in relation to some forms of such intercourse be truly absolute 63 64 65 Implied rights edit Implied rights are the political and civil freedoms that necessarily underlie the actual words of the constitution but are not themselves expressly stated directly in the constitution 66 The High Court has held that no implication can be drawn from the Constitution which is not based on the actual terms of the Constitution or on its structure 67 Since the 1990s the High Court has discovered rights which are said to be implied by the very structure and textual form of the Constitution 68 Chief amongst these is an implied right to freedom of communication on political matters In addition some protections of civil liberties have been the result of the High Court s zealous attempts to safeguard the independence of and confidence in the Federal judiciary Freedom of political communication edit Main article Freedom of political communication Two cases decided in 1992 established a new implied right to freedom of communication on political matters The first case Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Wills concerned a Federal provision criminalising the bringing into disrepute of members of an industrial relations tribunal and a prosecution under that provision of a person who had published a newspaper article repeatedly describing such members as corrupt and compliant 69 The second case Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Commonwealth concerned a Federal attempt to ban political advertising on radio and television during election periods and to strictly control it at other times via a system of free time entitlements 70 In both cases the majority of the High Court reasoned that since the Constitution required direct election of members of the Federal Parliament and since moreover the Ministers of State were required to be or swiftly become members of that Parliament the result was that representative democracy is constitutionally entrenched That being so freedom of public discussion of political and economic matters is essential to allow the people to make their political judgments so as to exercise their right to vote effectively Furthermore since public affairs and political discussion are indivisible it is impossible to limit this necessary freedom to purely Federal issues it applies also to issues which might be the preserve of the State or local levels of government Therefore there is implied in the Constitution a guarantee of freedom of communication on all political matters 70 The Court stressed that this freedom is not absolute but the result in both cases was that the relevant Federal legislation was struck down In the latter case some strong dissents to the effect that limiting expenditure on political advertising in the electronic media might actually enhance representative democracy did not prevail Both these cases concerned the validity of Federal legislation But two years later the Court extended the implied guarantee into the area of private law by holding that it also applied to limit the statutory and common law of defamation A former chairman of a Commonwealth Parliamentary Committee on Migration claimed to have been defamed by a newspaper which had published a letter accusing him of bias in his official capacity towards people of his own ethnic background 71 72 By trial it was conceded that the accusation was false However the Court accepted a constitutional defence which was said by three Justices to operate when otherwise defamatory statements concerning the fitness of a public official to hold office were published without knowledge of or recklessness as to their falsity and when publication was reasonable in the circumstances This case however and a series of following cases failed to produce a clear statement of the operative principle which commanded the support of a majority of the Court But in 1997 in Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation which involved the alleged defamation of a former Prime Minister of New Zealand a unanimous Court did state the operative principle It rejected the constitutional defence of the migration bias case just discussed and instead expanded the scope of qualified privilege requiring the defendant to have actively taken reasonable steps to verify the accuracy of the published material and also in most circumstances to have given the defamed person an opportunity to respond 73 74 On the other hand the Court made it clear that the qualified privilege may extend to discussion concerning the United Nations and other countries even where there is no direct nexus with the exercise of political choice in Australia In McCloy v New South Wales the High Court further endorsed the view that a qualified freedom of political communication exists and provided an updated and more detailed legal test 75 The constitutional guarantee of freedom of political communication is prima facie far more restricted than the generalised guarantee of freedom of speech and of the press in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution But it remains to be seen whether a suitable expansion of the notion of political communication may not lead in time to a similar result In the migration bias case some of the Justices while being careful to quarantine commercial speech without political content seemed to imply that the scope of political speech may nevertheless be very broad indeed Mitchell Landrigan goes as far as arguing that the exception to the Anti Discrimination Act 1977 NSW permitting the exclusion of women from ordination as priests infringes the right of women to rise to positions from which they may take part in political speech as politically persuasive religious leaders 76 Any such constitutional protection would depend on a court finding that the anti discrimination laws first effectively burdened political speech as relevant to the Commonwealth Parliament and secondly disproportionately burdened such speech Right to vote edit Main article Suffrage in Australia The Constitution is silent as to many aspects of the democratic process leaving these details to be provided by Parliament The Constitution does however require in sections 7 and 24 that the members of Parliament be directly chosen by the people 77 In 1975 two judges of the High Court suggested that these requirements may amount to a right to vote holding the long established universal adult suffrage may now be recognized as a fact and as a result it is doubtful whether anything less than this could be described as a choice by the people 78 In 1983 the High Court took a limited view of the right to vote in R v Pearson Ex parte Sipka 79 The High Court Judge Michael Kirby writing extrajudicially in 2000 said that in Australia there may be a basic right to vote implied in the text of the constitution itself 80 Prior to 2006 prisoners were only disenfranchised if they were serving sentences of three years or more 81 82 2006 legislation sought to disenfranchise all prisoners regardless of the length of their sentence 83 The validity of the disenfranchisement was challenged by Vickie Roach who was serving a four year gaol term for negligently causing serious injury in a car accident and her legal team comprised Ron Merkel QC and Michael Pearce SC 84 In 2007 the High Court held in Roach v Electoral Commissioner that the requirement that members be directly chosen by the people conferred a limited right to vote 85 In principle these words guaranteed qualified universal franchise and limited the Federal government s legislative power to limit that franchise The court held that removing right to vote for serious misconduct was acceptable and that the previous legislation was valid however imprisonment failed as a method of identifying serious criminal misconduct such that the 2006 amendments 83 were invalid 85 86 The 2006 legislation 83 was again considered in Rowe v Electoral Commissioner where the High Court held that amendments restricting the enrolment of voters once an election has been called were also invalid 66 The High Court subsequently held that closing the electoral roles 7 days after the issuing of writs was not a burden on the constitutional mandate that members of Parliament be directly chosen by the people 87 The right to vote does not involve a corresponding right not to vote 88 The High Court rejected a challenge to the 2016 Senate voting changes holding that both above the line and below the line voting were constitutionally valid methods for the people to choose their Senators 89 Right to due process edit As mentioned above the fact that the Constitution prescribes a system of responsible or parliamentary government means that there can be no meaningful separation of the legislative and executive powers despite their distinct textual separation in the Constitution However the same consideration does not militate against a separation of the judicial power from the other two and in fact the High Court has come to insist on this with some force It has also held that the separation of the judicial power implies that a body exercising that power must do so in a manner that is consistent with traditional notions of what constitutes judicial process The result may be a limited constitutional guarantee of due process The judicial power of the Commonwealth is vested in Chapter III of the Constitution in the High Court and such other courts as the Parliament creates or invests with Federal jurisdiction 90 91 In Australian constitutional jargon such courts are called Chapter III courts The members of Chapter III courts may not be removed except by the Governor General on an address from both Houses of Parliament on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity they otherwise hold office until the age of 70 92 In separate cases in 1915 93 and 1918 94 the High Court held that judicial power essentially the power of interpretation of the law and enforcement of decisions could not be invested in anything other than a Chapter III court and specifically in anything other than a body whose members have life tenure In Kruger v Commonwealth 1997 the High Court considered claims by members of the Stolen Generation 95 including that their removal and subsequent detention without due process was in contravention of the Constitution 96 Dawson J 96 p 61 and McHugh J 96 p 142 held that the Constitution contained no general guarantee of due process of law Toohey Gaudron and Gummow JJ held that the removal of Indigenous children was not the exercise of judicial power hence no question of due process arose 97 The converse of the separation of powers is the decision of the High Court in Boilermakers Case in 1956 that Chapter III courts cannot be invested with anything other than judicial power 20 98 99 100 To some extent the rigour of the separation of powers doctrine was softened by the Court s subsequent acceptance that judges could constitutionally be assigned functions in their personal capacity as judges rather than as members of a Chapter III court 101 102 But this raised the question of which such functions were compatible with the simultaneous holding of Federal judicial office The answers offered by the Court have been controversial and involved some very fine distinctions for instance it has held that a power to authorise telephone interceptions is compatible 103 while a power to make recommendations concerning the protection of land which might be of heritage significance to Aboriginals is not compatible 104 105 The most striking application and extension of this incompatibility doctrine however has involved the Supreme Court of the State of New South Wales a court that may be invested with Federal jurisdiction 91 Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions 1996 99 106 concerned a criminal law passed by the New South Parliament and directed at a single named individual somewhat in the manner of a Bill of attainder The individual was a prisoner under state law whose sentence was about to expire but who was alleged to have made threats against the safety of various persons to be carried out when released The State Parliament enacted a law applying only to him which authorised the Supreme Court of New South Wales to make preventive detention orders for periods up to six months with the possibility of renewal 107 The orders were to be made if the Court was satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the person to whom the Act applied was more likely than not to commit a serious act of violence It is clear that had the Federal Parliament passed such an Act it would be found invalid as it was in effect a legislative judgment and so violated of the constitutional separation of the judicial power However the High Court found that the separation of powers was not a feature of the New South Wales constitution so the State Act was not invalid on that ground The Act was found invalid however on the ground that since the Supreme Court of New South Wales had been invested with federal jurisdiction it must not be required to perform a function incompatible with the exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth To that extent the States are not free to legislate as they please with respect to their own courts A requirement to order the preventive detention of someone who has not been charged with any criminal offence was found incompatible with the exercise of Federal judicial power In this rather circuitous manner the High Court has found a limited constitutional guarantee of due process See also edit nbsp Australia portalAustralian Constitution Constitutional history of Australia Separation of church and state in Australia Separation of powers in Australia Federalism in Australia Referendums in Australia Section 51 of the Australian Constitution federal heads of powerTrade and Commerce Power Corporations Power External Affairs PowerSection 109 of the Australian Constitution inconsistency between state and federal lawsReferences edit The Honourable Murray Gleeson 18 June 2008 The Privy Council an Australian Perspective PDF High Court of Australia Aroney Nicholas 2009 The constitution of a federal commonwealth the making and meaning of the Australian constitution Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 12968 8 OCLC 774393122 Williams George Brennan Sean Lynch Andrew 2014 Blackshield and Williams Australian Constitutional Law and Theory 6 ed Leichhardt NSW Federation Press pp 77 88 ISBN 978 1 86287 918 8 Aroney Nicholas Kincaid John Analysis Comparing Australian and American federal jurisprudence Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 4 November 2020 James A Thomson American and Australian Constitutions Continuing Adventures in Comparative Constitutional Law 30 J Marshall L Rev 627 1997 Zelman Cowan A Comparison of the Constitutions of Australia and the United States 4 Buff L Rev 155 1955 Evans Harry December 2009 The Other Metropolis The Australian Founders Knowledge of America Papers on Parliament No 52 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Australian Communist Party v The Commonwealth Communist party case 1951 HCA 5 1951 83 CLR 1 See also Pape v Commissioner of Taxation 2009 HCA 23 2009 238 CLR 1 KEYZER PATRICK 2000 The Americanness of the Australian Constitution The Influence of American Constitutional Jurisprudence on Australian Constitutional Jurisprudence 1988 to 1994 Australasian Journal of American Studies 19 2 25 35 ISSN 1838 9554 JSTOR 41053826 COMPARATIVE LAW IN AUSTRALIAN CONSTITUTIONAL JURISPRUDENCE NICHOLAS ARONEY UNITED STATES INFLUENCE ON THE AUSTRALIAN LEGAL SYSTEM THE HON ROBERT FRENCH AC Aroney Nicholas Kincaid John Analysis Comparing Australian and American federal jurisprudence Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 6 November 2020 Key Terms Constitutional Monarchy australianpolitics com Archived from the original on 8 August 2010 Retrieved 9 July 2010 Ireland Ian amp Magarey Kirsty 23 January 1998 Research Note 24 1997 98 Powers of the Head of State of Australia and South Africa Parliamentary Library of Australia Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 a b c Downing Susan 23 January 1998 Research Note 25 1997 98 The Reserve Powers of the Governor General Parliamentary Library of Australia Archived from the original on 26 July 2010 Deakin v Webb 1904 HCA 57 1904 1 CLR 585 at p 606 per Grifith CJ Barton amp O Connor JJ Canadian Western Bank v Alberta 2007 SCC 22 at par 32 2007 2 SCR 3 31 May 2007 Supreme Court Canada House of Representatives Practice 6th ed Parliament of Australia Retrieved 12 September 2012 Egan v Willis 1998 HCA 71 1998 95 CLR 424 Egan v Chadwick 1999 NSWCA 176 1999 46 NSWLR 563 Court of Appeal NSW Australia a b c R v Kirby Ex parte Boilermakers Society of Australia Boilermakers case 1956 HCA 110 1956 94 CLR 254 See also Attorney General Commonwealth v The Queen 1957 UKPC 4 1957 AC 288 1957 95 CLR 529 Privy Council on appeal from Australia Re Wakim Ex parte McNally 1999 HCA 27 1999 198 CLR 51173 White v Director of Military Prosecutions 2007 HCA 29 2007 231 CLR 570 Attorney General for NSW v Brewery Employees Union of NSW Union Label Case 1908 HCA 94 1908 6 CLR 469 D Emden v Pedder 1904 HCA 1 1904 1 CLR 91 a b c d Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd Engineers Case 1920 HCA 54 1920 28 CLR 129 Jumbunna Coal Mine NL v Victorian Coal Miners Association 1908 HCA 95 1908 6 CLR 309 Ex parte McLean 1930 HCA 12 1930 43 CLR 472 see also Clyde Engineering Co Ltd v Cowburn 1926 HCA 6 1926 37 CLR 466 Wenn v Attorney General Victoria 1948 HCA 134 1948 77 CLR 84 a b NSW v Commonwealth WorkChoices case 2006 HCA 52 2006 229 CLR 1 Actors and Announcers Equity Association v Fontana Films Pty Ltd 1982 HCA 23 1982 150 CLR 169 See also Fairfax v Commissioner of Taxation 1965 HCA 64 1965 114 CLR 1 a b South Australia v Commonwealth the First Uniform Tax case 1942 HCA 14 1942 65 CLR 373 a b Victoria v Commonwealth the Second Uniform Tax case 1957 HCA 54 1957 99 CLR 575 Ha v New South Wales 1997 HCA 34 1997 189 CLR 465 see also Matthews v Chicory Marketing Board Vic 1938 HCA 38 1938 60 CLR 263 NSW v Commonwealth Incorporation case 1990 HCA 2 1990 169 CLR 482 R v Sharkey 1949 HCA 46 1949 79 CLR 121 a b c d Commonwealth v Tasmania the Tasmanian Dams Case 1983 HCA 21 1983 158 CLR 1 a b c Koowarta v Bjelke Petersen 1982 HCA 27 1983 153 CLR 168 Thomas v Mowbray 2007 HCA 33 2007 233 CLR 307 a b Polyukhovich v Commonwealth War Crimes Act Case 1991 HCA 32 1991 172 CLR 501 a b Richardson v Forestry Commission 1988 HCA 10 1988 164 CLR 261 See also Toonen v Australia 1994 UNHCR R v Federal Court of Australia Ex parte WA National Football League 1979 HCA 6 1979 143 CLR 190 a b Workplace Relations Amendment Work Choices Act 2005 Commonwealth of Australia Chief Justice Robert French 25 March 2011 The Role of the Courts in Migration Law PDF High Court High Court of Australia Annual Report 2014 15 PDF High Court p 19 Henry v Boehm 1973 HCA 32 1973 128 CLR 482 Street v Queensland Bar Association 1989 HCA 53 1989 168 CLR 461 Church of the New Faith v Commissioner of Pay roll Tax Scientology case 1983 HCA 40 1983 154 CLR 120 Attorney General Vic Ex Rel Black v Commonwealth DOGS Case 1981 HCA 2 1981 146 CLR 559 Adelaide Co of Jehovah s Witnesses Inc v Commonwealth 1943 HCA 12 1943 67 CLR 116 at p 123 per Latham CJ a b c Kingswell v The Queen 1985 HCA 72 1985 159 CLR 264 a b Matheison Michael 1999 Section 117 of the Constitution The Unfinished Rehabilitation Archived from the original on 25 October 2000 1999 27 3 Federal Law Review 393 ISSN 0067 205X Davies v Western Australia 1904 HCA 46 1904 2 CLR 29 23 December 1904 High Court Australia Simpson Amelia 2008 The Limited Significance of the Individual in Section 117 State Residence Discrimination Melbourne University Law Review 2008 32 2 Melbourne University Law Review 639 ISSN 0025 8938 Cheatle v The Queen 1993 HCA 44 1993 177 CLR 541 R v Bernasconi 1915 HCA 13 1915 19 CLR 629 Brownlee v The Queen 2000 HCATrans 687 Bank of NSW v Commonwealth the Bank Nationalisation Case 1948 HCA 7 1948 76 CLR 1 McCarter v Brodie 1950 HCA 18 1950 80 CLR 432 North Eastern Dairy Co Ltd v Dairy Industry Authority of NSW 1975 HCA 45 1975 134CLR 559 a b Cole v Whitfield 1988 HCA 18 1988 165 CLR 360 Bath v Alston Holdings Pty Ltd 1988 HCA 27 1988 165 CLR 411 Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia 1990 HCA 1 1990 169 CLR 436 Betfair Pty Limited v Western Australia 2008 HCA 11 2008 234 CLR 418 Sportsbet Pty Ltd v New South Wales 2012 HCA 18 2012 249 CLR 298 a b Rowe v Electoral Commissioner 2010 HCA 46 2010 243 CLR 1 McGinty v Western Australia 1996 HCA 48 1996 186 CLR 140 Burns R 1997 Political Discussion as a Defence to Defamation Lange v Australian Broadcasting Commission 1997 High Court Review 13 Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Wills 1992 HCA 46 1992 177 CLR 1 See also Suntory Aust Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation 2009 FCAFC 80 Federal Court Full Court Australia a b Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Commonwealth 1992 HCA 45 1992 177 CLR 106 Theophanous v Herald amp Weekly Times Ltd 1994 HCA 46 1994 182 CLR 104 See also Williams George 1996 97 The State of Play in the Constitutionally Implied Freedom of Political Discussion and Bans on Electoral Canvassing in Australia Parliamentary Library of Australia Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1997 HCA 25 1997 189 CLR 520 see also Bass v Roberts 2000 SADC 35 Adelaide v Corneloup 2011 SASCFC 84 Monis v The Queen 2013 HCA 4 2013 249 CLR 9 Unions NSW v NSW 2013 HCA 58 2013 252 CLR 530 Gibbs v Christies Beach Sports amp Social Club No 1 2000 SADC 28 McCloy v New South Wales 2015 HCA 34 2015 257 CLR 17 7 October 2015 High Court Landrigan Mitchell 2009 Voices in the Political Wilderness Women in the Sydney Anglican Diocese 2009 34 3 Alternative Law Journal 177 doi 10 1177 1037969X0903400307 S2CID 220052381 section 7 and section 24 Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Attorney General Cth Ex rel McKinlay v Commonwealth 1975 HCA 653 1975 135 CLR 1 per McTeirnnan amp Jacobs JJ at 6 R v Pearson Ex parte Sipka 1983 HCA 6 1983 152 CLR 254 The Hon Justice Michael Kirby Upholding The Franchise 2001 21 Australian Bar Review 1 ISSN 0814 8589 Archived from the original on 26 April 2013 Section 93 8 b Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 Commonwealth of Australia 16 May 2005 Jerome Davidson 24 May 2004 Inside outcasts prisoners and the right to vote in Australia PDF Parliamentary Library of Australia Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2004 a b c Electoral and Referendum Amendment Electoral Integrity and Other Measures Act 2006 Cth Commonwealth of Australia Kenneth Nguyen 25 April 2007 Prisoner goes to High Court to win right to vote The Age p 3 a b Roach v Electoral Commissioner 2007 HCA 43 2007 233 CLR 162 Prisoners and the Right to Vote Roach v AEC and Commonwealth of Australia Human Rights Law Resource Centre Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 Murphy v Electoral Commissioner 2016 HCA 36 Holmdahl v Australian Electoral Commission No 2 2012 SASCFC 110 Day v Australian Electoral Officer for the State of South Australia 2016 HCA 20 Constitution Cth s 71 Judicial power and Courts a b High Court Justice Sir Owen Dixon described the power of the Australian Parliament to invest State courts with Federal jurisdiction as an autochthonous expedient essentially an economy measure in a country of small population 20 Constitution Cth s 72 Judges appointment tenure and remuneration Judicial office was originally for life the age limit was introduced by a referendum in 1977 New South Wales v Commonwealth Wheat Case 1915 HCA 17 1915 20 CLR 54 Waterside Workers Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd 1918 HCA 56 1918 25 CLR 434 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children who had been systematically removed from their families by the Australian Federal and State government agencies Community Guide PDF Bringing Them Home Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission 1997 Archived from the original PDF on 29 December 2005 a b c Kruger v Commonwealth Stolen Generation case 1997 HCA 27 1997 190 CLR 1 High Court Australia Kruger v Commonwealth 1997 HCA 27 1997 190 CLR 1 per Toohey J at p 84 Gaudron J at p 110 and Gummow J at p 162 See also Victorian Stevedoring amp General Contracting Company Pty Ltd v Dignan 1931 HCA 34 1931 46 CLR 73 a b Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions NSW 1996 HCA 24 1996 189 CLR 51 By this decision the system of industrial arbitration that had been in place for 30 years and which involved judges of the Conciliation and Arbitration Court acting in both a judicial and an administrative capacity was overturned See also Brandy v Human Rights amp Equal Opportunity Commission 1995 HCA 10 1995 183 CLR 245 As of June 2017 update judges of the Federal Court have been appointed as the President of the Fair Work Commission Iain Ross and President of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal John Logan Grollo v Palmer 1995 HCA 26 1995 184 CLR 348 Wainohu v New South Wales 2011 HCA 24 2011 243 CLR 181 Hilton v Wells 1985 HCA 16 1985 157 CLR 57 KS v Veitch No 2 2012 NSWCA 266 Gypsy Jokers Motorcycle Club INC v Commissioner of Police No2 2008 WASC 166 Wilson v Minister for Aboriginal amp Torres Strait Islander Affairs Hindmarsh Island case 1996 HCA 18 1996 189 CLR 1 Al Kateb v Godwin 2004 HCA 37 2004 219 CLR 562 See also Kable v State of NSW 2012 NSWCA 243 Fencott v Muller 1983 HCA 12 1983 152 CLR 570 Kirk v Industrial Relations Commission 2010 HCA 1 2010 239 CLR 531 Attorney General NT v Emmerson 2014 HCA 13 2010 253 CLR 393 Community Protection Act 1994 NSW Bibliography editTony Blackshield and George Williams Australian Constitutional Law and Theory Commentary and Materials 3rd ed Federation Press Annandale NSW 2002 John Quick and Robert Garran The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth LexisNexis Butterworths Sydney 1901 2002 Leslie Zines The High Court and the Constitution 4th ed Butterworths Sydney 1997 Greg Craven Conversations with the Constitution 1st ed UNSW Press Sydney 2004 External links editFull text of the Constitution from the Australian Attorney General s Department Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian constitutional law amp oldid 1214330062, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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