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APL Peer-Led Tutorial - PowerPoint Presentation

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APL Peer-Led Tutorial - PPT Presentation

Semester 2 2013 Anna Gruen The Legislature Is the Act valid Head of power Federal s51 Cn for most subjects eg trade and commerce taxation Creation of an electoral system qualification of electors s8 s30 or qualification and disqualification of members s16 s34 s51xxxvi ID: 158577

legislation power executive crown power legislation crown executive judicial state federal cth case judge exercise body government political immunity statutory court prerogative

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Slide1

APL Peer-Led Tutorial Semester 2 2013

Anna

GruenSlide2

The Legislature

Is the Act valid?

Head of power?

Federal:

s51

Cn

for most subjects

eg

. trade and commerce, taxation

Creation of an electoral system (qualification of electors s8, s30 or qualification and disqualification of members s16, s34, s51(xxxvi)

State:

NSW: Receives plenary power to legislate for ‘peace, welfare and good government’ (s5 NSW

Cn

, R v

Burah

) Slide3

The Legislature

Are there limitations?

Implied

Cn

rights (only applies at Federal level)

Representative government (s24

Cn

)

Implied guarantee of voting equality (franchise) –

McKinlay

,

McGinty

Right to vote –

Roach, Rowe

(reason for the exclusion must be considered and whether it is ‘reasonably appropriate and adapted to serve and end’)

Implied freedom of political communication –

Nationwide News PL v Wills, ACTV v

Cth

Freedom under

Cth

Constitution constrains State Parl re

Cth

political matters (

Theophanus

) and re State political matters (NN, ACTV,

Theophanus

)Slide4

The Legislature

Are there limitations?

Abdication: to what extent can Parl transfer part or all of its legislative power to another body which it may or may not have created for that purpose?

Question of degree of power transferred where delegation (which is approved by

Dignan

’s

case) while abdication is not. Slide5

The Legislature

Manner and form

Federal Parliaments cannot bind its successors (SE Drainage Board)

STATE legislative power can be constrained by the operation of previous enacted legislative provisions requiring special legislative procedures to be complied with by Parl only in relation to certain issues regarding the ‘Constitution, powers or procedure of Parliament’ (CLVA s5 and Australia Acts s6) Slide6

Manner and Form

Is the law that purports to amend or repeal the entrenched provision one respecting ‘Constitution, powers or procedure of Parliament’? (

Trethowan

,

Marquet’s

case)

eg

. Voting systems

Is the ‘manner and form’ provision legitimate?

The question to be asked is whether the

m&f

provision is whether it is proportionate regarding the issue it is designed to entrench (

Trethowan

,

Westlakes

)

Has it been doubly entrenched? (

Westlakes

)Slide7

Executive

Head of power?

Non statutory

Prerogative power (

eg

. declare or conduct war, make treaties)

Legislation is presumed not to limit prerogative powers or property rights of the Crown.

Other power – ‘as a legal person’ (Davis, NSW v

Bardolph

) – although this has been rejected in

Williams!

Nationhood power – incorporated in s61Slide8

Nationhood power

There are a number of indicators which would suggest a matter could be dealt with under nationhood power

Is

it ‘peculiarly adapted to the governing of a nation and which cannot otherwise be carried on for the benefit of the nation’? (

AAP case

)

Is it necessary that the task is carried out by the Executive? (

Davis,

Pape

)

Is if for the ‘protection and advancement of the nation’? (Davis)

Is it of national proportions enough to attract the nationhood power?

Also consider proportionality (

Davis,

Pape

) – urgency of the situation, whether the measures are permanent Slide9

Executive

Limitations on the head of power of the Executive

Prerogative power can be overridden by statute

Consider: terms of the legislation (

Cadia

),

nature and essentiality of the prerogative (

Tampa

), whether the legislation and prerogative cover the same field (

Tampa

) Slide10

Crown Immunity

Is the legislation intended to apply to members of the Executive government? (

Cth

v WA)

Presumption of statutory construction that the ‘Crown’ is immune unless legislation shows a contrary intention either ‘expressly or by necessary implication’ (

Bropho

)

Consider the content and purpose of the particular provision. What is the mischief to be addressed? Will the purpose be frustrated if it does not apply to the Crown? (

Bropho

)

If yes, then legislation applies to members of the Executive

gov

along with other persons.

If no, does the immunity extend to X?Slide11

Is X part of the Executive government such that X is immune from legislation? (

Bropho

)

Person ‘personifies the executive government of the country’

Agency of the State

(

eg

. Departments, executive authorities -

Bropho

)

(

eg

. Statutory authorities –

Townsville Hospital –

see next slide)

Private contractors hired by the Crown (see next slide –

Baxter

)

Other State Governments (

Bradken

)Slide12

Statutory Authorities

Presumption: against Crown immunity extending to statutory authorities.

Test: was it Parl intention (as shown in statute creating body) that the body should enjoy Crown status in relation to the functioning of the body? (

Townsville Hospital)

Consider nature of the function of the authority, degree of independent of authority from central government control, nature of immunity/privilege being claimed Slide13

Third parties dealing with Crown

ACCC v Baxter

Crown immunity is presumed not to apply to third parties.

However, if the application of legislation that does not bind the Crown but binds third parties would divest the Crown of proprietary, contractual or other legal rights or interests, a contrary intention may appear from the language, objects and subject matter of the Act. Slide14

Judiciary

SCENARIO 1: Commission with judges appointed to it

FEDERAL Separation of Powers

Cth

judicial power: s71

Cn

What type of power is conferred by the body (Commission)? Judicial or non judicial

Indications that it’s judicial – binding and authoritative, enforceability (

Brandy

), decisions regarding rights (

Thomas v Mowbray

)Slide15

Judiciary

(a)

Cth

judicial power may only be exercised by courts (s71

Cn

) (

Wheat

case)

(b)

Ch

III Federal Courts can only exercise JP, and non JP incidental to the exercise of JP (

Boilermakers

case)Slide16

Judiciary

Often, the issue here is that a

Ch

III judge are not allowed to exercise non JP powers at

Cth

level. (

Boilermaker

’s case). There are 2 exceptions.

Is the non JP power incidental to the JP? (Boilermakers)

eg

. administrative functions of a judge within the court

PERSONA DESIGNATASlide17

Persona Designata

Judges may exercise non judicial functions in a personal capacity (

Drake)

Is the judge exercising his duty in a personal capacity? (

Hilton

) Factors to consider include (a) is the legislation applicable to all judges, (b) what is the nature of the power conferred?, (c) did the legislation express an intention to invest the court with jurisdiction?

Incompatibility test (

Grollo

) – (a) judge must consent, (b) the commitment cannot impair his capacity to perform judicial functions and (c) cannot be a threat to public confidence. Slide18

Judiciary

Institutional integrity

SCENARIO 2: Minister (upon consulting a taskforce) advise federal court that they must make an order (and make it ex parte)

Issue: about the way that the JP is exercised

No strongly entrenched

SoP

at state level (

BLF

case, affirmed in

KABLE

)Slide19

1) What type of power is the judge/body exercising?

Tasmania

Breweries

test is good for this

Extension of the incompatibility doctrine to the State courts which also exercise federal judicial power.

2) If the judge/

Ch

III court is exercising JP, is it incompatible with an exercise of federal judicial power? Slide20

How can the incompatibility come about?

Judges must be perceived to be independent of the legislature and executive otherwise public confidence is lost (

Fardon

)

Cannot be carrying out political purpose (

KABLE

)

When the function is repugnant to the political process to a fundamental degree (

KABLE

)

Ad hominem legislation (only effecting one person) (

KABLE)

ex parte applications (

ie

. Without notice – determined in absence of affected party)

May be okay (

Thomas v Mowbray

)

Court not impartial – when there is a ‘must’ order from a ministerSlide21
Slide22