the court system. " magna carta has lived in the hearts and minds of our people. it is an...
TRANSCRIPT
"Magna Carta has lived in the hearts and minds of our people. It is an incantation of the spirit of liberty. Whatever its text or meaning, it has become the talisman of a society in which tolerance and democracy reside, a society in which each man and woman has and is accorded his or her unique dignity, a society in which power and privilege do not produce tyranny and oppression". The Honourable Sir Gerard Brennan, Former Chief Justice of Australia, An Address on the Occasion of the Naming of Magna Carta Place (see High Court website)
To no one shall we sell, to no one shall we deny or delay right or justice
Clause 40, Magna Carta 1215 (15 June 2015!!)
Some You Tube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xo4tUMdAMw
The British Library
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPVyH6dcGUE
Horrible Histories
Aim of lecture:Understand Chapter III of the
Commonwealth Constitution and: (a) The separation of powers
doctrine (b) The meaning of ‘judicial
power’
Understand the courts and separation of powers at a state level and:(a) Kable
(b) Kuczborski (distinguishes Totani)
Lecture Overview: COURTS
FEDERAL STATE
Separation of powers
Cth Constitution NSW Constitution
Boilermakers etc Kable etc
What is a court?
‘At the end of the day it has unfortunately to be said that there emerges no sure guide, no unmistakable hall mark by which a ‘court’ may unerringly be identified. It is largely a matter of impression.’
Attorney-General v British Broadcasting Corporation [1981] AC 303, 351 (per Lord Edmund)
Why is this important?
1. Bodies which look like courts but are not courts (ie: tribunals)
2. Bodies may be found to be constitutionally invalid (eg: ‘new’ Australian Military Court declared invalid in 2009)
3. Processes may ‘look’ judicial but are they? (eg: Manus Island in 2014)
The Court System
What is it that ‘makes a court’ – judicial power
The way in which the exercise of judicial power is separated from legislative and executive power – or the Separation of Powers
The differences between Federal and State judicial power
The attempts made to overcome differences between the Federal and State judicial powers – or the cross vesting scheme.
Judicial power
s71 of the Commonwealth Constitution:“The judicial power of the Commonwealth shall be vested in a Federal Supreme Court, to be called the High Court of Australia, and in such other federal courts as the Parliament creates, and in such other courts as it invests with federal jurisdiction. The High Court shall consist of a Chief Justice, and so many other Justices, not less than two, as the Parliament prescribes.”
S71 Constitution:
Vests the judicial power of the Commonwealth in the High Court and other Chapter III Courts.
Acknowledges that the Federal Parliament can invest State courts with Federal jurisdiction – (mentioned in s77(iii) of the Constitution) – and provides foundation for cross vesting scheme.
Makes clear that the judicial power of the Commonwealth can only be exercised by these s71 courts – or that the judicial power is clearly separated from the legislative and executive powers.
What is ‘judicial power’?
Answer in Chapter III of Commonwealth Constitution
AND
Constitutional case law decided by High Court (eg: Boilermaker’s Case)
Huddart, Parker & Co Pty Ltd v Moorehead (1909) 8 CLR 330, 357 per Griffiths CJ:
“I am of opinion that the words ‘judicial power’ as used in sec 71 of the Constitution mean the power which every sovereign authority must of necessity have to decide controversies between its subjects, or between itself and its subjects, whether the rights relate to life, liberty or property. The exercise of this power does not begin until some tribunal which has power to give a binding and authoritative decision (whether subject to appeal or not) is called upon to take action.”
R v Trade Practices Tribunal; Ex parte Tasmanian Breweries Pty Ltd 1970] HCA 8; (1970) 123 CLR 361
[J]udicial power involves, as a general rule, a decision settling for the future, as between defined persons or classes of persons, a question as to the existence of a right or obligation, so that an exercise of the power creates a new charter by reference to which that question is in future to be decided as between those persons or classes of persons. In other words, the process to be followed must generally be an inquiry concerning the law as it is and the facts as they are, followed by an application of the law as determined to the facts as determined; and the end to be reached must be an act which, so long as it stands, entitles and obliges the persons between whom it intervenes, to observance of the rights and obligations that the application of law to facts has shown to exist.
Judicial power of the Commonwealth
s73: a “judgement, decree, order or sentence” e.g. Saffron v The Queen (1953) 88 CLR 523 or
ss75-77 a “matter” e.g. In re Judiciary and Navigation Acts
(1921) 29 CLR 257
Alexander’s case
Waterside Workers Federation v J W Alexander Ltd (1918) 25 CLR 434
Difference between judicial and non-judicial power
s72 Commonwealth Constitution: judges appointed for life (now until retirement age of 70)
Following quotes from the judges show the difficulty defining ‘judicial power’
Judges:Griffith C.J., Barton, Isaacs,
Higgins, Gavan Duffy, Powers and Rich JJ.
Griffith CJ
As soon as man emerged from the savage state and formed settled communities, the necessity became apparent of rules to regulate conduct. It also became necessary to make provision for their enforcement, and for the settlement of private controversies between individuals. In each case the right to do so was assumed by the community at large, and vested in some person or authority representing that community. Hence arose lawgivers and Judges. And as civilization advanced, and persons came to discriminate between the diverse functions of the community, these functions were called "the judicial power" as distinguished from the legislative and executive powers. (at 434)
Barton J
“It is the power of a Court to decide and pronounce a judgement and carry it into effect between persons and parties who bring a case before it for decision….” (at 451)
“From the earliest times, when people have associated themselves into settled communities, their interest has dictated to them the adoption of rules of conduct as the alternative to anarchy and as the only means of securing internal peace in the pursuit of their avocations. The making of such rules, by whatever term it may have been known, is the making of laws; that is, it is legislation. But laws of themselves were of little force without bodies which could enforce them- and authorities with power to enforce them were created. These authorities might or might not be called Judges, the tribunals might not be called Courts, and the power which they exercised might or might not be called judicial power. Whether persons were Judges, whether tribunals were Courts, and whether they exercised what is now called judicial power, depended and depends on substance and not on mere name. Enforceable decision by an authority constituted by law at the suit of a party submitting a case to it for decision is in character a judicial function.” Barton J 451
Powers J “a Court of judicature is a Court to settle existing rights between parties, but a compulsory arbitration Court is not a Court to settle existing rights. Its powers are more legislative than judicial. It is empowered to fix by an award, which is to have the effect of law, what wages are to be paid … The award is binding as a declaration of the law on persons who have not had any existing rights prior to the award, for it compels employers to pay the minimum wage fixed by the award …. The Arbitration Court is only asked to make an award when employers or employees are not content with existing rights and would not be content with any declaration as to existing rights.” (at 485)
Isaacs and Rich JJ “Both [the judicial and arbitral power]
presuppose a dispute, and a hearing or investigation, and a decision. But the essential difference is that the judicial power is concerned with the ascertainment, declaration and enforcement of the rights and liabilities of the parties as they exist, or are deemed to exist, at the moment the proceedings are instituted; whereas the function of arbitral power in relation to industrial disputes is to ascertain and declare, but not enforce, what in the opinion of the arbitrator ought to be the respective rights and liabilities of the parties in relation to each other”. (463-4)
R v Davison (1954) 90 CLR 353 at 369
“The truth is that the ascertainment of existing rights by the judicial determination of issues of fact or law falls exclusively within judicial power so that the Parliament cannot confide the function to any person or body but a court constituted under ss71 and 72 of the Constitution.”
Sir Gerard Brennan:“The Courts are an important element in the system of checks and balances that preserves our societies from a concentration of official power that might otherwise oppress the people and restrict their freedom under the law. The Courts are an organ of Government but they are not part of the Executive Government of that country. … But the apolitical organ of government, the Courts, are there continually to extend the protection of the law equally to all who are subject to their jurisdiction: to the minority as well as the majority, the disadvantaged as well as the powerful, to the sinners as well as the saints, to the politically incorrect as well as those who embrace a contemporary orthodoxy. The principle of judicial independence is not proclaimed in order to benefit the Judges; it is proclaimed in order to guarantee a fair and impartial hearing and an unswerving obedience to the rule of law. That is the way in which our peoples secure their freedom under the law.”
2 limbs…..
Separation of judicial powers principles: Limb 1: Commonwealth judicial power
can only be exercised by courts referred to in section 71 (Alexander’s case)
Limb 2: courts exercising Commonwealth judicial power can only exercise judicial power and non-judicial power that is incidental to the exercise of judicial power (Boilermakers’ case)
High Court (267) “in a federal form of government a part is
necessarily assigned to the judicature which places it in a position unknown in a unitary system or under a flexible constitution where Parliament is supreme…The conception of independent governments existing in the one area and exercising powers in different fields of action carefully defined by law could not be carried into practical effect unless the ultimate responsibility of deciding upon the limits of respective powers of the governments were placed in the federal judicature.
Separation of judicial power“Chapter III does not allow the exercise of a jurisdiction which of its very nature belongs to the judicial power of the Commonwealth by a body established for purposes foreign to the judicial power, notwithstanding that it is organized as a court and in a manner which might otherwise satisfy ss71 and 72, and that Chap III does not allow a combination with judicial power of functions which are not ancillary or incidental to its exercise but are foreign to it” (296)
Wilson v Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs
(1996) 189 CLR 1 “the separation of functions
is designed to provide checks and balances on the exercise of power by the respective organs of government in which powers are reposed.” per Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey, McHugh and Gummow JJ at 11
Persona Designata rule
Hilton v Wells (1985) 157CLR 57 “Although the Parliament cannot
confer non –judicial powers on a federal court, or invest a State court with a non-judicial power, there is no necessary constitutional impediment which prevents it from conferring non-judicial power on a particular individual who happens to be a member of a court” (68 Per Gibbs CJ, Wilson and Dawson JJ.)
Delegation of Federal Judicial Power
Harris v Caladine (1991) 172 CLR 84
Power can be delegated but: the delegation cannot be such
that the judges no longer manage the more important aspects of contested matters, and
the exercise of the delegated power must be subject to review by the judges themselves.
NSW separation of powers
New South Wales Constitution does not enshrine a separation of powers: Building Construction Employees and Builders' Labourers' Federation of New South
Wales v Minister for Industrial Relations & Anor (1986) 7 NSWLR 372;
SEE: Kable v Director of Public
Prosecutions (NSW) (1996) 189 CLR 51
Totani…Under s 10(1) of the SOCC Act, the
Attorney-General is, on the making of an application by the Commissioner of Police, empowered to “make a declaration” if satisfied of two criteria:
“(a) members of the organisation associate for the purpose of organising, planning, facilitating, supporting or engaging in serious criminal activity; and
(b) the organisation represents a risk to public safety and order in this State”.
Section 14(1) provided that the Court“must” make a control order “if the
Courtis satisfied that the defendant is a
member of a declared organisation”. a breach of either of these or any
additional conditions of a control order is an offence
punishable by five years imprisonment.
Justice French….the extent of the intrusions upon personal freedom effected by a control order is relevant to the characterisation of the duty imposed upon the Magistrates Court under s 14(1) of the Act and to whether, contrary to assumptions reflected in Ch III of the Constitution, s 14(1) removes or impairs that independence from the executive that is a defining characteristic of courts of law in Australia.
Queensland laws: Hells Angels Motorcycle Club member Stefan Kuczborski no standing, never
been charged
KUCZBORSKI v THE STATE OF QUEENSLAND [2014] HCA 46
“The laws did not require the courts to proceed otherwise than in accordance with the processes which are understood to characterise the exercise of judicial power,” the summary judgement said. (handed down 14 November 2014)
Totani Distinguished
Confined operation of Totani: categorized it as a case where the law held invalid was not one of determining criminal guilt – but rather required the court to create new norms of conduct
Kuczborski more consistent with Kable than Totani
Totani and future challenges
“Effectively the bikie challenge is dead.“It may be that another person, with proper standing, a proper claim and a proper challenge may have some luck.”
Read more: Tony Keim, Robyn Wuth & Mackenzie Ravn From: Gold Coast Bulletin November 14, 2014 9:50AM (citing the criminal lawyer in the case)
Cross Vesting Scheme
s77(iii) Constitution s39(2) Judiciary Act “The several Courts of the States
shall within the limits of their several jurisdictions, whether such limits are as to locality, subject-matter or otherwise, be invested with federal jurisdiction, in all matters in which the High Court has original jurisdiction or in which original jurisdiction can be conferred on it.”
Commonwealth or Ch III Courts
High Court of Australia Constitution ss71-77 Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth)
Federal Court of Australia Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth)
Family Court of Australia Family Law Act 1975 (Cth)
Federal Circuit Court of Australia Federal Magistrates Court Act 1999
(Cth)
NSW Courts
Supreme Court of New South Wales Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW)
District Court of New South Wales District Court Act 1973 (NSW)
Local Courts Local Courts (Civil Claims) Act 1970
(NSW)
Non-judicial tribunals
Administrative Appeals Tribunal Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission Australian Competition Tribunal Australian Industrial Relations
Commission Australian Securities Commission Copyright Tribunal Refugee Review Tribunal Registrar of Trade Marks The Commissioner of Taxation