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Separation of powers in Australia

The separation of powers in Australia is the division of the institutions of the Australian government into legislative, executive and judicial branches. This concept is where legislature makes the laws, the executive put the laws into operation, and the judiciary interprets the laws; all independently of each other. The term, and its occurrence in Australia, is due to the text and structure of the Australian Constitution, which derives its influences from democratic concepts embedded in the Westminster system, the doctrine of "responsible government" and the United States version of the separation of powers. However, due to the conventions of the Westminster system, a strict separation of powers is not always evident in the Australian political system, with little separation between the executive and the legislature, with the executive required to be drawn from, and maintain the confidence of, the legislature; a fusion.[1]

The first three chapters of the Australian Constitution are headed respectively "The Parliament", "The Executive Government", and "The Judicature". Each of these chapters begins with a section by which the relevant "power of the Commonwealth" is "vested" in the appropriate persons or bodies. On the other hand, the Constitution incorporates responsible government, in which the legislature and the executive are effectively united. This incorporation is reflected in sections 44, 62 and 64 of the Constitution.

Legislature and executive edit

Currently in Australia, there is no constitutional system where there is a complete separation of powers.[2] In the Westminster system, ministers (executive) are required to sit in Parliament (legislative). This is to adhere with the concept of Responsible Government, which is a requirement of section 64 of the Constitution.[3]

The specific requirement for ministers to sit in Parliament established the connection between executive and legislative, though any person may be appointed a Minister, their appointment lapses if they do not gain a seat in either house of the Parliament within three months. This provision was necessary in 1901, as the first government was sworn in on 1 January but the first parliament was not elected until late March (see 1901 Australian federal election). However, the provision is still relevant, such as the appointment of Bob Carr as Foreign Minister in 2012 prior to his appointment to the Senate. It also applies when a minister in the House of Representatives loses their seat at a general election; despite no longer being a member of parliament, the Minister will typically retain their portfolio for some days after the election, until the new government is sworn in. It also applied when John Gorton became Prime Minister in 1968; he was sworn in while a member of the Senate, then he resigned to contest a by-election for a lower house seat, which he won, but between his resignation from the Senate and being elected to the House of Representatives, he remained Prime Minister without holding any seat in Parliament.

In Victorian Stevedoring & General Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Dignan, the High Court of Australia held that it was impossible, consistent with the British tradition, to insist upon a strict separation between legislative and executive powers.[4] It was found that legislative power may be delegated to the executive, and as a result upheld the validity of delegated legislation. By contrast, in its insistence on a strict separation of "judicial power", the High Court has been less willing to compromise.[5] Furthermore, the role of the courts was discussed in Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW), whereby a NSW statute was invalidated since it purported to confer not-judicial functions to court.[5][6] The principle that a State Court cannot be assigned powers that are incompatible with its constitutionally protected independence was extended to Territory Courts in Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (2000).[7]

The legislature can allocate the executive some of its powers, such as of the making of regulations under an Act passed by Parliament. Similarly, the legislature could restrict or over-rule some powers held by the executive by passing new laws to that effect, though these could be subject to judicial review.

The exceptionally strong party discipline in Australia, especially in the lower house, has had the effect of weakening scrutiny of the executive by the legislature since within the lower house, every member of the numerically larger party will almost always support the executive and its propositions on all issues.

On the other hand, the Senate has had the effect of restraining the power of the executive through its ability to query, amend and block government legislation. The result of the adoption of a proportional system of voting in 1949 has been that the Senate in recent decades has rarely been controlled by governments. Minor parties have gained greater representation and Senate majorities on votes come from a coalition of groups on a particular issue, usually after debate by the Opposition and Independents.

The Constitution does, moreover, provide for one form of physical separation of executive and legislature. Section 44, concerning the disqualifications applying to membership of Parliament, excludes from Parliament government employees (who hold "an office of profit under the crown" (iv)) along with people in certain contractual arrangements with the Commonwealth. This was demonstrated in 1992 after Independent MP, Phil Cleary, had won the Victorian seat of Wills. Cleary, on leave without pay from the Victorian Education Department at the time of his election, was held in Sykes v Cleary to be holding an office of profit under the Crown and disqualified. The Court noted that that Section 44's intention was to separate executive influence from the legislature.[8]

Judiciary edit

As early as New South Wales v Commonwealth (The Wheat Case), the High Court decided that the strict insulation of judicial power was a fundamental principle of the Constitution.[9][10] This also applies to tribunals and commissions set up by Federal Parliament which, unlike some of their equivalents in the states, can only recommend consequences. The Federal Parliament itself has the rarely used privilege of being able to act as a court in some circumstances, primarily where it may regard a non-member as acting "in contempt" of parliament.

The reasoning in the Wheat Case was taken further in Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd where a decisive distinction between judicial and arbitral functions was drawn.[11] The High Court made reference to the separation of powers again in R v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society of Australia (Boilermakers' Case), highlighting that only a Chapter III Court can exercise judicial powers and, that a Chapter III Court is only permitted to exercise judicial power.[10]

A consequence of the Australian version of the separation of powers is its role in encouraging judicial deference to the "political" arms of government. The normal propensity of the High Court is to recognise that separation of powers requires not only that the "political branches" should not interfere with judicial activity, but also that the judiciary should leave politicians and administrators alone. The importance of deference has been acknowledged in extrajudicial writings, and in decisions such as Drake v Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs (No 2).[12]

As a manifestation of the separation of powers, a 'Chapter III Court' cannot make administrative decisions. In administrative law this means that the courts cannot substitute an original decision of the executive, but can only decide on its correctness.[13]

The doctrine of persona designata permits non-judicial functions to be conferred on judges in their personal capacity, as opposed to their judicial capacity.[1][14][15] However, in Hindmarsh Island Bridge case, it was held that this is subject to the compatibility of the conferred non-judicial function with judicial office.[16]

Prevalence in States edit

While there are strong textual and structural bases for the independence of the judiciary in the Commonwealth Constitution, the same is not true of the State constitutions. State courts, unlike their federal counterparts, are therefore capable of exercising non-judicial functions.[5] For example, the District Court of South Australia, through its Administrative and Disciplinary Division, conducts merits review of administrative decisions, a function which at Commonwealth level can only be exercised by Executive tribunals. Nevertheless, a degree of judicial independence is maintained at State level by convention.

The federal separation of powers also has implications for State courts, due to the fact that State courts may be invested with federal judicial power under section 71 of the Commonwealth Constitution. On this basis it was held in Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) that a State court could not be given a function inconsistent with its status as a potential repository of federal judicial power.[5] The doctrine was rarely applied in the early years following Kable, leading Justice Kirby to describe it as "a constitutional guard-dog that would bark but once."[17] However, there has been a revival in the High Court's application of the doctrine since 2009.[18] One recent case was South Australia v Totani,[19] which involved a challenge to the validity of the Serious and Organised Crime (Control) Act 2008 (SA).[20] Section 14(1) of the Act required members of the Magistrates' Court of South Australia to make control orders on application by the Commissioner of Police, provided only that the Magistrate was satisfied that the person subject to the control order was a member of a declared organisation. Even though the functions of the Magistrates' Court under the Act are purely a matter of South Australian law, the fact that the Court is also capable of exercising federal jurisdiction was held to require that it maintain certain standards of independence and impartiality so that it retain the character of a court.

Parliamentary scrutiny of the executive and, in particular, by the New South Wales Legislative Council, was tested in the 1990s when Treasurer Michael Egan, on behalf of Cabinet, refused to table documents in the Legislative Council of which he was a member. The Council, determined to exercise its scrutiny of the executive, pressed the issues and eventually adjudged the Treasurer in contempt, suspending him from the house twice. The matters were disputed in three cases in the High Court and the Supreme Court of New South Wales. The results upheld that principle that the Legislative Council does have the power to order the production of documents by a member of the House, including a minister, and can counter obstruction.[21][22][23] However, the extent of the Legislative Council's power in relation to Cabinet documents remains unclear.

In 2018 the High Court held that all matters falling within section 75,[24] and section 76,[25] of the Constitution formed part of the judicial power of the Commonwealth, including a dispute between the residents of different States. It followed that the federal separation of powers meant that a State tribunal was unable to determine a dispute between residents of different States.[26]

Prevalence in Territories edit

One of the bases for the separation of powers in the Constitution is that the powers of the Parliament are found in Chapter I, executive powers are in Chapter II and judicial powers are in Chapter III. In 1915 it had been held that the separation of powers precluded the exercise of judicial power by the Inter-State Commission, provided for at section 101,[27] in Chapter IV Finance and Trade.[9] The power to make laws for the government of the territories is found in section 122,[28] located in Chapter VI New States. How section 122 relates to Chapter III is "a problem of interpretation ... which has vexed judges and commentators since the earliest days of Federation"[29] Three of the six judges in the Stolen Generations case,[30] held that the separation of powers doctrine did not apply to the power to make laws for a territory under section 122 of the Constitution. The High Court went on to hold in 2004 that federal jurisdiction can be invested by the Australian Parliament in a Territory court as well as in a State court.[31] In 2015 the question was again considered by the High Court where Gageler J,[32]: at [118]  and Keane J,[32]: at [161]  held that the power under section 122 was not constrained by the doctrine of separation of powers enshrined in Chapter III of the Constitution. Keane J similarly held . The other members of the Court, French CJ, Kiefel and Bell JJ,[32]: at [46]  and Nettle and Gordon JJ,[32]: at [194]  found it was unnecessary to answer the question.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hilton v Wells [1985] HCA 16, (1985) 157 CLR 57, High Court (Australia).
  2. ^ Carney, G (1993). "Separation of Powers in the Westminster System" (PDF). ASPG (Qld Chapter). Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  3. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 64 Ministers of State.
  4. ^ Victorian Stevedoring & General Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Dignan [1931] HCA 34, (1931) 467 CLR 73, High Court (Australia), see also Roche v Kronheimer [1921] HCA 25, (1921) 29 CLR 329, High Court (Australia)
  5. ^ a b c d Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) [1996] HCA 24, (1996) 189 CLR 51, High Court (Australia).
  6. ^ Kirk v Industrial Court of NSW [2010] HCA 1, (2010) 239 CLR 531, High Court (Australia).
  7. ^ Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy [2000] HCA 63, (2000) 205 CLR 337, High Court (Australia).
  8. ^ Sykes v Cleary [1992] HCA 60, (1992) 176 CLR 77, High Court (Australia).
  9. ^ a b New South Wales v Commonwealth [1915] HCA 17, (1915) 20 CLR 54, High Court (Australia).
  10. ^ a b R v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society of Australia [1956] HCA 10, (1956) 94 CLR 254, High Court (Australia).
  11. ^ Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd [1918] HCA 56, (1918) 25 CLR 434, High Court (Australia)
  12. ^ Re Drake and Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (No 2) [1979] AATA 179, (1979) 11 FLR 203, Administrative Appeals Tribunal (Australia).
  13. ^ Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corp [1947] EWCA 1, [1948] 1 KB 223, Court of Appeal (England and Wales).
  14. ^ Grollo v Palmer [1995] HCA 26, (1995) 184 CLR 348, High Court (Australia).
  15. ^ Wainohu v New South Wales [2011] HCA 24, (2011) 243 CLR 181, High Court (Australia).
  16. ^ Wilson v Minister for Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Affairs [1996] HCA 18, (1996) 189 CLR 1, High Court (Australia).
  17. ^ Baker v R [2004] HCA 45, (2004) 223 CLR 513 at [54] per Kirby J, High Court (Australia).
  18. ^ Appleby, G (2014). "The High Court and Kable: A Study in Federalism and Rights Protection". Monash University Law Review. (2015) 40 Monash University Law Review 673.
  19. ^ South Australia v Totani [2010] HCA 39, (2010) 242 CLR 1, High Court (Australia).
  20. ^ Serious and Organised Crime (Control) Act 2008 (SA) s 14.
  21. ^ Egan v Willis and Cahill [1996] NSWCA 583, (1996) 40 NSWLR 650, Court of Appeal (NSW, Australia).
  22. ^ Egan v Willis [1998] HCA 71, (1998) 95 CLR 424, High Court (Australia).
  23. ^ Egan v Chadwick [1999] NSWCA 176, (1999) 46 NSWLR 563, Court of Appeal (NSW, Australia).
  24. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 75 Original jurisdiction of High Court.
  25. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 76 Additional original jurisdiction.
  26. ^ Burns v Corbett [2018] HCA 15 Judgment summary (PDF), High Court
  27. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 101 Inter‑State Commission.
  28. ^ Constitution (Cth) s 122 Government of territories.
  29. ^ Re The Governor, Goulburn Correctional Centre; Ex parte Eastman [1999] HCA 44, (1999) 200 CLR 322 at p. 332 [9] (2 September 1999), High Court (Australia).
  30. ^ Kruger v Commonwealth [1997] HCA 27, (1997) 190 CLR 1, High Court (Australia) per Brennan CJ, Dawson and McHugh JJ.
  31. ^ North Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service Inc v Bradley [2004] HCA 31, (2004) 218 CLR 146, High Court (Australia).
  32. ^ a b c d North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency Limited v Northern Territory [2015] HCA 41, (2015) 256 CLR 569, High Court (Australia).

separation, powers, australia, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions October 2012 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Separation of powers in Australia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The separation of powers in Australia is the division of the institutions of the Australian government into legislative executive and judicial branches This concept is where legislature makes the laws the executive put the laws into operation and the judiciary interprets the laws all independently of each other The term and its occurrence in Australia is due to the text and structure of the Australian Constitution which derives its influences from democratic concepts embedded in the Westminster system the doctrine of responsible government and the United States version of the separation of powers However due to the conventions of the Westminster system a strict separation of powers is not always evident in the Australian political system with little separation between the executive and the legislature with the executive required to be drawn from and maintain the confidence of the legislature a fusion 1 The first three chapters of the Australian Constitution are headed respectively The Parliament The Executive Government and The Judicature Each of these chapters begins with a section by which the relevant power of the Commonwealth is vested in the appropriate persons or bodies On the other hand the Constitution incorporates responsible government in which the legislature and the executive are effectively united This incorporation is reflected in sections 44 62 and 64 of the Constitution Contents 1 Legislature and executive 2 Judiciary 3 Prevalence in States 4 Prevalence in Territories 5 ReferencesLegislature and executive editCurrently in Australia there is no constitutional system where there is a complete separation of powers 2 In the Westminster system ministers executive are required to sit in Parliament legislative This is to adhere with the concept of Responsible Government which is a requirement of section 64 of the Constitution 3 The specific requirement for ministers to sit in Parliament established the connection between executive and legislative though any person may be appointed a Minister their appointment lapses if they do not gain a seat in either house of the Parliament within three months This provision was necessary in 1901 as the first government was sworn in on 1 January but the first parliament was not elected until late March see 1901 Australian federal election However the provision is still relevant such as the appointment of Bob Carr as Foreign Minister in 2012 prior to his appointment to the Senate It also applies when a minister in the House of Representatives loses their seat at a general election despite no longer being a member of parliament the Minister will typically retain their portfolio for some days after the election until the new government is sworn in It also applied when John Gorton became Prime Minister in 1968 he was sworn in while a member of the Senate then he resigned to contest a by election for a lower house seat which he won but between his resignation from the Senate and being elected to the House of Representatives he remained Prime Minister without holding any seat in Parliament In Victorian Stevedoring amp General Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Dignan the High Court of Australia held that it was impossible consistent with the British tradition to insist upon a strict separation between legislative and executive powers 4 It was found that legislative power may be delegated to the executive and as a result upheld the validity of delegated legislation By contrast in its insistence on a strict separation of judicial power the High Court has been less willing to compromise 5 Furthermore the role of the courts was discussed in Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions NSW whereby a NSW statute was invalidated since it purported to confer not judicial functions to court 5 6 The principle that a State Court cannot be assigned powers that are incompatible with its constitutionally protected independence was extended to Territory Courts in Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy 2000 7 The legislature can allocate the executive some of its powers such as of the making of regulations under an Act passed by Parliament Similarly the legislature could restrict or over rule some powers held by the executive by passing new laws to that effect though these could be subject to judicial review The exceptionally strong party discipline in Australia especially in the lower house has had the effect of weakening scrutiny of the executive by the legislature since within the lower house every member of the numerically larger party will almost always support the executive and its propositions on all issues On the other hand the Senate has had the effect of restraining the power of the executive through its ability to query amend and block government legislation The result of the adoption of a proportional system of voting in 1949 has been that the Senate in recent decades has rarely been controlled by governments Minor parties have gained greater representation and Senate majorities on votes come from a coalition of groups on a particular issue usually after debate by the Opposition and Independents The Constitution does moreover provide for one form of physical separation of executive and legislature Section 44 concerning the disqualifications applying to membership of Parliament excludes from Parliament government employees who hold an office of profit under the crown iv along with people in certain contractual arrangements with the Commonwealth This was demonstrated in 1992 after Independent MP Phil Cleary had won the Victorian seat of Wills Cleary on leave without pay from the Victorian Education Department at the time of his election was held in Sykes v Cleary to be holding an office of profit under the Crown and disqualified The Court noted that that Section 44 s intention was to separate executive influence from the legislature 8 Judiciary editMain article Chapter III Court As early as New South Wales v Commonwealth The Wheat Case the High Court decided that the strict insulation of judicial power was a fundamental principle of the Constitution 9 10 This also applies to tribunals and commissions set up by Federal Parliament which unlike some of their equivalents in the states can only recommend consequences The Federal Parliament itself has the rarely used privilege of being able to act as a court in some circumstances primarily where it may regard a non member as acting in contempt of parliament The reasoning in the Wheat Case was taken further in Waterside Workers Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd where a decisive distinction between judicial and arbitral functions was drawn 11 The High Court made reference to the separation of powers again in R v Kirby Ex parte Boilermakers Society of Australia Boilermakers Case highlighting that only a Chapter III Court can exercise judicial powers and that a Chapter III Court is only permitted to exercise judicial power 10 A consequence of the Australian version of the separation of powers is its role in encouraging judicial deference to the political arms of government The normal propensity of the High Court is to recognise that separation of powers requires not only that the political branches should not interfere with judicial activity but also that the judiciary should leave politicians and administrators alone The importance of deference has been acknowledged in extrajudicial writings and in decisions such as Drake v Minister for Immigration amp Ethnic Affairs No 2 12 As a manifestation of the separation of powers a Chapter III Court cannot make administrative decisions In administrative law this means that the courts cannot substitute an original decision of the executive but can only decide on its correctness 13 The doctrine of persona designata permits non judicial functions to be conferred on judges in their personal capacity as opposed to their judicial capacity 1 14 15 However in Hindmarsh Island Bridge case it was held that this is subject to the compatibility of the conferred non judicial function with judicial office 16 Prevalence in States editWhile there are strong textual and structural bases for the independence of the judiciary in the Commonwealth Constitution the same is not true of the State constitutions State courts unlike their federal counterparts are therefore capable of exercising non judicial functions 5 For example the District Court of South Australia through its Administrative and Disciplinary Division conducts merits review of administrative decisions a function which at Commonwealth level can only be exercised by Executive tribunals Nevertheless a degree of judicial independence is maintained at State level by convention The federal separation of powers also has implications for State courts due to the fact that State courts may be invested with federal judicial power under section 71 of the Commonwealth Constitution On this basis it was held in Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions NSW that a State court could not be given a function inconsistent with its status as a potential repository of federal judicial power 5 The doctrine was rarely applied in the early years following Kable leading Justice Kirby to describe it as a constitutional guard dog that would bark but once 17 However there has been a revival in the High Court s application of the doctrine since 2009 18 One recent case was South Australia v Totani 19 which involved a challenge to the validity of the Serious and Organised Crime Control Act 2008 SA 20 Section 14 1 of the Act required members of the Magistrates Court of South Australia to make control orders on application by the Commissioner of Police provided only that the Magistrate was satisfied that the person subject to the control order was a member of a declared organisation Even though the functions of the Magistrates Court under the Act are purely a matter of South Australian law the fact that the Court is also capable of exercising federal jurisdiction was held to require that it maintain certain standards of independence and impartiality so that it retain the character of a court Parliamentary scrutiny of the executive and in particular by the New South Wales Legislative Council was tested in the 1990s when Treasurer Michael Egan on behalf of Cabinet refused to table documents in the Legislative Council of which he was a member The Council determined to exercise its scrutiny of the executive pressed the issues and eventually adjudged the Treasurer in contempt suspending him from the house twice The matters were disputed in three cases in the High Court and the Supreme Court of New South Wales The results upheld that principle that the Legislative Council does have the power to order the production of documents by a member of the House including a minister and can counter obstruction 21 22 23 However the extent of the Legislative Council s power in relation to Cabinet documents remains unclear In 2018 the High Court held that all matters falling within section 75 24 and section 76 25 of the Constitution formed part of the judicial power of the Commonwealth including a dispute between the residents of different States It followed that the federal separation of powers meant that a State tribunal was unable to determine a dispute between residents of different States 26 Prevalence in Territories editOne of the bases for the separation of powers in the Constitution is that the powers of the Parliament are found in Chapter I executive powers are in Chapter II and judicial powers are in Chapter III In 1915 it had been held that the separation of powers precluded the exercise of judicial power by the Inter State Commission provided for at section 101 27 in Chapter IV Finance and Trade 9 The power to make laws for the government of the territories is found in section 122 28 located in Chapter VI New States How section 122 relates to Chapter III is a problem of interpretation which has vexed judges and commentators since the earliest days of Federation 29 Three of the six judges in the Stolen Generations case 30 held that the separation of powers doctrine did not apply to the power to make laws for a territory under section 122 of the Constitution The High Court went on to hold in 2004 that federal jurisdiction can be invested by the Australian Parliament in a Territory court as well as in a State court 31 In 2015 the question was again considered by the High Court where Gageler J 32 at 118 and Keane J 32 at 161 held that the power under section 122 was not constrained by the doctrine of separation of powers enshrined in Chapter III of the Constitution Keane J similarly held The other members of the Court French CJ Kiefel and Bell JJ 32 at 46 and Nettle and Gordon JJ 32 at 194 found it was unnecessary to answer the question References edit a b Hilton v Wells 1985 HCA 16 1985 157 CLR 57 High Court Australia Carney G 1993 Separation of Powers in the Westminster System PDF ASPG Qld Chapter Retrieved 8 March 2017 Constitution Cth s 64 Ministers of State Victorian Stevedoring amp General Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Dignan 1931 HCA 34 1931 467 CLR 73 High Court Australia see also Roche v Kronheimer 1921 HCA 25 1921 29 CLR 329 High Court Australia a b c d Kable v Director of Public Prosecutions NSW 1996 HCA 24 1996 189 CLR 51 High Court Australia Kirk v Industrial Court of NSW 2010 HCA 1 2010 239 CLR 531 High Court Australia Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy 2000 HCA 63 2000 205 CLR 337 High Court Australia Sykes v Cleary 1992 HCA 60 1992 176 CLR 77 High Court Australia a b New South Wales v Commonwealth 1915 HCA 17 1915 20 CLR 54 High Court Australia a b R v Kirby Ex parte Boilermakers Society of Australia 1956 HCA 10 1956 94 CLR 254 High Court Australia Waterside Workers Federation of Australia v J W Alexander Ltd 1918 HCA 56 1918 25 CLR 434 High Court Australia Re Drake and Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs No 2 1979 AATA 179 1979 11 FLR 203 Administrative Appeals Tribunal Australia Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corp 1947 EWCA 1 1948 1 KB 223 Court of Appeal England and Wales Grollo v Palmer 1995 HCA 26 1995 184 CLR 348 High Court Australia Wainohu v New South Wales 2011 HCA 24 2011 243 CLR 181 High Court Australia Wilson v Minister for Aboriginal amp Torres Strait Islander Affairs 1996 HCA 18 1996 189 CLR 1 High Court Australia Baker v R 2004 HCA 45 2004 223 CLR 513 at 54 per Kirby J High Court Australia Appleby G 2014 The High Court and Kable A Study in Federalism and Rights Protection Monash University Law Review 2015 40 Monash University Law Review 673 South Australia v Totani 2010 HCA 39 2010 242 CLR 1 High Court Australia Serious and Organised Crime Control Act 2008 SA s 14 Egan v Willis and Cahill 1996 NSWCA 583 1996 40 NSWLR 650 Court of Appeal NSW Australia Egan v Willis 1998 HCA 71 1998 95 CLR 424 High Court Australia Egan v Chadwick 1999 NSWCA 176 1999 46 NSWLR 563 Court of Appeal NSW Australia Constitution Cth s 75 Original jurisdiction of High Court Constitution Cth s 76 Additional original jurisdiction Burns v Corbett 2018 HCA 15 Judgment summary PDF High Court Constitution Cth s 101 Inter State Commission Constitution Cth s 122 Government of territories Re The Governor Goulburn Correctional Centre Ex parte Eastman 1999 HCA 44 1999 200 CLR 322 at p 332 9 2 September 1999 High Court Australia Kruger v Commonwealth 1997 HCA 27 1997 190 CLR 1 High Court Australia per Brennan CJ Dawson and McHugh JJ North Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service Inc v Bradley 2004 HCA 31 2004 218 CLR 146 High Court Australia a b c d North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency Limited v Northern Territory 2015 HCA 41 2015 256 CLR 569 High Court Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Separation of powers in Australia amp oldid 1211575441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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