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Williams v Commonwealth of Australia [2012] HCA 23 (20 June 2012)
Last Updated: 17 July 2012
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
RONALD WILLIAMS PLAINTIFF
AND
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA & ORS DEFENDANTS
Williams v Commonwealth of Australia [2012] HCA 23
20 June 2012
S307/2010
ORDER
The questions stated in the Amended Special Case dated 26 July 2011 be
answered as follows:
Question 1
Does the plaintiff have standing to challenge:
(a) the validity of the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement?
(b) the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the purpose
of making payments pursuant to the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement during the
following financial years:
(i) 2007-2008;
(ii) 2008-2009;
(iii) 2009-2010;
(iv) 2010-2011;
(v) 2011-2012?
(c) the making of payments by the Commonwealth to Scripture Union Queensland
pursuant to the Darling Heights Funding Agreement during
the following financial
years:
(i) 2007-2008;
(ii) 2008-2009;
(iii) 2009-2010;
(iv) 2010-2011;
(v) 2011-2012?
Answer
(a) Yes.
(b) Unnecessary to answer.
(c) Yes.
Question 2
If the answer to Question 1(a) is Yes, is the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement invalid, in whole or in part, by reason that the Darling
Heights
Funding Agreement is:
(a) beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the
Constitution?
(b) prohibited by s 116 of the Constitution?
Answer
(a) Yes.
(b) No.
Question 3
To the extent that the answer to Question 1(b) is Yes, was or is the drawing
of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the purpose
of making payments
under the Darling Heights Funding Agreement authorised by:
(a) the 2007-2008 Appropriation Act?
(b) the 2008-2009 Appropriation Act?
(c) the 2009-2010 Appropriation Act?
(d) the 2010-2011 Appropriation Act?
(e) the 2011-2012 Appropriation Act?
Answer
Unnecessary to answer.
Question 4
To the extent that the answer to Question 1(c) is Yes, was or is the making
of the relevant payments by the Commonwealth to Scripture
Union Queensland
pursuant to the Darling Heights Funding Agreement unlawful by reason that the
making of the payments was or is:
(a) beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the
Constitution?
(b) prohibited by s 116 of the Constitution?
Answer
(a) The making of the payments was not supported by the executive power of
the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution.
(b) No.
Question 5
If the answer to any part of Question 2 is Yes, the answer to any part of
Question 3 is No, or the answer to any part of Question
4 is Yes, what, if
any, of the relief sought in the statement of claim should the plaintiff be
granted?
Answer
The Justice disposing of the action should grant the plaintiff such
declaratory relief and make such costs orders as appear appropriate
in the light
of the answers to Questions 1-4 and 6.
Question 6
Who should pay the costs of this special case?
Answer
The first, second and third defendants.
Representation
B W Walker SC with G E S Ng for the plaintiff (instructed by Horowitz &
Bilinsky)
S J Gageler SC, Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth with
G R Kennett SC and S J Free for the first, second and third
defendants
(instructed by Australian Government Solicitor)
R Merkel QC with G A Hill and J A Thomson for the fourth defendant (instructed
by Norton Rose Australia)
Interveners
M G Sexton SC, Solicitor-General for the State of New South Wales with
N L Sharp intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General for
the State
of New South Wales (instructed by Crown Solicitor (NSW))
W Sofronoff QC, Solicitor-General of the State of Queensland with
G P Sammon and G J D del Villar intervening on behalf of the
Attorney-General
of the State of Queensland (instructed by Crown Law
(Qld))
G L Sealy SC, Solicitor-General of the State of Tasmania with S D Gates
intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General of the State
of Tasmania
(instructed by Solicitor-General of the State of Tasmania)
M G Hinton QC, Solicitor-General for the State of South Australia with
M J Wait intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General for
the State
of South Australia (instructed by Crown Solicitor (SA))
S G E McLeish SC, Solicitor-General for the State of Victoria with R J Orr and N
M Wood intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General
for the State of Victoria
(instructed by Victorian Government Solicitor)
R M Mitchell SC, Acting Solicitor-General for the State of Western Australia
with F B Seaward intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General
for the State of
Western Australia (instructed by State Solicitor (WA))
P D Quinlan SC with K E Foley appearing as amicus curiae on behalf of the
Churches' Commission on Education Incorporated (instructed
by Mallesons Stephen
Jaques)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Williams v Commonwealth of
Australia
Constitutional law − Executive power of Commonwealth − Commonwealth
entered funding agreement with private service provider
for provision of
chaplaincy services at State school ("Funding Agreement") − Funding
Agreement made pursuant to National School
Chaplaincy Program − Whether
executive power of Commonwealth extends to matters in respect of which
Parliament may legislate
− Whether s 61 of Constitution or s 44(1) of
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth) ("FMA Act") source
of power to enter Funding Agreement − Whether s 61 of Constitution or s
44(1) of FMA Act source of power to pay service provider.
Constitutional law − Powers of Commonwealth Parliament − Whether law
providing for payments in circumstances identical
to Funding Agreement would be
law with respect to s 51(xx) of Constitution − Whether law providing for
payments in circumstances identical to Funding Agreement would be law with
respect to s 51(xxiiiA) of Constitution.
Constitutional law − Freedom of religion − Prohibition on religious
tests as qualification for any office under Commonwealth
− Under Funding
Agreement, "school chaplain" to provide services − Whether "school
chaplain" holds office under Commonwealth
− Whether Funding Agreement or
payments to service provider prohibited by s 116 of
Constitution.
Constitutional law − Appropriations of moneys from Consolidated Revenue
Fund − Commonwealth paid appropriated moneys
to service provider pursuant
to Funding Agreement − Whether Appropriation Acts authorised
appropriations of moneys for purpose
of payments under Funding
Agreement.
Constitutional law − Standing − Plaintiff's children attended State
school party to Funding Agreement − Whether
plaintiff has standing to
challenge validity of Funding Agreement − Whether plaintiff has standing
to challenge validity of
appropriations to pay moneys pursuant to Funding
Agreement − Whether plaintiff has standing to challenge validity of
payments
to service provider.
Words and phrases – "appropriation", "benefits to students", "capacity to
contract", "execution and maintenance of this Constitution", "executive power of
the Commonwealth", "office under the Commonwealth", "ordinary and
well-recognised functions", "religious test".
Constitution, ss 51(xx), 51(xxiiiA), 61, 64, 81, 96 and 116.
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth), s
44(1).
FRENCH CJ.
Introduction
- In
1901, one of the principal architects of the Commonwealth Constitution, Andrew
Inglis Clark, said of what he called "a truly federal
government"[1]:
"Its essential and distinctive feature is the preservation of the separate
existence and corporate life of each of the component
States of the
commonwealth, concurrently with the enforcement of all federal laws uniformly in
every State as effectually and as
unrestrictedly as if the federal government
alone possessed legislative and executive power within the territory of each
State."
In this case, that essential and distinctive feature requires consideration of
the observation of Alfred Deakin, another of the architects of the
Commonwealth Constitution and the first Attorney-General of the Commonwealth,
that[2]:
"As a general rule, wherever the executive power of the Commonwealth extends,
that of the States is correspondingly
reduced."
In particular, this case requires consideration of the executive power of the
Commonwealth, absent power conferred by or derived
from an Act of the
Parliament, to enter into contracts and expend public money.
- The
plaintiff, Ronald Williams, calls into question the validity of a
contract made by the Commonwealth with a private service provider, and
expenditure under that contract, for the
delivery of "chaplaincy services" into
schools operated by the Queensland State Government. His claim concerns
the provision of such services in the Darling Heights State School in
Queensland, at which his children are students. Although the
expenditure is
said by the Commonwealth to have met the necessary condition of a parliamentary
appropriation for each year in which
it has been made, no Act of Parliament has
conferred power on the Commonwealth to contract and expend public money
in this way. The Commonwealth relies upon the executive power under s 61
of the Constitution. That section provides:
"The executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen and is
exercisable by the Governor-General as the Queen's representative,
and extends
to the execution and maintenance of this Constitution, and of the laws of the
Commonwealth."
The extent to which the executive power authorises the Commonwealth to
make contracts and spend public money pursuant to them is raised in these
proceedings
partly because, as this Court has recently
held[3] contrary
to a long-standing assumption, parliamentary appropriation is not a
source of spending
power[4].
- Initially
there was another common assumption underpinning the written submissions
in this case that, subject to the requirements of the Constitution relating to
appropriations, the Commonwealth Executive can expend public moneys on any
subject matter falling within a head of Commonwealth
legislative power. The
unanimity of that assumption did not survive oral argument and further written
submissions were filed by
leave after oral argument had concluded.
- For
the reasons that follow, s 61 does not empower the Commonwealth, in the
absence of statutory authority, to contract for or undertake the challenged
expenditure on chaplaincy services in the Darling Heights State School.
That conclusion depends upon the text, context and purpose
of s 61 informed by
its drafting history and the federal character of the Constitution. It does not
involve any judgment about the merits of public funding of chaplaincy
services in schools. It does not involve any conclusion about the availability
of constitutional mechanisms, including
conditional grants to the States under
s 96 of the Constitution and inter-governmental agreements supported by
legislation[5],
which might enable such services to be provided in accordance with the
Constitution of the Commonwealth and the Constitutions of the States. Nor does
it involve any question about the power of the Commonwealth to
enter into
contracts and expend moneys:
. in the administration of departments of State pursuant to s 64 of the
Constitution;
. in the execution and maintenance of the laws of the Commonwealth;
. in the exercise of power conferred by or derived from an Act of the
Parliament;
. in the exercise of powers defined by reference to such of the
prerogatives of the Crown as are properly attributable to the Commonwealth;
. in the exercise of inherent authority derived from the character and
status of the Commonwealth as the national government.
What is rejected in these reasons is the unqualified proposition that, subject
to parliamentary appropriation, the executive power
of the Commonwealth extends
generally to enable it to enter into contracts and undertake expenditure of
public moneys relating to
any subject matter falling within a head of
Commonwealth legislative power.
Procedural history
- The
plaintiff is the father of four children enrolled in the Darling Heights State
School. On 21 December 2010 he commenced proceedings
in the original
jurisdiction of this Court challenging the authority of the Commonwealth to draw
money from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund ("CRF") and to make payments to
Scripture Union Queensland ("SUQ") to provide chaplaincy services at the Darling
Heights State School. The payments
were made pursuant to the Darling Heights
Funding Agreement ("DHF Agreement") between the Commonwealth and SUQ and were
made for
the purposes of the National School Chaplaincy Program ("NSCP"),
established by the Commonwealth.
- SUQ
was incorporated under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) as a public
company limited by guarantee and is registered in Queensland. It is designated
in its Constitution as "the Mission". Its objects are "to make God's Good News
known to children, young people and their families" and "to encourage
people of
all ages to meet God daily through the Bible and prayer". In furtherance of
these objects, SUQ shall "undertake ... a
variety of specialist ministries",
"shall preach the need of true conversion and of holiness in heart and life" and
"shall aid the
Christian Church in its ministries."
- In
an amended writ of summons filed in the Court on 12 July 2011, the plaintiff
sought declarations to the effect that Appropriation
Acts enacted for the years
2007-2008 to 2011-2012 inclusive did not validly authorise the drawing of funds,
pursuant to the DHF Agreement
or any like agreement, and did not authorise the
payment of funds to SUQ. Declarations were also sought relating to the
issue of drawing rights purporting to authorise the payment of public moneys to
SUQ under the DHF Agreement or other
similar agreements. The plaintiff claimed
injunctive relief to restrain officers of the Commonwealth from making such
payments for
chaplaincy services at the school.
- On
26 July 2011, Gummow J referred an amended special case for the opinion of the
Full Court.
- A
number of questions were posed for determination by the amended special case.
Question 1 was whether the plaintiff had standing
to challenge the DHF Agreement
and, for each of the financial years from 2007-2008 to 2011-2012 inclusive, the
drawing of money from
the CRF and the payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ. For
the reasons given by Gummow and Bell
JJ[6], I agree
that the plaintiff had the requisite standing to support his challenge to the
DHF Agreement and the payments made under
it. I agree that it is unnecessary to
answer the question relating to the drawing of money from the CRF for the
purpose of making
payments under the agreement. On the basis that the plaintiff
had the requisite standing, the remaining questions were:
- 2. is
the DHF Agreement invalid, in whole or in part, by reason that the DHF Agreement
is:
(a) beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the
Constitution?
(b) prohibited by s 116 of the Constitution?
- 3. is
the drawing of money from the CRF for the purpose of making payments under the
DHF Agreement authorised by:
(a) the 2007-2008 Appropriation Act?
(b) the 2008-2009 Appropriation Act?
(c) the 2009-2010 Appropriation Act?
(d) the 2010-2011 Appropriation Act?
(e) the 2011-2012 Appropriation Act?
- 4. was
or is the making of the relevant payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ pursuant to
the DHF Agreement unlawful by reason that
the making of the payments was or is:
(a) beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the
Constitution?
(b) prohibited by s 116 of the Constitution?
I agree, again for the reasons given by Gummow and Bell JJ, that neither the DHF
Agreement nor the payments made under it were prohibited
by s 116 of the
Constitution[7].
The only limb of that provision relevant to this case was that which prohibits
the Commonwealth from requiring any religious test
"as a qualification for any
office ... under the Commonwealth." The persons providing chaplaincy services
under the DHF Agreement
did not hold offices under the Commonwealth.
Questions 5 and 6 related to the relief sought, dependent upon the answers to
questions 2, 3 and 4, and who should pay the costs
of the special
case.
Factual background
- On
29 October 2006, Prime Minister Howard announced the introduction of the NSCP
for the provision of chaplaincy services in schools.
The initial level of
funding announced was $90 million over a three year period. That level of
funding was increased in 2007 to
$165 million over three years. Prime Minister
Rudd announced an extension of the NSCP in November 2009. That extension
involved
additional funding of $42 million over the 2010 and 2011 school years.
- Following
Prime Minister Howard's announcement the Department of Education, Science and
Training ("DEST") issued NSCP Guidelines.
The guidelines were administrative in
nature. They did not have statutory force. Revised guidelines were issued on
19 January
2007. Responsibility for the administration of the NSCP was
brought under the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations
("DEEWR") on 3 December
2007[8]. Further
revised guidelines were issued on 1 July 2008 and 16 February 2010. From July
2008 DEEWR made funds available under the
NSCP for the provision of secular
pastoral care workers in accordance with a Secular Service Providers Policy
("SSP Policy"). Where
a school seeking funding under the NSCP had been unable
to locate a suitable chaplain, it was given a copy of the SSP Policy.
- At
the time of the Prime Minister's announcement in 2006, the Queensland Government
had in place a procedural policy, published in
1998, for the supply of
chaplaincy services in Queensland State schools. The policy set out
requirements to be met by Queensland State schools in providing such
services. Revised versions were published in July 2007 and April 2011 ("the
Queensland Procedure"). Compliance with the Queensland Procedure was a
condition of State Government funding. The Queensland Procedure
was applicable
even if the funding for a particular school's chaplaincy service did not come
from the Queensland Government. Pursuant
to the Queensland Procedure, SUQ
entered into an agreement with the State of Queensland which required chaplains
provided by SUQ
to State schools to comply with a code of conduct and also with
the Queensland Procedure as in force from time to time.
- On
9 November 2007, the Commonwealth entered into the DHF Agreement with SUQ for
the provision of funding under the NSCP in respect
of the Darling Heights State
School. That agreement was varied in October 2008 and again in May 2010. It
followed a standard form
used for funding under the NSCP.
- SUQ
provided chaplaincy services at the Darling Heights State School and received
payments under the DHF Agreement. Three payments
of $22,000 each were made on
or about 14 November 2007, 15 December 2008 and 2 December 2009. A further
payment of $27,063.01 was
made on or about 11 October 2010. It covered the
provision of NSCP chaplaincy services at the school for the period until
31 December
2011. No further payments were due to be made by the
Commonwealth pursuant to the DHF Agreement.
The Darling Heights Funding Agreement
- On
4 April 2007 the Darling Heights State School lodged an application for funding
under the NSCP for chaplaincy services. The application
was made in the name of
the Deputy Principal of the school. It was endorsed by the Principal and the
President of the Darling Heights
State School Parents' and Citizens'
Association. It was also endorsed by SUQ as the proposed chaplaincy service
provider.
- The
application was successful and led to the DHF Agreement. The stated purpose of
that agreement was "the provision of funding
under the National School
Chaplaincy Programme on behalf of Darling Heights State School."
- SUQ
was required under the DHF Agreement to provide chaplaincy services in
accordance with the application for funding under the NSCP. The chaplain
employed under the project
was required to deliver services to the school and
its community. A key element of that service was the provision of "general
religious
and personal advice to those seeking it, [and] comfort and support to
students and staff, such as during times of grief". The chaplain
was not to
seek to "impose any religious beliefs or persuade an individual toward a
particular set of religious beliefs". SUQ was
required to ensure that the
chaplain signed the NSCP Code of Conduct which formed part of the DHF Agreement.
- The
DHF Agreement provided for payments to be made in accordance with a payment
schedule set out in Sched 1 to the agreement. The
payments made to SUQ pursuant
to the DHF Agreement have been set out earlier in these reasons.
- The
funding arrangements having been outlined, it is necessary now to refer to the
legal bases for those payments, relied upon by
the Commonwealth and challenged
by the plaintiff.
Bases for validity – the Commonwealth contentions
- The
Commonwealth submitted that the power of the Executive Government to enter into
the DHF Agreement and to make payments to SUQ
pursuant to the agreement and the
NSCP derived from s 61 of the Constitution.
- It
should be emphasised at the outset that the executive power of the Commonwealth
is to be understood as a reference to that power
exercised by the Commonwealth
as a polity through the executive branch of its government. It is, as the
plaintiff submitted, an
error to treat the Commonwealth Executive as a separate
juristic person. The character of the Executive Government as a branch of
the
national polity is relevant to the relationship between the power of that branch
and the powers and functions of the legislative
branch and, particularly, the
Senate.
- The
Commonwealth submissions fall to be considered in relation to aspects of
executive power identified in the decisions of this
Court. Those decisions have
been made in the context of particular controversies about specific applications
of the power. They
have not required a global account of its scope.
Nevertheless, it can be said that the executive power referred to in s 61
extends to:
. powers necessary or incidental to the execution and maintenance of a
law of the
Commonwealth[9];
. powers conferred by
statute[10];
. powers defined by reference to such of the prerogatives of the Crown
as are properly attributable to the
Commonwealth[11];
. powers defined by the capacities of the Commonwealth common to legal
persons[12];
. inherent authority derived from the character and status of the
Commonwealth as the national
government[13].
- It
is necessary to draw a distinction between that aspect of the executive power
which derives its content from the prerogatives
of the Crown and that aspect
defined by reference to the capacities which the Commonwealth has in common with
juristic persons.
- The
mechanism for the incorporation of the prerogative into the executive power is
found in the opening words of s 61 which vests the executive power of the
Commonwealth in "the Queen". This has been described as a "shorthand
prescription, or formula,
for incorporating the prerogative – which is
implicit in the legal concept of 'the Queen' – in the Crown in right of
the
Commonwealth."[14]
As Dixon J said in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Official
Liquidator of EO Farley
Ltd[15]:
"This consequence flows from the fact that the executive power of the
Commonwealth is vested in the Crown, which, of course, is as
much the central
element in the Constitution of the Commonwealth as in a unitary constitution."
- The
taxonomical question whether the prerogatives incorporated in the executive
power of the Commonwealth include the common law
capacities of a juristic person
has been given different answers. Blackstone said that "if once any one
prerogative of the crown
could be held in common with the subject, it would
cease to be prerogative any
longer"[16] and
therefore that "the prerogative is that law in case of the king, which is law in
no case of the
subject."[17]
Dicey thought the prerogatives extended to "[e]very act which the executive
government can lawfully do without the authority of
the Act of
Parliament"[18].
Professor George Winterton considered the dispute sterile and concluded
that[19]:
"there is neither a rational basis nor any utility in distinguishing the
'prerogative' in Blackstone's sense from the other common
law powers of the
Crown".
In the United Kingdom that view has been said to be reflected in "the prevalence
of judicial references to Dicey's definition of
the prerogative and the relative
marginalization of Blackstone's" indicating "a preference for the modern over
the archaic, as Dicey's
definition is read as functional and modern in
emphasizing residuality and parliamentary
supremacy."[20]
There is, nevertheless, a point to Blackstone's distinction in this case. It
avoids the temptation to stretch the prerogative beyond
its proper historical
bounds[21].
Moreover, as appears below, one of the Commonwealth submissions suggested
that the exercise of the executive "capacities" was not subject to the
same constraints as the exercise of the prerogative. It is necessary
now to
turn to the Commonwealth submissions.
- In
its written submissions, filed before the hearing, the Commonwealth made what
was presented as a limiting assumption for the purpose
of its argument. The
assumption was that the breadth of the executive power of the Commonwealth, in
all of its aspects, is confined
to the subject matters of express grants of
power to the Commonwealth Parliament in ss 51, 52 and 122 of the Constitution,
together with matters that, because of their distinctly national character or
their magnitude and urgency, are peculiarly adapted
to the government of the
country and otherwise could not be carried on for the public benefit. The
"aspects" of executive power
so limited were said to be the prerogative in the
"narrower
sense"[22], the
powers that arise from the position of the Commonwealth as a national
government, and the capacities which the Commonwealth
has in common with other
legal persons. The limiting negative assumption was linked to a
broad positive proposition that the executive power in all of its
aspects extends to the subject matter of grants of legislative power to the
Commonwealth Parliament.
In oral argument at the hearing the Commonwealth
nevertheless disavowed the proposition that the "executive power authorises the
Executive to do anything which the Executive could be authorised by statute to
do, pursuant to one of the powers in section 51". In later written submissions,
filed after the hearing, in response to submissions by Tasmania and South
Australia, the Commonwealth
appeared to revive its broad proposition and
contended that the executive power supports executive action dealing at least
with matters
within the enumerated heads of Commonwealth legislative power.
- The
broad proposition in each of its manifestations should not be
accepted. The exercise of legislative power must yield a law able to be
characterised as a law with respect to a subject matter within the
constitutional
grant of legislative authority to the Parliament. The subject
matters of legislative power are specified for that purpose, not to
give content
to the executive power. Executive action, except in the exercise of delegated
legislative authority, is qualitatively
different from legislative action. As
Isaacs J said in R v
Kidman[23]:
"The Executive cannot change or add to the law; it can only execute
it".
To say positively and without qualification that the executive
power in its various aspects extends, absent statutory support, to the "subject
matters" of the legislative powers
of the Commonwealth is to make a
statement the content of which is not easy to divine. Neither the drafting
history of s 61 of the Constitution nor its judicial exegesis since
Federation overcomes that difficulty.
- In
reliance upon its broad premise, the Commonwealth submitted that the making of
the DHF Agreement and the payments to SUQ were
within the executive power
in that:
- 1. The
DHF Agreement provided for, and its performance involved, the provision of
benefits to students, a subject matter covered by
s 51(xxiiiA) of the
Constitution.
- 2. The
DHF Agreement was entered into with, and provided for assistance to, a trading
corporation formed within the limits of the
Commonwealth, a subject matter
covered by s 51(xx) of the Constitution.
- The
Commonwealth referred to a number of authorities in support of its broad
proposition. The first of those was Victoria v The Commonwealth and Hayden
("the AAP
case")[24].
The focus in that case, which concerned the validity of Commonwealth payments to
regional councils to provide welfare services,
was upon the term
"purposes of the Commonwealth" in s 81 of the Constitution. Gibbs J
said[25]:
"We are in no way concerned in the present case to consider the scope of the
prerogative or the circumstances in which the Executive
may act without
statutory sanction."
Observations about the executive power made in the judgments in the
AAP case were generally cast in a form reflecting the negative limiting
assumption which stood at the threshold of the Commonwealth's initial
written
submissions in this case. Barwick CJ said that the Executive "may only do
that which has been or could be the subject of
valid
legislation."[26]
Gibbs J said that the Executive "cannot act in respect of a matter which falls
entirely outside the legislative competence of the
Commonwealth"[27].
The content of executive power as Mason J explained it "does not reach
beyond the area of responsibilities allocated to the Commonwealth
by the
Constitution"[28].
His Honour did not define those responsibilities in terms of the subject matters
of Commonwealth legislative competence. Rather,
he described them
as[29]:
"ascertainable from the distribution of powers, more particularly the
distribution of legislative powers, effected by the Constitution itself and the
character and status of the Commonwealth as a national
government."
This was no simplistic mapping of the executive power on to the fields of
legislative competency. His Honour described his view
of the executive power as
confirmed by the decisions of this Court in The Commonwealth v Colonial
Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd ("the Wool Tops
case")[30]
and The Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth Shipping
Board[31].
In relation to the Wool Tops case his Honour referred in his
footnote[32] to
the joint judgment of Knox CJ and Gavan Duffy J, in which the impugned
agreements were held invalid for want of constitutional
or statutory
authority[33].
His footnoted
reference[34]
to Commonwealth Shipping Board was to a passage in the joint judgment of
Knox CJ, Gavan Duffy, Rich and Starke JJ in which their Honours held that
an activity unwarranted
in express terms by the Constitution could not be vested
in the
Executive[35].
- In
R v Duncan; Ex parte Australian Iron and Steel Pty
Ltd[36],
Mason J held that Commonwealth executive power extended to the making of
inter-governmental agreements between the Commonwealth
and the States "on
matters of joint interest, including matters which require for their
implementation joint legislative action",
so long as the means used and the ends
sought were consistent with the
Constitution[37].
His Honour said that the executive power of the Commonwealth was not "limited to
heads of power which correspond with enumerated
heads of Commonwealth
legislative power under the
Constitution."[38]
Referring back to what he had said in the AAP case, he
added[39]:
"Of necessity the scope of the power is appropriate to that of a central
executive government in a federation in which there is a
distribution of
legislative powers between the Parliaments of the constituent elements in the
federation."
These remarks are consistent with a concept of executive power in which the
character and status of the Commonwealth as a national
government is an aspect
of the power and a feature informing all of its aspects, including the
prerogatives appropriate to the Commonwealth,
the common law capacities, powers
conferred by statutes, and the powers necessary to give effect to statutes. His
Honour's conception
of executive power was consistent with that most recently
discussed by this Court in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[40].
It does not afford support for the broad proposition that the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth can do anything about which
the Parliament of the
Commonwealth could make a law.
- In
Davis v The
Commonwealth[41]
the Court was again concerned with the way in which the "character and status of
the Commonwealth as the government of the nation"
underpinned executive action
and associated incidental legislation to celebrate the bicentenary of first
European settlement in Australia.
It was in the context of that question that
Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ held the executive power to extend most
clearly "in areas
beyond the express grants of legislative power ... where
Commonwealth executive or legislative action involves no real competition
with
State executive or legislative
competence."[42]
It is necessary, in considering Davis, to have regard not only to the
questions which fell for decision in that case, but also to the observation of
Brennan J
that[43]:
"Section 61 refers not only to the execution and maintenance of the laws of the
Commonwealth (a function characteristically to be performed by execution of
statutory powers); it refers also to 'the execution and maintenance of this
Constitution' (a function to be performed by execution of powers which are not
necessarily statutory)." (emphasis added)
What his Honour said was not a prescription for a general non-statutory
executive power to enter contracts and spend public money
on any matter that
could be referred to a head of Commonwealth legislative power or could be
authorised by a law of the Commonwealth.
What Davis was about is
encapsulated in the observation by Wilson and Dawson
JJ[44]:
"In this case it is enough to say that, viewing its powers as a whole, the
Commonwealth must necessarily have the executive capacity
under s 61 to
recognize and celebrate its own origins in history. The constitutional
distribution of powers is unaffected by its
exercise."
- R
v
Hughes[45],
also cited in the Commonwealth's submissions, concerned the validity of a State
law conferring on the Commonwealth Director of Public
Prosecutions the power to
institute and carry on prosecutions for indictable offences against the law of
the State. In the joint
judgment, consideration was given to whether the
provisions of the relevant Commonwealth Act authorising regulations conferring
such
functions on a Commonwealth officer could be supported as laws with respect
to matters incidental to the executive power pursuant
to s
51(xxxix)[46].
The underlying inter-governmental agreement was referred to in the joint
judgment as a possible illustration of the propositions
stated by Mason J
in Duncan and referred to earlier in these reasons.
- The
Commonwealth also relied upon observations in the judgments of McHugh and Gummow
JJ in Re Residential Tenancies Tribunal (NSW); Ex parte Defence Housing
Authority[47].
As McHugh J correctly pointed out, much Commonwealth executive activity
does not depend on statutory authorisation. He
said[48]:
"In the ordinary course of administering the government of the Commonwealth,
authority is frequently given to Commonwealth servants
and agents to carry out
activities in the exercise of the general powers conferred by the Constitution."
Gummow J also
said[49]:
"The executive power of the Commonwealth enables the undertaking of 'all
executive action which is appropriate to the position of
the Commonwealth under
the Constitution and to the spheres of responsibility vested in it by the
Constitution'." (footnote omitted)
- There
are undoubtedly significant fields of executive action which do not require
express statutory authority. As was accepted by
the Attorney-General of
Tasmania in further written submissions, filed after the oral hearing, the
executive power of the Commonwealth
extends to the doing of all things which are
necessary or reasonably incidental to the execution and maintenance of a valid
law of
the Commonwealth once that law has taken effect. That field of action
does not require express statutory authority, nor is it necessary
to find an
implied power deriving from the statute. The necessary power can be found in
the words "execution and maintenance ...
of the laws of the Commonwealth"
appearing in s 61 of the Constitution. The field of non-statutory
executive action also extends to the administration of departments of State
under s 64 of the Constitution and those activities which may properly be
characterised as deriving from the character and status of the Commonwealth as a
national
government. To accept those propositions is not to accept the broad
proposition for which the Commonwealth contended, nor does such
a proposition
have the authority of a decision of this
Court[50].
- The
Commonwealth sought to support the challenged expenditure on two other
bases. The first was that the Commonwealth possesses capacities, in
common with other legal persons, including the capacity to obtain information,
to spend
money lawfully available to be spent or to enter into contracts. As
initially formulated by the Commonwealth, these capacities were
not limited in
their exercise by reference to the subject matters of the legislative powers of
the Commonwealth. The second basis,
put in oral argument, was that:
"a relevantly unlimited power to pay and to contract to pay money is to be found
in the character and status of the Commonwealth
as a national government just as
it would be inherent in the character and status of the Commonwealth were it a
natural person."
The Commonwealth accepted that, unlike a natural person, its power to pay and to
contract to pay money was constrained by the need
for an appropriation and by
the requirements of political accountability.
- In
oral argument, the Commonwealth submitted that its capacity to contract, and to
pay money pursuant to contract, extends at least
to payments made on terms and
conditions that could be authorised or required by an exercise of the
legislative power of the Commonwealth
under s 51. The metes and bounds of
aspects of executive power, however, are not to be measured by undiscriminating
reference to the subject
matters of legislative power. Those subject matters
are diverse in character. Some relate to activities, others to classes of
persons
or legal entities, some to intangible property rights and some to
status. Some are
purposive[51].
The submission invites the Court to determine whether there is an hypothetical
law which could validly support an impugned executive
contract and expenditure
under such a contract. There might be a variety of laws which could validly
authorise or require contractual
or spending activity by the Commonwealth. The
location of the contractual capacity of the Commonwealth in a universe of
hypothetical
laws which would, if enacted, support its exercise, is not a means
by which to judge its scope.
- The
Commonwealth submitted that the exercise by its Executive Government of its
capacities does not involve interference with what
would otherwise be the legal
rights and duties of others, nor does the Executive Government thereby displace
the ordinary operation
of the laws of the State or Territory in which the
relevant acts take place. This is correct as far as it goes but does not
provide
an answer to the question of validity. There are consequences for the
Federation which flow from attributing to the Commonwealth
a wide executive
power to expend moneys, whether or not referable to a head of Commonwealth
legislative power, and subject only to
the requirement of a parliamentary
appropriation. Those consequences are not to be minimised by the absence of any
legal effect
upon the laws of the States. Expenditure by the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth, administered and controlled by the Commonwealth,
in fields within the competence of the executive governments of the States has,
and always has had, the potential, in a practical
way of which the Court can
take notice, to diminish the authority of the States in their fields of
operation. That is not a criterion
of invalidity. It is, however, a reason not
to accept the broad contention that such activities can be undertaken at the
discretion
of the Executive, subject only to the requirement of appropriation.
- That
aspect of executive power, which has been described as the "mere capacities of a
kind which may be possessed by persons other
than the
Crown"[52], is
not open-ended. The Commonwealth is not just another legal person like a
private corporation or a natural person with contractual
capacity. The
governmental contract "is now a powerful tool of public
administration."[53]
As Professor Winterton said of the capacities exercised by the Executive
Government[54]:
"Important governmental powers, such as the power to make contracts, may be
attributed to this source, but the general principle
must not be pressed too
far. It can be applied only when the executive and private actions are
identical, but this will rarely be
so, because governmental action is inherently
different from private action. Governmental action inevitably has a far greater
impact
on individual liberties, and this affects its
character."
Relevantly for present purposes, there is also the impact of Commonwealth
executive power on the executive power of the States.
- The
Commonwealth submitted that the necessary condition, imposed by s 83 of the
Constitution, for the exercise of the Commonwealth power to spend, namely that
it be under appropriation made by law, had been met by the enactment
of
Appropriation Acts in each of the relevant years. It was not in dispute that,
although a necessary condition of the exercise
of executive spending power, an
appropriation under s 83 is not a source of that
power[55]. For
the reasons given by Gummow and
Bell JJ[56]
it is not necessary in this case to deal with the sufficiency of the
parliamentary appropriations relied upon by the Commonwealth.
No Act of
Parliament existed which conferred power on the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth to make the impugned payments to
SUQ[57].
The lawfulness of the payments therefore depended critically upon whether
s 61 of the Constitution supplied that authority. That question invites
consideration of the construction of s 61 by reference to its drafting history
and the concept of executive government which informed it.
Executive power – prehistory and drafting history
- There
were elements of the drafting history of s 61 of the Constitution which
reflected some of the Commonwealth's arguments about its scope. It is helpful
to consider that history.
- In
November 1890, a few months before the first National Australasian Convention,
Sir Samuel Griffith, then Premier of Queensland
for the second time, proposed,
by way of motion in the Legislative Assembly, a federal constitution for the
Colony of Queensland
involving the creation of three provinces. The
motion was a political response to a long-running separatist
movement[58].
Relevantly, he proposed executive governments of the provinces and a
central "United Provinces" Executive Government. Their functions, he
said, "should correspond with the functions assigned to their respective
Legislatures."[59]
Queensland did not become a federation but Griffith's delineation of executive
powers was to have some resonance in the drafting
process which led to s 61 of
the Constitution of the Commonwealth.
- On
18 March 1891, the National Australasian Convention resolved in Committee of the
Whole to approve of the formation of the framing of a Federal
Constitution which would establish, among other
things[60]:
"An Executive, consisting of a Governor-General, and such persons as may from
time to time be appointed as his
advisers."
A Constitutional Committee was created to draft a Bill. Sir Samuel Griffith,
Edmund Barton, Alfred Deakin and Andrew Inglis Clark
were among its members. A
list of issues for decision by the Committee at its first meeting, probably
prepared by
Griffith[61],
included an Executive with "[p]owers correlative to those of
Legislature."[62]
A framework document subsequently produced by the Committee proposed an
Executive Government but made no reference to its
powers[63].
- Inglis
Clark prepared a draft Constitution which, in effect, became a working document
in the drafting process that ensued in the 1891 Convention and the 1897-1898
Conventions.
The initial draft was based upon the Constitution of the
United States in so far as it assigned enumerated legislative powers to the
Federal
Parliament[64].
In relation to the "location, nature and exercise of the Executive
power"[65] it
followed the Constitution of Canada embodied in the British North America Act
1867 (Imp) ("the British North America
Act")[66].
Section 9 of that Act provided:
"The Executive Government and Authority of and over Canada is hereby declared to
continue and be vested in the Queen."
Nevertheless, Inglis Clark, perhaps having in mind the power of the
central government under the Canadian Constitution, warned the delegates, in the
memorandum that accompanied his draft,
against[67]:
"an Executive having an immense number of provincial offices at its disposal,
and the reduction of the present local Governments
to the position of large
Municipal Councils with a Governor and a Ministry attached to each of
them."
A relevant contrast between the British North America Act and the Commonwealth
Constitution was made by the Privy Council in Attorney-General (Cth) v
Colonial Sugar Refining Co
Ltd[68].
What was in the minds of those who agreed on the resolutions which gave rise to
the British North America Act "was a general Government
charged with matters of
common interest, and new and merely local Governments for the Provinces", which
were to have "fresh and much
restricted
Constitutions"[69].
The Constitution adopted by the Australian colonies was "federal in the
strict sense of the
term"[70], in
which "States, while agreeing on a measure of delegation, yet in the main
continue[d] to preserve their original
Constitutions."[71]
- Clause
5 of Inglis Clark's draft Constitution provided that the executive power
and authority of the "Federal Dominion of Australasia" would continue and be
vested, subject to the provisions
of the Bill, in the
Queen[72].
Clause 6 provided for the Queen to appoint a Governor-General to exercise such
"executive powers, authorities, and functions" as
the Queen might deem
"necessary or expedient to assign to
him."[73]
Charles Kingston's draft Constitution was to broadly similar
effect[74].
- The
Constitution produced by the Constitutional Committee of the 1891 Convention,
and submitted to the Convention, followed the Inglis Clark and Kingston
model in relation to executive power. Clause 5 of the Inglis Clark draft became
cl 1 of Ch
II of the proposed Constitution, entitled "THE EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT".
It
provided[75]:
"The Executive power and authority of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen,
and shall be exercised by the Governor-General as
the Queen's
Representative."
That clause was one of two precursors of s 61.
- The
second precursor of s 61, a new provision with respect to executive power which
had not appeared in either of the Inglis Clark or Kingston drafts, was cl
8 of
the proposed Ch
II[76]:
"The Executive power and authority of the Commonwealth shall extend to all
matters with respect to which the Legislative powers of
the Parliament may be
exercised, excepting only matters, being within the Legislative powers of a
State, with respect to which the
Parliament of that State for the time being
exercises such powers."
In speaking to the draft Bill, Sir Samuel Griffith
said[77]:
"It is proposed that [the Commonwealth's] executive authority shall be
co-extensive with its legislative power. That follows as
a matter of
course."
The 1891 draft Constitution contained a paramountcy provision, cl 3 of Ch
V, in terms identical to those which became s 109 of the
Constitution[78].
That circumstance, and the non-exclusive character of most Commonwealth
legislative powers, was at least consistent with the proposition
that cl
8 was directed to cases in which the Commonwealth had exercised its concurrent
legislative power on a particular subject matter.
The proposition is, to some
degree, speculative because no explanation emerged at the time of what was meant
by an executive power
extending to matters with respect to which the legislative
powers of the Parliament could be exercised.
- In
the course of consideration by the Convention in Committee in April 1891, cl 8
was amended, on Sir Samuel Griffith's motion, to
read[79]:
"The Executive power and authority of the Commonwealth shall extend to the
execution of the provisions of this Constitution, and the Laws of the
Commonwealth."
In moving the amendment, Griffith said that it did not alter the intention of cl
8 and
added[80]:
"As the clause stands, it contains a negative limitation upon the powers of the
executive; but the amendment will give a positive
statement as to what they are
to be."
With what has been described as "an optimism that history has shown to be
misplaced"[81]
he said[82]:
"That amendment covers all that is meant by the clause, and is quite free from
ambiguity."
The stated equivalence of the original and amended forms of cl 8 raised more
questions than it answered. As amended, the clause
did not, in terms or by any
stretch of textual analysis, describe an executive power to do any act dealing
with a subject matter
falling within a head of Commonwealth legislative power.
- The
1891 draft Constitution failed to secure support from the colonial
legislatures[83].
Nevertheless, it became an important working document for the Drafting Committee
of the Constitutional Committee of the National
Australasian Convention which
met in Adelaide in 1897. In debate at the Adelaide session, Edmund Barton,
responding to a proposal
to insert the words "in council" after
"Governor-General" in s 61, described the executive power of the Crown as
"primarily divided into two
classes"[84]:
"those exercised by the prerogative ... and those which are ordinary Executive
Acts, where it is prescribed that the Executive shall
act in
Council."
The latter class he described as "the offsprings of
Statutes."[85]
Quick and Garran summarised his observation as a statement
that[86]:
"Executive acts were either (1) exercised by prerogative, or (2)
statutory."
The draft Constitution, recommended to the 1897 Convention by the Constitutional
Committee, made no substantial changes to the provisions of Ch II dealing
with
the location and nature of executive power. Sir Samuel Griffith, having
become Chief Justice of Queensland, was not a delegate to the 1897-1898
Conventions.
Nor was Inglis Clark present. His journey in 1897 to the United
States, and his appointment in 1898 to the Supreme Court of Tasmania,
precluded
his attendance at those
Conventions[87].
Nevertheless, Griffith and Inglis Clark offered written critiques of the draft
Constitution under consideration in 1897. They did not propose any alterations
relating to the location and scope of the executive
power[88]. Nor
did the Colonial Office beyond the suggestion, which was accepted, that the
words "is exercisable" be substituted for the words
"shall be exercised" in
cl 60[89],
the provision which evolved into s 61. That change was adopted at the
Sydney Convention of
1897[90], along
with other changes to Ch II which are not material for present purposes.
- After
consideration by colonial legislatures, pursuant to enabling Acts establishing
the 1897
Convention[91],
the draft Constitution was revised by the Drafting Committee. As finally
presented to the Melbourne Convention in 1898 the provisions which were to
become
s 61 of the Constitution were embodied in two clauses found in Ch
II[92]:
"60. The executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen, and is
exercisable by the Governor-General as the Queen's
representative.
- The
executive power of the Commonwealth shall extend to the execution of this
Constitution, and of the laws of the Commonwealth."
Clauses 60 and 67, although not debated in Committee at the Melbourne Convention
of 1898, were condensed into one clause by the Drafting
Committee, namely cl 61,
which became s 61 of the
Constitution[93].
- The
two versions of cl 8 in the 1891 draft and Griffith's comment upon moving the
amendment to the clause were relied upon in the
"Vondel Opinion" signed by
Alfred Deakin, as Attorney-General, in 1902. In that Opinion, Deakin gave a
meaning to s 61 which, at least so far as the documentary record discloses,
had not been exposed during the National Australasian Convention debates.
He
regarded executive power as existing "antecedently to, and independently of,
legislation". Its scope was "at least equal to
that of the legislative power
– exercised or
unexercised."[94]
Later in his Opinion he
concluded[95]:
"the Commonwealth has executive power, independently of Commonwealth
legislation, with respect to every matter to which its legislative
power
extends."
Deakin's Opinion reflected that of the Secretary to the Attorney-General's
Department, Robert Garran, who may have contributed to
its
drafting[96].
Garran, however, was later to resile from that opinion in testimony to the Royal
Commission on the Constitution of the Commonwealth. He told the Royal
Commission[97]:
"I used to have the view that some common law authority might be found for the
executive; but, in view of those words in section 61, I think you must seek
support for it either in the Constitution itself or in an act of
Parliament."
Deakin's Opinion contrasted sharply with that of Inglis Clark, expressed
in 1901,
that[98]:
"It is evident that the legislative power of the Commonwealth must be exercised
by the Parliament of the Commonwealth before the
executive or the judicial power
of the Commonwealth can be exercised by the Crown or the Federal Judiciary
respectively, because
the executive and the judicial powers cannot operate until
a law is in existence for enforcement or
exposition."
It is not to be thought that Inglis Clark thereby took a narrow view of
executive power. The power declared by s 61 of the Constitution to be vested in
the Queen included "the discretionary authority of the Crown within the
Commonwealth" and extended "to the maintenance
and execution of the Constitution
and of the laws of the
Commonwealth."[99]
So far as the section referred to the Queen it was to be read as a declaration
of an existing fact and not as an original grant of
executive authority to her
within the
Commonwealth[100].
- The
extension of the executive power in the closing words of s 61 was not the
subject of any exegesis by Quick and Garran, beyond their observation that the
execution and maintenance of the Constitution and of laws passed pursuant to it
would be "foremost" among the powers and functions conferred upon the
Governor-General[101].
- The
similarity between the words of extension in s 61 and the language of s 101 of
the Constitution, which provides for the establishment and functions of the
Inter-State Commission, is
striking[102].
In New South Wales v The Commonwealth ("the Inter-State Commission
case")[103],
which was concerned with s 101, Isaacs J, with whom Powers J
agreed[104],
described s 61 as according with Blackstone's observation
that[105]:
"though the making of laws is entirely the work of a distinct part, the
legislative branch, of the sovereign power, yet the manner,
time, and
circumstances of putting those laws in execution must frequently be left to the
discretion of the executive magistrate."
Barton J, dissenting in the result, equated the words "execute and maintain"
with "enforce and uphold the laws of which they are
the
guardians."[106]
- Professor
W Harrison Moore, writing in 1910, noted that the colonial constitutions were
"almost silent on the subject of the powers
as of the organization of the
Executive."[107]
He identified as one function of the Executive the representation of the
Commonwealth whenever necessary, "whether as a political
organism, or as a
juristic person making contracts and appearing as a party in Courts of
justice."[108]
That function required no express power. It flowed from the establishment of
the Commonwealth as a new political community. The
other functions were those
conferred by the terms of s
61[109]. In
relation to s 61, the Commonwealth Executive had more to do with the subject
matters of Commonwealth legislative power than just giving effect to
Commonwealth
legislation[110]:
"In relation to all such matters, the Commonwealth Executive does ... represent
the Commonwealth and all the States to the outside
world, whether there has been
any Commonwealth legislation or not".
Further, where a power or duty committed to "the Commonwealth" under the
Constitution was of a kind exercisable at common law by the Executive, the
Commonwealth Executive was empowered to take such action as the common
law
allowed[111].
- Professor
A Berriedale Keith, in the first edition, published in 1912, of
Responsible Government in the Dominions, described the executive power of
the Commonwealth as "very large",
adding[112]:
"It includes in addition to the power conferred by Commonwealth Acts the power
sole and exclusive over the transferred
departments."
In a subsequent edition, he also proposed that "[t]he executive power in the
Commonwealth is little affected by considerations of
the federal character of
the
Commonwealth."[113]
- The
Commonwealth submitted that it had been part of the accepted understanding of
the Constitution, since the time of the National Australasian Convention
debates, that the executive power of the Commonwealth supports executive
acts
dealing at least with matters within the enumerated heads of Commonwealth
legislative power. There is no doubt that at the
time of the Convention
debates, the statement that the distribution of executive powers in a federation
would follow the distribution
of legislative powers was not novel. However, its
meaning appears to have been no clearer then than it is now.
- There
is little evidence to support the view that the delegates to the National
Australasian Conventions of 1891 and 1897-1898, or
even the leading lawyers at
those Conventions, shared a clear common view of the working of executive power
in a federation. The
Constitution which they drafted incorporated aspects of
the written Constitutions of the United States and Canada, and the concept
of responsible government derived from the British tradition.
The elements were
mixed in the Constitution to meet the Founders' perception of a uniquely
Australian Federation. In respect of executive power, however, that perception
was
not finely resolved.
- Quick
and Garran distinguished the "Federal Executive power" conferred by s 61
from "the Executive power reserved to the
States."[114]
The executive power of the Commonwealth as a united political community was
divided into two parts: "that portion which belongs
to the Federal Government,
in relation to Federal affairs ... and that portion which relates to matters
reserved to the
States"[115].
Nevertheless, federal executive power and State executive power were "of the
same nature and
quality"[116].
- The
tension between the operation of executive powers and functions under a
system of responsible cabinet government and a federal constitution
with a
bi-cameral legislature, one element of which was a States' House,
represented a difficulty for some leading figures in the Federation
movement. Professor Winterton wrote that there was "a direct conflict
between responsible government
as practised in Britain and the federal model the
framers adopted from the United
States."[117]
Quick and Garran attributed to Sir Samuel Griffith, Sir Richard Baker, Sir John
Cockburn, Inglis Clark and Mr GW Hackett the view
that "the Cabinet system
of Executive is incompatible with a true
Federation."[118]
At the 1891 Convention at Sydney, Hackett said, in words which have frequently
been quoted, "either responsible government will kill
federation, or federation
... will kill responsible
government."[119]
That sentiment was repeated by the Chair of Committees at the Convention, Sir
Richard Baker, in a speech at Adelaide in 1897 in which
he
said[120]:
"if we adopt this Cabinet system of Executive it will either kill Federation or
Federation will kill it; because we cannot conceal
from ourselves that the very
fundamental essence of the Cabinet system of Executive is the predominating
power of one Chamber."
As Quick and Garran observed, the views of the objectors were not accepted. The
system of responsible government under the British
Constitution was embedded in
the federal Constitution and cannot now be disturbed without amendment to that
Constitution[121].
This Court has acknowledged the centrality of responsible government in the
Constitution[122].
Quick and Garran predicted correctly that the system of responsible government
would "tend in the direction of the nationalization
of the people of the
Commonwealth, and [would] promote the concentration of Executive control in the
House of
Representatives."[123]
To accept the correctness of that prediction is not to reflect upon the
desirability or otherwise of the way in which the operation
of our
constitutional system of government has developed.
- Quick
and Garran characterised s 61 as grafting the "modern political institution,
known as responsible government" onto the "ancient principle of the Government
of
England that the Executive power is vested in the
Crown"[124].
The difficulty, as they explained it,
was[125]:
"in a Federation, it is a fundamental rule that no new law shall be passed and
no old law shall be altered without the consent of
(1) a majority of the people
speaking by their representatives in one House, and (2) a majority of the States
speaking by their representatives
in the other house; that the same principle of
State approval as well as popular approval should apply to Executive action, as
well
as to legislative action; that the State should not be forced to support
Executive policy and Executive acts merely because ministers
enjoyed the
confidence of the popular Chamber".
Much has changed in the expectations and practices of government since the time
of the Conventions. The financial dominance of the
Commonwealth Government in
relation to the States was no doubt anticipated by some delegates, although
almost certainly not to the
degree which has eventuated, particularly in the
field of taxation, the use of conditional grants under s 96 and the
erroneous reliance upon the appropriations provisions of the Constitution
as a source of spending power. Another important development has been the
expansion of the functions of government into "activities
of an entrepreneurial
or commercial kind which, in general, were previously engaged in only by
subjects of the
Crown."[126]
- There
is no clear evidence of a common understanding, held by the framers of the
Constitution, that the executive power would support acts of the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth done without statutory authority provided
they
dealt with matters within the enumerated legislative powers of the Commonwealth
Parliament. A Commonwealth Executive with a
general power to deal with matters
of Commonwealth legislative competence is in tension with the federal conception
which informed
the function of the Senate as a necessary organ of Commonwealth
legislative power. It would undermine parliamentary control of the
executive
branch and weaken the role of the Senate. The plaintiff submitted that the
requirement of parliamentary appropriation
is at best a weak control,
particularly given the power of the Executive to advise the Governor-General to
specify the purpose of
appropriations. The inability of the Senate under
s 53 to initiate laws appropriating revenue and its inability to amend
proposed laws appropriating revenue for "the ordinary annual services
of the
Government" also point up the relative weakness of the Senate against an
Executive Government which has the confidence of
the House of Representatives.
As the Solicitor-General of Queensland put it in oral argument, the Senate has
limited powers to deal
with an Appropriation Bill, whereas it has much greater
powers with respect to general legislation which might authorise the Executive
to spend money in specific ways.
- The
function of the Senate as a chamber designed to protect the interests of the
States may now be vestigial. That can be attributed
in part to the predicted
evolution whereby responsible government has resulted in a powerful Executive
which, using the mechanisms
of party discipline, is in a position to exert
strong influence over the government party or parties in both Houses. The
Executive
has become what has been described as "the parliamentary wing of a
political party" which "though it does not always control the
Senate ...
nevertheless dominates the Parliament and directs most exercises of the
legislative
power."[127]
However firmly established that system may be, it has not resulted in any
constitutional inflation of the scope of executive power,
which must still be
understood by reference to the "truly federal government" of which Inglis Clark
wrote in 1901 and which, along
with responsible government, is central to the
Constitution.
The executive capacity to contract and spend
- The
Commonwealth's principal submissions located the contractual and spending powers
of the Executive in that aspect of executive power analogous to the
capacities of a legal person. Those submissions invite reflection upon the
way in which contractual and other "capacities" of the Executive have
been considered by this Court in the past.
- An
early example of such consideration concerned the power of the Executive to
undertake inquiries. It was described by Griffith
CJ in Clough v
Leahy[128]
as "not a prerogative right" but "a power which every individual citizen
possesses"[129].
That characterisation does not convey any coercive element in the power.
However, coercion could be supported by statute. As O'Connor
J said in
Huddart, Parker & Co Pty Ltd v
Moorehead[130]:
"The right to ask questions, which, as was pointed out by this Court in
Clough v Leahy, the Executive Government has in common with every other
citizen, is of little value unless it has behind it the authority to enforce
answers and to compel the discovery and production of documents." (footnote
omitted)
Importantly, the extent of the "power" was not at large. It was at least
constrained by the distribution of powers in the Constitution. In
Colonial Sugar Refining Co Ltd v Attorney-General
(Cth)[131]
the Court divided equally on the question whether s 51(xxxix) of the
Constitution authorises legislation, incidental to the executive power,
compelling persons to give evidence on matters outside the constitutional
authority of the
Commonwealth[132].
Griffith CJ, who viewed the question from a federal perspective, rejected
the proposition, as one
which[133]:
"implicitly denies the whole doctrine of distribution of powers between the
Commonwealth and the States, which is the fundamental
basis of the federal
compact."
On appeal to the Privy Council, pursuant to s 72 of the Constitution, the view
of the Chief Justice and Barton J
prevailed[134].
- Even
within fields of activity referable to heads of legislative power, the
capacities of the Commonwealth Executive analogous to
those of a juristic
person did not give it free rein. In Heiner v
Scott[135]
Griffith CJ rejected the proposition that the carrying on of ordinary
banking business was a function of the Executive Government
of the Commonwealth
conferred by the Constitution. He
said[136]:
"It may be that the carrying on of such a business is not unlawful in the sense
of being forbidden by law, but the liberty to do
so cannot be regarded as
anything more than a permissive faculty, permitted only in the sense of not
being prohibited by positive
law."
Powers J also observed that it was "not seriously contended that the
Constitution gave the Commonwealth special power to establish an ordinary
trading bank for
profit"[137].
The question was not considered by the other Justices. In any event it was not
suggested by anyone in that case that the conferral
upon the federal Parliament,
by s 51(xiii), of a power to make laws with respect to banking, could support
the existence of an executive power to carry on the business of banking.
- Section
61 was invoked by the Commonwealth as a source of contractual power in
the Wool Tops
case[138].
The Commonwealth had made agreements, without statutory backing, under
which it would give necessary regulatory
consents[139]
for the acquisition of wool and sheepskins and the manufacture and sale of wool
tops by the Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving
Co Ltd. Section 61, however,
did not confer power directly on the Commonwealth to make or ratify the
agreements. In so holding, Knox CJ and Gavan Duffy
J accepted that
Ministers could make contracts in the administration of their departments
pursuant to
s 64[140].
The impugned agreements had not been made on that basis. Isaacs J held
that the Crown's discretion to make contracts involving
the expenditure of
public money would not be entrusted to Ministers unless sanctioned either by
direct legislation or by appropriation
of
funds[141].
- An
attempt by the Commonwealth to invoke s 61 in support of an agreement for the
supply of plant made by a Commonwealth statutory authority was unsuccessful in
The Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth Shipping
Board[142].
The primary debate was about the scope of the statutory powers conferred on the
Shipping Board and their constitutional underpinning.
Knox CJ, Gavan
Duffy, Rich and Starke JJ, however, noted that the executive power of the
Commonwealth had been touched on in submissions
and
said[143]:
"it is impossible to say that an activity unwarranted in express terms by the
Constitution is nevertheless vested in the Executive, and can therefore be
conferred as an executive function upon such a body as the Shipping
Board."
- As
a general rule the power of the Commonwealth to make agreements has
always been regarded as subject to statutory
constraints[144].
So much was explained in The Commonwealth v Colonial Ammunition Co
Ltd[145].
The appropriation provisions of the Constitution could not be relied upon to
support an exercise of executive power involving expenditure which was
dependent for its validity upon the satisfaction of a statutory
condition[146].
A general appropriation was sufficient to satisfy "one 'necessary legal
condition of the transaction'"; it did not satisfy all other
legal
conditions[147].
- The
question whether the Commonwealth required statutory authority to enter into
contracts was discussed in testimony given at the
Royal Commission on the
Constitution of the Commonwealth by Owen Dixon KC, speaking on behalf of a
Committee of Counsel of Victoria. He criticised the view that the
words of
extension in s 61 were words of limitation restricting the Executive in
effect "to operating under and in pursuance of the laws made by
Parliament."[148]
While acknowledging that there was room for flexibility within that
interpretation, he doubted whether the propounded restriction
was intended or in
practice
observed[149].
The restrictive view, applied to the power of the Commonwealth to make
contracts, would
mean[150]:
"that, unless a contract was in some way incidental to the administration of a
statute it would be outside the power of the executive
to make
it."
Against a background of judicial decisions which required prior appropriation to
support a Crown contract he
said[151]:
"We cannot help feeling, however, that the result is unduly to hamper the
executive Government if it observes the restrictions, or
to inflict great
hardship upon the subject who contracts with the Crown if the executive fails to
observe the restrictions."
On the other hand, he suggested that it would be competent for the
Parliament to pass a General Contracts Act which would remove the difficulty
unless it were desired to confer greater contractual power upon the Executive
than the subjects
of legislative power would permit Parliament to
give[152].
It is not necessary for present purposes to express a concluded view on that
suggestion. There is no such statute.
- The
Commonwealth looked for a general contracts statute in s 44(1) of the
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth) ("FMA Act") which
provides:
"A Chief Executive must manage the affairs of the Agency in a way that promotes
proper use of the Commonwealth resources for which
the Chief Executive is
responsible."
There is a note to that provision which reads:
"A Chief Executive has the power to enter into contracts, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, in relation to the affairs of the Agency.
Some Chief Executives
have delegated this power under section
53."
In the case of an agency that is a Department of State, the Chief Executive is
the Secretary of that Department for the purposes
of the FMA
Act[153].
The Secretary of a Department is responsible, under s 57(1) of the
Public Service Act 1999 (Cth), for "managing the
Department".
- The
Commonwealth submitted that implicit in the obligation to promote "proper use"
of "Commonwealth resources for which the Chief
Executive is responsible" is the
power to direct those resources to government policies identified in Portfolio
Budget Statements
as falling within the scope of an appropriation, and any
applicable Administrative Arrangements Order made by the Governor-General.
Performance of that function, it was said, is impossible unless in conferring
it, Parliament is understood to have conferred on
the Executive Government power
to spend money that has been appropriated and to enter into contracts that
relate to such expenditure.
The note to s 44(1) was inserted by the
Financial Framework Legislation Amendment Act 2008 (Cth). It was relied
upon by the Commonwealth as extrinsic material, to which regard might be had
pursuant to s 15AB(2)(a) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth). The
note was said to confirm that s 44(1) confers a statutory "power" to enter
into contracts on behalf of the Commonwealth
in relation to the affairs of the
agency that is capable of being delegated under s 53(1) of the FMA Act.
The Commonwealth submitted that the DHF Agreement was signed for the State
Manager (South Australia) of DEST, acting as a delegate
of the Secretary of the
Department, exercising the Chief Executive's power under s 44 of the FMA Act .
- The
plaintiff directed attention to the collocation "manage the affairs of the
Agency" in s 44(1) and the similarity of its language to s 57(1) of the
Public Service Act. The plaintiff submitted that neither the purported entry by
the Commonwealth into the DHF Agreement nor its performance occurred
in the
course of the Secretary of DEST and then of DEEWR performing a managerial
function. That submission should be accepted.
As is pointed out in the reasons
of Gummow and
Bell JJ[154],
the provisions of the FMA Act are directed to the prudent conduct of
financial administration. It is not a source of power to spend that which is to
be administered.
- Suffice
it to say for present purposes, there was no statute, general or specific,
identified by the parties, which could be invoked
as a source of executive power
to enter into the DHF Agreement and to undertake the challenged
expenditure.
- In
Attorney-General (Vict) v The Commonwealth ("the Clothing Factory
case")[155]
the Commonwealth successfully argued that it had statutory authority to
conduct a clothing factory providing uniforms for defence
purposes and for
public and private sector employees. Rich J accepted that the legislative power
of the Parliament enabled it to
authorise the Executive to establish and conduct
a clothing factory to supply all the needs of the Commonwealth Government.
However,
his Honour was not prepared to accede to the argument
that[156]:
"without legislative power, the Commonwealth Executive can enter into business
operations simply because it is a juristic entity,
and in conducting business is
not exercising governmental power over the
subject."
That view seems to have been echoed in Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[157].
The decision in that case turned on a finding that a contractual claim
against the Commonwealth failed for want of a contract. Nevertheless the Court
said[158]:
"Questions of general constitutional law have ... been excluded from
consideration, but, if there was an intention on the part of
the Government to
assume a legal obligation, one would certainly have expected statutory authority
to be sought".
- An
important support for the exercise of contractual power by an executive
government in advance of parliamentary appropriation was
established by the
decision of this Court in New South Wales v
Bardolph[159].
The case is authority for the proposition, applicable to the Commonwealth, that
the Executive Government of New South Wales could
enter into a binding contract
absent prior parliamentary appropriation for the expenditure of money under the
contract. The case
concerned a contract made by the Tourist Bureau of New South
Wales for the provision of advertising services. The Tourist Bureau
had been
recognised for many years, both in Parliament and out, as part of the
established service of the
Crown[160].
Rich J characterised the making of the contract for advertising services as
"an ordinary incident of this particular function of
Government"[161].
Starke J made observations to similar
effect[162].
Dixon J, with whom Gavan Duffy CJ
agreed[163],
made a similar point, saying
that[164]:
"No statutory power to make a contract in the ordinary course of
administering a recognized part of the government of the State appears to me
to be necessary in order that, if made by the appropriate servant of the Crown,
it should become the contract of the
Crown, and, subject to the provision of
funds to answer it, binding upon the Crown." (emphasis
added)
The words emphasised in the judgment of Dixon J reflect a characterisation of
the contract in issue in Bardolph upon which all the members of the Court
agreed. That characterisation suggests that the State executive power
considered in Bardolph was analogous to the powers of Commonwealth
Ministers, derived from s 64 of the Constitution, in relation to the
administration of government departments. The case is not authority for the
existence of a general contractual
power derived from s 61 capable of
exercise without statutory authority.
- Professor
Enid Campbell criticised the apparent discrimen in Bardolph which would
confine its application to contracts "for the public service as are
incidental to the ordinary and well recognized functions of
Government"[165].
She made the point that a rule which made the validity of non-statutory Crown
contracts dependent upon the normality of their subject
matters as an aspect of
public administration had "the effect of enlarging the area of executive
authority by
prescription."[166]
In the context of s 61 of the Constitution and its relationship to s 64, she
said[167]:
"The Crown's power to contract is not, it is true, a prerogative power, but if
the power to contract without statutory authorization
has to be found within the
terms of The Constitution, s 61 seems to provide just as defensible a
constitutional basis as does s 64."
- Professor
Leslie Zines expressed his agreement with Professor Campbell,
observing[168]:
"What activities the government should engage in is the province of the
executive. What is normal or not will depend partly on what
policies and
activities have in the past been pursued and for what length of time. Why
should this matter to the issue of whether
parliamentary authorisation is
needed?"
Having regard to the sufficiency of parliamentary control of appropriations, it
was "hard to see how the supposed distinction between
types of contracts leads
to any significant bolstering of responsible
government."[169]
Professor Zines pointed to a passage from the judgment of Dixon J in Bardolph
where, without referring to any limitations, he
said[170]:
"the principles of responsible government do not disable the Executive from
acting without the prior approval of Parliament, nor
from contracting for the
expenditure of moneys conditionally upon appropriation by Parliament and doing
so before funds to answer
the expenditure have actually been made legally
available."
- Doctor
Nicholas Seddon has observed, in reflecting upon Professor Campbell's view, that
in contrast to the executive power of New
South Wales, the Commonwealth's power
is limited. Further, as he has correctly pointed out, the assumption that the
Commonwealth
is not exercising powers that are peculiarly governmental when
entering into a contract is increasingly unable to be
justified[171].
Professor Winterton, who thought that the Commonwealth would have power to enter
into contractual relations about matters outside
the sphere of its legislative
power, also observed
that[172]:
"bearing in mind the ability of governments to use their contract power to
achieve de facto regulation of an activity, the significance of the
federal contract power should not be underrated." (footnote
omitted)
Professor Cheryl Saunders and Kevin Yam, in a paper published in 2004, pointed
to the increasing use of government contracts for
the performance of
governmental functions and their use as a regulatory
tool[173].
That is perhaps illustrated in this case by the quasi-regulatory setting in
which the DHF Agreement was made. That setting included
the NSCP Guidelines,
issued by the responsible department. Under those guidelines, participating
schools and their communities were
required to "engage a school chaplain and
demonstrate how the services provided by the school chaplain achieve the
outcomes required
by the [NSCP]." Funding provided under the program could
"only be used for expenditure that directly relates to the provision of
chaplaincy services." Funding was provided "subject to the provision of
appropriate project performance reporting."
- The
DHF Agreement was itself prescriptive about the nature of the services to be
delivered by SUQ in the Darling Heights State School
and required SUQ chaplains
used in the school to sign the NSCP Code of Conduct which formed part of the DHF
Agreement. Its implementation
was amenable to the grant of supervision and
control appropriate to the delivery of a governmental service. The agreement
provided
that funding was conditional upon, inter alia, the submission of "a
detailed financial statement regarding all income and expenditure
relating to
the [NSCP]" and progress reports. It was also agreed that in the event of a
breach of the NSCP Code of Conduct by the
school chaplain, the Commonwealth
might require SUQ to repay some or all of the funding provided.
- In
considering criticisms of the taxonomy of government contracts referred to in
the judgments in Bardolph, it is necessary to bear in mind that
that case concerned the power of the Executive in a setting analogous to that of
a unitary constitution.
It was not a case about the relationship between
Commonwealth and State Executives and their contractual and spending powers
under
a federal constitution. Nor did it involve a consideration of the
relationship between the executive power conferred by s 61 of the
Constitution and the administration of departments of State of the Commonwealth
for which s 64 of the Constitution provides. The latter section may give
rise to questions of classification. Any consideration of its operation must
recognise that
it is a constitutional provision written to accommodate change in
governmental practice. It is not a repository for bright line
categories. As
Gleeson CJ said in Re Patterson; Ex parte
Taylor[174]:
"The concept of administration of departments of State, appearing in s 64, is
not further defined. This is hardly surprising. The practices and conventions
which promote efficient and effective government
administration alter over time,
and need to be able to respond to changes in circumstances and in
theory."
In similar vein, Gummow and Hayne JJ
observed[175]:
"The Court should favour a construction of s 64 which is fairly open and which
allows for development in a system of responsible ministerial
government."
Although both those comments were made in a case concerning the validity of the
appointment of two persons to administer the same
government department, they
have a more general application relevant to the scope of the concept of
departmental administration with
which s 64 is concerned. It is sufficient
for present purposes to say that the issue before the Court in Bardolph
did not involve consideration of the powers of the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth acting under ss 61 and 64 of the Constitution. Moreover,
subsequent commentary about the application of that case to the Commonwealth
Executive occurred in a setting in which
parliamentary appropriations were
thought to be a source of substantive power to spend public money.
- A
wide view of the executive power to make contracts pursuant to s 61 has been
expressed by a number of academic
writers[176],
although not without
misgivings[177].
Professor Winterton, in his seminal textbook Parliament, the Executive and
the Governor-General,
said[178]:
"As the common law powers of the Crown have been incorporated into the executive
power of the Commonwealth in s 61, the Crown in right of the Commonwealth has
inherited this common law power; accordingly, the Commonwealth government has
power to
enter into contracts without prior parliamentary authorization."
(footnotes omitted)
He cited in support a comment by Viscount Haldane in Kidman v The
Commonwealth[179],
and an observation by Aickin J, with which Barwick CJ agreed, in Ansett
Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[180].
- In
Kidman, Viscount Haldane, in the course of argument in the Privy Council,
referred to the decision of the Privy Council in Commercial Cable Co v
Newfoundland
Government[181]
and
said[182]:
"In that case we distinctly laid it down ... that the Governor-General, as
representing the Crown, could enter into contracts as
much as he liked, and
even, if he made the words clear, to bind himself
personally."
In an obiter observation, Aickin J said in Ansett Transport
Industries[183]:
"It is plain that even without statutory authority the Commonwealth in the
exercise of its executive power may enter into binding
contracts affecting its
future action."
- Ansett
Transport Industries was primarily a case about the power of the Executive
to agree to exercise statutory powers in a particular way. The agreements in
issue in that case had received parliamentary approval in a statute. The case
did not raise for consideration the issues which have
been raised in this case
and particularly the federal dimension which this case raises.
Viscount Haldane's remarks in Kidman harked back to a decision made
in the somewhat different setting of the British North America Act. Neither of
the quoted passages
are, with respect, of assistance in the resolution of the
matter now before this Court.
Conclusion
- Neither
the DHF Agreement nor the expenditure made under it was done in the
administration of a department of State in the sense
used in s 64 of the
Constitution. Neither constituted an exercise of the prerogative aspect of the
executive power. Neither involved the exercise of a statutory
power, nor
executive action to give effect to a statute enacted for the purpose of
providing chaplaincy or like services to State
schools. Whatever the scope of
that aspect of the executive power which derives from the character and status
of the Commonwealth
as a national government, it did not authorise the contract
and the expenditure under it in this case. The field of activity in
which the
DHF Agreement and the expenditure was said, by the Commonwealth, to lie within
areas of legislative competency of the Commonwealth
Parliament under either
s 51(xxiiiA) or s 51(xx) of the Constitution. Assuming it to be the
case that the DHF Agreement and expenditure under it could be referred to one or
other of those fields of
legislative power, they are fields in which the
Commonwealth and the States have concurrent competencies subject to the
paramountcy
of Commonwealth laws effected by s 109 of the Constitution.
The character of the Commonwealth Government as a national government does not
entitle it, as a general proposition, to enter into
any such field of activity
by executive action alone. Such an extension of Commonwealth executive powers
would, in a practical sense,
as Deakin predicted, correspondingly reduce those
of the States and compromise what Inglis Clark described as the essential and
distinctive
feature of "a truly federal government".
- I
would answer the questions posed in the special case in the terms set out in the
judgment of Gummow and Bell
JJ[184].
GUMMOW AND BELL JJ.
Introduction
- The
plaintiff challenges, for lack of authority under the Constitution, the
provision by the Commonwealth of funding pursuant to what is known as the
National School Chaplaincy Programme ("the NSCP").
The action in the original
jurisdiction of this Court has led to argument in the Full Court upon a Special
Case. There have been
interventions by all the States and the Court also
received submissions, as amicus curiae, by the Churches' Commission on Education
Incorporated.
- On
5 October 2009, the three eldest of the plaintiff's four children were
enrolled at the Darling Heights State Primary School in
Queensland. The
youngest child was enrolled there on 27 January 2010. As their father, the
law gave the plaintiff parental responsibilities,
including responsibilities for
their
education[185].
- At
the time of the enrolment of the four children, there was in force with respect
to their school an agreement for funding under
the NSCP between the Commonwealth
(the first defendant) and Scripture Union Queensland ("SUQ") (the fourth
defendant) with a term
of three years from 8 October 2007 ("the Funding
Agreement"). SUQ is incorporated under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
as a public company limited by guarantee. On 13 May 2010, the term of the
Funding Agreement was extended to 31 December 2011.
- The
funding of the NSCP is not provided under any statute of the Parliament. There
is no law enacted, for example, in reliance upon
the power conferred by
s 51(xxiiiA) of the Constitution to make laws with respect to "the
provision of ... benefits to students". Nor is the funding provided by the
Commonwealth under
s 96 of the Constitution as the "grant [of] financial
assistance to any State on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks
fit". Rather, for its
power to spend so as to fund the NSCP, the Commonwealth
relies upon "the executive power of the Commonwealth", which is identified
in
Ch II of the Constitution, particularly in s 61.
- It
is important to bear in mind that, when ascertaining the limits of the executive
power of the Commonwealth, attention is to be
paid by the Court both to the
position of the States in the federal system established by the Constitution and
to the powers of the other branches of the federal government established by
Ch I (the Parliament) and Ch III (the Judicature)
of the
Constitution[186].
- In
that regard, it should be noted that, unlike the situation in Pape v Federal
Commissioner of
Taxation[187],
where the validity of a statute, the Tax Bonus for Working Australians Act
(No 2) 2009 (Cth), was in question, here there has been no engagement
of the Parliament in supplementation of the exercise of the executive power
by a
statute supported by s 51(xxxix) of the Constitution. That paragraph
confers upon the Parliament power to make laws with respect to "matters
incidental to the execution of any power
vested by this Constitution ... in the
Government of the Commonwealth ... or in any department or officer of the
Commonwealth". There has been no involvement
by legislation of the Parliament
in the NSCP beyond the passage of appropriation Acts. Hence the significance
here of the positions
both of the States and of the Parliament.
- It
also should be emphasised at the outset that a conclusion reached on this
Special Case that spending upon the NSCP is not supported
as an exercise of the
executive power would not foreclose any issue whether further provision of the
substance of the NSCP could
be achieved either by grant pursuant to s 96 of
the Constitution or by legislation of the Parliament said to be supported, for
example, by s 51(xxiiiA). Nothing in these reasons should be taken as
expressing any view upon the scope of s 51(xxiiiA) or any other head of
legislative power.
The NSCP and the Funding Agreement
- The
Funding Agreement incorporated a document identified as the "National School
Chaplaincy Programme Guidelines" ("the Guidelines"),
first issued in December
2006 by the Department of Education, Science and Training.
- The
Funding Agreement was described on its title page as "For the provision of
funding under the [NSCP] on behalf of Darling Heights
State School". Under the
heading "Your Obligations", the Funding Agreement stated that SUQ was to provide
the chaplaincy services
which it had described in its application and was to
ensure that those services were "delivered" as they had been identified in the
application and in accordance with the Guidelines. The only obligation imposed
upon the Commonwealth by the Funding Agreement was
to provide the funding for
these services, subject to the availability of sufficient funds and compliance
by SUQ with the terms on
which the Commonwealth provided the funding.
- The
section of the Funding Agreement entitled "Project description" stated that the
purpose of the funding was "to contribute to
the provision of chaplaincy
services at [the] school", and "to assist [the] school and community in
supporting the spiritual wellbeing
of students". The services to be provided
included the provision of "comfort and support to students and staff, such as
during times
of grief" and "being approachable by all students, staff and
members of the school community of all religious affiliations". The
width and
generality of these statements should be noted.
- The
Guidelines which accompanied the Funding Agreement, under the heading
"Overview", stated:
"School chaplains are already making valuable contributions to the spiritual
and emotional wellbeing of school communities across Australia,
and the Australian Government has responded to the call that their services be
made more broadly available.
The [NSCP] aims to support schools and their communities that wish to establish
school chaplaincy services or to enhance existing
chaplaincy services.
It is a voluntary [p]rogramme that will assist schools and their
communities to support the spiritual wellbeing of their students. This
might include support and guidance about ethics, values, relationships,
spirituality and religious issues; the provision of pastoral care; and enhancing
engagement with the broader community.
Funding of up to $30 million per annum for three years will be available,
commencing in the 2007 school year. Government and non-government
schools and
their communities can apply for up to $20,000 per annum (and a maximum of
$60,000 over the life of the [NSCP]) to establish
school chaplaincy services or
to enhance existing chaplaincy services.
[NSCP] funding will be appropriated annually by Parliament and administered by
the Department of Education, Science and Training
...
The nature of chaplaincy services to be provided, including the religious
affiliation of the school chaplain, is a matter which
needs to be decided by the
local school and its community, following broad consultation. However, students
will not be obliged to
participate, and parents and students will be informed
about the availability and the voluntary nature of the chaplaincy services.
Access to advice, support and guidance about ethics, values and relationships
may already be available at schools through existing
services, such as
counsellors, youth workers, social workers and psychologists. While the [NSCP]
complements these services, there
are also clear differences between [the NSCP]
and existing services, which include the focus on spiritual and religious
advice, support
and guidance.
It is not the Australian Government's intention that this initiative will in
any way diminish or replace existing careers advice and
counselling services
funded by state and territory governments." (emphasis
added)
- On
21 November 2009, the Prime Minister announced an extension of the NSCP to
December 2011, with additional funding of $42 million
over the 2010 and
2011 school years.
- The
plaintiff emphasises that the Guidelines do not require that a recipient of
funding under the NSCP have the character of a trading
corporation. Rather, the
Guidelines stipulate that payments will not be made to schools without entry
into agreements with either
a "School Registered Entity", a State or Territory
education authority or a "Project sponsor". The term "School Registered Entity"
applies to a "Government School Community Organisation" for certain government
schools, and to the "legal entity for any Independent
and Catholic school".
Payments may also be made to a "Project sponsor" nominated by a school to manage
the chaplaincy service, being
"a legal entity, affiliated with or working with a
religious institution to provide a school chaplain and deliver chaplaincy
services
in schools".
- The
plaintiff refers to these provisions in the Guidelines to emphasise that the
implementation of the NSCP was so designed as to
be indifferent to the corporate
nature of recipients of funding, and that had the Commonwealth sought to
implement the NSCP by legislation
s 51(xx) of the Constitution would not
have provided a basis for doing so. The point was developed by Victoria by
emphasising that a law permitting the Commonwealth
to enter contracts for the
payment of moneys to entities, indifferent to whether those entities be trading
corporations, would not
be a law supported by s 51(xx).
- It
should be noted that at least since 1998 the Queensland Department of Education
and Training has specified requirements for the
provision of chaplaincy services
in Queensland State schools. Since 2007 it has operated a funding programme for
those chaplaincy
services. On 24 January 2011, the State of Queensland
entered into an agreement with SUQ for the provision by SUQ for the term of
one
year of "Chaplaincy Services"; this involves support (which may have a religious
or spiritual component) to students attending
Queensland State schools,
regardless of religious or non-religious beliefs, and it is to be provided
"through the delivery of inclusive
religiously and culturally respectful
activities and programs". In the year 2010, SUQ received $781,000 in
"chaplaincy funding"
by Queensland; in the same year it received $11,012,000
from the Commonwealth under the NSCP. SUQ employs approximately 500 school
chaplains in Queensland.
- For
many years the Parliament has legislated for the provision of financial
assistance to the States on the condition that the funds
be applied for
educational purposes. The Schools Assistance Act 2008 (Cth) provides for
the provision of financial assistance to the States for non-government schools.
The Nation-building Funds Act 2008
(Cth)[188]
provides for the grant of financial assistance for educational purposes on terms
agreed between the Commonwealth and the States.
- However,
as noted above, the NSCP is not the creature of statute. Rather, the NSCP is
administered by the second defendant, the
Minister for School Education, Early
Childhood and Youth. The NSCP is given effect by a series of funding
arrangements for particular
schools, of which the Funding Agreement is an
example. On 14 November 2007, 15 December 2008 and 2 December
2009, SUQ received from
the Commonwealth three payments each of $22,000
(inclusive of GST), upon invoices from SUQ for the provision of services under
the
Funding Agreement. On 11 October 2010, SUQ received a payment of
$27,063.01 for the period until 31 December 2011.
- The
third defendant, the Minister for Finance and Deregulation, administers the
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth) ("the FMA Act ").
Part 7 (ss 44 - 53 ) of the FMA Act imposed "special responsibilities"
upon the Secretary (as "Chief Executive") of the Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace
Relations ("the Department") administered by the second
defendant. These included the implementation of a fraud control plan
fmaaa1997321 /s45.html" class="autolink_findacts">(s 45), the establishment of an audit committee (s 46) and ensuring
that the accounts and records of the Department were kept as required by Orders
made by the third defendant under s 63 of the FMA Act (s 48). These
specific requirements were directed to the efficient, effective and ethical use
of the Commonwealth resources for which the
Secretary was made responsible by
s 44 in managing the affairs of the Department.
- The
Commonwealth contended that Pt 7 of the FMA Act , and in particular
s 44 , went further. It was said that s 44 conferred upon the
Department power to expend appropriated moneys and, in that regard, to enter
into and make payments under the
Funding Agreement. The structure of Pt 7
indicates that its provisions are directed elsewhere, to the prudent conduct of
financial administration, not to the conferral of
power to spend that which is
to be so administered. There is applicable here the statement made by
Mr Dennis Rose QC with respect
to the predecessor of the FMA Act , the
Audit Act 1901 (Cth), and the Finance Regulations made thereunder. He
wrote
that[189]
these were "drafted on the basis that the power is derived elsewhere, and [were]
concerned only with regulating the exercise of that
power".
- The
payments to SUQ were made in exercise of drawing rights issued by the third
defendant to the Secretary of the Department pursuant
to Pt 4, Div 2
(ss 26 , 27 ) of the FMA Act . The Secretary had delegated the exercise of
those drawing rights, pursuant to s 53 of the FMA Act , to a departmental
officer.
- The
effect of regs 8 and 9 of the Financial Management and Accountability
Regulations 1997 ("the Regulations"), at the time the NSCP was entered, had been
to oblige the second defendant, the Secretary of the Department,
or an
authorised person to give approval to the expenditure proposed under the Funding
Agreement before entry into it. No distinct
issue arises with respect to
compliance with the Regulations.
- The
plaintiff challenges the legality of the payments to SUQ under the NSCP on
various grounds. One of these may be dealt with immediately.
Section 116 of the Constitution
- Section 116
of the Constitution states that "no religious test shall be required as a
qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth". The
plaintiff contends that the "school chaplain" is an "office ... under the
Commonwealth" and that the definition of "school chaplain"
in the Guidelines
imposes a religious test for that office. To qualify as a "school chaplain", a
person must be recognised "through
formal ordination, commissioning, recognised
qualifications or endorsement by a recognised or accepted religious institution
or a
state/territory government approved chaplaincy service".
- However,
the plaintiff's case under s 116 fails at the threshold.
Questions 2(b) and 4(b) presented by the Special Case should be
answered accordingly.
- The
chaplains engaged by SUQ hold no office under the Commonwealth. The chaplain at
the Darling Heights State Primary School is
engaged by SUQ to provide services
under the control and direction of the school principal. The chaplain does not
enter into any
contractual or other arrangement with the Commonwealth. That the
Commonwealth is a source of funding to SUQ is insufficient to render
a chaplain
engaged by SUQ the holder of an office under the Commonwealth.
- It
has been said in this Court that the meaning of "office" turns largely on the
context in which it is
found[190],
and it may be accepted that, given the significance of the place of s 116
in the
Constitution[191],
the term should not be given a restricted meaning when used in that provision.
Nevertheless, the phrase "office ... under the Commonwealth"
must be read as a
whole. If this be done, the force of the term "under" indicates a requirement
for a closer connection to the Commonwealth
than that presented by the facts of
this case. The similar terms in which the "religious test clause" is expressed
in Art VI, cl
3 of the United States Constitution was emphasised by
the plaintiff but there is no clear stream of United States authority on this
provision which points to any conclusion
contrary to that expressed above.
Standing of the plaintiff
- The
plaintiff also asserts both the lack of any appropriation to fund the drawing of
money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under
s 83 of the Constitution,
and the absence of power in the Executive Government to spend, giving rise to
the invalidity of the Funding Agreement and of payments
which have been made
thereunder to SUQ.
- The
Commonwealth parties (which hereafter refers to the first, second and third
defendants) and SUQ to varying degrees contest the
standing of the plaintiff.
But, in exercise of the right of intervention given by s 78A of the
Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth), Victoria and Western Australia extensively
support that part of the plaintiff's case which challenges the existence of the
spending power and the validity of the Funding Agreement. In this respect, the
questions of standing may be put to one side. Even
without s 78A, any
State would have a sufficient interest in the observance by the Commonwealth of
the bounds of the executive power assigned to
it by the Constitution to give the
State
standing[192].
It should be added that New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and
Tasmania also intervene in support of the plaintiff, but
on grounds more limited
than those of Victoria and Western Australia.
The absence of appropriations
- The
plaintiff challenges the payments to SUQ on the ground that the drawing rights
relied upon appropriations for the ordinary annual
services of the
Government[193],
which did not in their terms refer to the implementation of the NSCP as a new
policy[194].
- Several
points should be made. First, the following passage in the reasons of
French CJ, Gummow and Crennan JJ in ICM Agriculture Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[195]
should be noted. With reference to Pape, their Honours said:
"[I]t is now settled that the provisions ... in s 81 of the Constitution
for establishment of the Consolidated Revenue Fund and in s 83 for
Parliamentary appropriation, do not confer a substantive spending power and that
the power to expend appropriated moneys must
be found elsewhere in the
Constitution or the laws of the Commonwealth." (footnote
omitted)
- Secondly,
the Commonwealth parties correctly submit that the issue of the validity of the
Funding Agreement is not determined by
the presence (or absence) during its term
of appropriations by the Parliament to satisfy the obligations thereunder of the
Commonwealth
to make payments to SUQ. Rather, as Rich J explained in
New South Wales v
Bardolph[196]:
"[I]t is no more than a condition implied in the contract that before payment is
made Parliament must appropriate the necessary money,
but that a contract
otherwise within the authority of Government is binding subject to that
condition. [Part IX, especially s 65, of the] Judiciary Act is
designed to give effect to the condition."
Dixon J
added[197]:
"Parliament is considered to retain the power of enforcing the responsibility of
the Administration by means of its control over
the expenditure of public
moneys. But the principles of responsible government do not disable the
Executive from acting without
the prior approval of Parliament, nor from
contracting for the expenditure of moneys conditionally upon appropriation by
Parliament
and doing so before funds to answer the expenditure have actually
been made legally available."
- Thirdly,
whether the payments which have been made to SUQ under the Funding Agreement
are, by reason of the absence of an appropriation,
moneys had and received by
SUQ to the use of the Commonwealth and recoverable as such by the
Commonwealth[198]
is not the subject of any contest between the parties to the Special Case.
Fourthly, any failure in supply by the Parliament of
the necessary
appropriations, if established, could be put right by subsequent
appropriation[199].
- In
these circumstances, two considerations are presented. First, even if the
plaintiff made good his case as to the absence of an
appropriation, that would
not impeach the Funding Agreement, which is the focus of his case. Secondly,
there is a real issue as
to the existence of a sufficient interest in the
plaintiff to found a claim by him to declaratory relief upon the alleged absence
of appropriations by the
Parliament[200].
The Commonwealth parties accept only that the plaintiff has a sufficient
interest with respect to the final payment made to SUQ
on 11 October 2010
in reliance upon the appropriation Act for the financial year 2010-2011, but
this acceptance is limited to the
plaintiff's standing to challenge the
satisfaction of the conditions precedent to that payment and does not extend to
any challenge
by the plaintiff to the underlying appropriation. Moreover, the
interventions by the States in support of the plaintiff do not extend
to this
aspect of the litigation. Hence, it is preferable to proceed immediately to the
alleged absence of power for the Commonwealth
to enter into the Funding
Agreement and to make the payments to SUQ.
The validity of the Funding Agreement
- Question 2(a)
of the Special Case asks whether the Funding Agreement is invalid, in whole or
in part, by reason that entry into it
was beyond the executive power of the
Commonwealth. This must be read with Question 4(a), which asks whether the
making of the payments
under the Funding Agreement was "unlawful" by reason of
the absence from the executive power of the Commonwealth of the power to
pay
those moneys to SUQ. This issue would be presented whether the payments were
made to SUQ as grants or in discharge of contractual
obligations. It will be
necessary to return to this, the essential aspect of the litigation, but it is
convenient first to say something
respecting contracts made by the Commonwealth.
- Where
the efficacy of a contract entered into by the Commonwealth, other than in
exercise of authority conferred by or under a law
made by the
Parliament[201],
is challenged, two issues may arise. The first is the authority to bind the
Commonwealth which was vested in those who purported
to act on its
behalf[202].
The Funding Agreement was expressed to be signed on behalf of the Commonwealth
by a named officer of the Department of Education,
Science and Training, the
predecessor of the Department. No challenge is made to the authority of that
officer to execute the Funding
Agreement[203].
- It
is the second issue which is in contention. This is the existence of the power
of the Executive Government to enter into the
Funding Agreement and to spend
moneys in its performance. It appears to be accepted that entry into the
Funding Agreement and spending
thereunder must be supported, if at all, as an
exercise of the executive power of the Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth executive power
- This
Court has eschewed any attempt to define exhaustively the content of the
"executive power" which is identified but not explicated
in s 61 of the
Constitution[204].
Hence the attention in these reasons to partial but not necessarily complete
descriptions of the executive spending power. To some
degree this state of
affairs in the analysis of s 61 may reflect the considerations expressed by
Professor Crommelin in a passage in his study of the drafting of the sparse
provisions
of Ch II of the Constitution, which was quoted in Re
Patterson; Ex parte
Taylor[205].
The passage
reads[206]:
"The reasons were understandable, if not entirely convincing. The executive
branch of government was shrouded in mystery, partly
attributable to the
uncertain scope and status of the prerogative. The task of committing its
essential features to writing was
daunting indeed. Moreover, the price of
undertaking that task would be a loss of flexibility in the future development
of the executive.
Politicians who were the beneficiaries of half a century of
colonial constitutional development placed a high value upon such
flexibility."
Further, in Melbourne Corporation v The
Commonwealth[207],
Dixon J observed that the framers of the Constitution, chiefly by the text
of ss 51, 52, 107, 108 and 109, had performed the task of distributing
power between State and Commonwealth by reference to legislative
powers.
- The
immediate issues in this litigation require, among other matters, consideration
of the relationship between the federal Executive
and the legislative powers of
the federal Parliament. A distinction is to be made here. The distinction is
between the capacity
of the Parliament to qualify or abrogate at least some
aspects of the executive power, and the scope of the executive power in respect
of matters which could be the subject of legislation. The Commonwealth parties
rely on the latter to support the Funding Agreement.
But something should be
said to contrast the former.
- In
Cadia Holdings Pty Ltd v New South
Wales[208]
Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Crennan JJ said:
"The executive power of the Commonwealth of which s 61 of the Constitution
speaks enables the Commonwealth to undertake executive action appropriate to its
position under the Constitution and to that end includes the prerogative
powers accorded the Crown by the common
law[209].
Dixon J spoke of common law prerogatives of the Crown in England,
specifically the prerogative respecting Crown debts, as having
been 'carried
into the executive authority of the
Commonwealth'[210]."
In Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Official Liquidator of E O Farley
Ltd[211],
Evatt J distinguished what he classified as the "executive prerogatives"
from those "common law prerogatives" conferring certain
preferences, immunities
and exceptions which were denied to the subject. The latter, particularly with
respect to fiscal
matters[212],
from time to time have been qualified or abrogated by the
Parliament[213].
When a prerogative power is directly regulated by statute, the Executive
Government must act in accordance with the statutory
regime[214].
- The
present case concerns not these "common law prerogatives" but rather the
submission that the scope of the executive power with
respect to spending may be
measured by that of the legislative power but in the absence of legislation
conferring any authority upon
the Executive Government.
The executive power of the Commonwealth with respect to
spending
- As
the plaintiff framed his written submissions he accepted the proposition which
at that stage had been advanced by the Commonwealth
parties that the executive
power of the Commonwealth extends at least to engagement in activities or
enterprises which could be authorised
by or under a law made by the Parliament,
even if there be no such statute. That broad proposition as to the scope of
s 61 of the Constitution, which had the support of Sir Robert
Garran[215],
appears to have had a source in the Opinion given on 12 November 1902 by
Alfred Deakin as
Attorney-General[216],
that:
"It is impossible to resist the conclusion that the Commonwealth has executive
power, independently of Commonwealth legislation,
with respect to every matter
to which its legislative power extends."
The width of that proposition requires consideration before it could be accepted
by this Court. Its correctness was challenged,
particularly by Queensland in
oral submissions, and by Tasmania in written submissions filed, by leave, after
the hearing.
- Upon
the assumption that the proposition is correct the defendants rely upon the
powers of the Parliament with respect to "trading
... corporations"
(s 51(xx)) and "the provision of ... benefits to students"
(s 51(xxiiiA)). The argument by the defendants appears to involve the
proposition that a law authorising entry into and performance of the Funding
Agreement would be supported by those heads of power, even if not also by
s 51(xxxix) in its operation with respect to matters incidental to the
execution of the executive power of the Commonwealth. In response, the
plaintiff, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and
Tasmania deny that SUQ is a trading corporation in the
constitutional sense; and
the plaintiff, Victoria and Western Australia also deny that the Funding
Agreement provides "benefits to
students", rather than merely to SUQ, which is
obliged by the Funding Agreement to provide the "chaplaincy services" at the
Darling
Heights State Primary School.
- However,
in the course of argument the plaintiff resiled from, and asserted the contrary
to, the general proposition that because
s 61 empowers the executive branch
of government to engage in activities authorised by or under a law made by the
Parliament, the executive
power extends to engagement in activities or
enterprises which could be authorised by or under a law made by the Parliament,
even
though they have not yet been and may never be so authorised. Support for
that view of s 61 which the plaintiff now disavows was based primarily upon
a reading of Victoria v The Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP
Case")[217].
But that decision does not provide a sufficient basis for such a broad
proposition.
The AAP Case
- The
AAP Case was argued on demurrer by Victoria to the defence of those who
were the Commonwealth parties in that case and was decided on what,
since
Pape, can be seen to have been the false assumption that the spending
power of the Executive Government of the Commonwealth was to be
found in Ch IV
of the Constitution, in particular in ss 81 and 83. Hence the
attention given in the submissions in the AAP Case and in the reasons of
the Court to the phrase in s 81 "the purposes of the Commonwealth".
- Barwick CJ[218]
reasoned that this phrase was "a reasonable synonym" for the expression in
s 51(xxxi) "for any purpose in respect of which the Parliament has power to
make laws", and
concluded[219]:
"With exceptions that are not relevant to this matter and which need not be
stated, the executive may only do that which has been
or could be the subject of
valid legislation. Consequently, to describe a Commonwealth purpose as a
purpose for or in relation to
which the Parliament may make a valid law, is both
sufficient and accurate."
- Gibbs J[220],
after stating that "the whole question is whether the purposes of the
[Australian Assistance] Plan are 'purposes of the Commonwealth'",
said:
"According to s 61 of the Constitution, the executive power of the
Commonwealth 'extends to the execution and maintenance of this Constitution, and
of the laws of the Commonwealth'. Those words limit the power of the Executive
and, in my opinion, make it clear that the Executive
cannot act in respect of a
matter which falls entirely outside the legislative competence of the
Commonwealth. A view consonant
with that which I have expressed has previously
received acceptance in this Court: see The Commonwealth v Colonial Combing,
Spinning and Weaving Co
Ltd[221];
The Commonwealth v The Australian Commonwealth Shipping
Board[222].
The Constitution effects a distribution between the Commonwealth and the States
of all power, not merely of legislative power. We are in no way concerned
in
the present case to consider the scope of the prerogative or the circumstances
in which the Executive may act without statutory
sanction. Once it is concluded
that the Plan is one in respect of which legislation could not validly be
passed, it follows that
public moneys of the Commonwealth may not lawfully be
expended for the purposes of the Plan."
The last sentence in this passage is expressed in negative terms. Gibbs J
did not say that public moneys could lawfully be expended
on any purpose for
which legislation might be passed. It was sufficient for his Honour's decision
that the Australian Assistance
Plan could not have been supported by
legislation.
- Mason J[223]
concluded that the phrase "for the purposes of the Commonwealth" had the meaning
"for such purposes as Parliament may determine".
His Honour, prescient of what
was to be decided in Pape, went on to say that an appropriation "does not
supply legal authority for the Commonwealth's engagement in the activities in
connexion
with which the moneys are to be spent", and added that, no legislation
having been enacted with respect to the Australian Assistance
Plan, it was
necessary to look to the executive
power[224].
His Honour then responded to the opposing submissions by the Commonwealth
parties (that the devotion of an appropriation to its
purpose may be secured by
legislation or executive
action[225])
and by Victoria (that s 61 of the Constitution does not confer executive
power beyond the execution of laws made by the
Parliament[226]).
Mason J did so in these qualified
terms[227]:
"Although the ambit of the power is not otherwise defined by Ch II it is
evident that in scope it is not unlimited and that its content
does not reach
beyond the area of responsibilities allocated to the Commonwealth by the
Constitution, responsibilities which are ascertainable from the distribution of
powers, more particularly the distribution of legislative powers,
effected by
the Constitution itself and the character and status of the Commonwealth as a
national government. The provisions of s 61 taken in conjunction with the
federal character of the Constitution and the distribution of powers between the
Commonwealth and the States make any other conclusion
unacceptable."
- However,
in referring to the distribution of responsibilities between the Commonwealth
and the States, Mason J was speaking in general
terms and, like
Gibbs J, his Honour was not adopting any broad proposition that moneys may
be spent by the Executive Government upon
what answers the description of any
head of legislative power found in s 51 of the Constitution. That this is
so is apparent from the earlier rejection by
Mason J[228],
along with
Barwick CJ[229],
of the application to s 51(ii) of the
Constitution[230]
of the United States doctrine, exemplified in United States v
Butler[231],
that because the power of Congress to tax is "unlimited" the power to spend is
also "unlimited".
- On
the other hand,
Murphy J[232]
appears to have accepted the application in Australia of Butler, and
Jacobs J[233]
said that "the purposes of the Commonwealth" spoken of in s 81 "certainly
include all the purposes comprehended within the subject matters of s 51 in
respect of which the Commonwealth may legislate, including the subject matter
comprised in s 51(xxxix)".
- As
the argument on the Special Case proceeded it became apparent that the AAP
Case does not support any proposition that the spending power of the
executive branch of government is co-extensive with those activities
which could
be the subject of legislation supported by any head of power in s 51 of the
Constitution.
- First,
any such proposition is too broad. Reference has been made to s 51(ii),
the taxation power; it is well settled that there can be no taxation except
under the authority of
statute[234].
Many other of the heads of power in s 51 are quite inapt for exercise by
the Executive. Marriage and divorce, and bankruptcy and insolvency by executive
decree, are among
the more obvious examples. These heads and other heads of
legislative power in Ch II are complemented by the power given to the
Parliament by Ch III to make laws conferring upon courts federal
jurisdiction in matters arising under federal laws. Further, while
heads of
power in s 51 carry with them the power to create
offences[235],
the Executive cannot create a new
offence[236],
and cannot dispense with the operation of any
law[237].
- Secondly,
such a proposition would undermine the basal assumption of legislative
predominance inherited from the United Kingdom and
so would distort the
relationship between Ch I and Ch II of the Constitution. No doubt the
requirement of s 64 of the Constitution that Ministers of State be senators
or members of the House of Representatives has the consequence that the Minister
whose department
administers an executive spending scheme, such as the NSCP, is
responsible to account for its administration to the
Parliament[238].
This is so whether the responsibility is to the chamber of which the Minister is
a member or to the other chamber, in which the
Minister is "represented" by
another
Minister[239].
But there remain considerations of representative as well as of responsible
government in cases where an executive spending scheme
has no legislative
engagement for its creation or operation beyond the appropriation process. And
that appropriation process requires
that the proposed law not originate in the
Senate, and that the proposed law appropriating revenue or moneys "for the
ordinary annual
services of the Government" not be amended by the
Senate[240].
- The
questions on the Special Case are not to be answered through debate as to what
legislation could have been passed by the Parliament
in reliance upon
pars (xx) or (xxiiiA) of s 51 of the Constitution.
The determinative question
- The
Commonwealth parties make the general submission that the executive power
extends to entry into contracts and the spending of
money without any
legislative authority beyond an appropriation. The determinative question on
this Special Case thus becomes whether
the executive power is of sufficient
scope to support the entry into and making of payments by the Commonwealth to
SUQ under the
Funding Agreement. For the reasons which follow this question
should be answered in the negative.
- In
his reply, the plaintiff submitted that the relevant aspect of the executive
power was that concerned with the ordinary course
of administering a recognised
part of the Government of the Commonwealth or with the incidents of the ordinary
and well-recognised
functions of that
Government[241].
These functions would vary from time to
time[242],
but would include the operation of the
Parliament[243],
and the servicing of the departments of State of the Commonwealth, the
administration of which is referred to in s 64 of the Constitution,
including the funding of activities in which the departments engage or consider
engagement[244].
The plaintiff accepted that this aspect of the executive power encompassed
expenditure without legislative backing beyond an appropriation
and the
Commonwealth parties appeared to accept that concession.
- However,
the plaintiff contended that expenditure upon the NSCP does not fall within any
ordinary and well-recognised functions of
the Government of the Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth parties submitted that the expenditure at least now had that
quality because
expenditures under the NSCP had commenced in the 2007 school
year and had continued thereafter. That submission assumes the determination
of
the issue on which the Special Case turns and should not be accepted.
- The
plaintiff agrees that the ordinary and well-recognised functions of the
Government of the Commonwealth include the Commonwealth
entering into agreements
with the States, particularly with reference to the referral by State
Parliaments of matters pursuant to
s 51(xxxvii), and to the engagement of
s 96 of the Constitution. No doubt a range of agreements and
understandings between the Commonwealth and State Executive Governments,
recently exemplified
in ICM
Agriculture[245],
would be supported upon the plaintiff's thesis.
- The
plaintiff did not support the outcome in Pape as having rested upon an
ordinary and well-recognised activity of the Government of the Commonwealth.
Rather, Pape was said by the plaintiff to have been decided in a
"different universe of discourse" to that of the NSCP because the expenditure
with which Pape was concerned was effected with legislative support.
Several points should be made in response.
- First,
while the engagement of the legislative branch of government marked off
Pape from cases where there is, by reason of the absence of such
engagement, a deficit in the system of representative government, there
remains
in common with any assessment of the NSCP the considerations of federalism,
stimulated by the by-passing by the Executive
of s 96. Secondly, the
outcome in Pape indicates that although the plaintiff's submission is
satisfactory as a partial description of the executive power to spend, it does
not mark any outer limit of universal application. Thirdly, fuller attention to
Pape nevertheless yields support to the conclusion sought by the
plaintiff: that the executive power does not go so far as to support
the entry
by the Commonwealth into the Funding Agreement, and the making of payments by
the Commonwealth to SUQ.
- In
Pape[246],
approval was given to the statement by Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ
in Davis v The
Commonwealth[247]
that:
"the existence of Commonwealth executive power in areas beyond the express
grants of legislative power will ordinarily be clearest
where Commonwealth
executive or legislative action involves no real competition with State
executive or legislative competence".
In Davis, Brennan J invited consideration of "the sufficiency of the
powers of the States to engage effectively in the enterprise or activity
in
question"[248].
This consideration reflects concern with the federal structure and the position
of the States.
- Further,
as noted above, the NSCP contracts, such as the Funding Agreement, present an
example where within the Commonwealth itself
there is a limited engagement of
the institutions of representative government. The Parliament is engaged only
in the appropriation
of revenue, where the role of the Senate is limited. It is
not engaged in the formulation, amendment or termination of any programme
for
the spending of those moneys.
- The
present case, unlike Pape, does not involve a natural disaster or
national economic or other emergency in which only the Commonwealth has the
means to provide
a prompt
response[249].
In Pape, the short-term, extensive and urgent nature of the payments to
be made to taxpayers necessitated the use of the federal taxation
administration
system to implement the proposal, rather than the adoption of a mechanism
supported by s 96. However, the States have the legal and practical
capacity to provide for a scheme such as the NSCP. The conduct of the public
school
system in Queensland, where the Darling Heights State Primary School is
situated, is the responsibility of that State. Indeed, Queensland
maintains its
own programme for school chaplains.
- Section 96
of the Constitution gives to the Parliament a means for the provision, upon
conditions, of financial assistance by grant to Queensland and to any other
State. This is subject to the qualification stated in ICM
Agriculture[250]
that the legislative power conferred by s 96 and s 51(xxxvi) does not
extend to the grant of financial assistance to a State on terms and conditions
requiring the State to acquire property on
other than just terms.
- With
respect to the significance of s 96 in the federal structure, the following
passage from the reasons of Barwick CJ in the AAP Case is in
point[251]:
"Section 96 ... has enabled the Commonwealth to intrude in point of policy
and perhaps of administration into areas outside Commonwealth legislative
competence. No doubt, in a real sense, the basis on which grants to the
claimant States have been quantified by the Grants Commission
has further
expanded the effect of the use of s 96. But a grant under s 96 with
its attached conditions cannot be forced upon a State: the State must accept it
with its conditions. Thus, although in point
of economic fact, a State on
occasions may have little option, these intrusions by the Commonwealth into
areas of State power which
action under s 96 enables, wear consensual
aspect. Commonwealth expenditure of the Consolidated Revenue Fund to service a
purpose which it is not
constitutionally lawful for the Commonwealth to pursue,
is quite a different matter. If allowed, it not only alters what may be
called
the financial federalism of the Constitution but it permits the Commonwealth
effectively to interfere, without the consent of the State, in matters covered
by the residue of
governmental power assigned by the Constitution to the
State."
- What
then was said by the defendants for the conclusion contrary to that which would
follow from the above?
The Commonwealth parties' ultimate submission
- With
the support of SUQ, and the qualified support of South Australia, the
Commonwealth parties presented their ultimate submission.
This was that because
the capacities to contract and to spend moneys lawfully available for
expenditure do not "involve interference
with what would otherwise be the legal
rights and duties of others" which exist under the ordinary law, the Executive
Government
in this respect possesses these capacities in common with other legal
persons. The capacity to contract and to spend then was said
to take its legal
effect from the general law.
- A
basic difficulty with that proposition is disclosed by the observation by
Dixon CJ, Williams, Webb, Fullagar and Kitto JJ in Australian
Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[252]
that:
"the position is not that of a person proposing to expend moneys of his own. It
is public moneys that are involved."
The law of contract has been fashioned primarily to deal with the interests of
private parties, not those of the Executive Government.
Where public moneys are
involved, questions of contractual capacity are to be regarded "through
different
spectacles"[253].
- One
example of what may be seen through those spectacles is the debate (which does
not fall for consideration here) as to the extent
to which by contract the
Commonwealth may fetter future executive action in a matter of public
interest[254].
Other examples are given in the reasons of
Crennan J[255].
- Consideration
of the issues which the Commonwealth parties' submission presents (contrary to
what is put in support by South Australia)
is not assisted by reference to the
position of the Sovereign in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland at
the time of the
framing of the Constitution. It was, as explained in Sue v
Hill[256],
then well understood that the term "the Crown" was used in a number of
metaphorical senses. Five of these were considered in Sue v
Hill[257].
The first concerned the use of "the Crown" in English law as a device to
dispense with the recognition of the State as a juristic
person. In his
doctoral thesis, which was presented some years after Federation and only
published in 1987, Dr H V Evatt referred
to the failure in
English constitutional theory "to separate the personal rights of the monarch
from the legal authority of the
State"[258].
- To
this may be added the point made by the plaintiff that the Commonwealth parties'
ultimate submission appears to proceed from the
assumption that the executive
branch has a legal personality distinct from the legislative branch, with the
result that the Executive
is endowed with the capacities of an individual. The
legal personality, however, is that of the Commonwealth of Australia, which
is
the body politic established under the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution
Act 1900
(Imp)[259],
and identified in covering cl 6.
- The
assimilation of the executive branch to a natural person and other entities with
legal personality was said by the Commonwealth
parties to be supported by
statements by Brennan CJ and by Gummow and Kirby JJ in The
Commonwealth v
Mewett[260].
These were to the effect that s 75(iii) of the Constitution denies any
operation of doctrines of executive immunity which might be pleaded to any
action for damages in respect of a common law
cause of action. The absence from
the Constitution of doctrines of executive immunity assists those private
parties who have dealings with the executive branch of government. Different
considerations arise where the question is one of executive capacity to enter
into such dealings. In that situation there arise
the considerations referred
to at the outset of these reasons, respecting both the federal structure and the
relationship between
Ch I and Ch II of the Constitution.
- In
oral submissions the Commonwealth Solicitor-General resisted the suggestion that
the references made in earlier submissions to
the character and status of the
Commonwealth as a national government, in support of his submission as to the
assimilation of the
capacities of the Commonwealth to contract and to spend to
those of other legal persons, may conflate the capacities to contract
and to
spend with the distinct and special financial privileges associated with the
prerogative; the latter have been referred to
earlier in these
reasons[261].
- Rather,
the Commonwealth parties' assimilation submission was said to draw support as
constitutionally coherent from (i) the relationship
between s 61 and
the appropriation provisions in s 81 and s 83, and (ii) the
extent of the power to tax. The first consideration understates the
significance of the holding in Pape respecting the relationship between
the provision of an appropriation and the spending power. The second shows the
tenacity of his
successors to the views of Sir Robert Garran, noted earlier in
these
reasons[262].
Further, for the reasons already given, considerations of constitutional
coherence point away from the existence of an unqualified
executive power to
contract and to spend.
- The
Commonwealth Solicitor-General also distinguished on the one hand attempts by
the Executive to conscript or command individuals
and entities such as trading
corporations, and on the other hand the conferral of rights or benefits upon
parties with the attachment
of conditions to be observed by the recipient, such
as those imposed upon SUQ by the Funding Agreement. The latter was within the
executive power but the former was not. But the distinction rests upon what
appears to be a false assumption as to the non-coercive
nature of the attachment
of conditions. Financial dealings with the Commonwealth have long had attached
to them the sanctions of
the federal criminal law. For example, the provisions
added respectively as s 29A(1) and s 29B to the Crimes Act 1914
(Cth) by s 16 of the Crimes Act 1926 (Cth) created offences of
obtaining from the Commonwealth, with intent to defraud, "any chattel, money,
valuable security or
benefit" by any false pretence, and also of imposing or
endeavouring to impose upon the Commonwealth any untrue representation with
a
view to obtain money or any other benefit or
advantage[263].
- These
submissions by the Commonwealth parties as to the scope of the executive power
to contract and to spend should not be accepted.
Conclusions
- Question 1(a)
asks whether the plaintiff has standing to challenge the validity of the Funding
Agreement. It should be answered
"Yes". Question 1(c) asks the same
question with respect to the making of payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ
pursuant to the Funding
Agreement for the financial years beginning 2007-2008
and ending 2011-2012. This also should be answered "Yes". Question 1(b)
is
directed to the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the
purpose of making those payments. It should be answered:
"Unnecessary to
answer".
- Question 2(a)
asks whether the Funding Agreement is invalid as beyond the executive power of
the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution, and should be answered
"Yes". Question 2(b) asks the same question but with respect to s 116
of the Constitution and should be answered "No".
- Question 3
asks questions with respect to the authorisation of payments by appropriation
Acts beginning with that for 2007-2008 and
ending with that for 2011-2012. It
should be answered: "Unnecessary to answer".
- Question 4(a)
asks whether the making of the relevant payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ was
"unlawful" by reason of the lack of
the executive power under s 61 of the
Constitution to make those payments. It should be answered: "The making of the
payments was not supported by the executive power of the Commonwealth
under
s 61 of the Constitution".
- Question 4(b)
asks the same question with respect to s 116 of the Constitution. It
should be answered: "No".
- Question 5
asks what relief sought in the statement of claim should be granted to the
plaintiff. This should be answered: "The
Justice disposing of the action
should grant the plaintiff such declaratory relief and make such costs orders as
appear appropriate
in the light of the answers to Questions 1-4
and 6".
- Question 6,
as to the costs of the Special Case, should be answered: "The first, second and
third defendants". We would not make
a costs order against SUQ, the fourth
defendant.
- HAYNE
J. The facts and circumstances which give rise to the questions of law that
have been stated by the parties for the opinion
of the Full Court, in the form
of a Special Case, are described in the reasons of Gummow and Bell JJ. They
need not be repeated.
- I
agree with the reasons given by Gummow and Bell JJ for answering Question 1
(concerning the standing of the plaintiff) and Questions
2(b) and 4(b)
(concerning s 116 of the Constitution) as they propose. I agree that it is
not necessary to answer Question 3 (concerning whether identified
Appropriation Acts authorised
the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund for the purpose of making the disputed payments). I also agree with the
answers Gummow and Bell JJ propose to Questions 5 and 6.
- These
reasons are directed to the issues about executive power that are raised in the
matter. It is necessary to begin consideration
of those issues (raised by
Questions 2(a) and 4(a) of the Special Case) by identifying the question
which is raised by the complaint
that the plaintiff makes.
The question
- The
plaintiff alleged that there was no power for the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth to pay Scripture Union Queensland
("SUQ") moneys which the
Commonwealth had agreed with SUQ should be paid under the Darling Heights
Funding Agreement. The central
issue in the matter is the ambit of the
Commonwealth Executive's power to spend money.
- The
spending in question was in satisfaction of an obligation which the Commonwealth
had undertaken by making a contract with SUQ,
the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement. The obligation to pay money was the only obligation which the
Commonwealth undertook by that
contract as made and later varied. The Darling
Heights Funding Agreement made detailed provisions regulating how SUQ was to
apply
the moneys it received from the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth thus
agreed to pay money to SUQ on terms. But to ask only whether
the Commonwealth
had power to make the particular contract which it made with SUQ is to
obscure the more fundamental question which the arrangement presented: did the
Commonwealth have power
to spend money on terms? The particular legal
framework by which the Commonwealth chose to provide for the payments, or to
provide for the
terms on which they were made, is beside the point if, as the
plaintiff asserted, the Executive Government had no power to spend
the
money.
- The
ultimate question in this matter is: did the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth, with no authority other than whatever
authority was given by the
relevant Appropriation
Acts[264],
have power to make the impugned payments to SUQ in accordance with the Darling
Heights Funding Agreement? The broader question
whether the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth, with no authority other than whatever authority
is given by an Appropriation
Act, may spend money for a purpose that is
identified in that Appropriation Act is cast at a level of generality that
presents issues
that need not be decided in this case.
Three fundamental propositions
- Nonetheless,
the question that has been identified as the ultimate question in this matter
directs attention to, and requires consideration
of, three fundamental
propositions, each of which is necessarily expressed at a high level of
abstraction and each of which must
be given more particular content before it is
capable of application to a particular case. First, the expenditures in issue
(the
disputed payments) are expenditures made by the executive government of a
polity – an artificial legal person – and are
expenditures of public
moneys – not moneys which are in any relevant sense the polity's "own"
moneys. Second, the legislative
branch of the federal polity, the Parliament,
is the branch of government that controls the raising and expenditure of public
moneys.
Third, the legislative branch has limited legislative powers; the
Constitution distributes legislative power by giving the Federal Parliament only
limited legislative powers.
- Other
equally fundamental observations about accounting for and control of public
expenditures hover in the background of the issues
that must be decided. They
include such matters as the requirements of ss 53, 54 and 56 of the
Constitution, which regulate parliamentary practice in relation to money Bills.
They include the (relatively recent) adoption by the Parliament
and the
Executive of output accounting practices. They include the (now long-standing)
practice of identifying the purposes for
which the Consolidated Revenue Fund is
appropriated at a very high level of abstraction. But despite the importance of
these and
other like considerations which loom in the background, some of which
will later be considered, chief attention must be directed,
at least for the
most part, to the three fundamental propositions that have been identified.
Attention to those propositions is
required by the way in which the first,
second and third defendants ("the Commonwealth parties") put their arguments
about the extent
of the Executive's power to spend.
The arguments of the Commonwealth parties
- The
Commonwealth parties submitted that "[w]hat is truly in issue [in this case] is
whether the executive power of the Commonwealth
extends to making the payments".
That submission proceeded on the basis that this Court decided in Pape v
Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[265]
that s 81 of the Constitution is not to be treated as an "appropriations
power" that implicitly authorises the expenditure of money "for the purposes of
the Commonwealth".
Rather, the Commonwealth parties' submissions continued,
"s 81 (with s 83) merely confirms that parliamentary appropriation is
a prerequisite for the lawful availability of money for expenditure.
Authority to spend such money must be found in the executive power or in
legislation enacted under a head of power in ss 51, 52 or
122[266]."
(emphasis added) In this case the Commonwealth parties submitted, at least
initially, that the authority to spend was found in
the executive power, not in
any legislation.
- The
Commonwealth parties proffered alternative submissions about the relevant ambit
of the executive power: what was described as
a "narrow basis" and a "broad
basis". The narrow basis was that the executive power of the Commonwealth, in
all its aspects, is:
"limited to the subject-matters of the express grants of legislative power in
ss 51, 52 and 122 of the Constitution (together with matters that, because
of their distinctly national
character[267]
or their magnitude and
urgency[268],
are peculiarly adapted to the government of the country and otherwise could not
be carried on for the public benefit)".
On that basis the making of the Darling Heights Funding Agreement and the
payments to SUQ were submitted to be within the executive
power of the
Commonwealth in that:
"the Agreement provides for, and its performance involves, the provision of
benefits to students (cf s 51(xxiiiA)) ... and ... the Agreement was
entered into with, and provides for assistance to, a trading corporation formed
within the limits of
the Commonwealth (cf s 51(xx))".
That is, the Commonwealth parties submitted that the disputed payments could
have been authorised by a valid law made by the Parliament and that, because
there could have been a valid law, the Executive had power to
make the payments
even though there was no legislative authorisation for their
making.
- The
broad basis advanced on behalf of the Commonwealth parties was that the
Executive's power to spend money lawfully available to
it was, in effect,
unlimited. It was said that the "capacities" of the Executive to spend money
lawfully available to it, or to
enter into a contract,
"do not involve interference with what would otherwise be the legal rights and
duties of others. Nor does the Commonwealth, when
exercising such a capacity,
assert or enjoy any power to displace the ordinary operation of the laws of the
State or Territory in
which the relevant acts take place." (footnote
omitted)
And in amplification of and support for these propositions, the Commonwealth
parties further submitted that neither s 51(xxxix) (the incidental power)
nor s 96 (the grants power) required some other
conclusion.
178 Several important propositions underpinned these submissions. First, as
has been noted, they proceeded from the premise that
there was no legislative
authorisation for the disputed payments or the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement. But in supplementary
submissions, filed by leave after the close of
oral argument, the Commonwealth parties submitted that, if legislative authority
to
enter the Darling Heights Funding Agreement was required, that authority was
provided by s 44 of the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997 (Cth)[269].
And as will later be explained, the premise that there was no legislative
authorisation for the disputed payments may require closer
examination of the
terms of the Appropriation Acts than was given in argument of this matter.
- The
second proposition that underpinned the Commonwealth parties' initial
submissions founded on the narrow basis was that the ambit
of the Executive's
power to spend money that has been the subject of a valid appropriation is fixed
by whether the payment could have been validly authorised by a law of the
Parliament. And at first the focus of the plaintiff and of the interveners fell
only upon whether
the payments could have been authorised by a law of the
Parliament, rather than upon whether it was right to say that (assuming a valid
appropriation) the Executive
can spend in any manner and for any purpose
that could validly be authorised by legislation, regardless of whether the
payment is authorised in that way.
- The
third proposition that underpinned the Commonwealth parties' initial
submissions, at least on the broad basis, was that the "capacity"
of the
Commonwealth Executive is the same as that of a natural person.
- Each
of these three propositions – there was no legislative authority; the
executive power to spend extends to any expenditure
the Parliament could
authorise; and the Executive's capacities are relevantly unbounded – will
require consideration of the
three fundamental propositions described at the
start of these reasons.
How the issues are considered
- The
balance of these reasons will proceed in the following manner. The Commonwealth
parties' broad basis submission is examined
first. In considering that
submission it is convenient to begin by noticing that submissions to the same
general effect as the broad
basis submission made by the Commonwealth parties in
this matter have been made, but not accepted, in those (relatively few) earlier
decisions of this Court in which the validity of Commonwealth expenditure has
been in issue. Next, the notion of the "capacities"
of the Commonwealth, which
lay at the heart of the broad basis submission, is considered. Then these
reasons will turn to consider
the nature and extent of parliamentary control
over the expenditure of public moneys. That requires consideration of both the
provisions
made by the Constitution establishing, and exercises by the
Parliament of, parliamentary control over the expenditure of public moneys, and
consideration
(by reference to the text and structure of the Constitution) of
the bounds on the Commonwealth's executive power to spend. These reasons will
thus demonstrate that the Commonwealth parties'
broad basis submission should be
rejected.
- The
Commonwealth parties' narrow basis submission will then be examined. That
entails consideration of the correct approach to examining
whether action by the
Executive Government is supported by the executive power, of notions of
competition with and sufficiency of
State legislative and executive power, and
ultimately – on the assumption that the approach initially taken by the
parties
and interveners is correct – of whether the Parliament could have
passed a valid law authorising the disputed payments. These
reasons will
demonstrate that the Parliament could not by law have authorised the disputed
payments. Because the Parliament could
not by law have authorised the payments,
their making was not a valid exercise of the executive power of the
Commonwealth. It is,
then, not necessary to consider whether (if there had been
power to enact such a law) specific legislative authority to make the
disputed
payments (in addition to the relevant Appropriation Acts) would have been
necessary to their being validly made.
- Finally,
attention will be given to Question 2(a), in which the parties asked
whether the Darling Heights Funding Agreement was "invalid".
As already
indicated, the central issue in the case concerned the Commonwealth's power to
perform the only obligation it undertook
under that agreement – the
obligation to make the disputed payments. Because these reasons conclude that
the Commonwealth
did not have power to make the disputed payments, it follows
that the Commonwealth could not validly undertake an obligation to make
them.
The answer given to Question 2(a) should expressly reflect that absence of
power, rather than risk obscuring the point by
an answer couched only in terms
of "invalidity".
- It
is convenient to deal first with the course of authority in this Court.
Earlier decisions
- In
the relatively few cases where Commonwealth expenditure has been in issue, the
Commonwealth has made submissions, along the lines
of those advanced in the
present case, that its power to expend public moneys, duly appropriated, is
unlimited.
- As
early as 1908, the Commonwealth submitted that "the Parliament is invested with
the same powers of appropriation for specific
purposes as are the State
Parliaments in respect of their
revenue"[270].
In 1945, the Commonwealth
argued[271]
that s 81 (read with s 83) of the Constitution is akin to Art I,
§8, cl 1 of the United States Constitution, which was said to confer a
"power to spend ... as wide as the power to tax". The Commonwealth power to
tax, and by implication
its power to spend, was
said[272] to
be "perhaps, for all practical purposes unlimited". In 1975, at a time when it
was thought that ss 81 and 83 conferred power to spend public moneys, the
Commonwealth
submitted[273]
that "[i]t is for Parliament and not the courts to determine what are purposes
of the Commonwealth" (referred to in s 81) and that "[o]nce money has been
appropriated by a valid law its devotion to the purpose of the appropriation may
be secured by executive action or by legislation" (emphasis added). In
1990, the Commonwealth
submitted[274]
that "all that is required [to permit expenditure] is an available
appropriation" (emphasis added).
- This
expansive view of the Commonwealth's power to spend has never been accepted by a
majority of this Court. Despite the contrary
views expressed by some Justices,
the Court has recognised that the text and structure of the Constitution require
the conclusion that the Commonwealth's power to spend public moneys is not and
cannot be unlimited.
- The
source of the Commonwealth's power to spend was a matter of some dispute until
the decision in Pape. Submissions of the kind described above assumed or
asserted, and judgments of some Justices of the Court appeared to proceed on
the
assumption[275],
that s 81, or some combination of ss 81, 83 and 51(xxxix), conferred
power on the Commonwealth to expend public moneys. (So also in Combet v The
Commonwealth[276],
the Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth stated in argument that Appropriation
Acts "merely authorise the drawing of money from
the Treasury of the
Commonwealth and its expenditure" (emphasis added).) In light of the
assumption that was made, a limit, perhaps the limit, on the Commonwealth's
power to spend was
discerned in the words "for the purposes of the Commonwealth"
in s 81. Construed in the light of the text and structure of the
Constitution – in particular, the enumerated but limited heads of
Commonwealth legislative power (especially ss 51, 52 and 122) and the
finance provisions (especially ss 87, 94 and 96) – these words were
seen as limiting the purposes for which s 81 (with or without ss 83
and 51(xxxix)) authorised appropriations and expenditure to be
made[277].
But a conclusive statement of that limit proved to be elusive. As Gibbs J
said in Victoria v The Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP
Case")[278]:
"This question was fully discussed in the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case[279].
There Latham CJ and McTiernan J held that 'the purposes of the
Commonwealth' within s 81 are such purposes as the Parliament determines,
and that the Courts have no power to declare that an Appropriation Act is
invalid
on the ground that the appropriation was made for an unauthorized
purpose[280].
However, this view, that s 81 does not impose any effective limitation on
the purpose for which an appropriation may be made, and
that the Parliament may
appropriate moneys for any purpose whatever, was not accepted by Rich, Starke,
Dixon, and Williams JJ, the
other members of the Court. Both Starke J
and Williams J were of the opinion that the words referred to the purposes
of the Commonwealth
as an organized political
body[281].
...
Dixon J (with whom Rich J concurred) agreed that if the power of
expenditure 'is limited to matters to which the Federal legislative
power may be
addressed, it necessarily includes whatever is incidental to the existence of
the Commonwealth as a state and to the
exercise of the functions of a national
government'[282].
He said[283]
that he did not find it necessary to choose between the view that the power is
so limited and the view that the Parliament is authorized
to spend money without
any limitation of purpose. But it is apparent that he did not favour the latter
view".
- The
AAP Case itself did not resolve the issue. The joint dissenting reasons
in Pape
explained[284]
that decision thus:
"Because of the way in which opinions were divided in the AAP Case, no
proposition about the ambit of the Commonwealth's powers as to appropriation and
expenditure can be identified as commanding
the assent of a majority of the
Justices in that case. Two members of the Court, Barwick CJ and
Gibbs J, were of opinion that the
Commonwealth's power of appropriation was
limited to purposes in respect of which the Parliament has legislative power.
By contrast,
McTiernan, Mason and Murphy JJ were of opinion that the
purposes of the Commonwealth are not limited to those purposes for which
the
Commonwealth has power to make laws and that it is for Parliament to determine
what are the purposes of the Commonwealth. Although
Jacobs J treated the
purposes of the Commonwealth as being limited to purposes identified from within
the Constitution, those purposes included, in his Honour's
view[285],
purposes implied from the existence of 'Australia as a nation externally and
internally sovereign' including 'co-ordination of services'
to meet the 'various
interrelated needs' of a complex society. The seventh member of the Court,
Stephen J, held that the plaintiffs,
the State of Victoria and the
Attorney-General for that State, lacked standing to bring the
proceedings."
What is said in the AAP Case, at least what is said by Barwick CJ,
McTiernan J, Jacobs J and Murphy J and perhaps by Gibbs J
and Mason J, can only be understood
once it is recognised that that case
was decided on the same assumption: that s 81 (or an Appropriation Act
supported by s 81) confers power to spend moneys
appropriated.
- The
whole Court
decided[286]
in Pape that the power to spend appropriated moneys must be found either
in provisions of the Constitution other than s 81 or s 83, or in
statutes made under the Constitution. This conclusion stemmed immediately from
the recognition of what the plurality in Pape
described[287]
as "the nature of the process of parliamentary appropriation", "[t]he grant of
an appropriation [being] not by its own force the
exercise of an executive or
legislative power to achieve an objective which requires
expenditure"[288].
- But
in Pape, as in the decisions that had gone before, this Court recognised
that the text and structure of the Constitution impose limits on the
Commonwealth's power to spend. These limits reflect federal considerations of
the kind expressed by Dixon J
in Melbourne Corporation v The
Commonwealth[289].
They reflect the distribution of powers between the Commonwealth and the States
that is effected by the Constitution.
The executive power of the Commonwealth as power to
spend
- It
is well settled that the Executive can spend (with an available appropriation)
where power to do so is conferred by valid
statute[290]
or by the Constitution
itself[291].
Exercise of a power of that kind can be described as an exercise of the
executive power of the Commonwealth. In the former case
it falls within "the
execution and maintenance ... of the laws of the Commonwealth" and in the latter
case within "the execution
and maintenance of this Constitution", to both of
which the executive power of the Commonwealth expressly "extends" by s 61.
But in these reasons, reference to "the executive power of the Commonwealth" is
to the power conferred by the first limb of s 61 of the Constitution, not
to power conferred on the Executive Government by statute or by other provisions
of the
Constitution[292].
- It
must now be taken as established by the decision in Pape that the
executive power of the Commonwealth referred to in s 61 of the Constitution
confers, in some circumstances, power to expend public moneys. However,
acceptance of the majority holding in Pape does not entail
acceptance of the position the Commonwealth has long maintained that, as Deakin
put the
matter[293]:
"Executive power exists antecedently to, and independently of, legislation;
and its scope must be at least equal to that of the legislative power –
exercised or unexercised. ...
It is impossible to resist the conclusion that the Commonwealth has executive
power, independently of Commonwealth legislation,
with respect to every matter
to which its legislative power extends." (emphasis
added)
In particular, acceptance of the majority holding in Pape does not entail
acceptance of the proposition that, absent some national emergency or crisis,
because certain expenditure could be authorised by statute, it can be
undertaken by the Executive. As the plurality in Pape observed, that
case could be and was "resolved without going beyond the notions of national
emergency and the fiscal means of promptly
responding to that
situation"[294].
Similarly, French CJ observed that his conclusions left "in place questions
about the scope of the executive power which cannot
be answered in the compass
of a single
case"[295].
Whether or not the wider proposition articulated by Deakin and since maintained
by the Commonwealth should be accepted, and whether
or not such an approach to
ascertaining the scope of the executive power is apposite, may be thought to
fall for decision –
at least on some of the Commonwealth parties'
submissions – in this case. These reasons will show, however, that the
case
should be decided on a narrower footing.
- It
may nonetheless be noted that, in Brown v
West[296],
the Commonwealth argued that the provision of benefits having a pecuniary value
could, at least in some circumstances, fall "within
the executive power of the
Commonwealth" and, as has been mentioned, that "all that is required [to
permit expenditure] is an available
appropriation"[297]
(emphasis added). That case suggested, but did not decide, that s 61
confers power on the Executive, in at least some circumstances, to expend public
moneys that have been duly appropriated. The Court's
statement that certain
"money appropriated was not expendable at the Crown's discretion, as
appropriated moneys usually
are"[298]
(emphasis added), was not necessary to the decision that, "[w]hatever the scope
of the executive power of the Commonwealth might
otherwise be, it is susceptible
of control by
statute"[299]
and that the statute considered in that case prevented, in exercise of the
executive power, any conferral of benefit beyond that
for which the statute
provided[300].
- The
decision of a majority of this Court in Pape
establishes[301]
that, in circumstances of national emergency or crisis, the executive power of
the Commonwealth supports a determination by the Executive
Government that a
fiscal stimulus is needed (and that this power, with s 51(xxxix), will
support legislation effectuating that payment). This was identified as an
example of "activities peculiarly adapted to the
government of the country and
which otherwise could not be carried on for the public
benefit"[302]
or measures "peculiarly within the capacity and resources of the Commonwealth
Government"[303].
Opinions may differ about whether or not a particular activity meets these
descriptions[304],
but no party contended that this aspect of the executive power supported the
Commonwealth's payments or activities in issue in this
case. Nor, given that
Queensland has, itself, carried on a program very similar to that impugned in
this litigation, could any party
have so contended.
- Significantly
for the present case, all members of the Court in Pape held that
considerations of text and structure, akin to those alluded to or elucidated in
earlier decisions, limit the executive power
of the Commonwealth, at least
insofar as it enables the Commonwealth to spend public moneys. The plurality
observed that the executive
power has "at least the limitations discussed in
these
reasons"[305],
including that its content must be ascertained "having regard to the spheres of
responsibility vested in [the
Commonwealth]"[306]
and "the position of the Executive Governments of the
States"[307].
French CJ
referred[308]
with approval to Mason J's
statement[309]
that: "The scope of the executive power is to be ascertained ... from the
distribution of the legislative powers effected by the
Constitution and the
character and status of the Commonwealth as a national government." Similarly,
the joint dissenting reasons observed that
"structural considerations require
the conclusion that the executive power of the Commonwealth in matters of
spending is not
unbounded"[310],
and referred in that regard to "the whole of the constitutional structure" (in
particular the existence by s 51(xxxix) of "legislative power with respect
to matters incidental to the execution of [the] executive
power")[311],
the "limited legislative powers" of the
Commonwealth[312]
and the "supremacy of the Commonwealth's legislative
power"[313].
Heydon J emphasised the "explicit distribution" of powers effected by the
Constitution and its importance for the scope of the executive
power[314].
- The
position that emerges from Pape – that federal considerations limit
the scope of the executive power – is supported by and entirely consistent
with prior
decisions. No less importantly, the textual and structural
considerations that have caused this Court not to embrace the repeated
submission by the Commonwealth that its power to spend money lawfully available
for expenditure is unlimited are equally applicable
whether that power to spend
is found in s 81 of the Constitution (a view now discarded) or is part
of the executive power of the Commonwealth referred to in s 61 of the
Constitution, as Pape decided.
- The
conclusion that, consistent with earlier decisions, Pape holds that
federal considerations limit the scope of the executive power is reason enough
to reject so much of the submissions of
the Commonwealth parties as asserted
that "[t]here is no authority restricting the scope of the Commonwealth's power
to spend".
It is, however, necessary to examine other aspects of the broad
basis submission advanced by the Commonwealth parties. It is convenient
to deal
next with the Commonwealth parties' reliance on the notion of the Executive's
"capacities".
The Executive's capacities
- A
deal of attention was given in argument to what "capacities" the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth should be found to have.
In particular,
attention was directed to what capacity the Executive Government had to make the
Darling Heights Funding Agreement.
Much of the argument in favour of validity
proceeded from the premise that the Executive Government has the same capacity
to contract
and spend money as a natural person has and that the live issue in
the case was whether there was some relevant limit (described
as a limit on
"power" rather than "capacity") to the kinds of contract or kinds of expenditure
that could be made.
- Care
must be taken with the use in this context of the word "capacity". As Anson
explained[315],
the term "[c]apacity of [p]arties" is used in the law of contract to refer to
the presence or absence of "some disability for making
a valid contract", there
being "persons [who] are by law incapable, wholly or in part, of binding
themselves by a promise, or of
enforcing a promise made to them". No issue of
capacity of that kind arises here. As a polity, the Commonwealth is not under
any
disability preventing it from making a contract or a disposition of
property. But observing this to be so does not answer the question
at
issue.
- The
term "capacity" may be used in discussion of the executive power of the
Commonwealth in various ways. In his thesis, H V Evatt
divided[316]
the prerogative powers of the Crown into three categories for analytical
purposes. One was described as rights "in the nature of
immunities and
preferences" of the Crown and included what Evatt termed "permanent and
continuous characters and capacities of the
Monarch"[317].
The term "capacity" was used in a similar but broader sense in Re Residential
Tenancies Tribunal (NSW); Ex parte Defence Housing
Authority[318].
There,
Brennan CJ[319]
and Dawson, Toohey and
Gaudron JJ[320]
used the term "the capacities of the Crown" to mean "its rights, powers,
privileges and immunities".
- No
question arises in this case of the distribution between the Commonwealth and
the States of "prerogative" powers or of the ability
of State legislative or
executive action to affect Commonwealth executive action. Hence reference to
the "capacities of the Crown"
is unhelpful. But what is at issue in this case
is a question of power. And it follows that in this case the word "capacity" is
best used in the sense of "power". Its use in any other sense is a distraction.
The particular question at issue is: what power
was there to make the payments
to SUQ? To the extent that the Commonwealth parties' submissions implicitly
sought to assert that,
because the Commonwealth has some contractual and
dispositive "capacity", it had power to act as it did in this case (by
entering into the Funding Agreement and making the payments to SUQ), they
should
be rejected. Such a submission conflated the question of contractual and
dispositive capacity (in the sense of absence of
disability) with the question
of whether there was power to enter into the contract and to make the payments
here at issue.
- It
is not to be assumed, and was not demonstrated, that the Executive Government of
the Commonwealth has all of the capacities –
in the sense of powers
– to contract and spend that a natural person has. There is no basis in
law for attributing human attitudes,
form, or personality either to the federal
polity that was created by the Constitution or, as the Commonwealth parties
sought to do, to one branch of the government of that polity – the
Executive. The argument
asserting that the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth should be assumed to have the same capacities to spend and make
contracts
as a natural person was no more than a particular form of
anthropomorphism writ large. It was an argument that sought to endow an
artificial legal person with human characteristics. The dangers of doing that
are self-evident.
- Of
course, it is important to recognise that s 61 begins by providing that
"[t]he executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen and is
exercisable by the Governor-General
as the Queen's representative". But, as was
pointed out in Sue v
Hill[321],
the personification of the Executive as "the Crown" (or, I would add, as "the
Queen" or "the Governor-General as the Queen's representative")
must not be
permitted to disguise the several different senses in which the term "the Crown"
is used or to deny that the Executive
Government of the Commonwealth is the
executive government of an artificial legal entity – a polity.
- In
1896, Pollock, in the course of discussing the subject of "Persons",
wrote[322]:
"In political discourse we so constantly personify nations that we almost forget
the artificial character of our language: and yet the unrestrained use of
metaphor in politics is quite capable of grave consequences." (emphasis
added) So, too, in talking of the new federal polity established by the
Constitution – "one indissoluble Federal Commonwealth under the Crown of
the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and under the
Constitution
hereby established" – or of the Executive Government of that polity, the
unrestrained use of the metaphor of personification
is "quite capable of grave
consequences". For as Pollock
observed[323],
"the State" is "[t]he greatest of artificial persons" and "it depends on the
legal institutions and forms of every commonwealth
whether and how far the State
or its titular head is officially treated as an artificial person". That is,
the extent to which the Commonwealth may make contracts and dispose of
property does not depend on assumptions about its capacities, whether
based in
analogies or otherwise, but instead must be ascertained by interpreting the
Constitution.
- As
a polity, the Commonwealth makes contracts. But contrary to the submissions
advanced on behalf of the Commonwealth parties, what
has been said in the cases
about whether a contract with a government is effective if, when the contract
was made, there was no parliamentary
appropriation of the money necessary for
the government to perform its contracted obligations, does not establish that
the capacities
of the Commonwealth or of the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth should be understood to be the same as those of a natural
person.
In particular, what was said by Dixon J in New South Wales v
Bardolph[324]
goes no further than to make the point that it is "a function of the Executive,
not of Parliament, to make contracts on behalf of
the Crown". But as
Dixon J also made
plain[325]:
"The Crown's advisers are answerable politically to Parliament for their acts in
making contracts. Parliament is considered to retain the power of enforcing
the responsibility of the Administration by means of its control over the
expenditure of public moneys. But the principles of responsible government
do not disable the Executive from acting without the prior approval of
Parliament,
nor from contracting for the expenditure of moneys conditionally
upon appropriation by Parliament and doing so before funds to answer
the
expenditure have actually been made legally available." (emphasis
added)
Accordingly, Dixon J
concluded[326],
"the prior provision of funds by Parliament is not a condition
preliminary to the obligation of the contract" (emphasis added). Neither in
Bardolph nor in the earlier decisions in The Commonwealth v Colonial
Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd ("the Wooltops
Case")[327]
and Kidman v The
Commonwealth[328]
did the Court decide how far the capacity of the Executive to make a
contract on behalf of the Commonwealth extends.
- In
Bardolph, Dixon J, with whom Gavan Duffy CJ
concurred[329],
said[330]:
"No statutory power to make a contract in the ordinary course of administering a
recognized part of the government of the State
[of New South Wales] appears to
me to be necessary in order that, if made by the appropriate servant of the
Crown, it should become
the contract of the Crown, and, subject to the provision
of funds to answer it, binding upon the Crown." And the reasons of other
members of the Court
proceeded[331]
from the same starting point to a consideration of whether the contract in issue
was, as Rich J put
it[332],
"incidental to the ordinary and well-recognized functions of Government".
- Contrary
to the submissions of the Commonwealth parties, the Court did not deal only with
the question of the authority of the individuals
in question to make a contract
on behalf of the State. The reasons of the Court in Bardolph directed
attention not only to the authority of those who had made the contract in issue
but also to the power (or what the Commonwealth parties in this matter
identified as "capacity") to enter into the contract. And for the purposes of
that
case it was sufficient to decide that the contract was one which was made
"in the ordinary course of administering a recognized part
of the government of
the
State"[333]
or was "incidental to the ordinary and well-recognized functions of
Government"[334].
No broader proposition defining what kinds of contract the executive
government (of a State) may make, and for what purposes they may be made,
emerges from Bardolph. It is important to notice, however, that in
Bardolph it was
submitted[335]
that "[t]he power of the Executive to enter into a contract is
absolute so far as it is not fettered by the express statute" (emphasis
added). The concern of the Court to locate the making of the contract
in issue
in Bardolph within the ordinary course of the administration of a
recognised part of the government points strongly to the conclusions that the
proposition advanced in Bardolph was not accepted and that the very
similar submission made by the Commonwealth parties in this case should not be
accepted.
- Further,
nowhere in the decisions of this Court in the Wooltops Case or in
Kidman was it suggested that the power of the Executive to make a
contract on behalf of the Commonwealth, and to discharge the monetary
obligations
assumed by the Commonwealth under that contract, is unlimited.
Kidman turned on whether there was statutory authorisation for the
contracts and payments in question. The conclusion having been
reached[336]
that "there was no lack of legislative authority to the Commonwealth to make
such contracts, provided the ships were for defence
purposes" and that there was
"the necessary parliamentary appropriation", no question of executive power to
contract or spend arose.
- In
the Wooltops Case, the Court was concerned to answer the question whether
"it [was] within the legal power of the Commonwealth Executive Government
apart
from any Act of the Parliament or regulation thereunder to make or ratify"
certain
agreements[337].
All members of the Court (apart from Powers J, who did not deliver a
judgment[338])
held[339]
that the Commonwealth's entry into the agreements was beyond power, but the
reasons given for this conclusion differed widely and
no single view of the
ambit of executive power to make agreements commanded the assent of a majority
of the Court.
- As
the Commonwealth parties submitted, these cases do suggest that a polity may
make at least some contracts without statutory authority.
But what is presently
important is that these cases, particularly the decisions in Bardolph and
the Wooltops Case, recognise that neither a State's nor the
Commonwealth's power to make contracts is unlimited.
- Clough
v
Leahy[340]
is sometimes treated as standing for the proposition advanced by the
Commonwealth parties and by the fourth defendant that the Commonwealth
has the
same power (or "capacity") to contract as a natural person. But it does not
support that proposition.
- In
Clough, Griffith CJ (with whom Barton and O'Connor JJ
concurred[341])
was responding to a submission that a commission appointed under letters patent
was "'unlawful' and
'illegal'"[342].
Griffith CJ recognised that a State, as a polity, acts through individuals
and accepted that an officer of the State executive was
not somehow prevented,
when "acting for the
Crown"[343],
from undertaking an action "that every man is free to
do"[344],
being "any act that does not unlawfully interfere with the liberty or reputation
of his neighbour or interfere with the course of
justice"[345].
Griffith CJ's statement – that "[t]he liberty of another can only be
interfered with according to law, but, subject to that
limitation, every person
is free to make any inquiry he chooses; and that which is lawful to an
individual can surely not be denied to the Crown, when the advisers
of the Crown think it desirable in the public interest to get information on any
topic"[346]
(emphasis added) – is no more than the application of the two propositions
that have been identified. So much is evident from
the reference to "the
advisers of the Crown" getting information. It is also evident from his
Honour's earlier observation that
"[t]he power of inquiry ... is a power which
every individual citizen
possesses"[347]
(emphasis added), the later observation that "[t]he inquiry simply amounts to
the asking of questions of persons willing to give
information"[348]
(emphasis added) and his Honour's later reference to "any person,
purporting to act under the authority of a Royal Commission ... [who] was
acting for the
Crown"[349]
(emphasis added). Contrary to the submissions of the Commonwealth parties and
the fourth defendant, Clough does not stand for a general proposition
that a polity, or the Commonwealth in particular, has the same powers or
capacities as a
natural person.
- Metaphorical
comparisons between artificial legal entities and natural persons, though
colourful and sometimes provocative of further
thought[350],
do not provide a sound foundation for legal analysis. An anthropomorphic view
of the powers of a corporation incorporated according
to statute may now be
available but that is only by dint of specific statutory provision giving such a
corporation "the legal capacity
and powers of an individual both in and outside
this
jurisdiction"[351].
There is no warrant for adopting such an understanding of the capacities of the
Executive Government of the Commonwealth, or the
polity more generally, or of
the capacity of the Executive in particular, or the polity more generally, to
spend money or to make
a contract.
- Not
least is that understanding not available in respect of expenditure because an
anthropomorphic view of the Executive's (or polity's)
capacity to spend assumes
that the Executive (or the polity) is spending its "own" money, just as a
natural person may do. But that
equation of the position of the Executive and a
natural person ignores that the money being spent is public money. It thus
ignores
the carefully crafted checks (worked out in England over so many years
and reflected in Australia in the Constitution, especially Ch IV) that
effect parliamentary control over the raising and expenditure of public moneys.
As will next be demonstrated,
parliamentary control over raising and expenditure
of public moneys denies the notion that the Consolidated Revenue Fund may be
spent
as the Executive chooses. And once it is accepted, as it must be, that
the Constitution does provide for parliamentary control over the raising and
expenditure of public moneys, the anthropomorphic view of the Executive's
capacity to spend that lay at the heart of much, if not all, of the argument
advanced on behalf of the Commonwealth parties is necessarily
falsified.
- The
Commonwealth, as a polity, can make contracts and can outlay public moneys. It
is the Executive's function, not the Parliament's,
to make contracts and expend
public moneys. But neither the Executive nor the polity itself can be assumed
to have the same powers (or capacities) to contract and spend as a
natural person. The question to be answered in this case is whether there was
power to make the particular expenditures for which the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement provided and to undertake the obligation
to make those
expenditures.
- It
is necessary to make good the second fundamental proposition identified at the
outset of these reasons: that the Constitution provides for parliamentary
control over the raising and expenditure of public moneys.
Parliamentary control
- It
is Pt V of Ch I of the Constitution (particularly ss 53, 54, 55
and 56) and Ch IV (particularly ss 81, 83, 94, 96 and 97) that provide
for parliamentary control over the raising and expenditure of public moneys.
Section 97 (in Ch IV) with s 51(xxxvi) provides for parliamentary
supervision of "the receipt of revenue and the expenditure of
money on account of the Commonwealth" (emphasis added). The prescription of the
powers of the Parliament in Pt V of Ch I, when read with the relevant
provisions of Ch IV, "reflect[s] the cardinal principle of parliamentary
control which underpinned
the British financial system at the time of Federation
and which had earlier been transported to the Australian
colonies"[352].
The parliamentary control for which provision is made is control over both
"appropriating revenue or
moneys"[353]
and "imposing
taxation"[354]
and supervision of what is actually received and outlaid ("the receipt of
revenue and the expenditure of money on account of the
Commonwealth"[355]).
And it is control that is necessarily asserted through the exercise of the
legislative power of the Commonwealth by the
Parliament[356],
each House of which is "directly chosen by the
people"[357].
- The
way in which the raising and expenditure of public moneys is controlled by the
Parliament is further regulated by the provisions
that govern the relationship
between the two Houses of the Parliament in respect of laws or proposed laws
appropriating revenue or
moneys and laws or proposed laws imposing taxation. In
particular, s 53 requires that laws of these kinds "shall not originate in
the Senate"; s 54 requires, in the case of a proposed law appropriating
revenue or moneys "for the ordinary annual services of the Government", that
the
proposed law "deal only with such appropriation"; and s 55 requires, in the
case of laws imposing taxation, that such laws "deal only with the imposition of
taxation"[358].
Section 56 requires that money votes ("[a] vote, resolution, or proposed
law for the appropriation of revenue or moneys") "not be passed unless
the
purpose of the appropriation has in the same session been recommended by message
of the Governor-General to the House in which
the proposal originated". For
present purposes, it is not necessary to examine the detail of these provisions;
it is enough to notice
that the raising and expenditure of public moneys is
subject to parliamentary control.
- The
Parliament's control over the appropriation of public moneys is further governed
by the provisions of Ch IV, especially ss 81 and 83. As was
said[359] in
the joint dissenting reasons in Pape:
"In Britain, '[t]he most ancient, as well as the most valued, prerogative of the
House of Commons is the right of supreme control
over taxation, to which the
right to control issues is a natural
corollary'[360].
So too, under the Constitution, the power of appropriation given by ss 81
and 83 is a logical consequence of the right of levying supplies." (emphasis
added)
But, as was also pointed
out[361] in
Pape, the power of appropriation by the Parliament is a process which
permits application of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for identified
purposes; it does not require the application of those funds for those
purposes[362].
- Since
Federation, the purposes for which the Consolidated Revenue Fund is appropriated
have usually been articulated at a very high
level of abstraction. And, as the
output accounting practices considered in
Combet[363]
show, there has not been any recent shift to more particular specification of
the purposes for which moneys are appropriated. On
the contrary, more recent
parliamentary practice has been to adopt even more general and abstract
descriptions of the purposes for
which the Consolidated Revenue Fund is
appropriated. As the plurality in Pape
noted[364],
one consequence of the manner of drafting appropriations at a high level of
abstraction is that appropriations do not provide any
sufficient textual basis
for determining the constitutional facts that would be relevant to the validity
of any particular expenditure
made out of the moneys appropriated. But it also
follows from the conclusion that the power to spend lies elsewhere than in
ss 81 and 83 that whether any particular expenditure was validly made does
not depend upon attempting to give content to the phrase, in s 81,
"appropriated for the purposes of the Commonwealth" and then seeking to connect
the content given to that phrase with either the
(often generally expressed)
words of appropriation or some more particular expenditure which is found to be
authorised by those words.
- It
is to be observed, however, that since Federation, parliamentary control over
expenditure has not stopped at that point in the
process of appropriation at
which the legislature authorises drawing from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. As
Isaacs J
observed[365]
in the Wooltops Case, as well as "power over appropriation", "there
arises the necessity for control over the actual expenditure of the sums
appropriated".
There has always been coupled with the authority to draw from
the Consolidated Revenue Fund further legislative provision made in
the
appropriation legislation, which, if it has not conferred authority to make the
relevant expenditures, at least has provided
for, and in more recent times in
Australia sometimes confined, the application of appropriated sums to
expenditures for the designated
purposes.
- In
order to demonstrate the generality of that proposition reference should be made
first to standing appropriations of the kind
considered in Pape and then
to particular appropriations including those that were made in relation to the
payments in issue in this case.
Some examples of the exercise of parliamentary control
- It
will be recalled that the legislation under consideration in Pape (the
Tax Bonus for Working Australians Act (No 2) 2009 (Cth) – "the
Tax Bonus Act")
obliged[366]
the Commissioner of Taxation to make the relevant payments. The Tax Bonus Act
contained no express provision appropriating the Consolidated
Revenue Fund for
the purposes of making the payment but, by giving the general administration of
the Act to the Commissioner, the
Tax Bonus Act, by a chain of definitions whose
detail need not be noticed, engaged the standing appropriation made by
s 16(1) of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth). That
standing appropriation provided relevantly that, where the Commissioner was
required or permitted to pay an amount to
a person by or under a provision of an
Act of which the Commissioner had the general administration, "the amount is
payable out of
the Consolidated Revenue Fund, which is appropriated
accordingly". Many other examples of similar provisions can be found in the
statute
book[367]:
provisions permitting or requiring payments to persons which are supported by a
standing appropriation of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund.
- The
first of the Appropriation Acts which provided for the National School
Chaplaincy Program ("the Program" or "the NSCP") was the
Appropriation Act
(No 3) 2006-2007 (Cth) ("the 2007 No 3 Act"). The total of the
sums dealt with by the 2007 No 3 Act (specified in Sched 1 to that
Act) was stated
in s 6. The services for which money was appropriated were
identified by tables set out in Sched 1, organised by ministerial portfolio
and divided between "Departmental Outputs" and "Administered Expenses" –
expressions which engaged the defined terms "departmental
item"[368]
and "administered
item"[369].
For departments of State the appropriations were further divided between
"outcomes", a term given content by Portfolio Budget Statements
and Portfolio
Additional Estimates Statements, which s 4(1) of the Act "declared to be
relevant documents for the purposes of section 15AB of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901".
- The
item in Sched 1 to the 2007 No 3 Act relevant to the NSCP was
Outcome 1 for the Department of Education, Science and Training
– an
outcome described in Sched 1 as "Individuals achieve high quality
foundation skills and learning outcomes from schools
and other providers". One
of the departmental items identified in the relevant Portfolio Additional
Estimates Statements was an
item of $4.111 million for the NSCP. This was the
first appropriation made for the Program. As a departmental appropriation
forming
part of the total of departmental outputs for Outcome 1 of the
Department, the amount appropriated for the NSCP was part of the total
amount
set out in Sched 1 to the 2007 No 3 Act that constituted a
"departmental item".
- Section 7(1)
of the 2007 No 3 Act permitted the Finance Minister, for "a departmental
item for an entity", to "issue out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund amounts that
do not exceed, in total, the amount specified in the item". And s 15
provided that "[t]he Consolidated
Revenue Fund is appropriated as necessary for
the purposes of this Act".
- Section 7(2)
of the 2007 No 3 Act dealt with "expenditure", a term defined in s 3
as "payments for expenses, acquiring assets, making
loans or paying
liabilities". Section 7(2) provided that:
"An amount issued out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for a departmental item
for an entity may only be applied for the departmental
expenditure of the
entity.
Note: The acquisition of new departmental assets will usually be funded from an
other departmental item (in another Appropriation
Act)."
Section 8 of the same Act dealt with administered items in terms generally
similar to the provisions of s 7. Section 8(2) provided
that:
"An amount issued out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for an administered item
for an outcome of an entity may only be applied for
expenditure for the purpose
of carrying out activities for the purpose of contributing to achieving that
outcome.
Note: The acquisition of new administered assets will usually be funded from an
administered assets and liabilities item (in another
Appropriation
Act)."
Several points may be made about the provisions of ss 7 and 8 of the 2007
No 3 Act.
- First,
in their terms, ss 7 and 8 of the 2007 No 3 Act confined the purposes
for which expenditures (that is to say, "payments for
expenses, acquiring
assets, making loans or paying
liabilities"[370])
could be made. In the case of departmental items, amounts issued could be
applied only "for the departmental expenditure of the entity"; in the
case of administered items, the restriction was identified by reference to
the
applicable outcome of the relevant entity.
- Second,
by confining the purposes for which expenditures could be made, the provisions
could also be understood as authorising those
expenditures. And in this
respect, ss 7 and 8 of the 2007 No 3 Act could be understood as
providing to the same effect as earlier
forms of Commonwealth Appropriation and
Supply
Acts[371]
(and even the very first Act passed by the Commonwealth Parliament – the
Consolidated Revenue Act 1901, s 1) when, with some immaterial
verbal variations over the years, they provided, in effect, that the Treasurer
was "authorized
and empowered to issue and apply the moneys authorized to
be issued and applied" (emphasis added). And both the provisions of ss 7
and 8 of the 2007 No 3 Act and
earlier forms of Appropriation and Supply
Acts authorising the Treasurer to "apply" the moneys authorised to be issued and
applied
could well be understood as proceeding from that understanding of
ss 81 and 83 of the Constitution which was rejected in Pape.
But whether that is so need not be examined. It is enough to notice that there
were provisions of the 2007 No 3 Act which could
be understood as providing
authority to make expenditures for the NSCP.
- Third,
while the Appropriation Act (No 1) 2007-2008 (Cth) took the same
form as the 2007 No 3 Act, later Appropriation Acts which appropriated the
Consolidated Revenue Fund for purposes
that included the NSCP made provision for
application of moneys issued out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for
departmental items
and administered items that differed in form from those made
by the 2007 No 3 Act. On their face, those later Acts did not confine
the
purposes for which expenditures could be made in the same way as ss 7 and 8
of the 2007 No 3 Act had.
- So,
for example, the Appropriation Act (No 1) 2008-2009 (Cth) provided
in ss 7 and 8:
"7 Departmental items
The amount specified in a departmental item for an Agency may be applied for the
departmental expenditure of the Agency.
Note: The Finance Minister manages the expenditure of public money through the
issue of drawing rights under the Financial Management and Accountability Act
1997 .
- Administered
items
(1) The amount specified in an administered item for an outcome for an Agency
may be applied for expenditure for the purpose of contributing
to achieving that
outcome.
Note: The Finance Minister manages the expenditure of public money through the
issue of drawing rights under the Financial Management and Accountability Act
1997 .
(2) If the Portfolio Budget Statements indicate that activities of a particular
kind were intended to be treated as activities in
respect of a particular
outcome, then expenditure for the purpose of carrying out those activities is
taken to be expenditure for
the purpose of contributing to achieving the
outcome."
It will be observed that neither s 7 nor s 8 of this later
Appropriation Act spoke of application only for identified expenditures.
Nonetheless, these later forms of provision dealing with application of amounts
specified in either
a departmental item or an administered item were still cast
in terms that authorised "expenditure": "payments for expenses, acquiring
assets, making loans or paying liabilities". And this legislative conferral of
authority for the making of expenditures, like the
earlier forms of
Appropriation and Supply Acts authorising the Treasurer to issue and apply
moneys, was consistent with the proposition that it is Parliament, not the
Executive, which controls expenditure of public moneys,
not just by "power over
appropriation"[372]
but also by "control over the actual expenditure of the sums
appropriated"[373].
Bounds to the power to spend?
- Does
the Executive's power to spend extend to any expenditure that the Parliament
could authorise (the narrow basis submission of
the Commonwealth parties)? Is
it a power that is unbounded (the broad basis submission)? Is neither
proposition correct?
- It
is convenient to approach these questions from a proposition about the
parliamentary control of expenditure which can be identified
as running beneath
the submissions made by the Commonwealth parties about what (if any) are the
bounds to the Executive's power to
spend.
- The
submissions of the Commonwealth parties asserted that parliamentary control over
expenditure can cease at the point where the
Parliament has identified in an
Appropriation Act (with such particularity as the Parliament has chosen) the
purposes for which expenditures
can be made. How the Executive uses the moneys
thus appropriated was treated as a matter for the Executive unless or until the
Parliament
has provided otherwise. That is, the Commonwealth parties submitted
that how and on what terms money lawfully drawn from the Consolidated
Revenue
Fund may be applied in making what the relevant Appropriation Acts referred to
as "payments for expenses, acquiring assets,
making loans or paying liabilities"
is to be determined at the discretion of the Executive unless and until the
Parliament otherwise
provides. Absent legislative provision to the contrary,
what expenses may be paid, what assets acquired, what loans made or what
liabilities paid would all be for the Executive to decide.
- The
proposition that parliamentary control over expenditure can cease at the point
of appropriation of the Consolidated Revenue Fund
may or may not appear, on its
face, to be large or dubious. For present purposes, however, attention is
usefully directed to the
qualification to the proposition – unless and
until the Parliament otherwise provides – and what legislative power the
Parliament could exercise to "otherwise provide" and regulate the expenditures
that may be made of money lawfully drawn from the
Consolidated Revenue Fund.
Unless the qualification is soundly based, and the Parliament could
otherwise provide, the submission of the Commonwealth parties would entail
that appropriation by law is the only control the Parliament has over
expenditure of at least some public moneys.
- Plainly
the Parliament could otherwise provide in any case in which a law controlling
expenditure of money drawn from the Consolidated
Revenue Fund would be a law
with respect to an enumerated head of legislative power. Observing this to be
so echoes the narrow basis
submission of the Commonwealth parties about the
ambit of the executive power to spend. But what of the case where no head of
legislative
power, other than the incidental power (s 51(xxxix)), could be
engaged? Would s 51(xxxix) be a sufficient basis for the Parliament
to
control the expenditure of money lawfully drawn from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund for purposes and in circumstances which do
not engage any other head of
legislative power? Would such a law be a law with respect to a matter
"incidental to the execution
of any power vested by this Constitution ... in the
Government of the Commonwealth"?
- The
answers to these questions depend upon how the relevant "power vested by this
Constitution ... in the Government of the Commonwealth" is identified. The
broad basis submission of the Commonwealth parties depended upon the
relevant
executive power being not only sufficiently but completely identified as
power to spend money lawfully appropriated.
- In
cases of the kind dealt with in Pape – where the expenditures in
question were directed to meeting a national emergency – and other cases
of the kind commonly
grouped under the notion of "nationhood", the "power vested
by this Constitution ... in the Government of the Commonwealth" is not
identified only as a power to spend money; it is a different species of
executive power. So, as has been mentioned, the decision in Pape
depended upon the conclusion that the determination by the Executive of the
need for an immediate fiscal stimulus enlivened the power
under s 51(xxxix)
to enact a law incidental to the execution of a species of executive power
identified as the determination of the existence of a
national crisis or
emergency. But it was not suggested that the payments in issue in this case
could be supported on this basis
and it is, therefore, not necessary to explore
here what content could be given to the notion of a "nationhood" power.
Attention
must focus upon cases other than those said to engage a "nationhood"
power.
- If
the "power vested by this Constitution ... in the Government of the
Commonwealth" includes a power to spend, as the Executive chooses, any money
lawfully appropriated,
regardless of the purposes for which or circumstances in
which the expenditure is to be applied, several consequences would follow
which
at least suggest that the proposition is flawed.
- First,
this understanding of the operation of s 51(xxxix) with s 61 in
relation to Commonwealth expenditure would work a very great expansion in what
hitherto has been understood to be the ambit of
Commonwealth legislative power.
It must be accepted that the Engineers'
Case[374]
teaches that this is an observation that could conclude debate only if some
notion of reserved powers were
revived[375].
But it is an observation that suggests the need to pause before concluding that
the premise which underpins it is sound.
- Second,
and more tellingly, the understanding of the operation of s 51(xxxix) in
relation to Commonwealth expenditure that is under consideration would not only
give s 96 of the Constitution a place in the constitutional framework very
different from the place it has hitherto been understood to occupy but also
render it
otiose.
- Section 96
provides:
"During a period of ten years after the establishment of the Commonwealth and
thereafter until the Parliament otherwise provides,
the Parliament may grant
financial assistance to any State on such terms and conditions as the Parliament
thinks fit."
- In
The State of Victoria v The Commonwealth ("the Second Uniform Tax
Case")[376],
Dixon CJ said of s 96 that: "It confers a bare power of appropriating
money to a purpose and of imposing conditions." On the
basis[377]
that the scope and purpose of the power given by s 96 is "to be ascertained
on the footing that it was not transitional but stood with the permanent
provisions of the Constitution", Dixon CJ
said[378]
that "it is apparent that the power to grant financial assistance to any State
upon such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks
fit is susceptible of a
very wide construction in which few if any restrictions can be implied".
- As
Dixon CJ
recorded[379],
"the course of judicial decision" had put out of consideration other, more
limited constructions of s 96. In particular, the course of decision
precluded adopting "a not improbable supposition that the framers" conceived
s 96:
"as (1) a transitional power, (2) confined to supplementing the resources of the
Treasury of a State by particular subventions when
some special or particular
need or occasion arose, and (3) imposing terms or conditions relevant to the
situation which called for
special relief of assistance from the
Commonwealth"[380].
Dixon CJ
continued[381]:
"In any case it must be borne in mind that the power conferred by s 96 is
confined to granting money and moreover to granting money to governments. It is
not a power to make laws with respect to a general
subject matter, which for
reasons such as I gave in Melbourne Corporation v The
Commonwealth[382],
may be taken to fall short of authorising a special attempt to control the
exercise of the constitutional powers of the States where
there is a connexion
with some part of the subject matter of the federal power. The very matter with
which the power conferred by
s 96 is concerned relates to State finance.
Further there is nothing which would enable the making of a coercive law. By
coercive law
is meant one that demands obedience. As is illustrated by
Melbourne Corporation v The
Commonwealth[383],
the duty may be imposed, not on the State or its servants, but on others and yet
its intended operation may interfere unconstitutionally
with the governmental
functions of the State in such a way as to take the law outside federal power.
But nothing of this sort could be done by a law which in other respects might
amount to an exercise of the power conferred by s 96. For the essence of
an exercise of that power must be a grant of money or its equivalent and beyond
that the legislature can go no
further than attaching conditions to the
grant. Once it is certain that a law which is either valid under s 96
or not at all does contain a grant of financial assistance to the States, the
further inquiry into its validity could not go beyond
the admissibility of the
terms and conditions that the law may have sought to impose. The grant of money
may supply the inducement
to comply with the term or condition. But beyond that
no law passed under s 96 can go." (emphasis
added)
- Two
points of immediate relevance emerge from this understanding of s 96.
First, it is an understanding that is not consistent with reading
s 51(xxxix) as supporting any and every law that provides for or otherwise
controls the expenditure of money lawfully appropriated from the Consolidated
Revenue Fund regardless of the purposes for which or circumstances in which the
expenditure is to be made. It is an understanding
of s 96 that is not
consistent with the view of the intersection between s 51(xxxix) and the
executive power to spend which underpinned the submissions of the Commonwealth
parties because it would leave s 96 no work to do at all: not even to
provide (whether only in the first 10 years of Federation or more
permanently) for supplementation
of State resources "when some special or
particular need or occasion arose". All the work done by s 96 could be
done by laws made under s 51(xxxix). Section 96 would be superfluous.
Yet as Mason J observed of s 96 in the AAP
Case[384]:
"its presence confirms what is otherwise deducible from the Constitution, that
is, that the executive power is not unlimited and that there is a very large
area of activity which lies outside the executive
power of the Commonwealth but
which may become the subject of conditions attached to grants under
s 96".
And although Mason J made these observations in a context where it was
assumed that the power to spend is found in s 81, it is nonetheless
apposite to recognise that
Barwick CJ[385]
and
Gibbs J[386]
in the AAP Case, and
Starke J[387]
in Attorney-General (Vict) v The Commonwealth ("the Pharmaceutical
Benefits Case"), also saw s 96 as limiting the scope of that
power.
- Second,
whereas nothing in s 96 would enable the making of a coercive law (one that
demands obedience), a law made under s 51(xxxix) as incidental to a
power to spend money lawfully appropriated could demand obedience from the
recipient. The "consensual aspect"
of grants to the States under s 96
– the requirement that "the State must accept it with its
conditions"[388]
– would be obliterated. And because a law made under s 51(xxxix)
could demand obedience, the federal considerations mentioned by Dixon CJ in
the Second Uniform Tax Case, by reference to Melbourne Corporation v
The Commonwealth, as not presented by an exercise of the power
conferred by s 96 would arise. That is, if, as the Commonwealth
parties' submissions in this case entailed, s 51(xxxix) could be engaged to
make a law regulating the application of any money lawfully appropriated,
regardless of the purposes for which
or circumstances in which it is to be
applied, the basic considerations of federal structure which yielded the
decision in Melbourne Corporation would fall squarely for consideration.
And those considerations of federal structure point directly against reading the
relevant
"power vested by this Constitution ... in the Government of the
Commonwealth", with which s 51(xxxix) intersects, as sufficiently or
completely described as the Executive's power to spend money that has been
lawfully appropriated.
- How
is the limit on the Executive's power to spend to be described?
- Opinion
has
divided[389]
on the importance that should be attached to the surplus revenue provision made
by s 94 of the Constitution in deciding the ambit of the Commonwealth's
power to spend. As the plurality observed in
Pape[390]:
"The governments of the States have the interest given by s 94 of the
Constitution in the distribution of all surplus revenue of the Commonwealth, but
... the Commonwealth has no obligation to tailor its expenditure
to provide a
surplus[391]."
For that reason alone it may be that s 94 is of only limited significance
in deciding what is the scope of the executive power to spend. But even if
s 94 gives no real guidance to how to express the limitation on the
power to spend, s 94 does not point away from the conclusion that the power
to spend is limited.
- As
has already been emphasised, all decisions of this Court to date have, rightly,
acknowledged that some limiting notion additional
to the requirement of lawful
appropriation must be introduced to the description of the executive power in
question. That limiting
notion has been seen as required, first and foremost,
by the fact that the Constitution divides and distributes powers between the
Commonwealth and the States. That is, recognition that the Parliament of the
Commonwealth
is a Parliament of limited legislative
power[392]
entails that the Executive's power to spend is limited. An immediate textual
foundation for limiting the power to spend has not
infrequently been found in
s 96. And the conclusion that the Commonwealth's executive power to expend
moneys that have been appropriated is not unlimited is strengthened
by
recognising the intersection between the executive power and s 51(xxxix).
- The
limit on the power to spend must be consistent with the general proposition that
it is for the Parliament and not the Executive
to control expenditure. And the
Parliament can control expenditure only by legislation. Once it is recognised,
as it was in Pape, that "appropriation made by
law"[393] is
"not by its own force the exercise of an executive or legislative power to
achieve an objective which requires
expenditure"[394],
it follows that the Parliament's control over expenditure can be exercised by
not only the mechanisms of appropriation but also
more specific legislation. It
follows that the relevant "power vested by this Constitution ... in the
Government of the Commonwealth" in relation to the spending of money, which is
the power with which 51(xxxix) intersects,
must be understood as limited by
reference to the extent of the legislative power of the Parliament.
- It
follows that the broad basis submission made by the Commonwealth parties –
that the Executive's power to spend money lawfully
appropriated is unlimited
– should be rejected.
The narrow basis submission
- Is
it enough, as the Commonwealth parties submitted, to show that the disputed
payments could have been authorised by a valid law made by the
Parliament?
- Posing
the question in this way reflects what Barwick CJ
said[395] in
the AAP Case (albeit in order to determine whether the Australian
Assistance Plan fell within the "purposes of the Commonwealth" as those words
are used in s 81):
"In the long run, whether the attempt is made to refer the appropriation and
expenditure to legislative or to executive power, it
will be the capacity of the
Parliament to make a law to govern the activities for which the money is to be
spent, which will determine
whether or not the appropriation is valid. With
exceptions that are not relevant to this matter and which need not be stated,
the executive may only do that which has been or could be the subject of
valid legislation. Consequently, to describe a Commonwealth purpose as a
purpose for or in relation to which the Parliament may make a valid law, is
both
sufficient and accurate. ...
An Act of the Parliament which sought to authorize the carrying out of the Plan,
including its financial provisions, would, in my opinion, be
beyond the power of the Parliament." (emphasis
added)
- Approaching
the matter in this way may be no more than to ask, as French CJ did in
Pape[396],
whether it can be said that the exercise of the power in question "does not
reach beyond the area of responsibilities allocated
to the Commonwealth by the
Constitution, responsibilities which are ascertainable from the distribution of
powers, more particularly the distribution of legislative powers,
effected by
the Constitution itself and the character and status of the Commonwealth as a
national
government"[397].
The answer to that question will be assisted, as the plurality in Pape
suggested[398],
by the
observation[399]
that:
"the existence of Commonwealth executive power in areas beyond the express
grants of legislative power will ordinarily be clearest
where Commonwealth
executive or legislative action involves no real competition with State
executive or legislative competence".
That is, as was
said[400] by
the plurality in Pape:
"the determination of whether an enterprise or activity lies within the
executive power of the Commonwealth:
'... invites consideration of the sufficiency of the powers of the States to
engage effectively in the enterprise or activity in
question and of the need for
national action (whether unilateral or in co-operation with the States) to
secure the contemplated benefit'."
- In
this case, as the plaintiff submitted, these considerations point directly
against the Commonwealth's executive power extending
to the expenditure (or the
making of the agreement) in question. The provision of funding to an
organisation to provide chaplains
to schools involves direct competition with
State executive and legislative action and, as the chaplaincy program run by
Queensland
demonstrates, the powers of the States are more than adequate to
provide chaplains in schools. But while these observations may
point towards a
finding that Commonwealth power to engage in the activities does not exist, they
do not answer the question of whether
the Executive's actions were beyond power
under the Constitution.
- Asking
"whether the disputed payments could have been authorised by a valid law"
proceeds from the premise that the payments were
not authorised by legislation
and then presents two distinct issues. First, could the disputed payments (and
making the Darling
Heights Funding Agreement) have been authorised by a valid
law? Second, if they could, is the fact that they were not in fact so
authorised relevant?
- As
has already been noted, the premise – that the payments were not
authorised by legislation – was assumed by the parties
and interveners.
No party or intervener examined whether the provision in successive
Appropriation Acts which authorised the application of moneys
appropriated was a relevant statutory authorisation.
- As
previously noted, in submissions made by leave after the close of oral argument,
the Commonwealth parties submitted that "if legislative
authority to enter into
the Darling Heights Funding Agreement was required, that authority was provided
by s 44 of the [ Financial Management and Accountability Act ]".
Given that, by their defence, the Commonwealth parties admitted that "the NSCP
is not authorised by special legislation" and,
more importantly, did not assert
that "the Commonwealth had and has power to enter into the agreements and make
the payments referred
to" other than in pursuance of the executive power of the
Commonwealth, the submission belatedly made about legislative authority
to make
the Funding Agreement was probably not open. But whether or not that is so,
s 44(1) could not and does not support the making of the Darling Heights
Funding Agreement if, as these reasons conclude, there was no power
for the
Commonwealth to perform the obligations it undertook under that agreement. On
no view could it be said that the making of
a contract which the Commonwealth
not only did not then have, but also could not thereafter have, power to perform
promoted "proper
use of ... Commonwealth resources". Section 44 of the
Financial Management and Accountability Act did not supply power to make
the Darling Heights Funding Agreement. And the Commonwealth parties did not
submit that the requirements
of fmaaa1997321 /s44.html" class="autolink_findacts">s 44(1) – that a Chief Executive
"manage the affairs" of an agency "in a way that promotes proper use of the
Commonwealth resources
for which the Chief Executive is responsible" –
supported the making of any of the disputed payments.
- It
is therefore appropriate to examine the submissions of the Commonwealth parties
– that the disputed payments could have
been authorised by a valid law
made by the Parliament – without further consideration of the validity of
the premise that lies
behind the submissions.
- The
submissions directed attention to a hypothesis: that the disputed payments
could have been authorised by law. Little attention was given in
argument to the precise content of the hypothesised law beyond the Commonwealth
parties submitting that account need not, indeed should not, be taken of the
terms and conditions set out in the particular funding
agreement in deciding
whether a valid law authorising the payments could have been enacted. But if
the test to be applied is whether
the Parliament had power to enact a law
providing for the disputed payments it is necessary to identify the content of
that hypothetical
law with precision.
- In
identifying the content of the hypothetical law, there is no warrant for
discarding as irrelevant consideration of the terms and
conditions which the
Commonwealth has chosen to require as the terms and conditions on which the
payments will be made available.
Discarding reference to those matters could be
justified only on the footing that the powers of the Executive to contract are
not
limited in any relevant way or that the Executive may spend money lawfully
available to it in whatever way it sees fit. For the
reasons that have been
given, neither of those propositions should be accepted and it follows that, in
considering whether the Parliament
could have made a law providing for the
payments in question, account must be taken of the terms and conditions on which
the disputed
payments were made.
- Although
the focus in this matter necessarily falls upon payments made under the Darling
Heights Funding Agreement, it is necessary
to recognise and take account of the
fact that the disputed payments were made as part of a more general program:
the NSCP. The
Darling Heights Funding Agreement made repeated reference to the
NSCP. What were described as the "National School Chaplaincy Programme
Guidelines" ("the Guidelines") formed part of the Funding Agreement, which
provided that the Guidelines "must be adhered to by all
parties involved in
school chaplaincy projects". No less importantly, the Guidelines set out what
can properly be seen to be the
defining elements of the NSCP.
- Section 2.1
of the Guidelines described the NSCP as "a calendar year Programme with total
funding of up to $30 million available per annum for
three years, commencing in
the 2007 school year". Section 2.3 dealt with "Funding arrangements". It
provided that:
"When the school principal submits an application, he/she will be asked to
nominate the organisation that will enter into a funding
agreement to receive
funding under the Programme.
Under this Programme, the Australian Government will not make payments to
schools without a funding agreement. The following organisations
are eligible
to enter into a funding agreement under this Programme.
. School Registered Entity:
° A Government School Community Organisation for a government school that
has been approved by the Minister to receive funding
under the Investing In Our
Schools Programme.
° The legal entity for any Independent and Catholic school.
. Supported by state and territory or systemic arrangements:
° State and territory government education authorities which act on behalf
of government schools.
° The legal entity for the systems in the non-government sector which
support and act on behalf of non-government schools.
. Project sponsor:
° A project sponsor can be nominated by a school to manage the chaplaincy
service on its behalf. For example, the project sponsor
could be a chaplaincy
service provider already approved by state or territory governments. The
Department will enter into a funding
agreement with the project sponsor as
long as they are a legal entity, affiliated with or working with a religious
institution to provide a school chaplain and deliver
chaplaincy services in
schools, or a state or territory government approved chaplaincy service."
(emphasis added)
- The
particular arrangements in question in this case fell within the last of the
categories identified in the Guidelines. SUQ was
a project sponsor nominated by
a school to manage the chaplaincy service on its behalf.
- As
has been said, in identifying the relevant hypothetical law, it is important to
recognise that the impugned payments were made
under the NSCP. The question
being considered is whether the executive actions in question (making the
Funding Agreement and making
payments pursuant to it) could have been authorised
by a valid law. The hypothetical law in question must be one which provided
for
the NSCP generally, not just for the particular payments that lie at the heart
of the present litigation. That was the basis
on which the Darling Heights
Funding Agreement was drawn – that the agreement was made and the payments
were to be made under
and in accordance with the NSCP and in conformity with the
Guidelines. It is the NSCP and the Guidelines that reveal the circumstances
in
which the impugned payments were made.
- Contrary
to the submission of the Commonwealth parties – that the character of the
executive acts in question "flows, relevantly,
from the character of the legal
persons to whom they relate" – attention cannot be confined to that single
circumstance.
- The
hypothetical law to be considered must be one which provides for the payment of
money, under a funding agreement that accords
with the requirements described in
the Guidelines. Would a law of that kind be a valid law of the Parliament?
- Two
heads of legislative power were said to be engaged: that part of s 51(xx)
which provides power to make laws with respect to "trading or financial
corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth",
and that part of
s 51(xxiiiA) which provides power to make laws with respect to "the
provision of ... benefits to students".
Corporations power?
- The
payments in issue in this case were made to SUQ as a project sponsor. It was
submitted that SUQ was at the relevant times a
trading or financial corporation
and that it followed that a law regulating the activities of SUQ in its
provision of chaplaincy
services would be a law with respect to trading or
financial corporations. But even if SUQ were a trading or financial corporation
(and that is a question which need not be examined), it is necessary to
recognise that all that the Guidelines required was that
the project sponsor be
"a legal entity, affiliated with or working with a religious institution to
provide a school chaplain and
deliver chaplaincy services in schools". The
Guidelines did not require that a project sponsor be a trading or financial
corporation.
If, as was submitted, SUQ met that description, its being so was
wholly irrelevant to the operation and engagement of the Guidelines.
- The
hypothetical law under consideration would not in any way hinge on the
constitutional conception of trading or financial corporations.
It would not be
a law authorising or regulating the capacity of constitutional corporations
generally or of a particular corporation
to make a contract. Unlike the law
considered in New South Wales v The Commonwealth (Work Choices
Case)[401]
it would not be a law authorising or regulating the activities, functions,
relationships or business of constitutional corporations
generally or any
particular constitutional corporation; it would not be a law regulating the
conduct of those through whom a constitutional
corporation acts nor those whose
conduct is capable of affecting its activities, functions, relationships or
business[402].
The hypothetical law would be no more than a law authorising or requiring the
making of a particular kind of contract in which one
contracting party could be,
but need not be, a constitutional corporation providing services for reward.
The hypothetical law would
not be a law supported by s 51(xx).
Provision of benefits to students?
- The
hypothetical law would not be a law with respect to the provision of benefits to
students.
- No
party or intervener sought to challenge the conclusions expressed by five
members of the Court in Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth ("the Alexandra Hospital
Case")[403]
about the meaning to be given to the words "the provision of ... sickness and
hospital benefits" in their context in s 51(xxiiiA). And much of the
argument in this matter proceeded by seeking to apply what was said in that case
to the circumstances of this.
- In
the Alexandra Hospital Case three matters were taken as settled in
connection with that part of s 51(xxiiiA) which deals with "the provision
of ... sickness and hospital benefits". First, it was
said[404]
that it is settled that "the provision" of those benefits was confined to the
provision of benefits by the
Commonwealth[405].
Second, it was pointed
out[406] that
the prohibition "but not so as to authorize any form of civil conscription"
applies only to the reference to provision of "medical
and dental services" but
may be relevant to the scope of other elements of the power "at least to the
extent that whenever medical
or dental services are provided pursuant to a law
with respect to the provision of some other benefit, eg, sickness or hospital
benefits,
'the law must not authorize any form of civil conscription of such
services'[407]".
- Third,
and of most immediate relevance, it was
said[408] in
the Alexandra Hospital Case that "the concept intended by the use in the
paragraph of the word 'benefits' is not confined to a grant of money or some
other commodity.
It may encompass the provision of a service or services."
Reference was made by the Court in the Alexandra Hospital
Case[409]
to the discussion by Dixon J in British Medical Association v The
Commonwealth ("the BMA
Case")[410]
of the meaning to be given in s 51(xxiiiA) to the word "benefit" and
whether it would extend to the actual provision of services such as nursing
services. The Court
concluded[411]
in the Alexandra Hospital Case that the meaning of the word "benefit"
accepted by the majority of the Court in the BMA Case was that
expressed[412]
by McTiernan J:
"The material aid given pursuant to a scheme to provide for human wants is
commonly described by the word 'benefit'. When this
word is applied to that
subject matter it signifies a pecuniary aid, service, attendance or commodity
made available for human beings
under legislation designed to promote social
welfare or security: the word is also applied to such aids made available
through a
benefit society to members or their dependants. The word 'benefits'
in par (xxiiiA) has a corresponding or similar
meaning."
- That
"the word 'benefits' is not confined to a grant of money" and "may
encompass the provision of a service or services" (emphasis added) may be
accepted. But it by no means follows that every provision
of a "service" is a
"benefit" within the meaning of s 51(xxiiiA). When used in par (xxiiiA),
the word "benefits" cannot be read as either "benefits or services" or
"benefits and services". The paragraph distinguishes between the two
ideas and uses the words differently. The word "services" is used only in
the
collocation "medical and dental services"; the word "benefits" is used in the
collocations "unemployment, pharmaceutical, sickness
and hospital benefits" and
"benefits to students".
- As
the Alexandra Hospital Case illustrates, the concept of "benefit"
includes the payment of money for and on behalf of another to obtain the
provision to that
other of material aid in satisfaction of a human want. In
that case, money was paid by the Commonwealth to a nursing home proprietor
for
services provided to a patient. As the Court pointed
out[413],
"the intended ultimate beneficiary of any benefit paid [was] the patient in the
nursing home to the proprietor of which the payment
will ordinarily be made".
And as the Court also pointed
out[414], the
"benefit" could as much be described as money paid for and on behalf of the
patient as it could be described as provision of
a service to the patient by the
nursing home proprietor.
- But
in the present case, unlike the Alexandra Hospital Case, the chaplaincy
services to be provided by SUQ can be described only as the provision of
a service to students (and others) attending or associated with the school in
question. There is not, in this
case, a payment of money by the Commonwealth
for or on behalf of any identified or identifiable student for services rendered
or
to be rendered to that student.
- Just
as "benefits to students" cannot be understood as synonymous with "benefits to
or services for students", "benefits to students"
does not embrace any and every
form of provision of money or services that is of "advantage" to students. If
the latter construction
of "benefits to students" were adopted, a law that
provided for the Commonwealth's payment for provision of a chaplain (whether by
paying the wages of the chaplain or by paying an intermediary like SUQ to
provide a chaplain at one or more schools) would be a law
with respect to the
provision of benefits to students. It would provide services to students that
they may find helpful. But that
construction of "benefits" must be
rejected.
- If
"benefits" to students encompasses every form of payment that provides
advantage, the power to legislate with respect to the provision
of benefits to
students is a large power which approaches a general power to make laws with
respect to education. It would be a
power of a kind radically different from
the other elements of legislative power given by s 51(xxiiiA) and a very
long way away from the mischief to which s 51(xxiiiA) was directed. The
Constitution Alteration (Social Services) Bill, which led to the insertion of
s 51(xxiiiA), was
introduced[415]
following this Court's decision in the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case[416]
that the Pharmaceutical Benefits Act 1944 (Cth) was invalid. It was a
constitutional amendment evidently intended to provide federal legislative power
with respect to
the provision of various forms of social security benefit,
including benefits which were then and for some time had been provided
by the
Commonwealth.
- When
the word "benefits" is twice used in s 51(xxiiiA) the central notion that
is being conveyed is a payment to or for an individual
for provision of relief
against the consequences of identified events or circumstances: sickness,
unemployment, hospital treatment,
pharmaceutical needs or being a student. To
conclude that payments for the provision of chaplaincy services are a form of
benefit
to students would depend upon treating the central notion of "benefits
to students" as no more than a particular instance of a more
general concept
that encompasses any and every form of payment which may be thought to provide
some advantage to a person who is
a student.
- The
reference to benefits in s 51(xxiiiA), whether in the collocation
"unemployment ... benefits", "sickness and hospital benefits"
or "benefits to
students", is not to be read as encompassing every form of payment that provides
some advantage. "Benefits" when
used in the collocation "sickness and hospital
benefits" does not readily admit of such a broad understanding and there is no
warrant
for giving the word an altogether different meaning when used in the
collocation "benefits to students". Rather, as was accepted
in the BMA Case
(and not challenged in the argument of this case), the notion of benefits is
more confined than a generalised reference to provision
of advantage. It, like
the several notions of maternity allowances, widows' pensions,
child endowment and family allowances, centres upon the provision
of material aid in satisfaction of human wants.
- The
only forms of services mentioned in s 51(xxiiiA) are medical and dental
services. But if either of the broad understandings
of "benefit" that have been
identified – any provision of a service or any provision of an advantage
– were to be adopted,
the reference in s 51(xxiiiA) to "medical ...
services" would be superfluous. Every law for the provision by the Commonwealth
of
medical services would be a law with respect to the provision by the
Commonwealth of a form of "sickness and hospital benefits".
By contrast, the
understanding of "benefit" accepted in the Alexandra Hospital Case gives
the separate elements of s 51(xxiiiA) independent, rather than entirely
overlapping, effect.
- Adopting
and applying the understanding of "benefit" that was accepted in the
Alexandra Hospital Case, the provision of payment for a chaplain to a
school is not the provision of material aid in satisfaction of human wants. It
is
not a form of "benefits to students". The payments that are made under the
NSCP are not made to or for students. They are made
to provide a service to
which students may resort and from which they may derive
advantage. But they are not "benefits to students". A law providing for the
payment to SUQ of moneys on the terms and conditions
of the Darling Heights
Funding Agreement would not be a law supported by s 51(xxiiiA).
- The
conclusion that the hypothesised law providing for the impugned payments would
not be supported by either s 51(xx) or s 51(xxiiiA)
entails that the
impugned payments were not supported by the executive power of the Commonwealth.
It also entails that the Executive
had no power to make a contract undertaking
to make those payments and that the terms of the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement that
provided for the making of the payments were unenforceable.
A more fundamental reason?
- Is
there a more fundamental reason for concluding that the making of the impugned
payments was not a valid exercise of the executive
power of the Commonwealth?
Could those payments be made validly only if there was in fact legislation
specifically authorising the
application of money lawfully appropriated for that
purpose? As already noted, the parties and interveners argued the case on the
footing that there was no legislation of that kind (thus assuming, without
debate, that so much of the Appropriation Acts as provided
for the application
of moneys appropriated to expenditures did not constitute such a specific
authorisation).
- Sound
governmental and administrative practice may well point to the desirability of
regulating programs of the kind in issue in
this case by legislation. At the
least the difficulties that arise from applying tests that require the
consideration of a hypothetical
as distinct from an actual law made by the
Parliament are avoided and the Parliament's control over expenditures is plainly
asserted
in a manner that is capable of review both within and beyond the
Parliament. But to conclude that the Constitution requires that the Executive
never spend money lawfully available for expenditure without legislative
authority to do so is to decide a large and complex issue. It
is better that it
not be decided until it is necessary to do so. The conclusion that the impugned
payments could not have been the
subject of a valid law of the Parliament
suffices to conclude the issues that have been raised.
The answers to Questions 4(a) and 2(a)
- The
making of the relevant payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ pursuant to the
Darling Heights Funding Agreement was not supported
by the executive power of
the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution. Question 4(a) should
be answered accordingly.
- As
foreshadowed earlier in these reasons, the question asked in the Special Case
about the validity of the Darling Heights Funding
Agreement should be answered
in a way that directs attention to the relevant deficiency in power. Because
the Commonwealth had no
power to make the disputed payments, the Commonwealth
could not validly make a contract purporting to oblige the making of those
payments. Question 2(a) in the Special Case should be answered: "Save to
say that the Commonwealth had no power to make, and thus
no power to agree to
make, any of the payments for which the Darling Heights Funding Agreement
provided, it is inappropriate to answer
this question."
- HEYDON
J. I dissent.
The factual background
- This
case concerns a Queensland school. The parties agree that it is called Darling
Heights State Primary School ("the School").
The controversy concerns the
constitutional validity of the way "chaplaincy services" at the School have been
funded.
- From
1998, various "chaplains" provided "chaplaincy services" at the School for short
periods. From April 2006, Mrs Jo-Anne Hawley
provided "chaplaincy services" at
the School for an equivalent of two school days per week. The duties of the
office entailed "pastoral
care (including listening to and helping students,
parents and staff)", managing or building "peer relationships, child trust and
refuge" and giving "support to teachers and others". The appointment of the
"chaplains" was made with the permission of the Queensland
Department of
Education and Training. That Department issued various "policies" stating the
requirements that Queensland State schools
wishing to provide "chaplaincy
services" had to meet. The State of Queensland entered an agreement for the
provision of "chaplaincy
services" with Scripture Union Queensland, the fourth
defendant.
- In
2007, the School's Principal decided, after consultation with the Parents' and
Citizens' Association and others in the School
community, that students would be
assisted by increasing the number of days that a "chaplain" was in attendance at
the School. He
made an application on 4 April 2007 for funding under a federal
scheme announced in 2006.
- That
scheme is the National School Chaplaincy Program ("the NSCP"). Its application
to the School is the subject of this dispute.
The defendants contend that its
constitutional validity is supported by s 61 of the Constitution, but accept
that it is not supported by any other constitutional provision. Pursuant to the
NSCP, the first defendant (the Commonwealth)
funded "chaplaincy services" for
many government and non-government schools. The funds were provided through a
series of funding
agreements in relation to individual schools. The relevant
agreement in this case had two parties. One was the fourth defendant.
The
other was the first defendant (as represented by the Department of Education,
Science and Training, and more recently the Department
of Education, Employment
and Workplace Relations).
- The
4 April 2007 application was endorsed by the School's Principal, the President
of the School's Parents' and Citizens' Association
and the fourth defendant's
Regional Manager. The application contained a declaration that there was broad
community support for
the choice of "chaplain" (Mrs Jo-Anne Hawley) and the
proposed "chaplaincy services". There was also a declaration that appropriate
steps had been taken to publicise the fact that use of the "chaplaincy services"
was voluntary. The application stated that the
fourth defendant endorsed Mrs
Jo-Anne Hawley. It also stated that the proposal involved expanding the
"chaplaincy services" from
two to four school days per week. And the
application identified the fourth defendant as the proposed sponsor with whom
the first
defendant would make the agreement to fund the "chaplaincy services".
- The
application described the expanded "chaplaincy services" for which the NSCP
funding was sought thus:
"1. WORKING WITH STUDENTS (PREP-7): Being able to talk to/counsel students who
are experiencing a range of issues that are impacting
on them. This may either
be referral from Teacher/s or else the child seeking assistance. Also being
visible at Break Times so
that children may approach and seek help.
2. READING GROUPS/CLASSROOM ASSISTANCE: Improves knowledge of individual
students by observing how they function in the classroom.
Invaluable
information can be gleaned and observance by students assists the person to
build relationships and trust with the students.
Children seek the person out
as she is seen as a confidante.
3. GIRLS STUFF AND BOYS STUFF: Working with both genders in the Upper School
who are experiencing issues at home, display poor
self-esteem/friendship skills
or need extra care. The program covers self-esteem, appreciation, positive
thinking/talking &
responsible behaviour.
4. BOYS MENTORING PROGRAM: Overseeing the program for boys who need some extra
help in dealing with their emotions (anger/anxiety/fear).
Boys to be mentored
by a positive male role model who can help them learn to handle their
emotions/behaviour.
5. WORKING WITH TEACHERS/STAFF/PARENTS: Ensuring that all stakeholders are
able to access the services provided. This involves
being available to talk to
people about personal issues that may be impacting on them. Having an
additional support level available
ensures that some minor issues do not become
major issues.
The existing/future role is a continuation/refinement of the initial discussions
that were conducted when the first Chaplain was
appointed. This is an evolving
role and the various duties undertaken depend entirely on the make-up of the
School Community and
the range of issues that are affecting them. We are a very
multicultural school and this alone brings another dimension to the range
of
issues that as a School we have to deal with.
The role develops as there are concerns that need to be dealt with in an
appropriate manner."
- On
or about 7 July 2007, the Department of Education, Science and Training made an
offer of funding to the School under the NSCP.
On or about 25 July 2007, the
School's Principal signed a declaration that the School intended to proceed with
the "chaplaincy project".
On or about 24 September 2007, the Deputy Principal
of the School notified the Department of Education, Science and Training that
Ms
Christina Putland was to commence as "chaplain" at the School. The notification
indicated that she had a Bachelor of Arts (Teaching)
degree and formal
qualifications in relation to Lifeline telephone counselling. The notification
described her as being endorsed
by the fourth defendant. The notification did
not identify her as being formally ordained or commissioned by a recognised
religious
institution or endorsed by a religious authority.
- On
9 November 2007, the first defendant entered into an agreement with the fourth
defendant to fund "chaplaincy services" at the
School under the NSCP ("the
Agreement"). The Agreement was to last three years from the date of its
execution. However, the parties
later changed the commencement date of the
Agreement to 8 October 2007 and extended its term to 31 December 2011. The
fourth defendant
agreed to provide the "chaplaincy services" described in the
School's application. The first defendant agreed to provide funding
in three
annual instalments of $22,000 upon the rendering of valid tax invoices by the
fourth defendant. The parties later amended
the Agreement by agreeing that the
first defendant should make a fourth payment of $27,063.01.
- The
Agreement included a "Code of Conduct" for "chaplains". "Chaplains" were to
sign it before they began delivering any "chaplaincy
services" under the
Agreement. Breach of the Code of Conduct by a "chaplain" could result in the
fourth defendant being obligated
to repay all or some of the funding supplied by
the first defendant. One of the duties that the Code of Conduct imposed on
"chaplains"
was to "[r]espect the rights of parents/guardians to ensure the
religious and moral education of their children is in line with their
own
convictions."
- "Chaplaincy
services" funded under the NSCP began at the School. The fourth defendant
issued tax invoices to the first defendant
in respect of each of the four
instalments payable under the Agreement as amended. The first defendant paid
the instalments. The
fourth and last instalment was paid on 11 October
2010.
- On
5 October 2009, the plaintiff's three oldest children were enrolled at the
School. On 27 January 2010, his youngest child was
enrolled.
- The
litigation began on 21 December 2010, after the date of the last payment under
the Agreement, but at a time when some of the
services for which the fourth
defendant had been paid were still to be rendered.
- The
plaintiff sued the Commonwealth of Australia as first defendant. The plaintiff
also sued the Minister for School Education,
Early Childhood and Youth and the
Minister for Finance and Deregulation as the second and third defendants. Below
these three defendants
will together be called "the Commonwealth". The
plaintiff also sued Scripture Union Queensland as fourth defendant.
First preliminary point: the qualifications and work of the
"chaplains"
- One
challenge to the Agreement was that the "eligibility criteria" for the office of
"chaplain" imposed a religious test contrary
to s 116 of the Constitution.
Section 116 provides in part: "no religious test shall be required as a
qualification for any office or public trust under the Commonwealth."
The
eligibility criteria appear in cl 1.5 of the 2010 Guidelines for the NSCP. The
words complained of are:
"For the purposes of this Program, a school chaplain is a person who is
recognised:
- by the local
school, its community and the appropriate governing authority as having the
skills and experience to deliver school
chaplaincy services to the school and
its community; and
- through formal
ordination, commissioning, recognised qualifications or endorsement by a
recognised or accepted religious institution
or a state/territory government
approved chaplaincy service."
However, the next sentence reads: "In particular circumstances, secular
pastoral care workers may be employed under this program."
The next paragraph
reads in part:
"School chaplains will deliver services to the school and its community
through:
- providing
general religious and personal advice to those seeking it, comfort and support
to students and staff, such as during times
of grief;
- supporting
students and staff to create an environment of cooperation and respect,
promoting an understanding of diversity and the
range of religious affiliations
and their traditions;
- respecting the
range of religious views and cultural traditions in the school and the broader
community and also respecting the rights
of parents/guardians to ensure the
religious and moral education of their children is in line with their own
convictions;
- working in a
wider spiritual context to support students and staff of all religious
affiliations and not seeking to impose any religious
beliefs or persuade an
individual toward a particular set of religious beliefs".
- This,
read with the statement of the expanded "chaplaincy services" program in the
School's
application[417],
conveys the impression that, at least at this school, neither the NSCP nor the
qualification for "chaplains" had much to do with
religion in any specific or
sectarian sense. The work described could have been done by persons who met a
religious test. It could
equally have been done by persons who did not.
- In
ordinary speech a "chaplain" is the priest, clergyman or minister of a chapel;
or a clergyman who conducts religious services
in the private chapel of an
institution or household. Those who are "school chaplains" under the NSCP's
auspices fall outside these
definitions. Their duties in schools are
unconnected with any chapel. They conduct no religious services. Perhaps those
supporting
validity committed an error in calling the NSCP a "chaplaincy
program" and speaking of "school chaplains". The language is inaccurate
and may
have been counterproductive. Some vaguer expression, more pleasing to 21st
century ears, like "mentor" or "adviser" or "comforter"
or "counsellor" or even
"consultant", might have had an emollient effect. The plaintiff must have found
the words "chaplain" and
"chaplaincy" useful for his contention that the NSCP
was void under s 116.
Second preliminary point: the consequence of the plaintiff's
arguments
- Before
the NSCP was introduced, the School and the Queensland State Government saw it
as beneficial that a "chaplaincy service" be
supplied to the School for two days
per week. The NSCP enabled the supply of that service to be increased to four
days per week.
The Queensland State Government supported that change. A
federal government of one political colour initiated it before the 2007
election, two other governments of a different political colour continued it
until the next election, and a third government of that
political colour
continued it thereafter. The Queensland State Government did not appear to see
the NSCP as impinging on its rights
as a State. The NSCP was not controversial
as between the major political parties. It was not controversial as between the
two
houses of Parliament. It was voluntary for students and their parents. The
introduction of the NSCP at the School was favoured
by the School community's
key institutions. The plaintiff's submission that the Commonwealth had no power
to provide the NSCP funding
would invalidate a voluntary program that was seen
as advantageous by and had the support of four successive Commonwealth
Governments,
the Queensland State Government, the School and the School's
community. Of course, the results to which the submission leads do
not
demonstrate that the plaintiff's submission is wrong. But those results do call
for the submission to be closely scrutinised.
The structure of the questions
- Question
1 of the questions stated in the Amended Special Case raises three
sub-questions. The first is: does the plaintiff have
standing to challenge the
drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the purpose of making
payments under the Agreement
during five financial years: 2007-2008, 2008-2009,
2009-2010, 2010-2011 and
2011-2012[418]?
The second sub-question is: does the plaintiff have standing to challenge the
making of the four payments by the Commonwealth to
the fourth defendant? The
third sub-question, which is closely related to the second sub-question, is:
does the plaintiff have
standing to challenge the validity of the
Agreement[419]?
- Question
3 asks: was the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the
purpose of making payments under the Agreement
authorised by the Appropriation
Acts for the years 2007-2008, 2008-2009, 2009-2010, 2010-2011 and
2011-2012[420]?
- Questions
2(a) and 4(a) relate to whether the Commonwealth's acts in making the payments
to the fourth defendant under the Agreement
were unlawful because they were
beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution.
These questions raise two sub-questions. One is: does the executive power
extend to any matter on which the Commonwealth has
legislative power, and in
particular the powers conferred by s 51(xx) or (xxiiiA) of the
Constitution[421]?
The second sub-question only arises if the answer to the first sub-question is
"Yes". It is: does the Commonwealth have legislative
power to enact
legislation supporting the Agreement under either of those
placita[422]?
Below it will be seen that the first sub-question was not expressly identified
in the Amended Special Case and emerged only during
oral argument.
- Questions
2(b) and 4(b) relate to whether s 116 of the Constitution prohibits the making
of the
payments[423].
- Questions
5 and 6 relate to relief.
- The
questions and sub-questions just described will be answered in the above order,
save that it is not necessary to deal with s 51(xx).
Standing to challenge the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund
- The
plaintiff has no standing to challenge the drawing of money from the
Consolidated Revenue Fund.
- Where
a declaration that executive action is not constitutionally valid is sought, or
an injunction against its repetition is sought,
it must be demonstrated either
that a private right of the plaintiff is interfered with or that the plaintiff
has "a special interest
in the subject matter of the
action"[424].
The Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth did not argue that no litigant could
ever have standing to challenge the validity of an
appropriation. The
Solicitor-General accepted that a person who sought to challenge a payment which
had a direct effect on his or
her
rights[425]
would have had standing. But the plaintiff did not claim that his rights were
affected. He claimed only that he had "a special
interest in the subject
matter" – an interest greater than that of the public generally.
- The
plaintiff submitted that his "children attend a school in respect of which funds
have been expended by the Commonwealth." He
submitted that that expenditure was
the subject of his claim to relief. Accordingly, the plaintiff submitted that
he did not bring
the proceedings as a mere matter of "intellectual or emotional
concern."[426]
The plaintiff also submitted that he did not bring the proceedings in an attempt
to give effect to his beliefs or opinions on a matter
"which does not affect him
personally except in so far as he holds beliefs or opinions about
it."[427]
- The
plaintiff further argued:
"Given that appropriation is a necessary step in the expenditure of public
monies, it is not logically possible to recognise the
plaintiff's special
interest in the expenditure of such monies on the provision of chaplaincy
services at his children's school whilst
denying a sufficient interest in the
appropriation of those monies from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. The latter
interest flows
from the former."
- These
arguments must be rejected. It is true that they may establish that the
plaintiff may have standing to challenge the expenditure of funds. But
their flaw is that they do not establish that the plaintiff has standing to
challenge the appropriation of funds. It does not follow from the fact
that the plaintiff may have standing to challenge the expenditure of funds by
reason
of having a special interest in that expenditure that he also has
standing to challenge the appropriation of those funds. The appropriation
of
money by Parliament through an Appropriation Act authorises the Executive to
withdraw money from the Treasury, and restricts its
expenditure to the purpose
for which it was appropriated, but creates no other rights or
duties[428].
The plaintiff has no interest in the appropriation of the money beyond that of
any other member of the
public[429].
In Mason J's words in the Australian Assistance Plan case, "the
individual taxpayer has no interest at all in funds standing to the credit of
Consolidated
Revenue."[430]
- The
plaintiff faces an additional difficulty. His complaint relates to his
children's education at the School. They began to attend
the School in the
financial year 2009-2010. How, then, can the plaintiff have standing in
relation to the appropriations for 2007-2008
and 2008-2009? And how can the
plaintiff challenge the appropriation for 2009-2010 in relation to the third
payment? There is no
claim for it to be recovered. The plaintiff endeavoured
to surmount this difficulty by submitting that "to the extent that funds
expended during financial years prior to the enrolment of any of his children at
the School assisted in entrenching a program which
now affects his children at
that School, ... he has a sufficient interest in the legality of that
expenditure to constitute his claim
in respect of it a justiciable controversy."
That argument too must be rejected. The validity of an appropriation is
determined
by examining the relevant legislation for a particular year, not by
examining the validity of expenditures in previous years.
- The
plaintiff also argued:
"Because the plaintiff's argument concerning appropriations in the years during
which his children were enrolled at the School depends
upon demonstrating the
absence of appropriations in respect of the NSCP in prior years, he has a
sufficient interest in those prior
purported appropriations to have standing to
challenge them."
This was a reference to the plaintiff's contention that there was no valid
appropriation in relation to the fourth payment unless
there had been valid
appropriations for the earlier
payments[431].
The argument that there was no valid appropriation in relation to the fourth
payment is rejected below for reasons that do not depend
on the validity of the
earlier
payments[432].
Hence the plaintiff's argument for standing in respect of the earlier payments
fails.
- The
plaintiff also argued that even if the operation of past Appropriation Acts had
been exhausted and all money due had been paid
under the Agreement, he had
standing because the activities contemplated under the Agreement were "supposed
to continue." That argument
must fail unless it is shown that those activities,
and the past system of funding them, are continuing at the School. This was
not
shown.
- The
plaintiff advanced another argument:
"With respect to the declarations sought by the plaintiff in respect of
appropriations in financial years prior to the present, it
is incorrect to say
that these would concern no present or future rights or obligations,
notwithstanding the exhausted operation
of the relevant Appropriation Acts.
This is because:
(a) the Executive may, in the absence of an appropriation, contract to expend
monies conditional upon there being an appropriation;
and so,
(b) if there was never an appropriation in respect of the NSCP, and in
particular the ... Agreement, then [the fourth defendant]
was never entitled to
receive payments under that agreement.
Therefore, even while the plaintiff does not seek repayment of the money paid to
[the fourth defendant], the declarations sought
in respect of previous
Appropriation Acts would affect [the fourth defendant's] present title to retain
the money it has received
under the ...
Agreement."
There being no claim that the fourth defendant repay the money, a mere
declaration affecting its "present title to retain the money
it has received" is
immaterial and should not be made. Further, it has not retained the money: it
has paid it out to others, who
are not parties.
- The
plaintiff's final argument on this point was:
"whilst Parliament may, subject to there being a power to spend in respect of
the NSCP, make a supplementary appropriation for the
NSCP to cure the absence of
an appropriation, this does not mean that the relief sought by the plaintiff
lacks utility: placing
the matter before Parliament for its specific
consideration is precisely what ss 53, 54, 56, 81 and 83 of the
Constitution require."
For reasons given below, there is no "absence of an
appropriation"[433].
There is no need for the government to return to Parliament in search of a
supplementary appropriation. Hence the purported basis
for the argument does
not exist.
- Question
1(b) in the Amended Special Case should be answered "No".
- The
Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth advanced a submission going beyond the
terms of the questions in the Amended Special Case.
He submitted that even
though the States would have had standing to commence the proceedings, the
plaintiff's lack of standing could
not be cured by the intervention of the
States. He submitted that when the proceedings began there was no "matter" in
relation to
the validity of the appropriations because the plaintiff lacked
standing. He submitted that the States could not intervene under
s 78A of the
Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) unless there was a pre-existing "matter". And
he submitted that their purported intervention did not create a matter or expand
a matter. The Court did not have the benefit of contrary argument from any
party or intervener. Subject to that, the submission
appears to be sound.
Standing to challenge the Commonwealth's payments to the fourth defendant,
and to challenge the Agreement
- Because
of the times when his children began attending the School, the plaintiff has no
standing to challenge expenditures in 2007-2008
and
2008-2009[434].
Except for arguments that relate to the 2010-2011 payment of $27,063.01, the
plaintiff's arguments about expenditures already made
under the Agreement are
immaterial. The arrangements under which the 2007-2008, 2008-2009 and 2009-2010
payments were made "are
no longer in operation and were not in operation when
these proceedings were
commenced."[435]
That is, at the time when the proceedings started, the conduct of which the
plaintiff complains in relation to those payments had
already been carried out.
Declarations that that conduct was unlawful should not be granted because of
their inutility and futility:
they "can produce no foreseeable consequences for
the
parties."[436]
However, the receipt of the $27,063.01 payment by the fourth defendant obliged
it to carry out the NSCP under the Agreement until
31 December 2011, a
period during which the plaintiff's children were at the School.
- At
the time when the proceedings began, the plaintiff and his children had not
participated, and they were not obliged to participate,
in the NSCP. The NSCP
did not affect the plaintiff's freedom of action or that of his children. The
plaintiff did not contend that
he wished to be a counsellor or mentor to
children at the School and that his wish was frustrated because the Agreement
imposed a
religious test for that office contrary to s 116 of the Constitution.
There is thus much to be said for the view that when the proceedings began the
plaintiff was seeking no more than "the satisfaction
of righting a wrong,
upholding a principle or winning a
contest"[437].
- However,
Mrs Jo-Anne Hawley, who was the "chaplain" named in the 4 April 2007
application for funding, did participate in conventional
teaching activities.
She was said to work "on the Personal Development Programs for both males &
females in the Senior School,
... in varying capacities in the Options in Yrs
4/5, [and in] the Reading Programme in Yrs 2/3 and in varying capacities in the
Prep/1
area." Although Mrs Hawley left the School before the plaintiff's
children arrived, it may be inferred that her successor's role
was similar. It
was also contemplated that in future the "chaplain" would be involved in reading
groups and classroom assistance.
The plaintiff submitted:
"The Court may infer from this material that [Mrs] Hawley – and her
replacement, Ms Putland – did not merely provide
services additional to
those provided in the classroom by teachers, in circumstances where the
plaintiff's children were free to
avoid any contact or dealings with her.
Rather, she was involved in aspects of the life of the School that extended far
beyond the
forms of individually directed pastoral care that one might
ordinarily associate with the title 'chaplain'. Indeed, she was a presence
in
the classroom.
Accordingly, if it is [said] that the plaintiff lacks the requisite standing to
seek relief on the basis that there was a de facto wall separating him
and his children from the activities of first [Mrs] Hawley and then Ms Putland,
this proceeds upon an incorrect
factual
premise."
The plaintiff made no concession as to the position if there had been a de facto
wall.
- The
submission of counsel for the plaintiff suggests that the plaintiff does, and
did when he instituted the proceedings, feel very
troubled by the "activities"
of Ms Putland. "Special interests" are not limited to material interests. They
can include points
of conscience. Therefore at the time the proceedings began
the plaintiff had a special interest in having a judicial determination
of the
validity of the payment made on 11 October 2010. The services for which it was
paid were still being performed and to be
performed, and the payment was
returnable to the Commonwealth in the event of breach by the fourth defendant.
The Solicitor-General
of the Commonwealth was therefore correct to concede that
the plaintiff has a special interest in having a judicial determination
of the
validity of the Agreement. No payment has been made since 11 October 2010, and
hence there is no special interest in relation
to 2011-2012. The lapse of time
since the proceedings began might affect the form of relief to be granted to the
plaintiff, but
not his standing.
- Question
1(a) and (c)(iv) should be answered "Yes". The consequence is that the
plaintiff has standing to raise his ss 61 and 116 points.
Was the drawing of the money used to make the fourth payment authorised by
the Appropriation Act (No 1) 2010-2011 (Cth)?
- Although
this question does not arise, in deference to the very lengthy arguments
advanced by the plaintiff it will be dealt with.
- Above
it was concluded that the plaintiff did not have standing to challenge the
appropriation of the money supplied. If, contrary
to that conclusion, he did,
the standing can have been no wider than his standing to challenge the 11
October 2010 payment itself.
- On
the plaintiff's view of the interconnectedness of appropriation issues and
expenditure issues, the statute relevant to the 11
October 2010 payment is the
Appropriation Act (No 1) 2010-2011 (Cth) ("the No 1 Act"). It is
entitled: "An Act to appropriate money out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for
the ordinary annual
services of the Government, and for related purposes". The
plaintiff submitted that the NSCP was outside the concept of "ordinary
annual
services of the Government" as understood between the houses of Parliament. The
plaintiff submitted that "unless it provides
otherwise in clear language, an
[A]ct to appropriate moneys for the ordinary annual services of the Government
should not be construed
as authorising spending on policies not previously
authorised by special legislation and for which no appropriations have been made
in the past."
- The
Commonwealth denied that there was an understanding between the houses of
Parliament of the kind the plaintiff relied on. It
also submitted that by the
time of the No 1 Act, the NSCP was not a new policy, and that appropriations had
been made for it in the
past. It is not necessary to deal with these two
arguments of the Commonwealth. It is sufficient to uphold its primary argument
– that on the clear construction of the No 1 Act there was an
appropriation.
- The
No 1 Act expressly authorised the drawing of money from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund for the purpose of expenditure under the
NSCP. It is not necessary to
resort to the meaning of "ordinary annual services of the Government" as used in
the long title to
construe the Act. The meaning of the Act is so clear that it
is incapable of being altered by the long title.
- Section
17 of the No 1 Act provided:
"The Consolidated Revenue Fund is appropriated as necessary for the purposes of
this Act, including the operation of this Act as
affected by the Financial
Management and Accountability Act
1997 ."
The "purposes of this Act" were stated in s 8, which provided:
"(1) The amount specified in an administered item for an outcome for an Agency
may be applied for expenditure for the purpose of
contributing to achieving that
outcome.
...
(2) If the Portfolio Statements indicate that activities of a particular kind
were intended to be treated as activities in respect
of a particular outcome,
then expenditure for the purpose of carrying out those activities is taken to be
expenditure for the purpose
of contributing to achieving the
outcome."
"Administered item" is defined in s 3: "an amount set out in Schedule 1
opposite an outcome for an Agency under the heading 'Administered'."
The
relevant "outcome for an Agency" appears in Sched 1, in relation to the Agency
known as "Department of Education, Employment
and Workplace Relations". It is
Outcome 2: "Improved learning, and literacy, numeracy and educational
attainment for school students,
through funding for quality teaching and
learning environments, workplace learning and career advice". Under the heading
"Administered"
there appears opposite Outcome 2 the figure of $456,982,000.
- Section
3 defines "Portfolio Statements" as "the Portfolio Budget Statements". Section
3 in turn defines "Portfolio Budget Statements"
as meaning: "the Portfolio
Budget Statements that were tabled in the Senate or the House of Representatives
in relation to the Bill
for this Act." In the part of the Portfolio Budget
Statements so tabled that deals with the Department of Education, Employment
and
Workplace Relations, "Outcome 2" is described as it appears in Sched 1 to the
Act. Under the heading "Schools Support" appear
the following words:
"National School Chaplaincy Program – is a voluntary program which
provides up to $20,000 per year for schools to establish
chaplaincy services, or
enhance existing services, to provide pastoral care for students and the school
community."
That is an activity in respect of a particular outcome within the meaning of
s 8(2). Expenditure for the purpose of carrying out
that activity is
therefore taken to be expenditure for the purpose of contributing to achieving
Outcome 2. Accordingly, s 8(1) authorised
the necessary
expenditure.
- If
question 3(d) arose, the answer would be "Yes". The balance of question 3 does
not arise.
Executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61
- Section
61 of the Constitution provides:
"The executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen and is
exercisable by the Governor-General as the Queen's representative,
and extends
to the execution and maintenance of this Constitution, and of the laws of the
Commonwealth."
There were several controversies in these proceedings about the meaning of s 61,
but the central one is as follows. In the end the defendants submitted that the
executive power of the Commonwealth included a
power to do what the Commonwealth
legislature could authorise the Executive to do by enacting legislation, whether
or not the Commonwealth
legislature had actually enacted the legislation. The
plaintiff, and some interveners, on the other hand, contended that the executive
power was narrower. The defendants submitted that many modern authorities
supported their submission. The plaintiff submitted that
older authorities did
not. The stand of the defendants is correct.
- Paragraph
2(a)(i) of the plaintiff's written submissions assumed that the executive power
of the Commonwealth included a power to
enter contracts without statutory
authority as long as the Commonwealth had legislative power to give it statutory
authority. The
plaintiff's proposition was not a slip. It was repeated later
in his written submissions. It was repeated again in his Outline
of Oral
Submissions. The written submissions of all other parties and interveners
accepted its correctness. Indeed, Queensland
specifically submitted that "[n]o
party disputes" this. Queensland also went so far as to submit that the assumed
proposition was
"the orthodox test of the scope of executive power."
- In
its written outline of oral argument, the Commonwealth was thus correct to
describe the assumed proposition as a "common assumption"
– correct at
least at the time when that document was composed before the second day of oral
argument commenced. There are
exceptions to the assumed proposition as the
plaintiff stated it, some widening it and some narrowing it. They will be
referred
to
below[438].
The assumed proposition, as qualified by the exceptions, will be called "the
Common Assumption".
- The
extent to which the Common Assumption was actually common began to break down
when Western Australia began its oral address.
It withdrew the relevant part of
its written submissions. Victoria and Queensland followed suit. In due course,
the plaintiff
and most government interveners withdrew their assertion of the
Common Assumption and lined up against the defendants. This great
renversement des alliances created a new and unexpected hurdle for the
defendants. So the Court was as on a darkling plain, swept with confused alarms
of struggle
and flight, where ignorant armies clash by night – although
the parties were more surprised than ignorant.
- The
five parties and the seven interveners were represented by exceptionally capable
and experienced constitutional lawyers. Those
lawyers included seven
Solicitors-General and a retired Federal Court judge. Their solemn adherence to
the Common Assumption, during
the calm and leisured composition of their written
submissions, is a significant phenomenon. If Hugh Cairns and Roundell Palmer,
arguing opposite sides of a case, agreed on a principle of equity, that was some
indication that that principle was sound. Of course,
an agreement between
parties or interveners on the law does not bind the
courts[439].
Adherence to the Common Assumption does not demonstrate or constitute the law.
It is not decisive. But it is material. Why did
this large group of expert
constitutional lawyers initially adhere to the Common Assumption? Because they
thought it to be correct.
And it was correct.
- It
is now necessary to examine, in roughly chronological order, first the legal
materials supporting the Common Assumption and then
the opinions of modern
writers supporting it.
- Convention
Debates. According to Cole v Whitfield, reference to the history of
constitutional
provisions[440]:
"may be made, not for the purpose of substituting for the meaning of the words
used the scope and effect – if such could be
established – which the
founding fathers subjectively intended the [provision] to have, but for the
purpose of identifying
the contemporary meaning of language used, the subject to
which that language was directed and the nature and objectives of the movement
towards federation from which the compact of the Constitution finally
emerged."
- On
6 April 1891 the Constitutional Convention considered an early version of s 61.
It was contained in Ch II cl 8 of the then draft:
"The executive power and authority of the commonwealth shall extend to all
matters with respect to which the legislative powers of the parliament may be
exercised, excepting only matters, being within the legislative powers of a
state, with respect to which the parliament of that state for the
time-being
exercises such powers." (emphasis added)
Sir Samuel Griffith then said:
"This afternoon I have had circulated an amendment which I propose to make in
this clause. It does not alter its intention, though
it certainly makes it
shorter. As the clause stands, it contains a negative limitation upon the
powers of the executive; but the
amendment will give a positive statement as to
what they are to be. I move:
That in line 2 all the words after the words 'extend to' be omitted with a view
to the insertion in lieu thereof of the words 'the
execution of the provisions
of this constitution, and the laws of the commonwealth.'
That amendment covers all that is meant by the clause, and is quite free from
ambiguity."[441]
The amendment was agreed to, and the clause, as amended, was agreed to. This
incident was referred to in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[442].
Those passages constitute evidence that the "contemporary meaning" of the words
"execution ... of the laws of the Commonwealth"
used in s 61 included all
matters on which Commonwealth legislative power might be exercised, even though
it had not been exercised, subject to
the stated exception.
- Opinions
of the framers after 1900. The principles stated in Cole v
Whitfield[443]
apply also to the language of lawyers at a time roughly contemporary with
federation[444].
- In
1901, Alfred Deakin, the Attorney-General, stated in an opinion for the Prime
Minister[445]:
"The executive power of the Commonwealth unlike the legislative is derived
directly and independently from its fountain head –
the Crown. It may be
contended that it has a higher and larger scope than that of the States (see
sections 61 and 64) but it is not necessary to discuss such a claim here. Its
powers are at least coextensive with its legislative
charter."
- In
1902, Deakin said in what is known as his Vondel
opinion[446]:
"Had it been intended to limit the scope of the executive power to matters on
which the Commonwealth Parliament had legislated, nothing
would have been easier
than to say so."
This sentence was quoted with approval in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[447].
Then Deakin
stated[448]:
"The framers of that clause evidently contemplated the existence of a wide
sphere of Commonwealth executive power, which it would
be dangerous, if not
impossible, to define, flowing naturally and directly from the nature of the
Federal Government itself, and
from the powers, exercisable at will, with which
the Federal Parliament was to be
entrusted."
That sentence, too, was approvingly quoted in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[449].
- A
little later Deakin said: "section 61 points also to executive powers which
belong to prerogative", and
continued[450]:
"Shorn of prerogative powers, the Commonwealth Executive would be a mere
appendage to the Parliament – a board of subordinate
officers exercising
such powers as might be conferred upon it, but without independent authority of
any kind. Such a conception
of the executive is wholly at variance, not only
with every principle of English constitutional law, but with the clear and
unmistakable
provisions of the Constitution. Responsible government, though far
more clearly established there than in any of the State Constitutions, would
then be much more
restricted in authority, character, and domain than it is in
the States under their less explicit charters. 'The King's Ministers
of State
for the Commonwealth' – so described for the first time in a great
constitutional document – would, individually
and collectively, be less
His Majesty's Ministers than are the members of the State Executives; the vast
fund of powers held by the
Crown in trust for the people would disappear; and
the Commonwealth, instead of inheriting the fullest development of
constitutional
rights and privileges, would find its new political organisation
had dwindled from a national to a municipal body, for making and
executing
continental by-laws."
That suggests an amplitude in the powers conferred by s 61. How
ample?
- Deakin
answered that question
thus[451]:
"It is impossible to resist the conclusion that the Commonwealth has executive
power, independently of Commonwealth legislation,
with respect to every
matter to which its legislative power extends. It is not contended that the
Commonwealth Government has power to administer State Acts which remain in force
relating to matters
within the concurrent power of the State Parliaments; nor
that there are no executive acts requiring prior authority. What is clear
is
that in all matters within the scope of the legislative power of the
Commonwealth, its executive possesses all the powers of the Crown properly
exercisable within the Commonwealth. Although
instances may be found in which
there are, for the present, what may be treated as concurrent executive powers
in the Commonwealth
and the States, these are exceptions mainly of a temporary
character. As a general rule, wherever the executive power of the Commonwealth
extends, that of the States is correspondingly reduced." (emphasis
added)
Deakin then referred to Sir Samuel Griffith's 1891 amendment discussed
above[452].
He
proceeded[453]:
"The original clause, therefore, extended the executive power of the
Commonwealth to all matters within the legislative power of the
Parliament, with a negative limitation applying to the execution of State
laws on matters within the concurrent power of the States. The form
was
altered, to avoid even a negative limitation, but the intention remained the
same." (emphasis added)
In Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation this passage was quoted with
approval. It was said
that[454]:
"Deakin did not intend to convey that the executive power was exhaustively
defined by reference to the heads of Commonwealth legislative
power." (footnote
omitted)
- In
1907, Littleton Groom, the Attorney-General,
said[455]:
"it must be taken to be settled law that the executive power of the Commonwealth
is coextensive with the whole range of its legislative powers, whether those
powers are exercised or unexercised: and further, that there is vested in
the Governor-General under section 61 of the Constitution the whole undefined
mass of executive powers which are necessarily implied in the creation of a new
political entity, sovereign within
its own sphere. These general propositions
are of course subject to the limitation that where the matter is one which is
governed
by a State law which has not been displaced by a law of the
Commonwealth, the State executive power under the State law still remains."
(emphasis added)
- As
was recorded in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[456],
in 1903 and twice in 1912 other framers of the Constitution – H B Higgins,
Sir John Forrest and Sir John Quick – stated in the House of
Representatives that the Executive's power
to spend was limited to the heads of
legislative
power[457].
- Dr
H V Evatt's view. Prerogative powers are a species of executive power. In
The Royal Prerogative, completed in 1924 but not published until 1987, Dr
H V Evatt gave consideration to what criterion should be applied to "the
question
of the division of Prerogative power between ... Commonwealth and [the
States]."[458]
He cited the opinion of Lord Buckmaster LC, Viscount Haldane, Lord Parker of
Waddington and Lord Sumner in the Privy Council for
the proposition that "the
British North America Act has made a distribution between the Dominion and the
provinces which extends
not only to legislative but to executive
authority."[459]
They said that in general "the distribution under the new grant of executive
authority in substance follows the distribution under
the new grant of
legislative
powers."[460]
Dr Evatt also cited Canadian legal writing approving those
views[461].
Dr Evatt considered that they were "supported by the fact that in modern times
at any rate all executive power is in a sense referable
to some head of
legislative power." He quoted Harrison Moore: "The executive power is ...
closely allied to the legislative ...
[W]e are not encouraged to believe that
the executive can make good an independent sphere of its own, free from
legislative interference
and
control."[462]
Dr Evatt also referred to the statement of Knox CJ, Isaacs, Rich and Starke JJ
that executive power is "necessarily correlative to
legislative
power"[463].
- High
Court authority before 1974. The relevant authorities contain many
statements supporting the Common Assumption. All of them are in some sense
dicta, as are competing
statements or assumptions, and some were uttered at a
time when it was thought that ss 81 and 83 of the Constitution created a power
to approve expenditure.
- In
1935, in Attorney-General (Vict) v The
Commonwealth[464]
Starke J said in a judgment which was dissenting, but not on this point:
"It may well be that the executive power 'is co-extensive with the
responsibility and power of the Commonwealth' and not limited
'to matters
connected with departments actually transferred or matters upon which the
Commonwealth has power to make laws and has
made
laws'."[465]
- In
1940, Evatt J said that in determining which aspects of the royal prerogative
were exercisable by the Governor-General and which
were exercisable by the
Governors of the States, "the division of subject matters suggested by secs 51
and 52 of our Constitution affords a
guide"[466].
He did not suggest that exercises of the royal prerogative needed statutory
backing, only the capacity to legislate.
- Barton
v The Commonwealth. In 1974, in Barton v The Commonwealth,
Mason J
said[467]:
"[Section 61] enables the Crown to undertake all executive action which is
appropriate to the position of the Commonwealth under
the Constitution and to
the spheres of responsibility vested in it by the
Constitution."
That was later quoted with approval in Davis v The
Commonwealth[468].
It was also quoted with approval in Re Residential Tenancies Tribunal (NSW);
Ex parte Defence Housing
Authority[469].
And it was also referred
to[470] and
quoted[471]
with approval in Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation.
- The
Australian Assistance Plan case. In 1975, this Court decided the
Australian Assistance Plan case. Barwick CJ
said[472]:
"In the long run, whether the attempt is made to refer the appropriation and
expenditure to legislative or to executive power, it
will be the capacity of the
Parliament to make a law to govern the activities for which the money is to be
spent, which will determine
whether or not the appropriation is valid. With
exceptions that are not relevant to this matter and which need not be stated,
the
executive may only do that which has been or could be the subject of valid
legislation."
- Gibbs
J said[473],
after quoting s 61 of the Constitution:
"the Executive cannot act in respect of a matter which falls entirely outside
the legislative competence of the Commonwealth. ...
We are in no way concerned
in the present case to consider the scope of the prerogative or the
circumstances in which the Executive
may act without statutory sanction. Once
it is concluded that the Plan is one in respect of which legislation could not
validly
be passed, it follows that public moneys of the Commonwealth may not
lawfully be expended for the purposes of the
Plan."
- Mason
J said of s
61[474]:
"Although the ambit of the [executive] power is not otherwise defined by Ch II
it is evident that in scope it is not unlimited and
that its content does not
reach beyond the area of responsibilities allocated to the Commonwealth by the
Constitution, responsibilities which are ascertainable from the distribution of
powers, more particularly the distribution of legislative powers,
effected by
the Constitution itself and the character and status of the Commonwealth as a
national government. The provisions of s 61 taken in conjunction with the
federal character of the Constitution and the distribution of powers between the
Commonwealth and the States make any other conclusion
unacceptable."
That passage was summarised with approval in Davis v The
Commonwealth[475]
and it was quoted and summarised with approval in Pape v Federal Commissioner
of
Taxation[476].
- The
references to "allocated" and "distribution" are plainly references to
ss 51 and 52 of the Constitution. The reference to the States is a
reference to the limits on legislative power and therefore State power. Mason J
then dealt with
certain executive powers which it was appropriate for a national
government to have. His Honour went
on[477]:
"However, the executive power to engage in activities appropriate to a national
government, arising as it does from an implication
drawn from the Constitution
and having no counterpart, apart from the incidental power, in the expressed
heads of legislative power, is limited in scope. It
would be inconsistent with
the broad division of responsibilities between the Commonwealth and the States
achieved by the distribution
of legislative powers to concede to this aspect of
the executive power a wide operation effecting a radical transformation in what
has hitherto been thought to be the Commonwealth's area of responsibility under
the Constitution, thereby enabling the Commonwealth to carry out within
Australia programmes standing outside the acknowledged heads of legislative
power merely because these programmes can be conveniently formulated and
administered by the national government."
Gibbs CJ said in The
Commonwealth v
Tasmania[478]:
"I completely agree with that statement."
- In
the Australian Assistance Plan case Jacobs J
said[479]:
"When moneys are voted to the Queen by Parliament for the purposes declared by
the Parliament, it falls within the prerogative to
determine whether or not
those moneys will be expended for that purpose and how, within the expression of
the purpose to which the
moneys have been appropriated, the expenditure will be
made. Legislation is only needed when Parliament chooses to replace or affect
the prerogative powers by legislation which either extends or limits or simply
reproduces in the form of executive or other authority
the powers previously
comprehended within the prerogative. The exercise of the prerogative of
expending moneys voted by Parliament
does not depend on the existence of
legislation on the subject by the Australian Parliament other than the
appropriation itself.
This exercise of the prerogative is in no different case
from other exercises of the prerogative which fall within the powers of
the
Executive Government of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution.
If legislation were a prerequisite it would follow that the Queen would never be
able to exercise the prerogative through the Governor-General
acting on the
advice of the Executive Council; she would always exercise executive power by
authority of the Parliament. This cannot
be suggested. It would, if correct,
result in an inability of Australia to declare war, make treaties, appoint
officers of State
and members of the public service of the Commonwealth and do
all the multitude of things which still fall within the prerogative,
unless
there was a general or special sanction of an Act of
Parliament."
Then he said of the
prerogative[480]:
"Primarily its exercise is limited to those areas which are expressly made the
subject matters of Commonwealth legislative power."
That means that while the
executive power of the Commonwealth does not generally extend beyond the limits
of its legislative power,
the executive power does extend up to those limits.
Jacobs J then indicated respects in which the executive power of the
Commonwealth
extends beyond those limits which are immaterial for present
purposes. Finally, his Honour
said[481]:
"although the Parliament may legislate in respect of any subject matter which is
within the prerogative so far as it is exercisable
through the Governor-General
on the advice of the Executive Council, it does not follow that legislation is
necessary before a prerogative
power is
exercised."
- What
do the opinions of these four Justices in the Australian Assistance Plan
case say?
- The
scope of executive power was something which it was necessary for only Mason and
Jacobs JJ to examine. That is because only
those two Justices decided that the
appropriation of funds for the Australian Assistance Plan was valid (Barwick CJ
and Gibbs J did
not) but that the appropriation statute provided insufficient
authority for the expenditure of the funds. Hence what Barwick CJ
and Gibbs J
said about s 61 was not necessary for their conclusions. And Barwick CJ and
Gibbs and Mason JJ were in dissent from
the result of the case as a whole.
But what all four Justices said has been treated as important. The issue to
which the passages
quoted from those four judgments go is the principle
controlling the relationship between the executive power conferred by s 61 and
the legislative powers conferred by ss 51-52 and s 122. Putting aside the
matter of exceptions, to which Barwick CJ referred, and
which will be discussed
below[482],
there was agreement that the power of the Executive to act extended to fields in
which the Commonwealth had the power to legislate.
The controversy was whether
the power of the Executive to act extended further. Barwick CJ and Gibbs J
denied that it extended
further. Mason J thought that s 61 extended a little
further in relation to "activities appropriate to a national government", but
denied that s 61 could support the Australian Assistance Plan. Jacobs J, who
considered that s 61 could support the Plan, thought
that s 61 extended to "all
matters which are the concern of Australia as a
nation"[483].
- Subject
to the content of the exceptions to which Barwick CJ referred, his Honour did
not say "the executive cannot go beyond the
boundary marked by the legislature's
capacity to legislate, and may indeed have lesser powers." Rather his Honour
was saying: "the
executive can go right up to the boundary marked by the
legislature's capacity to legislate."
- In
relation to what Gibbs J
said[484],
the Solicitor-General of the State of Queensland put the following submission:
"[I]t would be to commit the fallacy of the undistributed middle to say that if
something falls within the legislative competence
of the Commonwealth,
therefore, by reliance upon that dictum, it falls within the executive power.
His Honour did not consider that."
The submission assumes that to adopt Gibbs J's statement was to reason
syllogistically. That is not so. It is true that Gibbs J
said: "We are in no
way concerned in the present case to consider ... the circumstances in which the
Executive may act without statutory
sanction."[485]
But he was not there denying the Common Assumption. One aspect of the Common
Assumption is that it deals with what has been called
the "breadth" of the
executive power – with how the limits of the executive power fit in with
federal
considerations[486].
Another aspect of the Common Assumption is that it deals with the "depth" of
executive power, which raises questions about when
the Executive can, and when
it cannot, act without legislative authority. In the sentence just quoted Gibbs
J was pointing out that
the case did not concern the "depth" of executive power.
Questions about the depth of executive power may well require different
answers
in the circumstances of the Australian Assistance Plan case (which
concerned the payment of money to newly created Regional Councils in order to
allow them to engage in social planning)
from those which arise in relation to
entering contracts. But read in context, which context concerned the breadth of
executive
power, his Honour was proceeding on the basis that there was not much
point in marking the line beyond which the Executive could
not go unless the
line also marked the edge of the area in which it had power to act. Gibbs J did
not say that executive incapacity
to act existed even within the area his Honour
demarcated. In context, Gibbs J's statement that the s 61 grant of executive
power
is limited in the manner indicated implies that within that limit
executive power exists. The same is true of what Barwick CJ, Mason
and Jacobs
JJ each said.
- Thus
although Mason J, for example, spoke in the first passage
quoted[487]
of executive power not reaching "beyond" a certain area, he did not suggest that
there were islands of non-power within that area.
- High
Court authority after 1975. In 1977 Aickin J said in Ansett Transport
Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[488]:
"It is plain that even without statutory authority the Commonwealth in the
exercise of its executive power may enter into binding
contracts affecting its
future action."
Barwick CJ
added[489]:
"[I]t is significant in this case that the Agreements have been authorized by
the Parliament. There is no question, in my opinion,
that the Parliament had
constitutional authority to authorize their making. We are not considering an
agreement resting merely on
the authority of the executive, though I agree with
my brother Aickin in thinking that, even if we were, there is no ground for
thinking
that the Agreements or any of them were beyond the competence of the
executive."
Aickin J's statement was quoted with approval by Gibbs CJ in A v
Hayden[490].
- In
1983, in R v Duncan; Ex parte Australian Iron and Steel Pty Ltd,
Mason J stated that
the[491]:
"executive power of the Commonwealth is not ... limited to heads of power which
correspond with enumerated heads of Commonwealth
legislative power ... The
scope of the executive power is to be ascertained, as I indicated in the AAP
Case[492],
from the distribution of the legislative powers effected by the Constitution and
the character and status of the Commonwealth as a national government. Of
necessity the scope of the power is appropriate to
that of a central executive
government in a federation in which there is a distribution of legislative
powers between the Parliaments
of the constituent elements in the
federation."
All but the first sentence of this
passage was quoted with approval in R v
Hughes[493]
and again in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[494].
- In
1988, in Davis v The Commonwealth, Brennan J, after quoting parts of what
Barwick CJ, Gibbs and Jacobs JJ said in the Australian Assistance Plan
case,
said[495]:
"There is no reason to restrict the executive power of the Commonwealth to
matters within the heads of legislative power." That
implies at least that the
executive power of the Commonwealth does extend to matters within the heads of
legislative power.
- In
2002, in Western Australia v Ward, Callinan J cited Barwick CJ, Gibbs and
Mason JJ in the Australian Assistance Plan case for his Honour's
conclusion
that[496]:
"The scope of the Commonwealth's executive power is generally coterminous with
the scope of its legislative powers." (footnote
omitted)
- The
idea that the executive power of the Commonwealth does not generally extend
beyond its legislative power was considered by Gibbs
and Mason JJ in the
Australian Assistance Plan
case[497]
to find support in The Commonwealth v Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving
Co Ltd ("the Wool Tops
case")[498]
and The Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth Shipping
Board[499].
Zines has also expressed this
view[500].
These are, however, difficult authorities. The difficulty both of the
authorities and of the problem under discussion is revealed
by the fact that
those opposing the Common Assumption relied on the
former[501].
- Non-High
Court authority. Applications of the Common Assumption include cases
upholding the validity of a contract made by the Commonwealth to refund to
prospective
overseas students the fees they had paid for the provision of
educational services which they had been unable to receive because
of visa
problems, in return for an assignment of the students' rights in respect of
those
fees[502].
- The
opinions of writers. The Common Assumption, and in particular what was said
in support of it in the Australian Assistance Plan case, has received
significant support from writers. This has been true from the time that the
case was decided until the present
day.
- In
1977, Crommelin and Evans said of the passages quoted
above[503]:
"Considerable support was voiced for the proposition that the limits placed on
executive power coincide with those applicable to
Commonwealth legislative
power."
Later they said that the relevant four Justices "indicated that as a matter of
principle the limits upon legislative and executive
powers of [the] Commonwealth
would in general
coincide."[504]
- In
1979, Lane
said[505]:
"If we rely on the very creation and existence of a Government of the
Commonwealth as a source of federal executive power, then
the limits will be
found in the kind of polity in which this Government was created and exists
– a federal polity. The Commonwealth
may declaim that it is a national
government. That may well be. But it is a national government in a federal
polity.
In this context the limits of the federal executive power are two: limits
reflecting the federal division of legislative power and
limits of a national
government (as opposed to a local, that is, State government).
The real difficulty will lie in applying the criterion 'an executive power
peculiar to the status of a national government'." (emphasis in
original)
Lane then quoted parts of the first passage from Mason J's judgment quoted
above[506].
Lane then
said[507]:
"When measuring the extent of the federal executive power in the light of the
Commonwealth catalogue of powers we may not have great
difficulty. When
measuring the extent of the federal executive power in the light of the status
of a national government we will
falter."
Lane was thus suggesting that federal executive power existed up to the limit of
legislative power, but not necessarily beyond, or
far beyond it. Lane was not a
writer who applauded judicially recognised expansions in the central power of
the Australian Commonwealth,
whether it be legislative power or executive power.
Nor did he permit expansions of which he disapproved to pass without comment.
Thus he said, after noting the opinions of Mason and Jacobs JJ and their
differing outcomes for the Australian Assistance
Plan[508]:
"The criterion, status-of-a-national-government, may be common to both
Justices, but its application differs. Our current centripetal
High Court, I
suspect, would be as generous in its application as Jacobs [J]." (footnote
omitted)
He was not using the word "centripetal" in a laudatory way. Yet there is not in
Lane any suggestion that the Australian Assistance Plan case was only
marking a boundary beyond which the legislative power could not extend. He did
not read the case as leaving open any
significant areas within that boundary
where executive power did not apply. When he spoke of "measuring the extent of
the federal
executive power in the light of the catalogue of [legislative]
powers", he was not implying that there were significant unstated
restrictions
within the area so demarcated.
- Winterton,
writing in 1983, said: "the contours of executive power generally follow those
of legislative
power."[509]
Winterton referred to earlier "uncertainties" on the subject. As examples of
the uncertainties he gave J G Latham KC's argument
in
Attorney-General (Vict) v The
Commonwealth[510]
and D M Dawson QC's argument in the Australian Assistance Plan
case[511].
Winterton said, however, that: "[w]hatever uncertainties there may have been in
the past regarding the breadth of the executive
power of the Commonwealth, they
have been dispelled by the clear statements of four members of the High Court in
the AAP
case."[512]
- In
1987, Rose stated that the power under s 61 to enter contracts "is nowadays
properly regarded as extending to any contracts that could be authorised
under a Commonwealth Act (whether or not there is such an Act)" (emphasis in
original)[513].
- In
1992, 1997 and 2008, Zines asserted, in the 3rd, 4th and 5th editions of The
High Court and the Constitution, in reliance on the Australian Assistance
Plan
case[514]:
"It is clear that the scope of Commonwealth responsibilities which limit the
executive power of the Commonwealth is to be judged
primarily from the express
powers granted to the Commonwealth
Parliament."
In 1987, Zines also
said[515]:
"Generally speaking the criterion adopted by the High Court in respect of the
executive power of the Commonwealth is, as Evatt suggests,
whether the subject
comes within Commonwealth legislative
power."
And Zines said that this had been accepted by a majority of the judges in the
Australian Assistance Plan case.
- In
1999, 2004 and 2009, Seddon said, in the 2nd, 3rd and 4th editions of
Government Contracts: Federal, State and
Local[516]:
"The ... generally accepted ... view ... is that the Commonwealth's executive
power is limited by reference to specific subject-matter
found in the
Constitution and it can only make contracts that relate to, or are a necessary
part of, the subject-matter of its legislative powers." (footnote
omitted)
- In
a paper written in collaboration with Winterton published in 2009, Gerangelos
spoke of the executive power of the Commonwealth
thus[517]:
"The Commonwealth's constitutional sphere of activity has been interpreted as
essentially coincident with its legislative powers."
He gave a footnote
reference to the key passages in the Australian Assistance Plan case
quoted above. Gerangelos then set out some criticisms which Winterton made of
Mason J's extension of executive powers beyond
that limit to include those
derived from the "character and status of the Commonwealth as a national
government". But he set out
no criticism of the proposition that executive
power existed up to that limit. And Gerangelos described "the view that s 61
extended to all subjects falling within the Commonwealth's legislative power" as
based on "long established
authority"[518].
In this he was following the view of
Winterton[519].
- In
2010, Twomey stated, citing inter alia the reasons of Barwick CJ, Gibbs and
Mason JJ in the Australian Assistance Plan
case[520],
that it "has generally been accepted that executive power follows legislative
power."[521]
She also
said[522]:
"it is necessarily an interference with the constitutional distribution of
powers to confer on the Commonwealth additional executive
powers (and incidental
legislative powers) which do not fall within the categories of powers
distributed to the Commonwealth by the
Constitution. It is an even
greater interference where those executive powers and associated incidental
legislative powers fall within an area
of state legislative and executive
jurisdiction." (footnote omitted)
- The
most recent writer is
Gerangelos[523],
who said of the passage from Mason J's reasons for judgment in the Australian
Assistance Plan case quoted
above[524]:
"He ... held that the subject matters in relation to which the Commonwealth
could take [executive] action were coincident with its
legislative
powers, express or implied." (footnote omitted; emphasis in
original)
Gerangelos also supported the Common Assumption in the following passage, which
relies on the parts of the Australian Assistance Plan case quoted
above[525]:
"Winterton conceived his neat distinction between the 'breadth' and 'depth'
elements of Commonwealth executive power in the maintenance
limb; 'breadth'
referring to the subject matters in relation to which the Commonwealth executive
could operate, 'depth' referring
to the precise actions which may be taken in
relation to those subject matters. Breadth is defined by reference to the
legislative powers of the Commonwealth and is essentially coincident with
them:[526]
'the distribution of legislative powers effected by the Constitution itself and
the character and status of the Commonwealth as a national
government.'[527]"
(emphasis in original)
- What
is the alternative to the Common Assumption? After the renversement des
alliances, the plaintiff and some interveners contended that the authorities
did not say that the executive power of the Commonwealth, vis-à-vis
the
States, enabled the Commonwealth, in the performance of a contract, to spend
money properly appropriated up to the limits of
its legislative power, whether
or not the expenditure is authorised by statute. They contended rather that
Commonwealth executive
power was subject to some further limitation. But they
never identified clearly what that limitation was and what its source was.
The
Commonwealth Solicitor-General complained about this in oral argument more than
once. The complaint was not addressed in later
oral argument, nor in the
written submissions filed after the close of oral argument. Of course, the
complaint could easily be met
by those who departed from the Common Assumption
by submitting that the executive power of the Commonwealth does not extend
beyond
the powers that specific constitutional provisions and Commonwealth
statutes give it. That rule would not sit comfortably with the
fact that for
the first six months of the Commonwealth's existence, the framers tolerated a
state of affairs in which Parliament
enacted no legislation and the first
Commonwealth public servant, R R Garran, exercised a great deal of executive
power[528].
But it would be a clear rule. It would satisfy all the demands for
representative and responsible government and respect for the
Senate made by
those opposing the Common
Assumption[529].
That, however, was not the submission they made. The closest that those
opposing the Common Assumption came to meeting the complaint
was the
Solicitor-General of the State of Queensland's submission that the executive
power of the Commonwealth extends, and extends
only, to "all of those things
[which] arise implicitly from the creation of the nation by the Act that gave
effect to the Commonwealth,
and the establishment of the Executive by the terms
of the Constitution itself. ... [O]ne then looks to the terms of a
Commonwealth statute expressly or implicitly, or the terms of the Constitution
expressly or implicitly." Heavy work is done in this submission by the thrice
invoked adverb "implicitly". What does the submission
mean?
- The
submissions attacking the Common Assumption: authority. Those who resiled
from the Common Assumption pointed to what was said to be authority
contradicting it, and to its supposed difficulties.
- The
Solicitor-General of the State of Queensland relied on dicta by
Isaacs J[530],
Higgins
J[531] and
Starke J[532]
in the Wool Tops case. Whether those dicta support the Queensland
position is obscure. If they do, they are inconsistent with many later
statements.
The result of that case can be explained thus. It concerned four
agreements made by the Commonwealth. Their validity was impugned
on the basis
that they were made without power. The first three agreements were treated as
amounting to taxation, which required
legislative
authority[533].
The fourth agreement was vitiated by what was then, but is no longer seen to be,
a requirement that executive expenditure depends
on a prior rather than a
subsequent
appropriation[534].
- The
dicta of Isaacs and Rich JJ in The Commonwealth v Colonial Ammunition Co
Ltd[535]
were also relied on. Queensland submitted that their Honours were discussing
the exercise of executive power without statutory authorisation.
Those dicta
are better understood on the basis that their Honours were discussing the grant
to the Executive by legislation of power
which depended on a condition –
an Order in Council – which was not satisfied.
- Queensland
relied on dicta in Kidman v The
Commonwealth[536].
However, though these dicta appear to assume the need for statutory authority to
validate executive action, it is not clear that
the question was to the
forefront of their Honours' minds.
- Finally,
Queensland referred to passages in New South Wales v
Bardolph[537].
That case did not concern the executive power of the Commonwealth
(as distinct from a State). In any event, it does not support the
conclusion that Queensland said followed from it, namely that for the Executive
"to do an
act which involves the expenditure of money it must point to a
Commonwealth law or a provision of the Constitution or something which inheres
in itself, as the Executive, which would permit it to do so."
- Submissions
attacking the Common Assumption: principle. The Solicitor-General of the
State of Tasmania submitted that Commonwealth executive power should be limited
to the execution and
maintenance of laws actually enacted by the Commonwealth
Parliament, because otherwise there would be a potential for the concurrent
but
inconsistent exercise of Commonwealth and State executive power with respect to
the same matter. Queensland adopted a similar
approach. Underlying that
submission was the fact that while some Commonwealth legislative powers are
exhaustive (for example, ss 52, 122,
51(vi)[538],
and, at least in narrower applications,
s 51(xxix)[539])
many are concurrent. While s 109 of the Constitution resolves inconsistency
between Commonwealth and State legislation, there is no provision resolving
inconsistency between Commonwealth
and State executive conduct. The more
actions that the Commonwealth Executive may permissibly take without support in
legislation,
the greater the scope for collisions between Commonwealth and State
executive
power[540].
- The
chance of conflicts between Commonwealth and State executive power is reduced by
the energy with which the Commonwealth has exercised
its legislative powers to
the exclusion of State laws. Any inconsistency between exercises of State
executive power and Commonwealth
executive power can be terminated by the
Commonwealth enacting legislation which regulates or abolishes State executive
power. That
is so whether the source of the State executive power is
non-statutory (in the prerogative or elsewhere) or in legislation. In the
former case the Commonwealth legislation will prevail over non-statutory law; in
the latter it will prevail by virtue of s 109 of the
Constitution[541].
- The
Solicitor-General of the State of Tasmania also submitted that if Commonwealth
executive power extended beyond powers granted
by statute, it would operate
unsatisfactorily in two respects. First, it would operate free of legislative
control. Secondly, it
would operate in an area of immunity from statutory
judicial review. The answer to the first point is that the use of executive
power can be controlled by the legislature enacting legislation. What is more,
use by the Executive of its powers in a fashion displeasing
to the legislature
is likely to lead to the House of Representatives losing confidence in the
Executive and to an inability on the
part of the Executive to procure the
passage of future Appropriation Bills. The answer to the second point is that
quite apart from
the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977
(Cth), which depends on conduct "under an enactment", common law principles of
judicial review can be invoked in this Court under
s 75(iii) or (v) of the
Constitution and s 30(a) of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) and in the
Federal Court of Australia under s 39B(1) and (1A)(a) and (b) of that Act.
- In
various respects critics of the Common Assumption contended that it ignored
federal considerations. Federal considerations have
certainly been seen as
relevant to the extent of the executive power. Different Justices grappled with
the impact of federal considerations
in different ways in Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation, to go no further back. But the vice of
Commonwealth executive power is reduced when the executive power relied on is
marked by
the limits of the Common Assumption. For the Common Assumption takes
federal considerations into account in holding that Commonwealth
executive power
follows the contours of Commonwealth legislative power. Commonwealth
legislative power, coupled with s 109, gives
the Commonwealth a preferred
position over the States in certain respects. But otherwise State executive
power is not fettered by
Commonwealth executive power.
- Critics
of the Common Assumption appealed to federal considerations by submitting that
on the Common Assumption the Executive could
bypass the Senate, damage
representative and responsible government, and upset the correct balance between
the House of Representatives
and the Senate. They submitted that if all the
Commonwealth Executive needed to act was an Appropriation Act and an unexercised
capacity on the part of the legislature to legislate, the Senate's role in
government would diminish. That is because Commonwealth
legislation, other than
appropriation and taxation legislation, requires Senate assent, can be initiated
in the Senate and can be
amended in the Senate, whereas appropriation and
taxation Bills, though they need Senate assent, cannot originate or be amended
in
the Senate. Bills of that kind can only be returned to the House of
Representatives with a request for amendment (s 53 of the Constitution). They
submitted that if the Common Assumption were correct, the Executive would be
able to avoid legislative scrutiny, and in particular
the risk of amendments by
the Senate to draft legislation. Those arguments may be answered thus. In
practice, and by right, the
Senate takes a very active role in controlling and
monitoring executive expenditure. It is true that the description given to
money
appropriated in Appropriation Acts and their accompanying documents is
often very brief and general. But Senators are able to seek
information and
criticise proposals to expend money. Senators can do this through the Senate
Estimates Committee, through correspondence
with responsible Ministers, through
debate on Appropriation Bills, and through the questioning of Ministers who are
Senators, or
their representatives, in the Senate. Nothing in the Constitution
prevents the Senate from returning Bills to which s 53 relates which it dislikes
to the House of Representatives for amendment, and, in the last resort, from
rejecting them. The Senate
is not in the same position as some almost impotent
post-Asquithean House of Lords. It cannot be said that the effect of the Common
Assumption is to remove the Senate (or the House of Representatives) from the
process of sanctioning executive expenditure. And
nothing in the Constitution
prevents the Senate initiating legislation to control the use by the Executive
of its power to spend what has been appropriated.
Finally, the Senate, like the
House of Representatives, is a platform from which critics of how the executive
power has been wielded
can build up that corrosive dissatisfaction which
eventually leads to a change of government after an election.
- Exceptions
narrowing the extent of executive power as formulated in the Common Assumption.
Barwick CJ in the Australian Assistance Plan case referred to the
existence of exceptions to the generality of the Common Assumption. Within the
area marked out by Commonwealth
legislative power there certainly are exceptions
to it. In part that is because the Common Assumption rests on an implication.
No implication of power can be made which is inconsistent with an express power.
- Hence
one exception to the generality of the principle that executive power follows
the contours of legislative power is s 51(ii) – the taxation power. The
Executive cannot raise taxes, because, even apart from the pressures of English
constitutional history
against that
possibility[542],
there are express powers in, for example, ss 53, 54, 55 and 56 dealing with the
raising of taxes.
- Another
exception was conceded by the Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth. He
conceded that so far as the executive power of the
Commonwealth extends to
prerogative powers to affect rights or liabilities, an unexercised Commonwealth
power to legislate does not
permit the Executive to alter rights and liabilities
arising under State law. In the absence of statutory authority the Commonwealth
Executive has no power to dispense with the operation of any law. It has no
power to alter the content of State law. It has no
power to relieve others from
their obligation to comply with
it[543].
Thus the Commonwealth Executive (like the judiciary) has no power to create
offences[544].
As Harrison Moore said: "[T]he executive has no inherent legislative
power."[545]
The Commonwealth cannot by executive action seize the property of another
(including a State): legislation conforming to s 51(xxxi) of the Constitution
is
necessary[546].
This concession by the Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth fitted in with a
reciprocal concession by counsel for the plaintiff:
that there is an executive
power to contract without statutory authorisation when there is no abrogation of
any other person's rights,
so that there is no need for legislation to change
the common law. A contract to pay money implements or uses the common law; it
does not abrogate anyone's rights. Legislation is only required for conduct
which affects the rights of others against their will.
The Solicitor-General of
the Commonwealth's concession harks back to an early draft of s 61 discussed
above[547].
It provided in effect that Commonwealth executive power based on an unexercised
legislative power did not extend to areas in which
State legislative power has
been exercised. It will be recollected that Sir Samuel Griffith stated that an
amendment bringing that
draft close to the ultimate form that s 61 took did not
alter that meaning.
- A
third exception to the Common Assumption is that the executive power to spend
money must not operate so as to curtail the capacity
of the States to function
as
governments[548].
- It
is not necessary to consider what further qualifications to the Common
Assumption there may be. None was identified as fatal
to the defendants in this
case.
- Exceptions
broadening the extent of executive power as formulated in the Common
Assumption. There are, on the authorities, exceptional cases in which the
executive power of the Commonwealth goes beyond the line marked by
unexercised
legislative power. One illustration is Davis v The
Commonwealth[549].
Other illustrations are found in the two approaches taken by different Justices
supporting the majority orders in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[550].
However, these exceptions, despite the fourth defendant's submissions to the
contrary, are irrelevant to the issues in the present
case.
- Conclusion
on the authorities. In view of the state of authority, particularly as
analysed in constitutional scholarship, the Common Assumption should be treated
as the law.
- Principle.
Is the Common Assumption in truth so wrong as a matter of principle as
distinct from authority that the authorities supporting it
should be overruled?
This case is not an appropriate one in which that question should be answered.
All parties and interveners
initially adhered to the Common Assumption. Its
sudden abandonment by the plaintiff and most government interveners during oral
argument meant that the submissions attacking and defending the Common
Assumption were deployed only at a very late stage of the
fray. Inevitably,
they betrayed signs of disorganisation. It is true that the plaintiff, South
Australia, Tasmania and the Commonwealth
were given leave to file additional
written submissions after the oral argument closed. But this gave the
Commonwealth only the
period between when oral argument ended on 11 August
2011, and when the additional submissions were filed on 1 September 2011, to
consider the point. On 7 August 2011, urgent and important litigation affecting
the Commonwealth had commenced. Interlocutory hearings
took place. After
11 August 2011, written argument was filed and preparation for oral
argument took place. Oral argument was then
heard on 22 and 23 August
2011. That litigation was decided on 31 August 2011. This must have depleted
the relevant resources of
Commonwealth energy and distracted those who were to
tap
them[551].
It is important that points of fundamental significance such as the one that
this case belatedly raised be pondered by counsel
for years – as they
often are when appeals come to this Court – or at least for months –
as is usual when matters
in the original jurisdiction are brought to the Full
Court. Above all, they need to be considered calmly. Radical changes in the
construction of the Constitution should not be made without better assistance
than the unpredicted conspiracy of circumstances permitted counsel to provide in
this
case.
- Two
facts illustrate these problems. The first is that the argument was framed on
the basis of the Common Assumption until it ceased
to be common. The second is
that most of the argument thereafter was devoted to the question of whether it
was sound. In consequence
attention was concentrated on what Winterton called
the "breadth" element in s 61, and distracted from the "depth"
element[552].
No attention was given to the "depth" element before the renversement des
alliances, and very little after it. In Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[553],
French CJ said that the powers which the Executive has under s 61 include
statutory powers, "prerogative" powers and the
"capacities"[554]
which may be possessed by persons other than the Executive. A capacity to
contract is a prime example of a capacity which both the
Executive and persons
other than the Executive possess. In the same case, Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ
said[555]:
"The conduct of the executive branch of government includes, but involves much
more than, enjoyment of the benefit of those preferences,
immunities and
exceptions which are denied to the citizen and are commonly identified with 'the
prerogative'."
In the same case, Gummow J asked in
argument[556]:
"Why should not the newly created polity the Commonwealth of Australia have
received all the executive capacities of the United Kingdom
executive save in so
far as it is necessary to give effect to the interests of the States under
federal considerations?"
One limitation which a person responding to that question would have to consider
is the "breadth" element of s 61, which goes to the federal division of powers.
For reasons given
below[557],
the Commonwealth had legislative power under s 51(xxiiiA) to enact legislation
giving effect to the NSCP: hence the "breadth" element is satisfied. Gummow
J's question also calls attention
to the "depth" element. That element
concentrates on whether the executive action in question cannot be taken without
prior legislative
authority.
- The
question in the present case then becomes: Why can the Executive not pay money
to the fourth defendant to carry out the NSCP
pursuant to contract? If the NSCP
involved the creation of rights and obligations which collided with pre-existing
rights and obligations
or with State or federal laws, no doubt statute would be
necessary. If the conflicting law was a federal enactment, a federal enactment
repealing it would be necessary. If the conflicting legal provision was a State
enactment, a federal enactment would also be necessary.
There would be, ex
hypothesi, federal legislative power to support that enactment (since the
"breadth" aspect was satisfied), and
it would prevail over the State enactment
by reason of s 109 of the Constitution. If the conflicting legal provision was
a rule of the common law, a federal enactment would be necessary, and there
would be legislative
power to enact it. But the NSCP does not create rights and
obligations which conflict with pre-existing rights and obligations or
with
State or federal laws. Hence no statute is necessary on that account. Those
alleging invalidity did not demonstrate that at
Federation the United Kingdom
Executive could not enter a contract to further a purpose in relation to which
funds had been appropriated.
The lack of full argument about the "depth"
element in this case is a further illustration of how the circumstances of this
case
do not make it one in which it is appropriate to narrow the executive power
of the Commonwealth to an extent sufficient to find for
the plaintiff.
- Immaterial
points. In the circumstances it is not necessary to deal with arguments
advanced by the defendants that the power conferred by s 61 was greater in
various respects than that contemplated by the Common Assumption. Nor is it
necessary to deal with a submission by
the Commonwealth that s 44 of the
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth) gave statutory
authority to enter the Agreement. It would probably be wrong to do so, since
the submission was raised only
in the written submissions filed after the close
of oral argument, and is outside the pleadings.
The Commonwealth's legislative power under s 51(xxiiiA)
- Section
51(xxiiiA) of the Constitution provides that the Parliament has power to make
laws for the peace, order and good government of the Commonwealth with respect
to:
"the provision of maternity allowances, widows' pensions, child endowment,
unemployment, pharmaceutical, sickness and hospital benefits,
medical and dental
services (but not so as to authorize any form of civil conscription), benefits
to students and family allowances".
- The
plaintiff submitted that s 51(xxiiiA) did not grant legislative power to arrange
for funding through the Agreement. The plaintiff accepted that "benefits to
students"
could fall within s 51(xxiiiA) even though the Commonwealth did
not directly provide them. But the plaintiff submitted that the provision of
benefits under s 51(xxiiiA):
"must involve the Commonwealth, or an entity established by it, and under its
control:
(a) making money payments to students;
(b) supplying goods or services to students, where this may be subcontracted to
a private entity, provided that the obligation to
provide the goods or services
to the students entitled to them remains with the Commonwealth or the
Commonwealth entity; or
(c) paying, either in whole or in part, for the supply of goods or services to
students, for which those students would otherwise
be obliged to
pay."
Under the NSCP the students received no money, the Commonwealth did not itself
provide services, and students were not relieved of
any liability they owed to
the "chaplaincy services" provider – they owed it no liability. The
plaintiff accepted that the
stipulated methods of providing benefits to students
under s 51(xxiiiA) may not be exhaustive. But he submitted that it was not
enough to provide merely a beneficial program in which students may involve
themselves. The "difficulty" of "rendering justiciable a decision whether a
certain course of study [or] training is a benefit to
students or not" was said
to justify this limitation.
- The
plaintiff supported this submission with references to United Kingdom
legislation. The National Insurance Act 1911 (UK) employed the term
"benefits" to refer to both payments and medical services, so long as the
obligation to provide the services
was upon the Insurance Commissioners charged
with their administration, not upon the practitioners engaged to provide them.
The
National Insurance Act 1946 (UK) drew a distinction between
"benefits", which referred to money payments to individuals, and the making of a
funding contribution
to the provision of health services. The plaintiff did not
subject these references to close analysis and they do not appear to
be
decisive.
- The
plaintiff also supported this submission with references to the Second Reading
Speech of the Attorney-General and Minister for
External Affairs (Dr Evatt)
on the Constitution Alteration (Social Services) Bill 1946, which led to the
insertion of s 51(xxiiiA) into the Constitution. Dr Evatt
said[558]:
"The object of this bill is to alter the Constitution so that this Parliament
can continue to provide directly for promoting social security in Australia.
This is in no sense a party measure. Ever since federation, it has been assumed
by successive
governments and parliaments that the National Parliament could
spend for any all-Australian purpose the money that it raises. In
1944, I
warned the House and the country that, under the Constitution as it stands, the
legal foundations for even the most urgent modern social service legislation
were doubtful and insecure. The High
Court's decision last year in the
pharmaceutical benefits case has shown that these doubts were only too well
founded. ... [T]he
framers of the Constitution recognized that such a matter
could be dealt with more satisfactorily on an Australia-wide basis than by
piecemeal and varied action
on the part of separate States. This is just as
true of other social services, such as, for example, child endowment, widows'
pensions
or medical benefits, which we realise to-day must be provided."
(emphasis added)
After referring to s 51(xiv) and (xxii) of the Constitution, Dr Evatt added:
"[a]ny other social service payments made by the Commonwealth must,
therefore, rest on some other foundation" (emphasis added).
- The
plaintiff relied on the parts of those two passages to which emphasis has been
added. The plaintiff also relied on the following
words in the "Yes" case on
the referendum on the proposed s
51(xxiiiA)[559]:
"You probably know that the Commonwealth is already providing most of [the
services described in s 51(xxiiiA)]. It provides maternity allowances,
widows' pensions, child endowment, unemployment, sickness and hospital benefits,
and benefits to students. But because of a legal decision last year, the
Constitution now needs altering to make sure that this can continue."
(emphasis in original)
- The
plaintiff submitted that, in the light of these materials, the word "benefits"
was understood in the context of the Constitution Alteration (Social Services)
Bill to denote:
"(a) benefits of the same character as the benefits then conferred under
Commonwealth legislation; and
(b) something other than the mere provision of funding which could have occurred
by way of grants pursuant to s 96 of the Constitution."
- In
the same vein, Western Australia submitted that the services which the
Commonwealth was already providing to which Dr Evatt and
the "Yes" case referred
were benefits in the form of financial assistance. To the plaintiff's
references, it added the following.
One was the National Security (Universities
Commission) Regulations 1943 (Cth). They provided for the payment of tuition
and other
non-voluntary University fees and for the payment of allowances. They
did so under the heading "Financial Assistance to Students".
Western Australia
also referred to the Education Act 1945 (Cth). That Act established a
Universities Commission. Section 14 of the Act gave it functions which
included:
"(a) to arrange, as prescribed, for the training in Universities or
similar institutions, for the purpose of facilitating their re-establishment
of
persons who are discharged members of the Forces within the meaning of the
Re-Establishment and Employment Act 1945;
(b) in prescribed cases or classes of cases, to assist other persons to
obtain training in Universities or similar institutions;
(c) to provide, as prescribed, financial assistance to students at
Universities and approved institutions".
Finally, Western Australia referred to the Universities Commission (Financial
Assistance) Regulations 1946 (Cth), which, like the
1943 Regulations, made
provision for the payment of tuition and other non-voluntary fees to students
and for the payment of an allowance.
And Western Australia submitted that
nothing in these extrinsic materials suggested that s 51(xxiiiA) was to
authorise Commonwealth
laws regulating the operations of schools.
- However,
when read as a whole, Dr Evatt's speech is not concerned with distinguishing
between direct payments by the Commonwealth
and other payments. Dr Evatt's
concern was the opposite – to ensure that the Constitution gave a wide
support for Commonwealth legislation in relation to social services payments,
whether direct or indirect.
- Similarly,
the "Yes" case did not distinguish between the power to provide social services
directly and the power to provide them
indirectly, and seek to procure power
only to do the former.
- The
argument of the plaintiff and Western Australia is undercut by one of Western
Australia's examples. Section 14(a) and (b) of
the Education Act
conferred on the Universities Commission the function of arranging for
discharged members of the armed forces to be trained and of
assisting others to
obtain training. Those functions were not limited to making direct payments to
the identified persons to obtain
training. They were not limited to services
that the Commonwealth provided. And they were not limited to relieving students
of
any liabilities they owed to the service providers.
- Paragraphs
(a) and (b) of s 14 of the Education Act also falsify the following
submission of the plaintiff:
"the benefits conferred by Commonwealth legislation at the time of the 1946
referendum involved the Commonwealth, or an entity established
by it,
either:
(i) providing financial assistance directly to the intended ultimate recipient
of the benefits; or
(ii) substituting itself for each such intended recipient as the party obliged,
either in whole or in part, for paying the cost of
certain services provided to
that recipient."
Section 14 is significant, because Dr Evatt referred to it in his Second Reading
Speech. He said that opinions of senior counsel
as to the validity of some
Commonwealth legislation after the Pharmaceutical Benefits case had been
obtained[560].
One provision with which the opinions dealt was s 14. Whilst Sir Robert Garran
KC thought that it was probably valid, Mr Maughan
KC, Mr Barwick KC
and Mr Ham KC thought pars (b) and (c) of s 14 were invalid, and Dr Coppel KC
thought them valid in limited respects
only. The significant point is, however,
that Dr Evatt asserted that the proposed s 51(xxiiiA) would be limited, "in the
main, to
benefits of a type provided for by legislation already on the
statute-book."[561]
In other words, Dr Evatt thought that the benefits that s 14(b) and (c)
conferred would be supported by s 51(xxiiiA). Section 14(b)
was concerned with
assistance not limited to financial assistance. As the Solicitor-General of the
Commonwealth correctly submitted
in this case: "the notion that what was
intended was limited to money payments is falsified by consideration of one of
the very
provisions that was identified as in need of shoring up."
- The
Solicitor-General's submission is supported by another statute in the group of
Commonwealth Acts on which the various senior
counsel advised – the
National Fitness Act 1941 (Cth). Three of them thought it to be of no or
doubtful validity. Sections 3 and 5 of that Act were concerned with the
promotion
of "national fitness" and "physical education in schools, universities
and other institutions". And the Solicitor-General's submission
also finds
support in another statute in that group – the Re-establishment and
Employment Act 1945 (Cth). Section 57(1) gave power to a Minister to
provide or arrange for the provision of facilities to disabled persons to
make
them fit for training or employment. Section 57(2) provided that
"facilities" included training, exercise, occupational and
other therapy, and
other facilities under medical supervision and under circumstances likely to
restore the persons concerned to
physical and mental fitness. And s 48
empowered the Commonwealth Employment Service to provide various non-monetary
services and
facilities.
- In
any event, there is no indication in Dr Evatt's speech that the social welfare
measures in place just before 1946 exhausted the
contemporary meaning of the
words used in s
51(xxiiiA)[562].
- The
authorities on s 51(xxiiiA) point against the narrow construction that the
plaintiff and Western Australia propounded.
- British
Medical Association v The
Commonwealth[563]
concerned indirect payments only. It is true that the legislation created a
system of Commonwealth funding for the provision of
medicines and appliances to
patients by chemists. But the legislation was not struck down on that ground.
It was struck down on
the ground that other aspects of the scheme constituted
civil conscription. The case does not reveal that s 51(xxiiiA) is limited
to
direct provision by the Commonwealth only. Webb J said that s 51(xxiiiA) "does
not empower the Commonwealth Parliament to do
more than legislate for the
provision by the Commonwealth itself of the allowances, pensions, endowment,
benefits and services to
which it
refers"[564].
But his Honour was not asserting any distinction between direct provision by the
Commonwealth and indirect provision by the Commonwealth.
- In
Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth, which
concerned legislation providing a benefit to be paid to the proprietor of an
approved nursing home, Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan,
Deane and Dawson JJ stated
two approaches to identifying a "benefit" for s 51(xxiiiA)
purposes[565]:
"On one approach, the benefit can be identified as the money paid to the
proprietor of the nursing home. On another approach, the
benefit can be
identified as the accommodation, sustenance and care to the extent that it is
provided by the proprietor to the patient
as the quid pro quo for the money
payment made by the Commonwealth. Ultimately, it matters not which of these
alternative identifications
of the 'benefit' is preferred because no distinction
relevant to the characterization of the overall legislative scheme can be drawn
between them. If the scheme is capable of being supported as a law with respect
to the provision of a money payment by the Commonwealth
to the proprietor of a
nursing home in consideration of nursing care provided to a patient it likewise
will be capable of being supported
as a law with respect to the provision of
nursing care for that patient. In the former case, it will be seen as the means
chosen
by the Parliament of controlling the application and ensuring the
effectiveness of the benefits paid; in the latter case, the scheme
will be seen
as the means adopted to provide those
benefits."
Their Honours concluded that legislation controlling the fees charged by nursing
homes receiving benefits had a significant connection
with s 51(xxiiiA).
- The
plaintiff submitted that the scheme under consideration in British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth was one under which the Commonwealth did more
than merely fund the provision of pharmaceutical products; rather, it assumed
and discharged
what would otherwise have been a payment obligation upon the
recipients of those products, thus directly providing a benefit to those
recipients. In relation to Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v
The Commonwealth the plaintiff submitted that the Commonwealth subsidy for
nursing home care conferred a direct benefit on the recipient of the care,
namely, a partial discharge of the payment obligation he or she owed to the
proprietor of the relevant nursing home. The plaintiff
submitted that the Court
did no more than recognise that the Commonwealth could provide nursing care
under legislation supported
by s 51(xxiiiA) in one of two ways – by
providing the relevant services itself or by relieving the recipients of those
services
of part or all of their obligation to pay for them. In either case,
that recipient would be receiving a benefit directly from the
Commonwealth.
- The
plaintiff submitted that neither British Medical Association v The
Commonwealth nor Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth was authority for the proposition that the mere provision of
funding by the Commonwealth, falling short of an assumption by the Commonwealth
of at least part of a payment obligation that the recipient of the benefit would
otherwise have owed, was "provision" within s 51(xxiiiA).
It is true that this
proposition was not part of the ratio decidendi of either case. But the dicta
are wide enough to support it.
Those cases do not support the plaintiff's
submission that payment by the Commonwealth to a third party falls within
s 51(xxiiiA)
only if that payment relieved the person benefited from an
obligation to reimburse the third party. There is, as South Australia
submitted, broad similarity between those two cases and the present in that in
each case the Commonwealth supplies funding for the
provision of a benefit by
another organisation.
- Both
the travaux préparatoires to s 51(xxiiiA) and the authorities
suggest that the expression "benefits to students" is not
limited to payments of
money to students any more than "hospital benefits" are limited to payments of
money to patients, rather than
to the hospitals which care for them. The
expression "benefits to students" can extend to the funding of services that
persons other
than the Commonwealth provide. It is not limited to the supply of
goods or services for which students would otherwise be obligated
to pay. There
are other matters that support that conclusion.
- One
is the following
precept[566]:
"The simplest approach ... to the problem is simply to read the paragraph and to
apply it without making implications or imposing
limitations which are not found
in the express words. We must remember that it is part of the Constitution and
go back to the general counsel to remember that it is a constitution we are
construing and it should be construed with all the
generality which the words
used admit."
That is a proper approach, subject to any contrary indication in the context or
in the rest of the
Constitution[567].
To treat the absence of express Commonwealth legislative power over education as
a reason for limiting the meaning of s 51(xxiiiA) would be to defy that
principle.
- Another
matter which supports the conclusion concerns the contrasts within
s 51(xxiiiA). Some integers of it relate to benefits in the form of
monetary payments, for example allowances and pensions. Others relate to
benefits which are not necessarily monetary from the standpoint of the persons
benefited, though they cost money to provide –
sickness and hospital
benefits, and benefits to students. As Dixon J said in British Medical
Association v The
Commonwealth[568]:
"The general sense of the word 'benefit' covers anything tending to the profit
advantage gain or good of a man and is very indefinite.
But it is used in a
rather more specialized application in reference to what are now called social
services; it is used as a word
covering provisions made to meet needs arising
from special conditions with a recognized incidence in communities or from
particular
situations or pursuits such as that of a student, whether the
provision takes the form of money payments or the supply of things
or
services."
In the same case Latham CJ, McTiernan, Williams and Webb JJ made similar
statements[569].
And in Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[570],
Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ referred approvingly to
Dixon J's observations in British Medical Association v The
Commonwealth.
- Hence
s 51(xxiiiA) confers power to enact legislation permitting the Commonwealth to
provide non-monetary benefits to students by financing others to
provide those
benefits. They need not be benefits for which the students would otherwise be
obligated to pay.
- Against
that background, it is necessary to turn to four arguments that Victoria in
particular advanced.
- Victoria's
first submission was that "benefits to students" did not include "services
provided to students". Victoria pointed out
that the word "services" is used in
s 51(xxiiiA) in the expression "medical and dental services" only. Hence it
submitted that the other integers of s 51(xxiiiA) only extended to benefits in
the nature of financial assistance and conceivably assistance in the nature of
goods but no further.
Victoria also pointed out that the words "(but not so as
to authorize any form of civil conscription)" qualify "medical and dental
services"
only[571].
Victoria submitted that if "benefits" extended to "services", an anomaly would
arise: civil conscription in areas other than medical
and dental services would
not be expressly prohibited. Victoria also submitted that "sickness and
hospital benefits" was a wider
expression than "benefits to students".
- This
argument is inconsistent with Dixon J's view in British Medical Association v
The Commonwealth. His Honour made it plain that the term "benefits"
encompassed the supply of
"services"[572].
Other members of the Court concurred with his
opinion[573].
Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ approved it in Alexandra
Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[574].
Victoria's argument in relation to civil conscription sheds little light on the
construction of the word "benefits". The civil
conscription exception was
introduced not by the Government, but by the Leader of the Opposition, in order
to address a concern about
the nationalisation of
medicine[575].
And there is no reason to treat the word "benefits" in the expression "benefits
to students" as being narrower than the word "benefits"
as used in the
expression "sickness and hospital benefits". Section 51(xxiiiA) contains 11
grants of legislative power. One grant of power in s 51 does not, in the
absence of express words of limitation, narrow the scope of any other by a
process of implication.
- Victoria's
second submission, in which the plaintiff joined, was that "benefits to
students" did not mean anything tending to benefit
students. If it did, the
Court would be required to decide matters insusceptible of proof. It would be
required to assess the merits
of particular proposals. The submission was that
"benefits to students" could only refer to material, tangible things.
- Victoria
relied on Gilmour v
Coats[576].
This was misplaced. No analogy can usefully be drawn between issues of public
benefit in the law of charity as applied to intercessory
prayers by nuns in
closed orders, and counselling for various problems encountered at school.
Victoria also relied on McTiernan
J's account of the word "benefit" in
British Medical Association v The
Commonwealth[577],
approved by Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ in Alexandra
Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[578].
McTiernan J said:
"The material aid given pursuant to a scheme to provide for human wants is
commonly described by the word 'benefit'. When this
word is applied to that
subject matter it signifies a pecuniary aid, service, attendance or commodity
made available for human beings
under legislation designed to promote social
welfare or security: the word is also applied to such aids made available
through a
benefit society to members or their dependants. The word 'benefits'
in par (xxiiiA) has a corresponding or similar
meaning."
Contrary to Victoria's submission, however, McTiernan J did not limit benefits
to "material" or "tangible" things. He spoke of "material
aid", but he included
within "material aid" a "service" to "promote social welfare". Those are wide
expressions. Further, in speaking
of legislation "designed to promote social
welfare", McTiernan J was referring to legislation identifying a process working
out an
organised method of responding to a perceived need. The "care" provided
in nursing homes to which Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane
and Dawson JJ
referred in Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth[579]
has intangible aspects too – the need for comfort and security for one
– but their Honours assumed that it was a "benefit".
- Victoria
said that no measurable "benefit" existed in this case. However, the Agreement
does render to students a comprehensible
benefit because it provides funding to
meet needs that experienced school authorities have identified. The operation
of the NSCP
contemplates decisions about what a particular school thinks it
needs, decisions about how those needs could be met by "chaplaincy
services",
decisions about how the efficacy of "chaplaincy services" in meeting those needs
could be monitored and evaluated as time
goes on, and decisions taken in
consequence of that monitoring and evaluation. Those decisions are made by
staff who may reasonably
be expected to have the capacity to form appropriate
judgments about student wellbeing.
- Finally,
in assessing the validity of legislation enacted in reliance on
s 51(xxiiiA), Latham CJ expressed the view that it is appropriate for the
Court to give substantial weight to a legislative judgment that the
opinion of
an expert about the existence of a benefit was
sound[580].
In that case the opinion was that of a doctor about the drugs and medicines
which could be beneficial to a patient. So here, while
the legislature cannot
delegate its statutes into validity, if legislation had been enacted to underpin
the Agreement, the legislature's
judgment that the opinion of the School
authorities that certain structures and conduct were beneficial to the students
was a sound
opinion would be something to which weight would have been
given.
- Victoria's
third submission, in which the plaintiff and Western Australia joined, was that
even if what students received under the
Agreement were "benefits", they were
not "benefits to students" because they did not benefit students as students.
The submission
referred to the words Dixon J used in his Honour's description of
"benefit" set out above: "provisions made to meet needs arising
from ... [the]
pursuits ... of a
student"[581].
The submission was:
"While material assistance – such as the provision of books, computers and
other educational equipment – may readily
be seen as meeting a need
arising from the pursuits of a school student, the fostering of general
'spiritual wellbeing' is not.
There is no sufficient relationship between the
chaplaincy services to be provided under the Agreement, and the particular needs
of a student. For example, the services are not confined to services
needed as a result of being a student (such as addressing bullying), but
extend
to any chaplaincy services that members of a school community, including staff
and students, might require. In the case of
students, this extends to services
that may be required irrespective of the fact of being a student or not; the
services would extend
to counselling in respect of matters not arising at all
from the pursuits of a student (for example, following the death of a family
member)." (footnote omitted; emphasis in
original)
And Western Australia submitted that while all the other benefits in s
51(xxiiiA) were defined by reference to the character of the authorised
expenditure, "benefits to students" are defined by reference to the
character of
the recipient.
- To
be a school student involves encountering numerous vicissitudes. Some may be
closely connected with studies – worry about
success or failure, overwork,
a feeling of incomprehension, discontent with teachers. Some may be more
connected with the fact of
being a young person – horseplay which leads to
victimisation, victimisation which leads to bullying, the cruelty of little
clans to the outsider, bereavement, hostility between parents, divorce, a lack
of personal confidence, the problems of life in a
multicultural area. The
latter group of vicissitudes may be rendered more acute by the school
environment. That a scheme might
be devised to benefit persons generally by
preventing or ameliorating those woes does not prevent a scheme being devised to
benefit
school students by preventing or ameliorating those woes. Dixon J did
not speak of benefits specifically relating to the "pursuits"
of children, but
of "needs arising from ... particular ... pursuits". The vicissitudes in
question create "needs arising from special
conditions with a recognized
incidence in [school] communities". Those vicissitudes also create "needs
arising from ... particular
... pursuits such as that of a student". They often
flow from stress referable to the pursuit of studying, the vulnerability of
those who study by reason of age, and the risks to which other students expose
them. Factors which are closely connected to studying
in a narrow sense are
almost impossible to separate from factors which affect young people who are
students. Since education is
compulsory between specific ages, the category
"young people within those ages" and the category "students within those ages"
are
substantially similar, leaving aside those who cannot and those who will not
attend school. Victoria's submission would mean that
s 51(xxiiiA) would not
support legislation authorising the provision of benefits in the form of
payments of money to alleviate financial need.
Poverty is a characteristic that
students (and widows and the unemployed) share with other members of the public.
- Victoria's
fourth submission, in which Western Australia joined, was that the benefits
conferred under the Agreement were not benefits
"to students", but to the
broader school community. Victoria drew attention to various references in the
Agreement and the documents
it incorporates to School staff, the wider School
community, and the community of which the School is part. However, when those
documents are read as a whole, it is clear that the NSCP's central object as
implemented at the School through the Agreement is providing
benefits to
students; the provision of benefits to others is incidental to that object. It
is, after all, the students, not the
wider School community and the community of
which the School is part, who spend most of their time at the School and to whom
the
services of the "chaplains" are most readily available. As for the staff,
they are the servants of the students. It may be a secondary
function of the
"chaplains" to provide benefits to the wider communities and the staff. But the
primary function of the "chaplains"
is to provide benefits to students. And
there is a close connection between the wellbeing of parents, teachers and the
wider School
community on the one hand and the wellbeing of students on the
other. The function of advancing the wellbeing of parents, teachers
and the
wider communities is ancillary to the NSCP's primary function of benefiting
students. The proposition that the NSCP assisted
schools and school communities
does not deny the proposition that it benefited students, because schools and
communities which have
been assisted are likely to benefit students.
- The
final submission about s 51(xxiiiA) to consider was advanced by the plaintiff.
He submitted that for a measure to fall within the description "benefits to
students"
it was necessary to demonstrate a benefit to a particular student.
This submission has three flaws. First, the argument is inconsistent
with
Dixon J's analysis of "benefit" in British Medical Association v The
Commonwealth[582].
Secondly, even if it is correct, it would be possible, if the enterprise were
thought useful, to identify particular students at
the School whom the Agreement
benefited. Thirdly, it narrows s 51(xxiiiA) unduly. The arrangements at the
School could result in a benefit to any student depending on that student's
particular circumstances
from time to time.
- For
the above reasons s 51(xxiiiA) would support legislation authorising the
provision of "chaplaincy services" by the fourth defendant using money provided
by the
Commonwealth.
Section 116
- The
plaintiff advanced two submissions concerning s 116 of the Constitution, which
relevantly provides: "no religious test shall be required as a qualification
for any office ... under the Commonwealth."
First, the plaintiff submitted that
NSCP "chaplains" hold an "office ... under the Commonwealth" within the meaning
of s 116. The plaintiff submitted that the more closely "chaplains" complied
with Commonwealth requirements as to their qualifications, activities
and
obligations, the more they acted for the Commonwealth and under its supervision.
Secondly, the plaintiff submitted that the eligibility
criteria in the Agreement
imposed a religious test as a qualification for the offices of the "chaplains".
In relation to his second
submission, the plaintiff accepted that "this is not a
scheme which proclaims its uniquely Christian character" and that it was "a
scheme which forbids proselytising". But he argued that it was "to provide for
spiritual guidance, and by persons who are likely
to be clerics."
- In
relation to the first submission, the plaintiff drew attention to the
differences between s 44(iv) of the Constitution, s 75(v) of the Constitution
and s 116. Section 44(iv) refers to an "office of profit under the Crown",
and means a permanent officer of the executive
government[583].
The plaintiff submitted that the omission of the words "of profit" from s 116
suggests that it contemplates something less than a relationship of employment.
The plaintiff also pointed to the fact that s 75(v) refers to "officer of the
Commonwealth" while s 116 refers to an "office ... under the Commonwealth". The
plaintiff submitted that "of" indicates a person engaged or appointed by the
Commonwealth, while "under" indicates the exercise of Commonwealth supervision
or control over the office holder. The plaintiff
submitted that if his proposed
construction of s 116 were not adopted, the Commonwealth could evade s 116 by
engaging subcontractors to perform its activities and stipulating that those
subcontractors employ only adherents to a particular
religious faith. The
plaintiff contended that the Commonwealth exercised supervision or control over
the "chaplains". That is because
if the Code of Conduct were breached, the
Commonwealth could cause the "chaplain" in breach to cease providing "chaplaincy
services".
And it is because the Commonwealth had the right to conduct
monitoring activities.
- The
plaintiff's construction of s 116 must be rejected. The absence of the words
"of profit" from s 116 indicates only that s 116 is wider than s 44(iv).
Section 116 applies to offices which are not "of profit" as well as those which
are. An "office" is a position under constituted authority to
which duties are
attached[584].
That suggests that an "officer" is a person who holds an office which is in
direct relationship with the Commonwealth and to which
qualifications may attach
before particular appointments can be made or continued. The word "under" in s
116 has no significance. It does not suggest the wider meaning which the
plaintiff advocated. It simply repeats the relevant part of
Art VI of the
United States Constitution: "no religious Test shall ever be required as a
Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States."
- The
Commonwealth has no legal relationship with the "chaplains". It cannot appoint,
select, approve or dismiss them. It cannot
direct them. The services they
provide in a particular school are determined by those who run that school. The
provision of those
services is overseen by school principals.
- In
the result, the plaintiff's construction of s 116 is an unattractive one. Under
that construction, whenever the Commonwealth enters a contract under which
services are to be provided
by a party with whom it is to have no legal
relationship, under which particular standards are stipulated, and under which
reporting
obligations are created to ensure compliance with those standards,
that party would hold an office under the Commonwealth. This
would radically
expand s 75(v). The effect would be greatly to widen opportunities to commence
litigation within the original jurisdiction of this Court, without
the
possibility of statutory restriction of them. Section 75(v) is a very
beneficial provision, but not as beneficial as that.
- This
is not the occasion on which to attempt an exhaustive definition of "office ...
under the Commonwealth". It is sufficient to
say that whatever its outer
limits, the "chaplains" are beyond them.
- It
is therefore not necessary to deal with the plaintiff's other, somewhat
controversial, submission, that the eligibility criteria
impose a religious
test.
Relief
- The
questions in the Amended Special Case should be answered thus:
1(a): Yes.
1(b): No.
1(c)(i): No.
1(c)(ii): No.
1(c)(iii): No.
1(c)(iv): Yes.
1(c)(v): No.
2(a): No.
2(b): No.
3: This question does not arise.
4(a): No.
4(b): No.
5: This question does not arise.
6: The plaintiff.
- CRENNAN
J. The plaintiff is the father of four children currently enrolled at the
Darling Heights State Primary School in Queensland
("the School"). This action,
within the Court's original jurisdiction, was referred by a single Justice to
the Full Court as a special
case under r 27.08 of the High Court Rules
2004. The plaintiff challenged the validity of an agreement dated 9 November
2007 ("the Funding Agreement") between the Commonwealth
(the first defendant)
and Scripture Union Queensland ("SUQ") (the fourth defendant) for the provision
of funding for chaplaincy services
to the School under a Commonwealth initiative
entitled the National School Chaplaincy Program ("the NSCP").
- There
is no special statute under any specific head of Commonwealth legislative power
in the Constitution authorising the institution of the NSCP and spending on its
activities. Nor is there any utilisation of s 96, which permits grants of
financial assistance to the States on such terms and conditions as the
Commonwealth Parliament thinks fit.
In those circumstances, the present
litigation concerns the scope of the Commonwealth's executive power under the
Constitution, specifically s 61, to enter into and pay moneys under the
Funding Agreement.
The questions
- The
special case stated four main questions for this Court's consideration. The
first question is whether the plaintiff has standing
to challenge the validity
of the Funding Agreement, the Commonwealth's drawing of moneys from the
Consolidated Revenue Fund, or the
making of payments under the Funding
Agreement.
- The
second and principal question is whether the Funding Agreement is invalid
because it is beyond the executive power of the Commonwealth
under s 61 of
the Constitution (construed either alone or in conjunction with
s 51(xxiiiA) or s 51(xx)) or prohibited by s 116 of the
Constitution.
- The
third question is whether the drawing of moneys from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund for the purpose of making payments under the
Funding Agreement is
authorised by relevant Commonwealth appropriation legislation. A sub-issue
related to this question is whether
the payments made to SUQ under the Funding
Agreement were for an activity within "the ordinary annual services of the
Government"
pursuant to ss 53 and 54 of the Constitution.
- The
fourth question is whether the making of payments by the Commonwealth to SUQ
under the Funding Agreement is constitutionally
invalid on either of the bases
described above. The fifth question concerns relief and the sixth question
relates to costs.
- All
States intervened, and the Court received submissions from the Churches'
Commission on Education Incorporated as amicus curiae.
- In
the reasons which follow it is concluded that the executive power of the
Commonwealth in s 61 of the Constitution does not authorise the expenditure
of funds appropriated in the manner described below on the activities of the
NSCP. It is further
concluded that s 116 of the Constitution does not
operate to invalidate the NSCP. The conclusions reached in these reasons do not
involve any assessment of the merits or
wisdom of the NSCP. In accordance with
these conclusions, I agree with the answers to the questions proposed in the
reasons of Gummow
and Bell JJ.
The NSCP
- The
Prime Minister announced the NSCP as a new initiative of the Australian
Government on 29 October 2006. Under the NSCP the Australian
Government would
commit up to $30 million each year for three years to provide chaplaincy
services in Australian schools. The funding
per school under the program was to
be capped at $20,000 per year. In 2007, total funding for the program was
increased to $165
million over three years. In 2009, the Prime Minister
announced an extension of the NSCP until December 2011, guaranteeing "a total
additional investment of $42 million over the 2010 and 2011 school years."
- Because
the NSCP was not initiated under a special statute of the Commonwealth
Parliament, it is necessary to consider constituent
documents prepared by the
Commonwealth Executive in order to understand the nature and purposes of the
NSCP.
The Guidelines
- The
NSCP is administered by the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations
("DEEWR")[585]
in accordance with guidelines which were initially issued in December 2006 ("the
2006 Guidelines") and subsequently replaced by updated
versions issued on
19 January 2007 ("the 2007 Updated Guidelines"), 1 July 2008 ("the
2008 Updated Guidelines") and 16 February 2010
("the 2010 Updated
Guidelines"). The 2006 Guidelines and the 2007, 2008 and 2010 Updated
Guidelines each state that the NSCP is
a voluntary program which supports
schools and their communities that wish to establish school chaplaincy services
or to enhance
existing chaplaincy services.
- To
receive funding under the NSCP, schools and their communities must "engage a
school chaplain and demonstrate how the services
provided by the school chaplain
achieve the outcomes required by the [NSCP]." The 2008 and 2010 Updated
Guidelines provide that
these services may alternatively be provided by a
"secular Pastoral Care Worker".
- A
"school chaplain" is defined in the various guidelines as:
"a person who is recognised:
. by the local school, its community and the appropriate governing authority as
having the skills and experience to deliver school
chaplaincy services to the
school and its community; and
. through formal ordination, commissioning, recognised qualifications or
endorsement by a recognised or accepted religious institution
or a
state/territory government approved chaplaincy
service."
- In
the 2008 and 2010 Updated Guidelines, a "secular Pastoral Care Worker" is
defined in the same way as a school chaplain, with the
exception that the second
criterion quoted above is omitted and the words "pastoral care services" are
substituted for the words
"school chaplaincy services" in the first
criterion.
- The
2006 Guidelines and the 2007, 2008 and 2010 Updated Guidelines describe the
tasks which school chaplains may perform in their
respective schools and
communities in delivering services under the NSCP. These tasks can include:
"assisting school counsellors and staff in the delivery of student welfare
services; supporting students to explore their spirituality;
providing guidance
about spiritual, values and ethical matters; and facilitating access to the
helping agencies in the community,
both religious-based and
secular."
- School
chaplains must abide by the NSCP Code of Conduct ("the Code of Conduct") in the
course of providing services under the program.
- To
receive funding under the NSCP, a school must nominate an organisation which
will enter into a funding agreement with the Commonwealth.
Eligible
organisations include certain legal entities nominated as "project sponsors" by
schools to manage the chaplaincy services
on their behalf.
- The
funding for a school is then covered by a separate funding agreement. Schools
may use these funds only "for expenditure that
directly relates to the provision
of chaplaincy services."
- Funding
is "provided on an annual basis subject to the provision of appropriate project
performance reporting", and "[f]ailure to
comply with reporting processes
outlined in the funding agreement will be considered a breach of the funding
agreement".
The Funding Agreement
- On
or about 4 April 2007, the School applied for funding under the NSCP to
expand an existing chaplaincy program regulated under
procedural policies made
by the Queensland Parliament. The existing program had commenced at the School
after consultation with
staff, students and parents in 1998, and was, at the
time of the application to the NSCP, a program which supported the provision
of
chaplaincy services at the School for an equivalent of two school days per week.
In its application, the School identified SUQ
as the project sponsor with which
the Commonwealth would enter into a funding agreement. DEST made an offer of
funding to the School
under the NSCP on or about 7 July 2007, and on or
about 25 July 2007 the School's Principal signed a declaration that the
School
intended to proceed with the NSCP-funded chaplaincy project. Ultimately,
this had the effect that the School's chaplaincy services
were enlarged to three
school days per week, two of those three days being funded by the Commonwealth
Government.
- On
9 November 2007, DEST (on behalf of the Commonwealth) entered into the
Funding Agreement with SUQ for the provision of funding
under the NSCP. The
term of the Funding Agreement was three years from the date of its execution.
By written variations made on
or about 12 October 2008 and 13 May
2010, the parties altered the commencement date of the Funding Agreement to
8 October 2007 and
extended its term to 31 December 2011. Under the
Funding Agreement, SUQ agreed, among other things, to provide the chaplaincy
services
described in the School's NSCP application, and the Commonwealth agreed
to provide funding in accordance with the project payment
schedule. The funding
to be provided under the original term of the Funding Agreement was $66,000
inclusive of GST in three equal
instalments upon the rendering of valid tax
invoices by SUQ. Pursuant to the contractual variation made on or about
13 May 2010,
the parties agreed for the Commonwealth to make a fourth
payment of $27,063.01 inclusive of GST, bringing the total NSCP funding
in
respect of the School to $93,063.01.
- NSCP-funded
chaplaincy services commenced at the School on 8 October 2007 and continued
at the date of the hearing. Each chaplain
provided to the School by SUQ in
accordance with the Funding Agreement signed a document in substantially the
same form as the Code
of Conduct, and delivered the chaplaincy services
described in the School's NSCP application. SUQ issued tax invoices to the
Commonwealth
in respect of each instalment payable under the Funding Agreement
as varied, and the Commonwealth duly paid the respective instalments
to SUQ on
or about 14 November 2007, 15 December 2008, 2 December 2009 and
11 October 2010.
Appropriations in respect of the NSCP
- Whilst
practice in the Commonwealth Parliament in relation to appropriations has varied
over time, the contemporary practice is to
enact appropriation statutes falling
into one of two categories. An Act in the first category is described in its
long title as
legislation appropriating money "for the ordinary annual services
of the Government, and for related purposes", and is given an odd
number (for
example, "Appropriation Act (No 1)"). An Act in the second category is
described as legislation appropriating money
"for certain expenditure, and for
related purposes", and is given an even number (for example, "Appropriation Act
(No 2)"). This
practice originated in an arrangement between the Houses of
Parliament in May 1965, which has become known as the "Compact of 1965",
and
which is described more fully in Combet v The
Commonwealth[586].
There it was further
said[587]:
"[T]he Senate resolved, on 17 February 1977, to reaffirm that appropriations for
(among other things) 'new policies not previously
authorised by special
legislation' were not appropriations for the ordinary annual services of the
Government[588]."
- The
reason for the practice lies in ss 53 and 54 of the Constitution. Section
53 provides, among other things, that proposed laws "appropriating revenue or
moneys, or imposing taxation" are not to originate in
the Senate and may not be
amended by the Senate. Section 54 provides that a proposed law which
"appropriates ... moneys for the ordinary annual services of the Government"
must deal only with
such appropriation. It should also be noted that s 56
requires that a proposed appropriation Bill must not be passed unless "the
purpose of the appropriation has in the same session been
recommended by message
of the Governor-General to the House in which the proposal originated."
- It
is recognised by the parties that there is no even-numbered appropriation Act
making specific appropriation for the expenditure
of moneys out of the
Consolidated Revenue Fund for the purposes of the NSCP. Rather, funds directed
towards the NSCP appear always
to have been appropriated from the Consolidated
Revenue Fund "for the ordinary annual services of the Government" pursuant to
odd-numbered
appropriation Acts commencing with the Appropriation Act (No 3)
2006-2007 (Cth).
Standing of the plaintiff
- I
agree with the reasons of Gummow and Bell JJ in respect of the issue of
standing.
Section 116 of the Constitution
- The
plaintiff's contention that the NSCP contravened s 116 of the Constitution
by imposing a religious test as a qualification for office under the
Commonwealth must be rejected for the reasons given by Gummow
and Bell JJ.
Section 61 of the Constitution
- The
parties' submissions were refined over the course of oral argument to define
more precisely the issues and areas of dispute between
the plaintiff and the
Commonwealth defendants and SUQ.
- It
was accepted that s 81 of the Constitution, which provides for the
establishment of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund[589],
and s 83, which provides for appropriation by
Parliament[590],
are not capable of conferring a "substantive spending
power"[591].
- The
plaintiff also accepted that success on his constitutional challenge to the
entry into and payment of moneys under the Funding
Agreement would render it
unnecessary for the Court to deal with all of his arguments concerning the
appropriations.
- Reduced
to essentials, the question asked in this litigation is whether the Commonwealth
Executive had the power to enter into and
pay moneys under the Funding Agreement
in the absence of special legislation under any of the heads of legislative
power in s 51, those nominated being s 51(xxiiiA) and s 51(xx),
or legislation in respect of matters incidental to the execution of the NSCP
under s 51(xxxix). The main question for determination is whether
s 61 of the Constitution supported the Executive contracting and spending
in respect of the NSCP in the absence of legislative support other than the
relevant
appropriation Acts.
- The
"executive power" of the Commonwealth as described in s 61 "extends to the
execution and maintenance of this Constitution, and of the laws of the
Commonwealth."
- A
number of propositions drawn from the course of authority in respect of the
scope of Commonwealth executive power were not in contest
and formed the
backdrop to submissions.
- First,
it was accepted that, despite the establishment of some limits, s 61 is not
amenable to exhaustive definition in any single
case[592].
- Secondly,
while a typical source of executive power is a special statute (of which there
were none here), it was accepted that there
are circumstances in which executive
power can be exercised lawfully without statutory authority. Such circumstances
include the
exercise of prerogative powers accorded to the Crown at common law
(now reposed in the Commonwealth Executive
alone[593]),
such as the power to enter a treaty or wage war. These are not relevant here.
They also include the powers which derive from
the capacities of the
Commonwealth as a juristic person, such as the capacities to enter a contract
and to spend money when exercised
in the ordinary course of administering a
recognised part of the Commonwealth
government[594].
- Thirdly,
it was recognised that s 61 is the source of the Commonwealth Executive's
capacity "to engage in enterprises and activities peculiarly adapted to the
government
of a nation ... which cannot otherwise be carried on for the benefit
of the
nation"[595],
although it may not necessarily so act in aid of any subject which the
Executive regards as being of national concern and
interest[596].
Submissions
- In
the light of those established propositions, the plaintiff first contended that
the entry into and payment of moneys under the
Funding Agreement was not
authorised as an enterprise or activity "peculiarly adapted to the government of
a nation ... which cannot
otherwise be carried on for the benefit of the
nation"[597]
– a recognised example of which is a need to deal with a national
emergency[598],
reflecting the Commonwealth's "inherent right of
self-protection"[599].
- Secondly,
the plaintiff contended that the Commonwealth Executive's entry into and making
of payments under the Funding Agreement
could not be described as spending on
"the ordinary annual services of the Government" and therefore could not be
treated as authorised
under that rubric. For the purposes of this argument, the
plaintiff drew a distinction between, on the one hand, the Commonwealth
Executive's power to enter into and make payments under contracts for "the
ordinary annual services of the Government" and, on the
other, entering
contracts and spending as a means of carrying out or implementing a new policy.
The NSCP, as at its instigation,
was said to fall into the latter category.
Although the plaintiff did not challenge the validity of the initial
appropriation, the
plaintiff contended that the NSCP at that point should have
been subject to greater scrutiny by Parliament by reason of Parliament's
control
of expenditure. This led to the next contention that, generally, in the absence
of a situation calling for the exercise
of prerogative power, or a national
emergency[600],
or the need for some unique national
enterprise[601],
spending associated with a new policy requires express authorisation by
Parliament beyond an appropriation – both because
of the principles of
responsible government and the separation of powers. It was posited that, if
spending on a new policy is represented
as spending on "the ordinary annual
services of the Government", the Executive would not be accountable to
Parliament in respect
of that policy, as required by the principles of
responsible government, because the Senate would effectively be bypassed by
reason
of ss 53 and 54 of the Constitution. The thrust of these
submissions was that spending on the activities of the NSCP amounted to the
Executive governing without parliamentary
authorisation, or authorisation
otherwise sourced in the Constitution.
- The
Commonwealth defendants' primary contention was that the Commonwealth
Executive's power to spend is sourced in the Commonwealth's
legal capacity as a
juristic person to spend moneys lawfully appropriated to be spent, and to enter
into contracts ("the wider submission").
In Davis, preferring
Blackstone[602]
to
Dicey[603],
Brennan J distinguished between the Crown's unique governmental prerogative
rights and powers once enjoyed by "the King ... alone"
and the Crown's ordinary
rights and powers in its private capacity, described by his Honour as "mere
capacities", which were no different
from the capacities of ordinary persons to
enter into contracts or to spend
money[604].
This restrained approach to the prerogative is consistent with Australia's legal
independence from Britain, the constraints of
federalism and the
paramountcy[605]
of the Commonwealth Parliament, and respect under our democratic system of
government for the common law rights of individuals.
- It
was submitted by the Commonwealth defendants that, whilst these capacities were
the same as the capacities of a natural person,
they were sourced in the
character and status of the Commonwealth as a polity, which rendered
constitutional spending by the Commonwealth
Executive for any purpose, including
purposes beyond the specific heads of legislative power in s 51. Central
to this argument was the proposition that the Commonwealth could no more be
constrained than a non-governmental juristic
person could be if an exercise of
its capacities did not unlawfully intrude on the rights of others. The exercise
by the Commonwealth
of its capacities to contract and to spend was said to be
limited only by the need for an appropriation and any constraints arising
out of
the law, the principles of responsible government and the federalist
distribution of executive power between the Commonwealth
and the States.
- As
to the plaintiff's reliance on the principles of responsible government and the
detail of the initial appropriation, it was contended
that, whilst there is
general parliamentary adherence to the broad concept that a new policy is not to
be included in odd-numbered
appropriation legislation, "a new activity within an
existing outcome is not a new policy and can be included in Acts No 1 and 3
for
the ordinary annual services of government." That submission was explained by
reference to a DEEWR Budget Statement tabled in
the Senate and the House of
Representatives relevant to the period 2010-2011 in which the relevant outcome
set out was "Improved
learning and literacy, numeracy and educational attainment
for school students, through funding for quality teaching and learning
environments, workplace learning and career advice." The NSCP was listed as an
"administered item" in respect of that outcome.
- Alternatively,
in reliance on the AAP
Case[606],
the Commonwealth defendants contended that the NSCP and the entry into and
payment of moneys under the Funding Agreement could have been authorised
by Parliament as the subject-matter of a grant of statutory authority under
ss 51, 52 and 122 of the Constitution – which, it was said,
constituted sufficient authorisation of those actions ("the narrower
submission").
- In
a further alternative, the Commonwealth defendants argued that spending under
the Funding Agreement was authorised by s 44 of the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth).
- By
reference to
Bardolph[607],
the plaintiff accepted that the Commonwealth Executive does not need statutory
authority to enter into contracts and to spend money
when the contracts concern
"the ordinary annual services of the Government". An aspect of the dispute was
therefore whether the
Funding Agreement was such a contract and, if it were not,
whether spending pursuant to it required statutory authority, there being
no
special statute and no reliance on s 96.
- SUQ
essentially supported the submissions of the Commonwealth defendants. In
particular, it contended that Commonwealth executive
power extended to
functions, capacities and discretions appropriate to be undertaken on behalf of
a national government as a polity
where such activities were not subject to any
lawful or constitutional limitations; it was contended by SUQ that the NSCP
funding
met this description.
- The
Commonwealth defendants' wider submission, based on the common law freedom to
contract enjoyed by the Commonwealth, must be assessed
in the light of: the
text and structure of the Constitution as it bears on the Executive's powers to
protect or benefit the body politic or nation of Australia; the distribution of
executive
powers between the Commonwealth and the States as
polities[608];
financial relations between the Commonwealth and States; and relations between
the Commonwealth Parliament and the Commonwealth
Executive affecting spending,
which include the Executive's obligations of accountability to Parliament.
- In
the reasons which follow, each of these matters will be considered. Together,
they establish the equipoise between executive
power under s 61 and the
powers of Parliament, which equipoise determines the boundaries of s 61.
The reasons will then deal with the Commonwealth defendants' first alternative,
the narrower submission, before finally addressing
the further alternative
submission in relation to s 44 of the Financial Management and
Accountability Act 1997 (Cth).
The nation – the distribution of powers – section
96
- The
Queensland Government has regulated chaplaincy services in the State of
Queensland since 1998, and it initiated chaplaincy/pastoral
care funding
arrangements in July 2007. The initial (and subsequent) guidelines extracted
above contemplated that the NSCP could
operate to enhance "existing chaplaincy
services", which (as explained earlier) is what occurred under the Funding
Agreement.
- From
that viewpoint alone, the present facts are readily distinguishable from those
in Davis, which concerned the scope of s 61 in relation to executive
acts the object of which was the commemoration of the Bicentenary throughout
Australia. The facts here do not lend themselves to any characterisation of the
NSCP as an enterprise or activity "peculiarly adapted
to the government of a
nation ... which cannot otherwise be carried on for the benefit of the
nation."[609]
- The
facts here are also readily distinguishable from Pape. There, an
exercise of executive power was upheld in the circumstances that the agreed
statement of facts referred to a global financial
crisis giving rise to a
national
emergency[610]
most easily dealt with by the Commonwealth Executive (and not those of the
States), and legislation incidental to the execution of
power under s 61
had been passed.
- It
was acknowledged in the joint majority judgment in Pape that, even where
an exercise of executive power is authorised by reference to the understanding
that s 61 gives the Commonwealth
government the power to protect the body
politic or nation of Australia (as was found in that
case[611]),
it still remains necessary to consider the scope of the power vis-à-vis
the
States[612]:
"it is only by some constraint having its source in the position of the
Executive Governments of the States that the government of
the Commonwealth is
denied the power, after appropriation by the Parliament, of expenditure of
moneys raised by taxation imposed
by the Parliament."
- Chapter
IV of the Constitution includes provisions governing the financial relations
between the Commonwealth and the States. Relevantly, s 96 allows the
Commonwealth Parliament to make grants to the States on such terms and
conditions as it thinks fit. It was noted by Barwick
CJ in the AAP Case
that s 96 has allowed the Commonwealth to intrude in point of policy into
areas outside the Commonwealth's legislative competence, although
s 96
grants which are subject to conditions wear a consensual
aspect[613].
His Honour went on to observe that, leaving s 96 apart, the Commonwealth
cannot, by executive act, intrude into an area of responsibility left by the
Constitution to the
States[614].
In a similar vein, Mason J stated that the presence of s 96 in the
Constitution confirms that Commonwealth executive power is not unlimited and
"there is a very large area of activity which lies outside the executive
power
of the Commonwealth but which may become the subject of conditions attached to
grants under
s 96."[615]
- The
Commonwealth makes grants of financial assistance to States under the Schools
Assistance Act 2008
(Cth)[616].
The financial assistance is then distributed to schools, the governing
authorities of which have entered into funding agreements
with the Commonwealth
for defraying "recurrent expenditures". Financial assistance which may be paid
to a State under the Schools Assistance Act 2008 (Cth) is not limited to
recurrent
expenditure[617],
but
also includes capital
expenditure[618]
and targeted
expenditure[619].
Targeted expenditure is available, among other things, for "Literacy, numeracy
and special learning
needs"[620].
The similarity between "targeted expenditure" and the "outcome" relevant to the
NSCP which is extracted above is obvious.
- There
was nothing in the facts here amounting to a circumstance in which the nation
needed protection, or invoking Commonwealth executive
powers otherwise
peculiarly referable to the government of Australia as a nation, such that the
Commonwealth Executive was, for this
or any other identifiable reason, the arm
of government exclusively, best, or uniquely authorised to act in respect of the
NSCP.
There was nothing to explain or justify the absence of special
legislation or any involvement by Parliament, beyond the appropriation
Acts, or
the bypassing of s 96.
- Further,
contrary to the submissions of SUQ, the fact that an initiative, enterprise or
activity can be "conveniently formulated
and administered by the national
government"[621],
or that it ostensibly does not interfere with State powers, is not sufficient to
render it one of "truly national
endeavour"[622]
or "pre-eminently the business and the concern of the Commonwealth as the
national
government"[623].
- In
the Tasmanian Dam Case, Deane J
said[624]:
"Even in fields which are under active State legislative and executive control,
Commonwealth legislative or executive action may
involve no competition with
State authority".
- His
Honour was there referring to executive and legislative power shared between the
Commonwealth and the States rather than setting
out a sufficient condition for
characterising an initiative as a national endeavour, enterprise or activity
peculiarly adapted to
the government of the nation. Further, there was no issue
of "the sufficiency of the powers of the States to engage
effectively"[625]
in the provision of chaplaincy services.
- Whilst
there are recognised circumstances in which the Commonwealth's capacities to
contract and to spend can be engaged lawfully
in actions extending to "the
execution and maintenance of this Constitution" without statutory authority, the
matters dealt with above indicate that the Executive's actions in entering the
Funding Agreement
and making payments to SUQ did not fall within this limb of
s 61.
Relations between the Parliament and the Executive affecting
spending
- It
has often been recognised that s 61 and, more generally, Ch II of the
Constitution were shaped by the institution of responsible government and the
exercise of executive power under the Westminster system of Britain,
as at the
date of
Federation[626].
Responsible government was seen then as a "government under which the Executive
is directly responsible to – nay, is almost
the creature of – the
Legislature."[627]
- In
Britain, relations between the Executive and Parliament altered – and the
principles of responsible government particularly
evolved – with the
development of wider representation after the First Reform
Act[628].
Earlier constitutional struggles between Parliament and the Sovereign had
resulted in Parliament having exclusive control over taxation
and supply. The
principles of responsible government were readily understood in Australia at the
date of
Federation[629]
because of their appearance in the self-governing colonial constitutions
described in Rowe v Electoral
Commissioner[630].
As explained in Egan v
Willis[631],
responsible government was traditionally considered "to encompass 'the means by
which Parliament brings the Executive to account'
so that 'the Executive's
primary responsibility in its prosecution of government is owed to
Parliament'"[632].
That accountability came to be expressed in terms of the need for the Executive
to enjoy the confidence of the House of Parliament
dealing with finance, as the
arm of government most immediately representing, and therefore responsible to,
the people (that is,
the
electors)[633].
It was also expressed in the notion that Ministers are liable to the scrutiny of
the chamber of which they are members, both for
their conduct and for that of
their departments.
- Prior
to Federation, it was appreciated that the sharing of political power was an
important mechanism for avoiding arbitrary government
and thereby maintaining
civil order. That appreciation underpinned the principle of responsible
government[634]
and the idea that a democratic representative assembly would give qualified
persons a "stake" in
government[635],
both of which are sourced in the constitutional history of Britain and Australia
in the 19th century. The same appreciation also
underpinned the doctrine of the
separation of
powers[636],
sourced in the constitutional history of America in the 18th century.
- The
relationship between Ch I and Ch II of the Constitution, between the Parliament
and the Executive, between s 1 and s 61, between representative and
responsible government, can be discerned in numerous constitutional
requirements. For the purposes of
the present action, relevant requirements in
Ch I include the requirement that there be a yearly session of Parliament
(s 6), that both Houses of Parliament be democratically elected (ss 7
and 24), that Parliament makes laws (s 51), including in respect of
taxation (s 51(ii)), and that appropriation from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund be undertaken as required by ss 53, 54 and 56, described above.
- Chapter
II of the Constitution (ss 61-70) deals with "The Executive Government".
As well as s 61, Ch II contains provision for a Federal Executive
Council to advise the Governor-General (s 62). Further, Ministers
administering "departments of State of the Commonwealth" cannot hold office for
longer than three months without
being or becoming a member of one of the Houses
of Parliament (s 64), thus ensuring their accountability to Parliament.
Section 67 governs the appointment of civil servants, who are officers of the
Executive[637].
- Section 83,
in Ch IV, secures Parliament's control over supply.
- Section
96, dealing with financial relations between the Commonwealth and the States,
has been referred to already and s 97 imposes audit requirements.
- Accountability
of the Executive arises not only from the requirements under the Constitution
affecting the Executive mentioned above, but also from various conventions of
Parliament, the established mechanisms of parliamentary
debate and question
time, and the requirement that members of the Executive provide information to
Select Committees of both Houses
of Parliament. Leaving aside appropriation
legislation, Bills are conventionally introduced to Parliament, and their
purposes explained,
by the Minister responsible for their initiation in the
House of which the Minister is a member, or by a delegate in the House of
which
the Minister is not a member. They are then the subject of parliamentary
scrutiny and debate. The ultimate passage of a Bill
into law may involve a
number of compromises along the way, reflected in amendments which secure the
Bill's final
acceptance[638].
Parliament's control over expenditure is effected through the legislative
process.
- The
practical workings of a system of government which is both responsible and
democratically representative are not static, and
have given rise to a more
general and flexible sense of "responsible government" to indicate a government
which is responsive to
public opinion and answerable to the
electorate[639].
The mechanisms and layers of accountability described above permit the
ventilation, accommodation, and effective authorisation of
political decisions.
The notion of a government's mandate to pass laws and to spend money rests both
on democratic representative
government and on the relationship between
Parliament and the Executive, involving, as it does, both scrutiny and
responsibility.
Whilst the Executive has the power to initiate new policy and
to implement such policy when authorised to do so, either by Parliament
or
otherwise under the Constitution, Parliament has the power to scrutinise and
authorise such policy (if it is not otherwise authorised by the Constitution),
and the exclusive power to grant supply in respect of it and control
expenditure. The principles of accountability of the Executive
to Parliament
and Parliament's control over supply and expenditure operate inevitably to
constrain the Commonwealth's capacities
to contract and to spend. Such
principles do not constrain the common law freedom to contract and to spend
enjoyed by non-governmental
juristic persons.
- Although
the practice of responsible government varies over time, most particularly as
the party system results in close identification
of Parliament and the
Executive[640],
the scope of s 61 to encompass any expenditure by the Commonwealth
Executive is limited by the system of government under the Constitution.
- Even
apart from the limits imposed by the principles of responsible and
democratically representative government, the Commonwealth's
capacities to
contract and to spend are not precisely analogous to those of a natural person
or any non-governmental juristic person.
- First,
the Consolidated Revenue Fund is distinguishable from funds available to
non-governmental juristic persons, consisting as
it does of revenues and moneys
raised from the public, Parliament holding exclusive powers to raise taxes and
grant supply.
- Secondly,
the Commonwealth's capacities to contract and to spend are circumscribed by
s 81, in the sense that moneys appropriated must be for some governmental
purpose[641],
a circumstance which is distinct from the rights and duties created by contracts
entered into by the voluntary acts of private parties.
- Thirdly,
unlike the capacities of a non-governmental juristic entity to contract and to
spend, the Commonwealth's capacities to do
so are capable of being utilised to
regulate activity in the community in the course of implementing government
policy. This consideration
highlights the importance of the mechanisms for
responsible government designed to protect the community from arbitrary
government
action. This is particularly so as only Parliament has the power to
institute coercive measures and attach penal consequences in
respect of the
regulation of
activity[642],
the power to convict and impose punishment lies entirely within judicial
power[643],
and the Executive has no power to dispense with obedience to the
law[644].
- Fourthly,
as the plaintiff, supported by Western Australia, contended, if the
Commonwealth's capacities to contract and to spend
generally permitted the
Commonwealth Executive to intrude into areas of responsibility within the
legislative and executive competence
of the States in the absence of statutory
authority other than appropriation Acts, access to s 109 of the
Constitution may be impeded. For example, in the specific circumstances of the
NSCP, such a wide view of the scope of s 61 could hypothetically lead to
the result that citizens caught by any inconsistency between a State
legislature's regulation of chaplaincy
services and the Commonwealth Executive's
acts in respect of the NSCP would be unable to avail themselves of the
constitutional protection
in s 109 against inconsistent legislation.
- Fifthly,
the absence in the Constitution of executive immunity, explained in The
Commonwealth v
Mewett[645],
does not ameliorate the differences between the Commonwealth's capacities and
those of a non-governmental juristic person which
have been identified
above.
- These
considerations support the rejection of the submission that an exercise of the
Commonwealth's capacities to contract and to
spend would never require statutory
authority, or would always, in the absence of statutory authority, fall within
the scope of s 61.
- It
remains important to note the position of the Commonwealth Executive in respect
of spending on the ordinary annual services of
government. In advancing the
proposition that the Commonwealth's capacities to contract and to spend
authorised the Commonwealth
Executive's actions in respect of the NSCP, the
Commonwealth defendants relied on Bardolph and the proposition that the
NSCP, at its institution, was part of "the ordinary annual services of the
Government".
- Assent
to the Appropriation Act (No 3) 2006-2007 (Cth) was given on
10 April 2007, and the Funding Agreement was entered into on 9 November
2007.
- In
dealing with the executive power of the New South Wales Government to enter a
contract for advertisements relating to the Tourist
Bureau of New South Wales in
Bardolph, Rich J
said[646]:
"Apart from the question whether parliamentary appropriation of moneys is a
prerequisite of the Crown's liability to pay under a
contract made by it, the
Crown has a power independent of statute to make such contracts for the public
service as are incidental to the ordinary and well-recognized functions of
Government." (emphasis added)
- Starke
J
said[647]:
"An advertising branch in the Premier's Department had been established
in New South Wales as one of the ordinary activities and functions of its
Government ... A contract made in these circumstances is a Government
contract, and in my opinion binds the Crown." (emphasis
added)
- Dixon J
said that the contract in question "concerned a recognized and regular activity
of Government in New South
Wales"[648],
and went on to say that no statutory authorisation was required for the
Executive "to make a contract in the ordinary course of administering a
recognized part of the government of the
State"[649]
(emphasis added). None of these statements supports a general proposition that
special or other legislation is never necessary to authorise the entry
into a contract or the incurring of expenditure by the Executive.
- The
statements made are apt for application to the constitutional phrase "the
ordinary annual services of the Government" occurring
in ss 53 and 54 of
the Constitution.
- As
confirmed in Pape, statutory authority for executive action (including
spending) is distinct conceptually from the appropriation of funds from the
Consolidated Revenue Fund for a particular purpose. It is possible for an Act
to do both where it amounts to a special appropriation
Act and provides some
detail about the policy being authorised. In Pape, s 3 of the
Tax Bonus for Working Australians Act (No 2) 2009 (Cth), read in
conjunction with s 16(1) of the Taxation Administration Act 1953
(Cth), provided statutory authority for payment of the Tax Bonus and also
effected an appropriation for the purposes of ss 81 and
83[650].
Similarly, the Appropriation (HIH Assistance) Act 2001 (Cth) made a
special appropriation for the provision of financial assistance to defined "HIH
eligible
persons"[651].
- The
NSCP has not been subject to the parliamentary processes of scrutiny and debate
which would have applied to special legislation,
a special appropriation Act,
legislation incidental to an exercise of power under s 61 or legislation
referable to Parliament's powers
under s 96. Further, whatever the
position in subsequent years, at the time of entry into the Funding Agreement,
the NSCP was not
(by reason of an appropriation in the previous year) a
recognised part of Commonwealth government administration in the sense explained
in Bardolph. Insofar as the Appropriation Act (No 3)
2006-2007 (Cth) covered appropriations for expenditure on the NSCP, for
which no moneys had been appropriated in any previous year, the Senate
had no
power to amend that Act. For those reasons, the facts in the present case are
distinguishable from those considered in Bardolph.
- These
considerations highlight the need to characterise any particular act of
contracting and spending by the Commonwealth Executive
so as to determine
whether or not it is authorised by s 61.
- The
abovementioned limits on the Commonwealth Executive's capacities to contract and
to spend demonstrate that, despite recognised
exceptions, expenditure by the
Commonwealth Executive will often require statutory authority beyond
appropriation Acts. The Commonwealth
Executive's entry into the Funding
Agreement and the making of payments to SUQ could not be characterised as
falling within any of
the recognised exceptions and did not fall within the
scope of s 61. For these reasons, the Commonwealth defendants' wider
submission
must be rejected.
Sections 51, 52 and 122 of the Constitution
- The
Commonwealth defendants' first alternative contention (the narrower submission)
was that the NSCP (and the Executive's entry
into the Funding Agreement and
associated spending) could have been authorised by Parliament under either
s 51(xxiiiA) or s 51(xx) of the Constitution, and that this was sufficient
authorisation for the Executive's entry into the Funding Agreement and spending
on NSCP activities.
In the earlier stages of argument all parties accepted the
proposition that the executive power of the Commonwealth at least covered
areas
of responsibility in respect of which the Commonwealth Parliament could
legislate under ss 51, 52 or 122 of the Constitution. This involved no
denial of prerogative powers or implied legislative power to protect the
nation[652]
or, as articulated in the AAP
Case[653],
Davis[654]
and
Pape[655],
implied legislative and executive powers to act on behalf of the nation in
certain circumstances.
- Interveners
addressed this point with some differences of emphasis. For example, in
relation to s 51(xxiiiA) it was contended by the plaintiff, Victoria and
Western Australia that the NSCP provided benefits beyond the class of students
and
did not provide directly measurable – that is, material –
benefits to students. In relation to s 51(xx) it was contended by the
plaintiff, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and
Tasmania that SUQ was not a
corporation for constitutional purposes and the
plaintiff further submitted that, in any event, the NSCP guidelines, including
those
referred to above, were indifferent as to whether the providers of
chaplaincy services were corporations.
- On
the approach to this issue taken in these reasons, it is unnecessary to enter
into any detailed consideration of such arguments.
It is sufficient for the
purposes of dealing with the submission to assume that the Commonwealth
Parliament could pass valid Commonwealth
legislation to support the NSCP and to
then ask whether that possibility is sufficient authorisation for the
Commonwealth Executive
to institute the NSCP, to enter the Funding Agreement and
to spend for NSCP purposes.
- In
the AAP Case, the validity of a line item in an appropriation Act was in
issue on the basis that it bypassed the federal distribution of powers.
The
case was not concerned with an exercise of prerogative power, or the
circumstances in which the Commonwealth Executive may act
without statutory
authority. Furthermore, both the parties and the Court made assumptions about
ss 81 and 83, since dispelled by
Pape.
- After
posing a question as to what was covered by the expression "the purposes of the
Commonwealth" in s 81 and referring to "powers
which are inherent in the
fact of nationhood and of international
personality"[656],
Barwick CJ said: "[w]ith exceptions that are not relevant ... the
executive may only do that which has been or could be the subject
of valid
legislation."[657]
Bearing in mind that prerogative powers were not being discussed, Gibbs J
considered that the wording of s 61 limits the power of
the Executive,
which he said "cannot act in respect of a matter which falls entirely outside
the legislative competence of the
Commonwealth."[658]
Mason J recognised that Commonwealth executive power was not unlimited and
discerned the responsibilities allocated to the Commonwealth
under the
Constitution by reference to the "distribution of legislative powers ...
effected by the Constitution itself and the character and
status of the
Commonwealth as a national
government."[659]
Jacobs J recognised that not every exercise of power by the Commonwealth
Executive requires special legislation, which recognition
was closely tied to
noting the characteristics of prerogative
powers[660].
- These
statements were directed to the Constitution's allocation of areas of
responsibility and competence as between the Commonwealth
and the States. For
the purposes of such a consideration, the specific heads of legislative power
under s 51 (subject to obvious exceptions) and any implied legislative
power are an obvious starting point. Taken in that context, and even
allowing
for an approach to s 81 no longer favoured, the statements do not support the
proposition that, provided an initiative, policy or activity could be the
subject
of valid Commonwealth legislation, the Commonwealth Executive is, for
that reason, authorised to contract and spend in respect of
such an initiative,
policy or activity without statutory authority.
- The
Commonwealth defendants' narrower submission was treated as deriving, at least
in part, from opinions as to the wide scope of
Commonwealth executive power
given by Alfred Deakin in his capacity as Attorney-General on 12 November 1902
in relation to the Vondel
incident[661]
and by Sir Robert Garran giving evidence before the 1929 Royal Commission on the
Constitution[662].
- The
conception of s 81 which underpinned Sir Robert Garran's view that the
Executive's power of spending is concomitant with the Commonwealth's taxation
power is no longer
favoured[663].
Alfred Deakin's opinion that the content of the executive power of the
Commonwealth extends at least to the legislative powers of
Parliament can be
discerned from relevant extracts set out in
Pape[664].
Opinions about the synergy between executive power and legislative powers
expressed in terms which are general, absolute or otherwise
imperfect should not
be taken to imply that expenditure by the Executive which does not fall within
the second limb of s 61 is nevertheless within the scope of s 61 provided
it is possible to identify special legislation which might be, but was not,
passed. Different considerations might arise
when enabling legislation is
subsequently passed.
- In
oral argument, examples were also given of circumstances in which the
Commonwealth was said to have acted on the basis that it
may engage in executive
activities involving contracting and spending without the need for any statutory
authority. These included
a reference to Davis and references to the
Commonwealth Executive's conduct of a shipping service in interstate and
overseas trade between 1916 and 1923.
In Davis, although the
Bicentennial Authority was incorporated prior to the enactment of enabling
legislation[665],
the incorporation and the enactment of enabling legislation were two steps in
execution of the same plan: the incorporation envisaged
the legislation, as
evidenced by cl 3 of the memorandum of association of the
Authority[666].
As to the shipping service referred to, at least one commentator has essayed the
view that the activity fell within the same principle
as that which applied in
Bardolph[667].
- If
the fact that the Parliament could pass valid Commonwealth legislation
were sufficient authorisation for any expenditure by the Commonwealth Executive,
and, in this
case, if the possibility of enabling legislation permitted the
Commonwealth Executive to enter the Funding Agreement and make payments
to SUQ,
the Commonwealth's capacities to contract and to spend would operate, in
practice, indistinguishably from the Commonwealth
Executive's exercise of a
prerogative power. Such a view ignores the restrained approach to the
prerogative adopted by Brennan J
in Davis, extracted above, and
disregards the constitutional relationship between the Executive and Parliament
affecting spending. For these
reasons, the Commonwealth defendants' narrower
submission must also be rejected.
Financial management legislation
- Finally,
it is necessary to refer to the Commonwealth defendants' further alternative
argument that, failing all other sources of
constitutional authorisation, the
contracting and spending on the NSCP by the Commonwealth Executive was
authorised by the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth).
This alternative must also be rejected for the reasons explained below.
- Among
other things, the purpose of the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997 (Cth) is "to provide for the proper use and management of public
money". The Act establishes an accounting system in respect of
the Consolidated
Revenue Fund and Div 2 of Pt 4 provides for "Drawing rights" in respect of
officials and Ministers. Such drawing
rights have no effect to the extent that
a drawing right appears to authorise the application of public money in a way
that was not
authorised by an appropriation (s 27(5)).
- The
Act satisfies the requirements of s 97 of the Constitution and provides for
the proper management of public money. It is to be construed together with the
Auditor-General Act 1997 (Cth). In its terms its provisions, most
particularly ss 27 and 44, do not purport to provide, through the drawing
rights mechanism, constitutional authorisation of spending by the Executive.
Accordingly
the Executive's actions in respect of the NSCP are not authorised
under this legislation.
Conclusion
- For
the reasons given, the Commonwealth Executive's entry into the Funding Agreement
was beyond the executive power in s 61 of the Constitution, and the making
of payments by the Commonwealth Executive to SUQ was not supported by that
power.
- KIEFEL
J. The detailed facts and circumstances relevant to this Amended Special Case
are set out in the reasons of Gummow and Bell
JJ and of Crennan J.
- The
National School Chaplaincy Program ("the NSCP") was announced on 29 October 2006
as an initiative of the Australian Government
by which funds were to be made
available by the Government for the provision or enhancement of chaplaincy
services in schools across
Australia. The purpose of the funding was said to be
to assist schools and their communities "in supporting the spiritual wellbeing
of students." Some $165 million was made available over approximately three
years from 2007 and, on 21 November 2009, an additional
sum of $42 million was
announced as being available over the 2010 and 2011 school years.
- According
to the "National School Chaplaincy Program Guidelines" ("the
Guidelines")[668],
by which the NSCP is administered, a "school chaplain" is a person who: is
recognised by the school, its community and the appropriate
governing authority
as having the skills and experience to deliver school chaplaincy services to the
school and its community; and
is formally ordained, commissioned, endorsed or
has qualifications recognised by a recognised or accepted religious institution
or
a State or Territory government approved chaplaincy service. In some
circumstances secular pastoral care workers may be employed
under the NSCP. In
July 2008, the department administering the NSCP adopted an internal written
policy relating to the provision
of funds under the NSCP to secular pastoral
care workers.
- The
Guidelines require that a funding agreement be entered into with the Australian
Government before payments are made to a school.
A school could nominate a
"project sponsor", such as a chaplaincy service provider already approved by a
State or Territory government,
to manage the chaplaincy service on its behalf.
In the case of the Darling Heights State School in Queensland, at which four of
the plaintiff's children were enrolled at the relevant times, the funding
agreement with the Department of Education, Science and
Training, representing
the Commonwealth of Australia, was entered into by Scripture Union Queensland
("SUQ"). This funding agreement
("the Funding Agreement"), as varied, was for a
term of approximately four years from 8 October 2007 to 31 December 2011.
It was
in the standard form of agreements between the Commonwealth and SUQ for
funding under the NSCP.
- The
NSCP Code of Conduct forms part of the Funding Agreement. A school chaplain is
required to sign a Code of Conduct before providing
services pursuant to the
NSCP.
- Since
July 2007, the Queensland Government has operated a "Chaplaincy/Pastoral Care
Funding Program" which also makes funds available
to schools in that State for
the purpose of engaging the services of a chaplain, pastoral care co-ordinator,
youth worker, "Youth
Support Coordinator", or other support worker to provide
support for vulnerable students. A policy (entitled "SM-03: Chaplaincy
Services in Queensland State Schools"), which was first published in 1998 and
has since been revised, governs the procedural and
other requirements to be met
by Queensland State schools in providing chaplaincy services. SUQ has entered
into an Agreement for
Chaplaincy Services with the State of Queensland, one
condition of which is that SUQ's chaplains must abide by the Queensland
Department
of Education and Training Code of Conduct.
- The
Commonwealth Parliament has provided financial assistance to the States for
educational purposes for many years, more recently
through the
Nation-building Funds Act 2008 (Cth) and the Schools Assistance
Act 2008 (Cth). Pursuant to the latter Act, grants of financial assistance
are provided to the States on the condition that the grants be
distributed to
non-government[669]
schools with which the Commonwealth has funding agreements, for the purpose of
defraying "recurrent expenditure".
- The
NSCP does not operate in this manner. It does not involve the provision of
grants to the States in the manner for which s 96 of the Constitution provides.
It is not the product of, and does not have the authorisation of, Commonwealth
legislation. It is merely a program for
the funding of chaplaincy services,
administered by the Department of Education, Science and Training (and later the
Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations) for which funds
have been provided by a series of odd-numbered Appropriation Acts
which,
according to contemporary parliamentary practice, describe the monies the
subject of appropriation in terms such as for "the
ordinary annual services of
the Government and for related
purposes"[670].
- The
central questions raised by the Amended Special Case are those numbered 2(a) and
4(a). They ask whether the Funding Agreement
is invalid and payments made under
it unlawful by reason that the Funding Agreement and those payments are beyond
the executive power
of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution. So
far as concerns questions 1(a) to (c), which relate to the plaintiff's standing
to challenge the validity of the Funding Agreement
and the payments under it, I
agree with the answers proposed by Gummow and Bell JJ for the reasons which
their Honours give.
- Questions
2(a) and 4(a) concern the scope of the power of the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth, more particularly its power
to expend monies which have been
appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund in circumstances where there is
no legislative authorisation
for expenditure. There is no doubt that the
Executive can spend monies where authorisation is given by a valid Commonwealth
law
or by the Constitution. An Appropriation Act is a lawful authority for the
segregation and disbursement of monies from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund[671],
but it is not of itself the exercise of an executive or legislative power to
achieve an objective which requires
expenditure[672].
- In
Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation[673],
the Court, by a majority, concluded that the executive power extended to the
taking of short
term[674] or
emergency[675]
fiscal measures to address the effects of global financial conditions upon the
Australian nation as a whole and which, it was said,
only the Commonwealth had
the capacity to implement. The Court was unanimous in the opinion that ss 81
and 83 are not the source
of a substantive power to spend appropriated monies
and that such a power must be found elsewhere in the
Constitution[676].
- Attention
was directed in the judgments in Pape to the terms of s 61 of the
Constitution. It provides, in that part which has been referred to as the
"third
declaration"[677],
that the executive power of the Commonwealth "extends to the execution and
maintenance of this Constitution, and of the laws of the Commonwealth." It has
never been thought that these "meagre
words"[678]
provide a definition of Commonwealth executive
power[679].
But that is not to say that they are devoid of meaning or of implication.
- Alfred
Deakin, in his so-called Vondel
opinion[680],
considered that the framers of the Constitution chose not to define the power.
The power, he said, was one which flowed from "the nature of the Federal
Government itself, and from
the powers, exercisable at will, with which the
Federal Parliament was to be entrusted." The scope of the executive authority
of
the Commonwealth is therefore "to be deduced from the Constitution as a
whole."[681]
- In
The Commonwealth v Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd ("the
Wooltops
Case")[682],
Isaacs J said that the third declaration in s 61 "marks the external boundaries
of the Commonwealth executive power, so far as that is conferred by the
Constitution", but that "it leaves entirely untouched the definition of that
power and its ascertainment in any given instance." His Honour saw
the third
declaration as marking out, within the physical territory of the Commonwealth, a
"special domain of governmental
action"[683],
and as a "constitutional delimitation as between Commonwealth and
States"[684].
- Early
commentary suggests that Commonwealth executive power was regarded as closely
allied to Commonwealth legislative
power[685],
although this does not appear to have been much discussed in the Convention
Debates and may have proceeded upon an assumption, for
want of better guidance
from s 61. In any event, as Professor Saunders has
observed[686],
such an understanding does not appear to have deterred the Commonwealth from
entering into schemes for which expenditure could not
clearly be supported by an
express power, albeit that s 96 was the preferred mechanism for Commonwealth
expenditure following the broad interpretation of that provision in the line of
cases
commencing with Victoria v The
Commonwealth[687]
and the uncertainty arising from the division of opinion in Attorney-General
(Vict) v The Commonwealth ("the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case")[688].
- In
Victoria v The Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP
Case")[689],
Gibbs J said that the words "extends to the execution and maintenance of
this Constitution, and of the laws of the Commonwealth" limit the power of the
Executive and "make it clear that the Executive cannot act in respect
of a
matter which falls entirely outside the legislative competence of the
Commonwealth." His Honour referred in this regard to
the distribution of all
power between the Commonwealth and the States as effected by the Constitution.
Mason J[690]
spoke of "the area of responsibilities allocated to the Commonwealth by the
Constitution, responsibilities which are ascertainable from the distribution of
powers, more particularly the distribution of legislative powers,
effected by
the Constitution itself and the character and status of the Commonwealth as a
national government." His Honour continued that "[t]he provisions of
s 61 taken
in conjunction with the federal character of the Constitution and the
distribution of powers between the Commonwealth and the States make any other
conclusion
unacceptable."[691]
Both Gibbs
J[692] and
Mason J[693]
considered that this view of the executive power had been accepted in the
Wooltops Case and in The Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth
Shipping Board ("the Shipping Board
Case")[694].
- In
the Wooltops Case, the Executive had entered into a series of agreements
with a company in relation to its business of manufacturing and selling wool
tops. Under these agreements: the company was to carry on its business
pursuant to consent from the Commonwealth in return for
which the Commonwealth
received a share of the profits; or the company was to carry on the business as
an agent of the Commonwealth
in consideration of an annual sum; or the company
was to carry on the business under a combination of both such arrangements. It
was relevantly
held[695]
that the authority of valid Commonwealth legislation or the Constitution itself
was necessary for the Executive to enter into such agreements. That view was
maintained in The Commonwealth v Colonial Ammunition Co
Ltd[696]
but does not appear to have been the subject of further consideration by this
Court. That may be because, until Pape, in connection with the executive
power of expenditure, a focus was maintained upon the power of appropriation and
ss 81 and 83 of the Constitution.
- Deakin
expressed a view which may not accord with the view expressed in the Wooltops
Case. He suggested that the Commonwealth "has executive power,
independently of Commonwealth legislation, with respect to every matter
to which
its legislative power
extends."[697]
This suggests that legislation is not necessary to support executive action. In
the AAP Case, Barwick CJ considered that Commonwealth activity must fall
"within the confines of some power, legislative or executive, derived
from or
through the Constitution." But his Honour also said that "[w]ith exceptions
that are not relevant to this matter and which need not be stated, the executive
may only do that which has been or could be the subject of valid
legislation."[698]
No other member of the Court in the AAP Case expressed that view. Gibbs
J did not express a view on the matter because the case did not concern the
circumstances in which the
Executive may act without statutory
sanction[699].
- The
Commonwealth defendants' argument, on what they termed the "narrow basis", is
put as an alternative to a broader argument as
to the capacity of the
Commonwealth to contract, a topic which will be dealt with later in these
reasons. The narrow basis assumes
that it is sufficient if the executive action
of expenditure falls within the subject matter of Commonwealth legislative power
in
ss 51, 52 or 122 of the Constitution. The Commonwealth defendants do not
acknowledge the need for legislative authority. On this approach, the questions
concerning
the validity of the Funding Agreement are to be answered by reference
to legislative powers which might have been employed but were
not, which is to
say by hypothetical legislation.
- The
plaintiff, together with Queensland and Tasmania, takes issue with the
correctness of such an approach and points to the absence
of any authority which
holds that the Executive has power to engage in activities which the Parliament
could authorise, but has not.
Queensland submits that the Commonwealth must
point to a Commonwealth law, a provision of the Constitution, or something which
inheres in the Commonwealth Executive, which would permit it to enter into the
Funding Agreement.
- It
is not necessary in this case to resolve whether and in what circumstances
legislative authority, or authority arising from the
Constitution, is required.
That is because the Commonwealth defendants identify two heads of power as
appropriate to support the Funding Agreement
– s 51(xxiiiA), by which
"benefits" may be provided to students, and s 51(xx) respecting trading
corporations – and reliance upon these heads of power is misplaced.
- The
inclusion of s 51(xxiiiA) in the Constitution, following a referendum, was a
response to this Court's decision in the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case[700].
In the Second Reading Speech to the Constitution Alteration (Social Services)
Bill
1946[701],
the amendment was said by the Attorney-General of the Commonwealth to be
necessary to "authorize the continuance of acts providing
benefits in the nature
of social services, and to authorize the Parliament in the future to confer
benefits of a similar character."
The Bill was said not to seek an extension of
the "appropriation power", but was "limited to benefits of a social service
character
and, in the main, to benefits of a type provided for by legislation
already on the
statute-book."[702]
The provision of benefits to students at that time primarily took the form of
financial
assistance[703],
such as the payment of a student's tuition and other University fees and the
provision of
allowances[704].
A purpose of the introduction of s 51(xxiiiA) was to confirm the Commonwealth's
power to continue providing assistance of that kind.
- The
word "benefits" is not limited to money; it may extend to services. So much is
clear from the meaning given to the term by McTiernan
J in British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth ("the BMA
Case")[705],
which was approved by the Court in Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty
Ltd v The
Commonwealth[706].
His Honour stated:
"The material aid given pursuant to a scheme to provide for human wants is
commonly described by the word 'benefit.' When this
word is applied to that
subject matter it signifies a pecuniary aid, service, attendance or commodity
made available for human beings
under legislation designed to promote social
welfare or security: the word is also applied to such aids made available
through a
benefit society to members or their dependants. The word 'benefits'
in par (xxiiiA) has a corresponding or similar
meaning."
- It
may be inferred from this description and the structure of s 51(xxiiiA) that the
power to make provision for benefits to students
is not a power to provide
anything which may be of benefit to them. "Benefits" has a more tangible
meaning than that. In the present context, it refers to social services
provided to students.
Social services provided to students might take the form
of financial assistance, for example payment of fees and living and other
allowances, or material assistance, such as the provision of books, computers
and other necessary educational equipment, or the provision
of services, such as
additional tutoring. The term "benefits" in the context of s 51(xxiiiA) does
not extend to every service which
may be supportive of students at a personal
level in the course of their education.
- "Benefits
to students" provided pursuant to s 51(xxiiiA) must be provided by the
Commonwealth[707]
to students. Benefits may be provided to students through a third party. The
passage from the BMA Case quoted above recognises this. However, care
must be taken not to give s 51(xxiiiA) a wider operation than was intended. The
power
given is to provide benefits to students, not funding to schools. The
power to provide benefits to students is not one to assist
schools to provide
services associated with education which may be of some benefit to students.
Moreover, benefits provided to students
in reliance on s 51(xxiiiA) must be
provided to students as a class. It is clear from the Funding Agreement itself
that the chaplaincy
services are to be provided not only to students, but to the
school's staff and members of the wider school community. This suggests
that
there is a wider purpose to the Funding Agreement.
- The
Funding Agreement does not provide benefits to students and is not a contract
for the provision of such benefits. It is a contract
to provide funds for the
provision of chaplaincy services in a school, as part of the education-related
program of the school. A
hypothetical statute authorising the Funding Agreement
could not be supported by s 51(xxiiiA).
- The
Commonwealth defendants' contention that the Funding Agreement might be
authorised by s 51(xx), the corporations power, may be
dealt with shortly. The
question is not whether SUQ is a trading or financial corporation, as much of
the argument assumed. The
Guidelines did not require a party to a funding
agreement entered into pursuant to the NSCP to be a trading or financial
corporation.
Any statute authorising the Funding Agreement could not be said to
be concerned with the regulation of the activities, functions,
relationships and
business of a corporation, the rights and privileges belonging to a corporation,
the imposition of obligations
upon it, or the regulation of the conduct of those
through whom it
acts[708].
More generally, any legislation supporting the Funding Agreement would not
single out constitutional corporations as the object
of its statutory
command[709].
- The
Commonwealth defendants' alternative, and broader, submission is that there is
no relevant limitation upon the power of the Commonwealth
Executive to spend
monies. That is so, it is said, because it has a capacity to contract that is
not limited by reference to the
division of legislative powers effected by the
Constitution, a capacity which is analogous to that of a natural person. In the
Commonwealth defendants' submission, the Commonwealth's power
to contract to
spend money is no less than that of a natural person, except that it is
constrained by the political accountability
of the Executive to Parliament and
the need for an appropriation by Parliament before an expenditure can be
effected.
- One
observation that may immediately be made about the submission concerns a
difference between the Commonwealth Executive and a
natural person contracting.
When the Commonwealth contracts, it may be committing to the expenditure of
public monies. But questions
as to the capacity of the Commonwealth Executive
to contract may be put aside for present purposes. They may be dealt with after
consideration is given to the fundamental proposition which lies at the heart of
the submission, namely that the Commonwealth Executive
has a relevantly
unlimited power to spend. That proposition raises questions about the
relationship between the Executive and the
Commonwealth Parliament and it raises
questions about the position of the Commonwealth government under the
Constitution.
- A
factor which was influential to Isaacs J's view in the Wooltops Case,
that Commonwealth legislation or the Constitution was required to authorise the
Executive's entry into contracts, was the doctrine of responsible
government[710].
His Honour saw the doctrine as important to an understanding of the relationship
between the six separate "constitutional units"
in Australia, comprised of the
six colonies that existed prior to federation. In this regard, he said
responsible government was
"the key to the full understanding and interpretation
of the third declaration in sec 61 of the
Constitution."[711]
And he saw its operation as a necessary control over
expenditure[712].
- The
principle of responsible government, derived from parliamentary history and
practice in the United Kingdom, is a central feature
of the Australian
Constitution[713].
The relationship it establishes between the Parliament and the Executive may be
described as one where the former is superior to
the
latter[714].
Thus it was stated in Brown v
West[715]
that whatever be the scope of Commonwealth executive power, it is susceptible of
control by statute. Their Honours went on to say
that a valid law of the
Commonwealth may limit the exercise of executive power such that acts which
would otherwise be supported
by the executive power fall outside its scope.
- The
decision in the Wooltops Case has been considered to have gone too
far in one respect, in requiring that there be a valid Commonwealth law
providing the necessary
authority before the Executive could
contract[716].
In New South Wales v
Bardolph[717],
Dixon J agreed that the principles of responsible government impose a
responsibility on the Executive to Parliament and that Parliament
retains
control over expenditure of public monies and therefore the power of enforcing
that responsibility, but said that the principle
does not disable the Executive
from acting without the prior approval of Parliament, nor from contracting
conditionally upon appropriation
by
Parliament[718].
- Considerations
as to the supremacy of Parliament which underlie the doctrine of responsible
government may provide a basis for limiting
executive power to certain of the
legislative heads of power. As was pointed out by the plaintiff and the
Solicitor-General of Queensland
in argument, if the Executive's power to spend
was unlimited, s 51(xxxix), when used to support the executive power, might
operate to extend that power beyond those matters which may, expressly or
impliedly,
be otherwise the subject of legislative power. In that event the
relationship between the Executive and the Parliament and the dominant
position
of the Parliament may be altered. Such an extension of power may enable the
Commonwealth to encroach upon areas of State
operation and thereby affect the
distribution of powers as between the Commonwealth and the States.
- The
executive power may extend beyond the subjects of Commonwealth legislative power
in that it includes prerogative powers and the
power to carry out the essential
functions and administration of a constitutional government. It is not
suggested that these powers
are engaged in the present case.
- The
executive power also includes the capacity of the Executive to "engage in
enterprises and activities peculiarly adapted to the
government of a nation and
which cannot otherwise be carried on for the benefit of the nation", of which
Mason J spoke in the AAP
Case[719].
That capacity is to be deduced from "the existence and character of the
Commonwealth as a national
government"[720].
This is the power upon which the majority in Pape
relied[721].
- Dixon
J, in the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case[722],
spoke of the position that the Commonwealth occupies as a national government
and suggested that "no narrow view" should be taken
of its powers. But his
Honour went on to identify limitations on the executive power of a kind
mentioned earlier in these reasons,
stating that "the basal consideration would
be found in the distribution of powers and functions between the Commonwealth
and the
States." Mason J in the AAP Case expressly acknowledged
that the distribution of legislative powers necessarily limited the scope of the
power to be implied from
the position and status of the Commonwealth as a
national
government[723].
- It
is true that, until Pape, limitations on the scope of the executive power
of expenditure were mostly viewed through the prism of s 81, which involved the
question whether an undertaking was "for the purposes of the Commonwealth".
Even so, the judgments in the AAP Case make plain that the executive
power generally was viewed as subject to limitation. And in Pape it was
observed that no statement of this Court has suggested that the executive power
of the Commonwealth is
unbounded[724].
The limitation consistently observed was that arising from the distribution of
powers effected by the Constitution as between the Commonwealth and the States.
Isaacs J in the Wooltops Case, it will be recalled, considered the third
declaration in s 61 as a constitutional delimitation as between the Commonwealth
and the
States[725].
- In
the AAP Case, Mason J observed that, although the ambit of the executive
power is not defined in Ch II, "it is evident that in scope it is not
unlimited
and that its content does not reach beyond the area of responsibilities
allocated to the Commonwealth by the Constitution, responsibilities which are
ascertainable from the distribution of powers, more particularly the
distribution of legislative powers,
effected by the Constitution itself and the
character and status of the Commonwealth as a national
government."[726]
In R v Duncan; Ex parte Australian Iron and Steel Pty
Ltd[727],
Mason J added to these observations that "[o]f necessity the scope of the power
is appropriate to that of a central executive government
in a federation in
which there is a distribution of legislative powers". These statements by Mason
J were approved in R v
Hughes[728]
and in
Pape[729].
- The
reasons given by Mason J for the necessary limitation upon the power of the
Executive Government to engage in activities "peculiarly
adapted to the
government of a nation" largely concern the division of responsibilities between
the Commonwealth and the States.
His Honour said that it would be inconsistent
with that division to effect "a radical transformation" of the Commonwealth's
"area
of responsibility under the
Constitution"[730].
To do so, his Honour observed, would enable the Commonwealth to carry out
programs outside the acknowledged heads of legislative
power merely because it
was convenient for the national government to formulate and administer them.
These observations are apposite
to this case.
- In
Davis v The
Commonwealth[731],
Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ said that the scope of Commonwealth executive
power had "often been discussed but never defined."
Their Honours referred to
the responsibilities derived from the distribution of powers and the character
and status of the Commonwealth
as a national polity and
said[732]
that "the existence of Commonwealth executive power in areas beyond the express
grants of legislative power will ordinarily be clearest
where Commonwealth
executive or legislative action involves no real competition with State
executive or legislative competence."
- In
Davis, Brennan J also
observed[733]
that the statement by Mason J in the AAP Case, that the Executive
Government had power to engage in activities peculiarly adapted to the
government of a nation and which otherwise
cannot be carried on for its benefit,
invites consideration of the sufficiency of the powers of the States to engage
effectively
in the enterprise or activity in question and therefore of the need
for national action, whether unilateral or in co-operation with
the States.
- In
the present case it cannot be said that no competition may be involved between
the State and Commonwealth Executives. Both governments
require adherence to
their respective guidelines as a condition of funding and both governments
publish those guidelines independently
of each other and not co-operatively. A
party to a funding agreement, such as SUQ, is required to conform to the content
of such
guidelines as may be determined by the Commonwealth and the State of
Queensland respectively. There is clearly the potential for
some disparity or
inconsistency in what is required.
- The
answer to the question posed by Brennan J in Davis is tolerably clear in
this case. The Queensland Government is not only in a position to administer
funding for chaplaincy services
in schools of that State. It funds some such
services itself and it has been actively involved in the development of policy
in that
area.
- The
distribution of powers effected under the Constitution directs attention to s
96. It may be that s 96 enables the Commonwealth to intrude in point of policy
and administration, by the conditions it attaches to grants, into areas outside
the Commonwealth's legislative
competence[734].
However, s 96 permits that course. Importantly, it also confirms that the
executive power "is not unlimited and that there is a very large area
of
activity which lies outside the executive power of the Commonwealth but which
may become the subject of conditions attached to
grants under s
96."[735]
- The
funding of school chaplains might be accommodated by grant on condition under s
96. That is the means by which funding for education-related purposes has been
effected in the past. As Heydon J observed in
Pape[736],
if the Commonwealth executive power to spend is said to be unlimited, s 96
becomes otiose.
- It
may be accepted that the executive power extends to its prerogative powers, to
subject matters of express grants of legislative
power in ss 51, 52 and 122 and
to matters which are peculiarly adapted to the government of a nation. None of
these powers support the Funding Agreement and
the payment of monies under it.
By analogy with the approach taken by Gibbs CJ in The Commonwealth v Tasmania
(The Tasmanian Dam
Case)[737],
there is nothing about the provision of school chaplaincy services which is
peculiarly appropriate to a national government. They
are the province of the
States, in their provision of support for school services, as evidenced in this
case by the policy directives
and funding undertaken by the Queensland
Government. Funding for school chaplains is not within a discernible area of
Commonwealth
responsibility.
- The
contention of the Commonwealth defendants that the Commonwealth Executive should
be taken to have a relevantly unlimited capacity
to contract, by analogy with a
natural person, is not to the point. The question is not one of the Executive's
juristic capacity
to contract, but its power to
act[738].
Actions of the Executive must necessarily fall within the confines of some power
derived from the
Constitution[739].
Such an approach is evident in the Shipping Board Case, where it was held
that there was neither legislative nor executive power to set up the business in
question. An activity not authorised
by the Constitution could not fall within
the power of the
Executive[740].
The Executive is not authorised by the Constitution to expand its powers by
contract.
- So
far as concerns the further contention of the Commonwealth defendants, which
relied upon s 44 of the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997
(Cth), I agree with Gummow and Bell
JJ[741] that
Pt 7 of that Act does not confer power to spend the monies to be advanced under
the Funding Agreement.
- The
foregoing is sufficient to dispose of questions 2(a) and 4(a). I agree with the
answers to these questions proposed by Gummow
and Bell JJ. It is not strictly
necessary to answer questions 2(b) and 4(b), asking whether the Funding
Agreement is invalid by
reason of s 116 of the Constitution, which relevantly
provides that "no religious test shall be required as a qualification for any
office or public trust under the
Commonwealth." However, I agree with Gummow
and Bell
JJ[742] that
the plaintiff's case in this regard fails at the threshold, because the
chaplains engaged by SUQ hold no office under the Commonwealth.
- I
also agree with the balance of the answers proposed by Gummow and Bell JJ.
[1] Inglis Clark, Studies in
Australian Constitutional Law (1901) at 12-13.
[2] Deakin, "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14 (1981) 129 at 132.
[3] Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation (2009) 238 CLR 1; [2009] HCA 23.
[4] An assumption reflected in the
testimony of Sir Robert Garran to the Royal Commission on Child Endowment or
Family Allowances that
s 81 of the Constitution conferred "an absolute power of
appropriation for general purposes": Australia, Report of the Royal
Commission on Child Endowment or Family Allowances (1929) at 10; cf the
opinions of Sir Edward Mitchell KC at 11, Mr Owen Dixon KC at 11-12 and Dr
Evatt KC at 13.
[5] See Saunders, "Intergovernmental
Agreements and the Executive Power", (2005) 16 Public Law Review 294.
[6] Reasons of Gummow and Bell JJ at
[112].
[7] Reasons of Gummow and Bell JJ at
[107]-[110].
[8] By operation of an Administrative
Arrangements Order.
[9] R v Kidman [1915] HCA 58; (1915) 20 CLR
425 at 440-441 per Isaacs J; [1915] HCA 58; Re Residential Tenancies Tribunal
(NSW); Ex parte Defence Housing Authority (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 464 per
Gummow J; [1997] HCA 36.
[10] Victorian Stevedoring and
General Contracting Co Pty Ltd and Meakes v Dignan [1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46 CLR 73 at 101
per Dixon J; [1931] HCA 34; Davis v The Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at
108 per Brennan J; [1988] HCA 63; Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(2009) [2009] HCA 23; 238 CLR 1 at 55 [111] per French CJ, 121 [343]-[344] per Hayne and
Kiefel JJ.
[11] Farey v Burvett [1916] HCA 36; (1916)
21 CLR 433 at 452 per Isaacs J; [1916] HCA 36; Barton v The Commonwealth
[1974] HCA 20; (1974) 131 CLR 477 at 498 per Mason J, 505 per Jacobs J; [1974] HCA 20;
Davis v The Commonwealth (1988) [1988] HCA 63; 166 CLR 79 at 93-94 per Mason CJ,
Deane and Gaudron JJ, 108 per Brennan J.
[12] New South Wales v
Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 509 per Dixon J; [1934] HCA 74; Davis
v The Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 108 per Brennan J; Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 60 [126] per French CJ. As
noted in In re KL Tractors Ltd (1961) [1961] HCA 8; 106 CLR 318 at 335 per
Dixon CJ, McTiernan and Kitto JJ; [1961] HCA 8: "The word 'powers'
here really means 'capacity', for we are dealing with the 'capacity' or a
'faculty' of the Crown in right of
the Commonwealth."
[13] Victoria v The Commonwealth
and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397 per Mason J; [1975] HCA 52; R v
Duncan; Ex parte Australian Iron and Steel Pty Ltd [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560
per Mason J; [1983] HCA 29; Davis v The Commonwealth (1988) [1988] HCA 63; 166 CLR 79 at
93-94 per Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ, 110-111 per Brennan J; R
v Hughes (2000) 202 CLR 535 at 554-555 [38] per Gleeson CJ,
Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ; [2000] HCA 22; Pape v
Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63 [133] per
French CJ, 87-88 [228], 91-92 [242] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 116
[328]-[329] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
[14] Winterton, Parliament, the
Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 50.
[15] [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278 at 304;
[1940] HCA 13. See also The Commonwealth v Colonial Combing, Spinning and
Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 437 per Isaacs J; [1922] HCA 62;
In re Foreman & Sons Pty Ltd; Uther v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(1947) [1947] HCA 45; 74 CLR 508 at 514 per Latham CJ, 525-526 per Starke J, 531 per
Dixon J; [1947] HCA 45; The Commonwealth v Cigamatic Pty Ltd (In Liq)
[1962] HCA 40; (1962) 108 CLR 372 at 377 per Dixon CJ, Kitto J agreeing at 381,
Windeyer J agreeing at 390; [1962] HCA 40.
[16] Commentaries on the Laws of
England (1765), bk 1, ch 7 at 232.
[17] Blackstone, Commentaries on
the Laws of England (1765), bk 1, ch 7 at 232. See also Chitty, A
Treatise on the Law of the Prerogatives of the Crown (1820) at 4.
[18] Dicey, Introduction to the
Study of the Law of the Constitution, 10th ed (1959) at 425.
[19] Winterton, Parliament, the
Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 112.
[20] Cohn, "Medieval Chains,
Invisible Inks: On Non-Statutory Powers of the Executive", (2005) 25 Oxford
Journal of Legal Studies 97 at 104.
[21] Cohn, "Medieval Chains,
Invisible Inks: On Non-Statutory Powers of the Executive", (2005) 25 Oxford
Journal of Legal Studies 97 at 108.
[22] That is, in the sense used by
Blackstone as outlined above.
[23] [1915] HCA 58; (1915) 20 CLR 425 at 441.
[24] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338.
[25] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379.
[26] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362.
[27] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379.
[28] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 396.
[29] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 396.
[30] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421.
[31] (1926) 39 CLR 1; [1926] HCA
39.
[32] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397, fn
40.
[33] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 432.
[34] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397, fn
41.
[35] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1 at 10.
[36] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535.
[37] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560.
[38] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560.
[39] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560.
[40] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 62-63
[131]- [132] per French CJ, 90-91 [239] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[41] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 94 per
Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ.
[42] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 93-94.
[43] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at
109-110.
[44] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 104.
[45] (2000) 202 CLR 535.
[46] (2000) 202 CLR 535 at 554-555
[38] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ.
[47] (1997) 190 CLR 410.
[48] (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 455.
[49] (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 464.
[50] In a different context it was
rejected in the Full Federal Court in Ruddock v Vadarlis [2001] FCA 1329; (2001) 110 FCR
491 at 542 [192] per French J, Beaumont J agreeing at 514 [95].
[51] As suggested by Dixon J in
Stenhouse v Coleman [1944] HCA 36; (1944) 69 CLR 457 at 471; [1944] HCA 36. See also
Murphyores Incorporated Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth [1976] HCA 20; (1976) 136 CLR 1 at
11-12 per Stephen J; [1976] HCA 20.
[52] Davis v The Commonwealth
[1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 108 per Brennan J.
[53] Seddon, Government
Contracts: Federal, State and Local, 4th ed (2009) at 65.
[54] Winterton, Parliament, the
Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 121.
[55] Pape v Federal Commissioner
of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 55 [111] per French CJ, 73-74 [178]-[180]
per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 113 [320] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ, 210-211
[601], 211-212 [603],
212 [606] per Heydon J.
[56] Reasons of Gummow and Bell JJ
at [113]-[117].
[57] The Commonwealth's submission
that s 44 of the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth)
provided such authority is dealt with later in these reasons and in the reasons
of Gummow and Bell JJ at [102]-[103].
[58] See Bernays, Queensland
Politics During Sixty (1859-1919) Years (1919) at 506-524; Thomson,
"Drafting the Australian Constitution: The Neglected Documents", [1986] MelbULawRw 6; (1986) 15
Melbourne University Law Review 533.
[59] Queensland, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 11 November 1890 at
1331.
[60] Official Record of the
Proceedings and Debates of the National Australasian Convention,
(Sydney), 18 March 1891 at lxii.
[61] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 53.
[62] "List of matters submitted to
Constitutional Committee for decision preparatory to drafting Constitution. 19
March 1891" (Document 3) in Griffith, Successive Stages of the Constitution
of the Commonwealth of Australia (1891, reprinted 1973).
[63] "Memorandum of Decisions of
Constitutional Committee. Printed from day to day" (Document 4) in Griffith,
Successive Stages of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia
(1891, reprinted 1973).
[64] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 68; La Nauze, The
Making of the Australian Constitution (1972) at 25-26; Buss, "Andrew Inglis
Clark's Draft Constitution, Chapter III of the Australian Constitution,
and the Assist from Article III of the Constitution of the United
States", [2009] MelbULawRw 26; (2009) 33 Melbourne University Law Review 718. See
generally, Winterton, Parliament, the Executive and the Governor-General
(1983) and Thomson, "Executive Power, Scope and Limitations: Some Notes from a
Comparative Perspective", (1983) 62 Texas Law Review 559.
[65] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 67.
[66] 30 & 31 Vict c 3.
[67] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 68.
[68] [1913] UKPCHCA 4; (1913) 17 CLR 644; [1914] AC
237.
[69] [1913] UKPCHCA 4; (1913) 17 CLR 644 at 652;
[1914] AC 237 at 253.
[70] [1913] UKPCHCA 4; (1913) 17 CLR 644 at 651;
[1914] AC 237 at 252.
[71] [1913] UKPCHCA 4; (1913) 17 CLR 644 at 651-652;
[1914] AC 237 at 253. See La Nauze, The Making of the Australian
Constitution (1972) at 27.
[72] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 80.
[73] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 81.
[74] "Mr Kingston's Draft of a
Constitution Bill prepared before the Convention", 26 February 1891
(Document 6) in Griffith, Successive Stages of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Australia (1891, reprinted 1973). See La Nauze, The
Making of the Australian Constitution (1972) at 26.
[75] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 329.
[76] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 329.
[77] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney), 31 March 1891 at
527.
[78] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 334.
[79] "Copy Draft used in Committee
of the Whole Convention. 1 April to 8 April, showing amendments made by
the Committee" (Document
15) in Griffith, Successive Stages of the
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia (1891, reprinted 1973). An
identically worded provision was contained in a proposed Constitution for a
federated Queensland submitted by Griffith to the Queensland Parliament in 1892.
Clause 78 provided that the "Executive power
and authority" of the United
Provinces was to "extend to the execution of the provisions of this
Constitution, and the laws of the United Provinces": Queensland Constitution
Bill (No 2) 1892 (Q), cl 78. The Bill was defeated in the Legislative Council
in October 1892.
[80] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney), 6 April 1891
at 777.
[81] Crommelin, "The Executive", in
Craven (ed), The Convention Debates 1891-1898: Commentaries, Indices
and Guide (1986) 127 at 131.
[82] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney), 6 April 1891 at
778.
[83] La Nauze, The Making of the
Australian Constitution (1972) at 88-89.
[84] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Adelaide), 19 April
1897 at 910.
[85] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Adelaide), 19 April 1897 at
910.
[86] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 701.
[87] La Nauze, The Making of the
Australian Constitution (1972) at 93.
[88] Griffith, "Notes on the Draft
Federal Constitution framed by the Adelaide Convention of 1897", June 1897,
reproduced in Queensland, Journals of the Legislative Council, vol 47 pt
1; Inglis Clark, "Proposed Amendments to the Draft of a Bill to Constitute the
Commonwealth of Australia", reproduced in Williams,
The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 705.
[89] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 715.
[90] Official Record of the
Debates of the Australasian Federal Convention, (Sydney), 17 September 1897
at 782.
[91] The Australasian Federation
Enabling Act (South Australia) 1895, s 26; Australasian Federation
Enabling Act 1895 (NSW), s 26; Australasian Federation Enabling Act
1896 (Vic), s 26; The Australasian Federation Enabling Act (Tasmania)
1896, s 26; Australasian Federation Enabling Act 1896 (WA), s 23.
[92] Williams, The Australian
Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at 1090 and 1092.
[93] "Bill as proposed to be further
amended by the Drafting Committee", (Melbourne), March 1898 at 17, reproduced in
Williams, The Australian Constitution: A Documentary History (2005) at
1091.
[94] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14 (1981) 129 at 131.
[95] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14 (1981) 129 at 131.
[96] Garran would have played an
important role in preparing drafts and settling opinions – see Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth of
Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14 (1981) at ix.
[97] Australia, Royal Commission on
the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Report of Proceedings and Minutes of
Evidence (Canberra), 27 September 1927 at 89.
[98] Inglis Clark, Studies in
Australian Constitutional Law (1901) at 38.
[99] Inglis Clark, Studies in
Australian Constitutional Law (1901) at 64.
[100] Inglis Clark, Studies in
Australian Constitutional Law (1901) at 64.
[101] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 702.
[102] Section 101 provides:
"There shall be an Inter-State Commission, with such powers of adjudication
and administration as the Parliament deems necessary
for the execution and
maintenance, within the Commonwealth, of the provisions of this Constitution
relating to trade and commerce, and of all laws made thereunder."
[103] (1915) 20 CLR 54; [1915] HCA
17.
[104] [1915] HCA 17; (1915) 20 CLR 54 at 106;
Powers J also agreed with Griffith CJ.
[105] [1915] HCA 17; (1915) 20 CLR 54 at 89,
quoting Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765), bk 1, ch 7 at
261.
[106] [1915] HCA 17; (1915) 20 CLR 54 at 72.
[107] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 294.
[108] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 295.
[109] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 296.
[110] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 296.
[111] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 297. An
example was the exercise of the discharge of the duty imposed by s 119 of
protecting every State against invasion and, on the application of the executive
government of the State, against domestic violence.
[112] Berriedale Keith,
Responsible Government in the Dominions (1912), vol 2 at 811.
[113] Berriedale Keith,
Responsible Government in the Dominions, 2nd ed (1928), vol 2 at 623.
[114] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 701.
[115] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 701.
[116] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 702.
[117] Winterton, Parliament,
the Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 5.
[118] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 706.
[119] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney), 12 March 1891 at
280.
[120] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Adelaide), 23 March 1897 at
28. See also Baker, The Executive in a Federation (1897) at 3-4.
[121] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 706-707.
[122] R v Kirby; Ex parte
Boilermakers' Society of Australia [1956] HCA 10; (1956) 94 CLR 254 at 275 per Dixon CJ,
McTiernan, Fullagar and Kitto JJ; [1956] HCA 10. See also Victorian
Stevedoring and General Contracting Co Pty Ltd and Meakes v Dignan [1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46
CLR 73 at 114 per Evatt J.
[123] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 707.
[124] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 703.
[125] Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 706.
[126] Re Residential Tenancies
Tribunal (NSW); Ex parte Defence Housing Authority (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 438
per Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ.
[127] Mantziaris, "The Executive
– A Common Law Understanding of Legal Form and Responsibility", in
French, Lindell and Saunders (eds), Reflections on the Australian
Constitution (2003) 125 at 130.
[128] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 156,
Barton and O'Connor JJ concurring at 163; [1904] HCA 38. The case did not
concern the executive power of the Commonwealth but that of a State government
to establish a royal commission
of inquiry.
[129] An analogy not accepted by
Mason J in Victoria v Australian Building Construction Employees' and
Builders Labourers' Federation [1982] HCA 31; (1982) 152 CLR 25 at 88-89; [1982] HCA 31.
[130] [1909] HCA 36; (1909) 8 CLR 330 at 377;
[1909] HCA 36. Moreover, the validity of a commission of inquiry was not
conditioned upon the validity of a statute conferring coercive powers
on the
Commissioner: McGuinness v Attorney-General (Vict) [1940] HCA 6; (1940) 63 CLR 73 at
102 per Dixon J, 106 per McTiernan J; [1940] HCA 6; Victoria v Australian
Building Construction Employees' and Builders Labourers' Federation [1982] HCA 31; (1982)
152 CLR 25 at 51 per Gibbs CJ, see also at 67 per Stephen J, 120 per Aickin J;
cf at 131 per Wilson J.
[131] (1912) 15 CLR 182; [1912]
HCA 94.
[132] Griffith CJ and Barton J
answered the question in the negative; Isaacs and Higgins JJ dissented.
[133] [1912] HCA 94; (1912) 15 CLR 182 at 194;
see also at 207 per Barton J.
[134] Attorney-General (Cth) v
Colonial Sugar Refining Co Ltd [1913] UKPCHCA 4; (1913) 17 CLR 644; [1914] AC 237.
[135] (1914) 19 CLR 381; [1914]
HCA 82. The case concerned the application of Queensland stamp duty legislation
to the Commonwealth Bank. The question whether the Bank
exercised a function of
the Executive Government of the Commonwealth was anterior to an invocation of
the doctrine of immunity of
instrumentalities, overturned in the
Engineers' case: Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide
Steamship Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 129; [1920] HCA 54.
[136] [1914] HCA 82; (1914) 19 CLR 381 at
393-394.
[137] [1914] HCA 82; (1914) 19 CLR 381 at
402.
[138] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421.
[139] The relevant regulations
were the War Precautions (Wool) Regulations 1916 (Cth) and the War Precautions
(Sheepskins) Regulations
1916 (Cth), made pursuant to the War Precautions Act
1914-1916 (Cth). They gave effect to a scheme underpinning an arrangement
under which the Imperial Government would acquire the entire
woolclip. The
historical background is described in John Cooke & Co Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth [1922] HCA 60; (1922) 31 CLR 394 at 399-404; [1922] HCA 60.
[140] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
432.
[141] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
451.
[142] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1.
[143] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1 at 10.
[144] Brown v West (1990)
169 CLR 195 at 202; [1990] HCA 7. See also The Commonwealth v Colonial
Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 450 per Isaacs
J.
[145] (1924) 34 CLR 198; [1924]
HCA 5.
[146] [1924] HCA 5; (1924) 34 CLR 198 at 222-225
per Isaacs and Rich JJ.
[147] New South Wales v
Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 469 per Evatt J, commenting on the judgment of
Isaacs and Rich JJ in Colonial Ammunition.
[148] Australia, Royal Commission
on the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Minutes of Evidence,
(Melbourne), 13 December 1927 at 781.
[149] Australia, Royal Commission
on the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Minutes of Evidence,
(Melbourne), 13 December 1927 at 781.
[150] Australia, Royal Commission
on the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Minutes of Evidence,
(Melbourne), 13 December 1927 at 781.
[151] Australia, Royal Commission
on the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Minutes of Evidence,
(Melbourne), 13 December 1927 at 781.
[152] Australia, Royal Commission
on the Constitution of the Commonwealth, Minutes of Evidence,
(Melbourne), 13 December 1927 at 781.
[153] FMA Act , s 5.
[154] Reasons of Gummow and Bell
JJ at [102]-[103].
[155] (1935) 52 CLR 533; [1935]
HCA 31.
[156] [1935] HCA 31; (1935) 52 CLR 533 at
562.
[157] (1954) 92 CLR 424; [1954]
HCA 20.
[158] [1954] HCA 20; (1954) 92 CLR 424 at 461.
The Court appears to have proceeded upon the premise that a parliamentary
appropriation itself would
have provided the necessary statutory authority for
the payment of the subsidy which was in issue in that case.
[159] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455.
[160] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 per
Rich J.
[161] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
496.
[162] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
502-503.
[163] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
493.
[164] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
508.
[165] Campbell, "Commonwealth
Contracts", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal 14 at 15, quoting New
South Wales v Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 per Rich J.
[166] Campbell, "Commonwealth
Contracts", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal 14 at 15.
[167] Campbell, "Commonwealth
Contracts", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal 14 at 17. See also
Campbell, "Federal Contract Law", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal
580.
[168] Zines, The High Court and
the Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at 349-350.
[169] Zines, The High Court and
the Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at 350.
[170] Zines, The High Court and
the Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at 350, referring to New South
Wales v Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 509 per Dixon J.
[171] Seddon, Government
Contracts: Federal, State and Local, 4th ed (2009) at 64-65.
[172] Winterton, Parliament,
the Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 47.
[173] Saunders and Yam,
"Government Regulation by Contract: Implications for the Rule of Law", (2004)
15 Public Law Review 51 at 52.
[174] [2001] HCA 51; (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 403
[15]; [2001] HCA 51.
[175] [2001] HCA 51; (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 460
[211].
[176] Seddon, Government
Contracts: Federal, State and Local, 4th ed (2009) at 61; Zines,
The High Court and the Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at
349-351; Puri, Australian Government Contracts: Law and Practice (1978)
at 44-46; Sawer, Federation Under Strain: Australia 1972-1975 (1977) at
70-71; Campbell, "Commonwealth Contracts", (1970) 44 Australian Law
Journal 14 at 16-17, 23.
[177] See generally, Saunders and
Yam, "Government Regulation by Contract: Implications for the Rule of Law",
(2004) 15 Public Law Review 51, especially at 57-59.
[178] Winterton, Parliament,
the Executive and the Governor-General (1983) at 45.
[179] [1926] ALR 1.
[180] [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 113,
Barwick CJ agreeing at 61; [1977] HCA 71.
[181] [1916] 2 AC 610.
[182] [1926] ALR 1 at
2.
[183] [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at
113.
[184] Reasons of Gummow and Bell
JJ at [160]-[166].
[185] Family Law Act 1975
(Cth), s 61C.
[186] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 60 [127] per
French CJ; [2009] HCA 23; Winterton, Parliament, the Executive and
the Governor-General, (1983) at 29-30.
[187] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1.
[188] Sections 186, 198.
[189] Rose, "The Government and
Contract", in Finn (ed), Essays on Contract, (1987) 233 at 245.
[190] Sykes v Cleary [1992] HCA 60; (1992)
176 CLR 77 at 96-97; [1992] HCA 60; Kendle v Melsom [1998] HCA 13; (1998)
193 CLR 46 at 60-61 [32]- [33]; [1998] HCA 13. See also
Edwards v Clinch [1982] AC 845 at 860, 864-867, 870-871.
[191] Kruger v The
Commonwealth [1997] HCA 27; (1997) 190 CLR 1 at 85-87, 121-124, 130-134, 160-161,
166-167; [1997] HCA 27.
[192] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP Case") [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 401-402; [1975] HCA 52.
[193] By Appropriation Act
(No 1) 2006-2007 (Cth); Appropriation Act (No 3) 2006-2007
(Cth); Appropriation Act (No 1) 2007-2008 (Cth); Appropriation
Act (No 1) 2008-2009 (Cth); Appropriation Act (No 1)
2009-2010 (Cth); Appropriation Act (No 1) 2010-2011 (Cth); and
Appropriation Act (No 1) 2011-2012 (Cth).
[194] See Combet v The
Commonwealth [2005] HCA 61; (2005) 224 CLR 494 at 572-577 [148]- [161]; [2005]
HCA 61; Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1 at 40 [64]- [65].
[195] [2009] HCA 51; (2009) 240 CLR 140
at 169 [41]; [2009] HCA 51.
[196] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455
at 498; [1934] HCA 74.
[197] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455
at 509. See also Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1 at 39-40 [62].
[198] See Roxborough v Rothmans
of Pall Mall Australia Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 516; [2001] HCA 68.
[199] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 39 [61].
[200] Bateman's Bay Local
Aboriginal Land Council v The Aboriginal Community Benefit Fund Pty Ltd
[1998] HCA 49; (1998) 194 CLR 247 at 265-266 [46]- [47], 284 [105]; [1998]
HCA 49.
[201] See, for example, Placer
Development Ltd v The Commonwealth [1969] HCA 29; (1969) 121 CLR 353 at 365-366;
[1969] HCA 29; Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v The
Commonwealth [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 61, 64, 90; [1977]
HCA 71.
[202] Hogg and Monahan,
Liability of the Crown, 3rd ed (2000) at 225-226.
[203] cf Minister for
Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd [1986] HCA 40; (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 38 per
Mason J; [1986] HCA 40.
[204] Johnson v Kent [1975] HCA 4; (1975)
132 CLR 164 at 169 per Barwick CJ; [1975] HCA 4; AAP
Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362-363 per Barwick CJ; Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 92-94 per Mason CJ, Deane
and Gaudron JJ; [1988] HCA 63; Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 60 [126] per French CJ, 87
[227], 89 [234] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[205] [2001] HCA 51; (2001) 207 CLR 391
at 462-463 [216]; [2001] HCA 51.
[206] Crommelin, "The Executive",
in Craven (ed), The Convention Debates 1891-1898: Commentaries, Indices and
Guide, (1986), vol 6, 127 at 147.
[207] [1947] HCA 26; (1947) 74 CLR 31
at 82; [1947] HCA 26.
[208] (2010) 242 CLR 195
at 226 [86]; [2010] HCA 27.
[209] Barton v The Commonwealth
[1974] HCA 20; (1974) 131 CLR 477 at 498; [1974] HCA 20; Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 61-62 [130], 83
[214].
[210] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Official Liquidator of E O Farley Ltd [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278
at 304; [1940] HCA 13.
[211] [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278
at 320-321.
[212] See Ling v The
Commonwealth [1994] FCA 1156; (1994) 51 FCR 88 at 92-94.
[213] See, for example, the
Taxation Debts (Abolition of Crown Priority) Act 1980 (Cth).
[214] Northern Territory v
Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust [2008] HCA 29; (2008) 236 CLR 24 at 58 [27];
[2008] HCA 29.
[215] See Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 90 [236]- [237].
[216] Reprinted in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth of
Australia, (1981), vol 1, 129 at 131. See also Winterton, Parliament,
the Executive and the Governor-General, (1983) at 30-31, 226-227. See
further the statements to the same effect in the House of Representatives by
Mr Higgins, Sir John
Forrest and Sir John Quick, collected by Hayne and
Kiefel JJ in Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1 at 108 [306].
[217] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338.
[218] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 363.
[219] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 362-363.
[220] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 378-379.
[221] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421
at 431-432, 437-441; [1922] HCA 62.
[222] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1
at 10; [1926] HCA 39.
[223] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 396.
[224] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 396.
[225] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 342-343.
[226] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 341.
[227] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 396-397.
[228] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 395-396.
[229] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 359-360.
[230] Section 51(ii),
consistently with the federal character of the Constitution, cannot be
"construed as a power over the whole subject of taxation throughout Australia":
Victoria v The Commonwealth ("the Second Uniform Tax Case") [1957] HCA 54; (1957)
99 CLR 575 at 614; [1957] HCA 54.
[231] [1936] USSC 11; 297 US 1 (1936).
[232] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 420.
[233] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 413. McTiernan J decided the case on the basis that the dispute
was "within the field of politics not of
law" and was non-justiciable:
at 370; and Stephen J, emphasising the limited nature of an
appropriation statute, held that Victoria
lacked the standing to bring the
action: at 390-391.
[234] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421
at 433-434.
[235] R v Kidman (1915) 20
CLR 425; [1915] HCA 58.
[236] Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 112.
[237] Port of Portland Pty Ltd
v Victoria (2010) 242 CLR 348 at 357-358 [5]-[8]; [2010]
HCA 44. See also the remarks of Lord Hoffmann in Higgs v Minister of
National Security [2000] 2 AC 228 at 241-242.
[238] Ansett Transport
Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54
at 87. See also Egan v Willis [1998] HCA 71; (1998) 195 CLR 424
at 451-452 [42]; [1998] HCA 71.
[239] Re Patterson; Ex parte
Taylor [2001] HCA 51; (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 464 [218].
[240] Constitution, s 53.
[241] cf New South Wales v
Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 per Rich J, 507 per
Dixon J; Selway, The Constitution of South Australia, (1997)
at 93-94.
[242] cf Ex parte Professional
Engineers' Association [1959] HCA 47; (1959) 107 CLR 208 at 274-275 per
Windeyer J; [1959] HCA 47.
[243] Brown v West (1990)
169 CLR 195 at 201; [1990] HCA 7.
[244] cf AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975)
134 CLR 338 at 362 per Barwick CJ.
[245] [2009] HCA 51; (2009) 240 CLR 140.
[246] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 62-63 [131]- [133] per French CJ, 90-91 [239] per Gummow, Crennan
and Bell JJ.
[247] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79
at 93-94.
[248] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79
at 111.
[249] cf the scheme the subject of
the Appropriation (HIH Assistance) Act 2001 (Cth), which was considered
but not challenged in HIH Claims Support Ltd v Insurance Australia Ltd
(2011) 244 CLR 72; [2011] HCA 31.
[250] [2009] HCA 51; (2009) 240 CLR 140
at 170 [46] per French CJ, Gummow and Crennan JJ,
198 [136]-[137] per Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ.
[251] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 357-358.
[252] [1954] HCA 20; (1954) 92 CLR 424
at 461; [1954] HCA 20.
[253] cf The Commonwealth v
John Fairfax & Sons Ltd [1980] HCA 44; (1980) 147 CLR 39 at 51; [1980]
HCA 44.
[254] See the discussion of the
authorities by Gibbs CJ in A v Hayden [1984] HCA 67; (1984) 156 CLR 532
at 542-543; [1984] HCA 67.
[255] At [519]-[523].
[256] [1999] HCA 30; (1999) 199 CLR 462
at 497-498 [83]; [1999] HCA 30.
[257] [1999] HCA 30; (1999) 199 CLR 462
at 498-503 [84]- [94].
[258] Evatt, The Royal
Prerogative, (1987) at 7.
[259] 63 & 64 Vict
c 12.
[260] (1997) 191 CLR 471
at 491, 550-551; [1997] HCA 29. See also at 530 per
Gaudron J.
[261] At [122]-[124].
[262] At fn 204.
[263] See now the extensive
provision made by Div 135 of Pt 7.3 of the Criminal Code
(Cth).
[264] The Acts in respect of which
relief was sought were Appropriation Act (No 1) 2007-2008 (Cth),
Appropriation Act (No 1) 2008-2009 (Cth), Appropriation Act
(No 1) 2009-2010 (Cth), Appropriation Act (No 1) 2010-2011
(Cth) and Appropriation Act (No 1) 2011-2012 (Cth).
[265] (2009) 238 CLR 1; [2009] HCA
23.
[266] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 55 [111]- [112] per
French CJ, 75 [184] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 113 [320] per
Hayne and Kiefel JJ, 211 [602] per Heydon J.
[267] As in Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 94 per Mason CJ, Deane and
Gaudron JJ, 104 per Wilson and Dawson JJ, 110-111 per Brennan J;
[1988] HCA 63.
[268] As in Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1 at 63 [133] per French CJ, 91-92 [242] per Gummow, Crennan and
Bell JJ.
[269] Section 44(1) of the
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth) now provides:
"A Chief Executive must manage the affairs of the Agency in a way that
promotes proper use of the Commonwealth resources for which
the Chief Executive
is responsible.
Note: A Chief Executive has the power to enter into contracts, on behalf of
the Commonwealth, in relation to the affairs of the Agency.
Some Chief
Executives have delegated this power under section 53."
When the Darling Heights Funding Agreement was made, the note to s 44(1)
had not been inserted. It was added by the Financial Framework Legislation
Amendment Act 2008 (Cth), Sched 1, item 47.
[270] The State of New South
Wales v The Commonwealth ("the Surplus Revenue Case") [1908] HCA 68; (1908) 7 CLR
179 at 185; [1908] HCA 68.
[271] Attorney-General (Vict) v
The Commonwealth ("the Pharmaceutical Benefits Case") [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR
237 at 245-246; [1945] HCA 30; see also at 272 per Dixon J ("this case
requires us to go no further than to distinguish the carefully chosen words of
our Constitution from the very different words of that of the United
States").
[272] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at
245.
[273] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP Case") [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
342-343; [1975] HCA 52. See also Pharmaceutical Benefits Case [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71
CLR 237 at 242-246.
[274] Brown v West (1990)
169 CLR 195 at 197; [1990] HCA 7.
[275] Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 248, 253-254, 256 per Latham CJ, 265-266 per
Starke J, 268-271 per Dixon J (Rich J agreeing at 264), 274-275
per McTiernan J; AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 354, 361 per
Barwick CJ, 394, 396 per Mason J, 412 per Jacobs J, 418-419, 424
per Murphy J; cf at 378-379
per Gibbs J, 385, 387, 390-391 per
Stephen J.
[276] [2005] HCA 61; (2005) 224 CLR 494 at 511;
[2005] HCA 61.
[277] Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 266 per Starke J, 269, 271-272 per Dixon J
(Rich J agreeing at 264), 281-282 per Williams J; AAP Case
[1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 354-359 per Barwick CJ, 373-374 per Gibbs J,
412-415 per Jacobs J. Mason J, in the AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR
338 at 398, relied on considerations of the same kind to limit the
executive power of the Commonwealth to engage in activities but at 396
appeared to treat s 81 as providing an unbounded power to spend. However,
his Honour would have restrained the Commonwealth not only from carrying into
effect the Australian Assistance Plan but also from "expending the moneys
appropriated for the purpose of carrying the Plan into
effect": at 402.
[278] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
371-372.
[279] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237.
[280] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at
254-256, 273-274.
[281] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 266,
282.
[282] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at
269.
[283] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at
269.
[284] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 113
[321].
[285] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
412-413.
[286] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 23
[8(5)], 36 [53], 55-56 [111]-[113] per French CJ, 72-75 [176], [178],
[180], [183]-[184] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 100-101 [283],
105
[296], 113 [320] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ, 210 [600], 213 [607] per
Heydon J.
[287] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 73
[178]; see also at 72-73 [174]-[177].
[288] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 72
[176].
[289] (1947) 74 CLR 31; [1947] HCA
26.
[290] See, for example, Pape
[2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 55 [111] per French CJ.
[291] See, for example,
Pharmaceutical Benefits Case [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 251 per Latham CJ;
AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 353 per Barwick CJ; Brown v West
(1990) 169 CLR 195 at 205; Harrison Moore, The Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 526.
[292] See, for example, ss 3,
48, 66, 87.
[293] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at 131.
[294] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 91
[241].
[295] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 55
[113].
[296] (1990) 169 CLR 195.
[297] (1990) 169 CLR 195 at
197.
[298] (1990) 169 CLR 195 at 201
per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ.
[299] (1990) 169 CLR 195 at
202.
[300] (1990) 169 CLR 195 at 205;
see also at 211-212.
[301] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63-64
[133], [136], 83 [213], 89 [232].
[302] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 92
[242].
[303] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63
[133].
[304] cf [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at
121-124 [345]- [357], 178-179 [512]-[514], 191 [545].
[305] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 89
[234]; see also at 87 [228].
[306] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 83
[214].
[307] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 85
[220].
[308] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63
[132]. His Honour applied this statement at 63 [133].
[309] R v Duncan; Ex parte
Australian Iron and Steel Pty Ltd [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560; [1983] HCA 29,
quoted with approval in R v Hughes (2000) 202 CLR 535 at 554-555 [38] per
Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ; [2000] HCA
22.
[310] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 119
[336].
[311] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 119
[337].
[312] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 119
[338].
[313] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 120
[339].
[314] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 190
[541]; see also at 134 [397].
[315] Principles of the English
Law of Contract and of Agency in Its Relation to Contract, 11th ed
(1906) at 121.
[316] The Royal
Prerogative, (1987) at 29-31.
[317] The Royal
Prerogative, (1987) at 31. These included the entitlement of the
Crown to be paid in preference to other creditors, not to be mulct in costs and
not to give discovery. It is not necessary to consider whether or to what
extent these entitlements survive.
[318] (1997) 190 CLR 410; [1997]
HCA 36.
[319] (1997) 190 CLR 410 at
424.
[320] (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 438;
see also at 454 per McHugh J ("The executive capacity of the Commonwealth
can only mean its legal right
or power to do or refrain from doing
something").
[321] [1999] HCA 30; (1999) 199 CLR 462 at
497-503 [83]- [94]; [1999] HCA 30.
[322] Pollock, A First Book of
Jurisprudence for Students of the Common Law, (1896) at 110.
[323] A First Book of
Jurisprudence for Students of the Common Law, (1896) at 113.
[324] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 509;
[1934] HCA 74.
[325] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
509.
[326] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
510.
[327] (1922) 31 CLR 421; [1922]
HCA 62.
[328] (1925) 37 CLR 233; [1925]
HCA 55. See also, on application for special leave to appeal to the Privy
Council, [1980] HCA 40; (1925) 32 ALR 1.
[329] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
493.
[330] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
508.
[331] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 per
Rich J, 502-503 per Starke J, 517-518 per McTiernan J.
[332] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
496.
[333] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 508 per
Dixon J.
[334] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 per
Rich J.
[335] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
493.
[336] [1925] HCA 55; (1925) 37 CLR 233 at 241 per
Isaacs J; see also at 239 per Knox CJ, 247-248 per Higgins J, 251
per Rich J. Starke J agreed at 252
that the appeal should be
dismissed but gave no reasons.
[337] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
430.
[338] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
461.
[339] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 432 per
Knox CJ and Gavan Duffy J, 441-443, 445, 447-448 per Isaacs J,
453-454 per Higgins J, 459-461 per Starke
J.
[340] (1904) 2 CLR 139; [1904] HCA
38.
[341] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 163.
[342] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 155; see
also at 150.
[343] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 161.
[344] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 157.
[345] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 157.
[346] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 157.
See also Lockwood v The Commonwealth [1954] HCA 31; (1954) 90 CLR 177 at 182 per
Fullagar J; [1954] HCA 31.
[347] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 156.
[348] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 160.
[349] [1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 161.
[350] cf Clough v Leahy
[1904] HCA 38; (1904) 2 CLR 139 at 156-157.
[351] Corporations Act 2001
(Cth), s 124(1).
[352] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 105 [294].
[353] Sections 53, 54 and 56
all refer to a proposed law or proposed laws "appropriating" or "which
appropriates" or "for the appropriation of" revenue
or moneys.
[354] Sections 53 and 55
deal, respectively, with proposed laws and laws "imposing taxation".
[355] s 97.
[356] s 1.
[357] ss 7 and 24.
[358] As to which see Permanent
Trustee Australia Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue (Vict) [2004] HCA 53; (2004) 220 CLR
388 at 407-420 [38]- [74]; [2004] HCA 53.
[359] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 105
[294].
[360] Durell, The Principles
and Practice of the System of Control over Parliamentary Grants, (1917) at
3.
[361] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 105
[296].
[362] See also Maitland, The
Constitutional History of England, (1908) at 445-446.
[363] [2005] HCA 61; (2005) 224 CLR 494 at 523
[6] per Gleeson CJ, 574-575 [154] per Gummow, Hayne, Callinan and
Heydon JJ.
[364] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 78
[197].
[365] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
449.
[366] Section 7(1) of the Act
provided that if the Commissioner of Taxation was satisfied that a person was
entitled to the tax bonus
for the 2007-08 income year "the Commissioner must pay
the person his or her tax bonus as soon as practicable after becoming so
satisfied".
[367] See, for example, Audit
Act 1901 (Cth), s 4, Coronation Celebration Act 1902 (Cth),
s 2, Loans Securities Act 1919 (Cth), s 4 and, more recently,
Northern Territory National Emergency Response Act 2007 (Cth),
s 63(2), Dental Benefits Act 2008 (Cth), s 65 and Federal
Financial Relations Act 2009 (Cth), s 22.
[368] Defined in s 3 as "the
total amount set out in Schedule 1 in relation to an entity under the
heading 'Departmental Outputs'". "[E]ntity" was defined
in the same section as
any of "an Agency ... a Commonwealth authority ... [or] a Commonwealth company".
"Agency" was defined as meaning
"an Agency within the meaning of the
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 " or this Court.
[369] Defined in s 3 as "an
amount set out in Schedule 1 opposite an outcome of an entity under the
heading 'Administered Expenses'".
[370] s 3.
[371] See, for example, Supply
Act (No 1) 1950-51 (Cth), s 3.
[372] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd ("the Wooltops
Case") [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 449 per Isaacs J.
[373] Wooltops Case [1922] HCA 62; (1922)
31 CLR 421 at 449 per Isaacs J.
[374] Amalgamated Society of
Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 129; [1920] HCA 54.
[375] See, for example, New
South Wales v The Commonwealth (Work Choices Case) [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229
CLR 1 at 119-120 [194]; [2006] HCA 52.
[376] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at 604;
[1957] HCA 54.
[377] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at
605.
[378] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at
605.
[379] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at
609.
[380] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at
609.
[381] [1957] HCA 54; (1957) 99 CLR 575 at
609-610.
[382] [1947] HCA 26; (1947) 74 CLR 31.
[383] [1947] HCA 26; (1947) 74 CLR 31.
[384] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
398.
[385] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
357.
[386] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
374.
[387] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at
266.
[388] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 357.
[389] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 356-357 per Barwick CJ, 374 per Gibbs J; cf at 393 per
Mason J.
[390] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 91
[240].
[391] Surplus Revenue Case
[1908] HCA 68; (1908) 7 CLR 179.
[392] Pharmaceutical Benefits
Case [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 271 per Dixon J.
[393] s 83.
[394] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 72
[176].
[395] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
362-363.
[396] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63
[132]- [133]. As has been mentioned, his Honour did so by reference to Mason J's
later, but substantively identical, statement of principle in
R v
Duncan; Ex parte Australian Iron and Steel Pty Ltd [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535
at 560.
[397] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 396 per Mason J.
[398] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 90-91
[239].
[399] Davis v The Commonwealth
[1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 93-94 per Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ.
[400] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 91
[239], quoting Davis v The Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 111 per
Brennan J.
[401] [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229 CLR 1.
[402] [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229 CLR 1 at 116
[181]. The hypothetical law would apply indifferently to constitutional
corporations and others but would produce no differential effect
on such
corporations: [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229 CLR 1 at 114 [176], quoting Re Dingjan;
Ex parte Wagner [1995] HCA 16; (1995) 183 CLR 323 at 337 per Brennan J; [1995]
HCA 16.
[403] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
279-281 per Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ; [1987]
HCA 6.
[404] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
279.
[405] British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth ("the BMA Case") (1949) 79 CLR
201; [1949] HCA 44.
[406] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
279.
[407] BMA Case [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79
CLR 201 at 287 per Williams J.
[408] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[409] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[410] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at
260-261.
[411] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[412] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 279;
see also at 246 per Latham CJ, 286-287 per Williams J, 292 per
Webb J.
[413] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[414] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
281.
[415] See Wong v The
Commonwealth [2009] HCA 3; (2009) 236 CLR 573 at 587-589 [43]- [48], 623-624 [174]-[177];
[2009] HCA 3.
[416] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237.
[417] See above at [297].
[418] See below at
[315]-[326].
[419] See below at
[327]-[331].
[420] See below at
[332]-[339].
[421] See below at
[340]-[407].
[422] See below at
[408]-[441].
[423] See below at
[442]-[448].
[424] Australian Conservation
Foundation Inc v The Commonwealth (1980) 146 CLR 493 at 527; [1980] HCA
53.
[425] Like the plaintiffs in
Brown v West (1990) 169 CLR 195; [1990] HCA 7 and Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2009) 238 CLR 1; [2009] HCA 23.
[426] Australian Conservation
Foundation Inc v The Commonwealth (1980) 146 CLR 493 at 530 per Gibbs J.
[427] Onus v Alcoa of Australia
Ltd [1981] HCA 50; (1981) 149 CLR 27 at 37 per Gibbs CJ; [1981] HCA 50.
[428] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 386-387 and 392-393; [1975]
HCA 52; Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at
210-211 [601]- [602].
[429] Anderson v The
Commonwealth [1932] HCA 2; (1932) 47 CLR 50 at 51-52; [1932] HCA 2.
[430] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 402.
[431] See below at [334].
[432] See below at
[332]-[339].
[433] See below at
[336]-[338].
[434] See above at
[320]-[321].
[435] Gardner v Dairy Industry
Authority of New South Wales (1977) 52 ALJR 180 at 188 per Aickin J; 18 ALR
55 at 71.
[436] Gardner v Dairy Industry
Authority of New South Wales (1977) 52 ALJR 180 at 189 per Aickin J; 18 ALR
55 at 71. See also Church of Scientology v Woodward [1982] HCA 78; (1982) 154 CLR 25 at
62; [1982] HCA 78.
[437] Australian Conservation
Foundation Inc v The Commonwealth (1980) 146 CLR 493 at 530 per Gibbs J.
[438] See below at [397]-[402].
[439] Pantorno v The Queen
[1989] HCA 18; (1989) 166 CLR 466 at 473; [1989] HCA 18.
[440] [1988] HCA 18; (1988) 165 CLR 360 at 385
per Mason CJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane, Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ; [1988] HCA
18.
[441] Official Report of the
National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney), 6 April 1891 at
777-778.
[442] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 56-57
[115]- [117] per French CJ.
[443] See above at [346].
[444] XYZ v The Commonwealth
[2006] HCA 25; (2006) 227 CLR 532 at 583-591 [153]- [173]; [2006] HCA 25.
[445] "Position of Commonwealth
and States in Relation to Treaties: Source and Extent of Commonwealth Executive
Power and External Affairs
Power: Nature of Adherence to Treaties: Channel of
Communication Between States and Empire or Foreign Powers", in Brazil and
Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth of
Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 2 at 3.
[446] "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at
130.
[447] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 59 [124]
per French CJ.
[448] "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at 130.
[449] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 59 [124]
per French CJ.
[450] "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at 131.
Deakin had stated similar ideas during the Convention Debates: Official
Report of the National Australasian Convention Debates, (Sydney),
6 April 1891 at 769-773.
[451] "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at 131-132.
The last sentence is an exaggeration: see below at [393], [395], [399] and
[406].
[452] See above at [397].
[453] "Channel of Communication
with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power of
Commonwealth", in Brazil and Mitchell
(eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General of
the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14,
(1981) 129 at 132.
[454] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 57 [118]
per French CJ.
[455] "Executive Power of
Commonwealth – Whether Coextensive with Legislative Power: When is State
Executive Power Displaced:
Whether Commonwealth has Power by Executive Act to
Permit Landing of Foreign Troops or Crews", in Brazil and Mitchell (eds),
Opinions of Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1:
1901-14, (1981) 358 at 360.
[456] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 108
[306].
[457] Australia, House of
Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 9 July 1903 at
1997-1998 (H B Higgins); Australia, House of Representatives, Parliamentary
Debates (Hansard), 25 September 1912 at 3422-3424 (Sir John Forrest);
Australia, House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard),
1 October 1912 at 3639 (Sir John Quick).
[458] (1987) at 203-204.
[459] Bonanza Creek Gold Mining
Co Ltd v The King [1916] 1 AC 566 at 579. See also Attorney-General for
Canada v Attorney-General of the Province of Ontario (1894) 5 Cart 517 at
543 and Her Majesty in right of the Province of Alberta v Canadian Transport
Commission [1978] 1 SCR 61 at 71.
[460] [1916] 1 AC 566 at 580.
[461] The Royal
Prerogative, (1987) at 204-205.
[462] The Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 98.
[463] Amalgamated Society of
Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd [1920] HCA 54; (1920) 28 CLR 129 at 148; [1920] HCA
54.
[464] [1935] HCA 31; (1935) 52 CLR 533 at 567;
[1935] HCA 31.
[465] There is a reference,
preceded by "cf", to Berriedale Keith, Responsible Government in the
Dominions, (1912), vol II at 809. The correct page reference is 800. The
words are in fact those of a quotation, of which the author appears
to approve,
of part of a despatch from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Joseph
Chamberlain, in relation to the question of
the channels through which the
Imperial Government and the Commonwealth Government should communicate.
[466] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Official Liquidator of E O Farley Ltd [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278 at 321;
[1940] HCA 13.
[467] [1974] HCA 20; (1974) 131 CLR 477 at 498;
[1974] HCA 20. As Winterton noted ("The Relationship between Commonwealth
Legislative and Executive Power", [2004] AdelLawRw 3; (2004) 25 Adelaide Law Review 21 at 33
n 87), the last sentence is "essentially quote[d]" in Re Ditfort; Ex parte
Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (1988) 19 FCR 347 at 369.
[468] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 93 per
Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ; [1988] HCA 63.
[469] (1997) 190 CLR 410 at 455
per McHugh J and 464 per Gummow J; [1997] HCA 36.
[470] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 83 [214]
per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[471] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 116
[328] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
[472] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362.
[473] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
379.
[474] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
396-397.
[475] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 93 per
Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ.
[476] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 114
[323].
[477] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
398.
[478] [1983] HCA 21; (1983) 158 CLR 1 at 109;
[1983] HCA 21. It was also approved in Pape v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 181 [519].
[479] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
404-405.
[480] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
405.
[481] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
406.
[482] See below at
[397]-[402].
[483] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
406.
[484] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379,
quoted above at [361].
[485] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
379.
[486] See below at [385] and
[405].
[487] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
396-397, quoted above at [362].
[488] [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 113;
[1977] HCA 71.
[489] [1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 61.
[490] [1984] HCA 67; (1984) 156 CLR 532 at 543;
[1984] HCA 67.
[491] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560;
[1983] HCA 29.
[492] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
396-397.
[493] (2000) 202 CLR 535 at
554-555 [38] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ;
[2000] HCA 22.
[494] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63 [132]
per French CJ.
[495] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at
110.
[496] [2002] HCA 28; (2002) 213 CLR 1 at 391
[962]; [2002] HCA 28.
[497] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379
and 396-397.
[498] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 432;
[1922] HCA 62. See also at 441, 443 and 451 (requiring a statutory sanction
beyond an Appropriation Act).
[499] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1 at 10;
[1926] HCA 39.
[500] The High Court and the
Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at 346-347.
[501] See below at
[387]-[388].
[502] The Commonwealth v
Ling (1993) 44 FCR 397 at 430; appeal dismissed Ling v The
Commonwealth [1994] FCA 1156; (1994) 51 FCR 88.
[503] "Explorations and Adventures
with Commonwealth Powers", in Evans (ed), Labor and the Constitution
1972-1975, (1977) 24 at 43.
[504] "Explorations and Adventures
with Commonwealth Powers", in Evans (ed), Labor and the Constitution
1972-1975, (1977) 24 at 57.
[505] The Australian Federal
System, 2nd ed (1979) at 430.
[506] See above at [362].
[507] The Australian Federal
System, 2nd ed (1979) at 430.
[508] The Australian Federal
System, 2nd ed (1979) at 431.
[509] Parliament, the Executive
and the Governor-General: A Constitutional Analysis, (1983) at 30, approved
in Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 181 [520].
See also at 47.
[510] [1935] HCA 31; (1935) 52 CLR 533 at 552
("The definition of the powers of the Commonwealth Parliament does not limit the
executive powers of the
Commonwealth at all").
[511] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 341:
that s 61 "does not confer executive power beyond the execution of laws made by
the Parliament."
[512] Parliament, the Executive
and the Governor-General: A Constitutional Analysis, (1983) at 30 (footnote
omitted).
[513] Rose, "The Government and
Contract", in Finn (ed), Essays on Contract, (1987) 233 at 246.
[514] The High Court and the
Constitution, 3rd ed (1992) at 218, 4th ed (1997) at 255 and 5th ed
(2008) at 347. In the 1st ed (1981) at 206 and the 2nd ed (1987) at 227,
the
passage read: "The prevailing view ... is that any executive action that can be
taken by the Commonwealth without legislative
authorisation is confined to
matters in respect of which Parliament can make laws."
[515] "Commentary", in Evatt,
The Royal Prerogative, (1987) at C12.
[516] Government Contracts:
Federal, State and Local, 2nd ed (1999) at 50 [2.11], 3rd ed (2004) at
58 [2.11] and 4th ed (2009) at 68 [2.11], and in each citing the relevant
passages
in the judgments of Barwick CJ, Gibbs and Mason JJ in the Australian
Assistance Plan case.
[517] "Parliament, the Executive,
the Governor-General and the Republic: The George Winterton Thesis", in Lee and
Gerangelos (eds), Constitutional Advancement in a Frozen Continent: Essays
in Honour of George Winterton, (2009) 189 at 192.
[518] "Parliament, the Executive,
the Governor-General and the Republic: The George Winterton Thesis", in Lee and
Gerangelos (eds), Constitutional Advancement in a Frozen Continent: Essays
in Honour of George Winterton, (2009) 189 at 195 (footnote omitted).
[519] "The Relationship between
Commonwealth Legislative and Executive Power", [2004] AdelLawRw 3; (2004) 25 Adelaide Law
Review 21 at 31.
[520] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362,
379 and 396-397.
[521] "Pushing the Boundaries of
Executive Power – Pape, The Prerogative and Nationhood Powers",
[2010] MelbULawRw 9; (2010) 34 Melbourne University Law Review 313 at 321.
[522] "Pushing the Boundaries of
Executive Power – Pape, The Prerogative and Nationhood Powers",
[2010] MelbULawRw 9; (2010) 34 Melbourne University Law Review 313 at 329.
[523] "The Executive Power of the
Commonwealth of Australia: s 61 of the Commonwealth Constitution, 'Nationhood'
and the Future of the Prerogative", to be published in the forthcoming issue of
the Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal.
[524] See above at [362].
[525] "The Executive Power of the
Commonwealth of Australia: s 61 of the Commonwealth Constitution, 'Nationhood'
and the Future of the Prerogative", to be published in the forthcoming issue of
the Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal. The "breadth"/"depth"
distinction which Winterton drew, though it may not exhaust the possibilities
which s 61 offers for analysis, is not only neat but illuminating.
[526] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362 per Barwick CJ, 379 per
Gibbs J, 396-397 per Mason J and 405-406 per Jacobs J.
[527] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 396 per Mason J.
[528] The first Commonwealth
statute received royal assent on 25 June 1901.
[529] See below at
[394]-[396].
[530] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
445-451.
[531] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
455.
[532] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
460-461.
[533] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
433-434, 443-445 and 460-461.
[534] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 434 and
445-451.
[535] [1924] HCA 5; (1924) 34 CLR 198 at 220;
[1924] HCA 5.
[536] [1925] HCA 55; (1925) 37 CLR 233 at 240-241
and 251; [1925] HCA 55.
[537] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496 and
507-509; [1934] HCA 74.
[538] The defence power is not
expressed to be exhaustive, but several other provisions in the Constitution
indicate that it is. Section 114 prevents a State without the consent of the
Commonwealth Parliament from raising or maintaining any naval or military force.
Section 52(ii) makes exclusive to the Commonwealth the power of legislation with
respect to "matters relating to any department of the public service
the control
of which is by this Constitution transferred to the Executive Government of the
Commonwealth". Section 69 provides for the transfer to the Commonwealth of
departments of "naval and military defence". Section 119 imposes a duty on the
Commonwealth to "protect every State against invasion". The executive power in
relation to defence is also
extensive, because of s 70. See Joseph v
Colonial Treasurer (NSW) [1918] HCA 30; (1918) 25 CLR 32 at 46-47; [1918] HCA 30.
[539] The external affairs power
is not expressed to be exclusive, but, as Barwick CJ said in New South Wales
v The Commonwealth [1975] HCA 58; (1975) 135 CLR 337 at 373; [1975] HCA 58:
"Whilst the power with respect to external affairs is not expressed to be a
power exclusively vested in the Commonwealth, it must
necessarily of its nature
be so as to international relations and affairs. Only the Commonwealth has
international status. The
colonies never were and the States are not
international persons."
[540] See Cadia Holdings Pty
Ltd v New South Wales (2010) 242 CLR 195 at 210 [31]; [2010] HCA 27.
[541] Winterton, Parliament,
the Executive and the Governor-General: A Constitutional Analysis, (1983)
at 47.
[542] See The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 460.
[543] A v Hayden [1984] HCA 67; (1984) 156
CLR 532 at 580-581; Vasiljkovic v The Commonwealth [2006] HCA 40; (2006) 227 CLR 614 at
634-635 [49]- [50]; [2006] HCA 40.
[544] Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 112. There may well be other powers in s
51 only exercisable by the legislature and not the Executive.
[545] The Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 98.
[546] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Official Liquidator of E O Farley Ltd [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278 at
322.
[547] See above at [347].
[548] The Solicitor-General of the
Commonwealth referred to Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009)
238 CLR 1 at 85 [220] and Clarke v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[2009] HCA 33; (2009) 240 CLR 272 at 306 [64] and 307 [66]; [2009] HCA 33.
[549] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79.
[550] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63 [133]
per French CJ and 91-92 [242] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[551] Plaintiff M70/2011 v
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2011) 244 CLR 144; [2011] HCA
32.
[552] See above at [385].
[553] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 60
[126].
[554] Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 108 per Brennan J.
[555] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 83
[214].
[556] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 18.
[557] See below at
[408]-[441].
[558] Australia, House of
Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 March 1946 at
646-647. The "pharmaceutical benefits case" to which Dr Evatt referred was
Attorney-General (Vict) v The Commonwealth (1945) 71 CLR 237; [1945] HCA
30.
[559] Commonwealth Electoral
Office, Referendums to be taken on the Proposed Laws: Constitution
Alteration (Social Services) 1946, Constitution Alteration (Organized Marketing
of Primary Products) 1946, Constitution Alteration (Industrial Employment) 1946:
The Case For and Against, (1946) at 5.
[560] Attorney-General (Vict) v
The Commonwealth [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237.
[561] Australia, House of
Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 March 1946 at
648.
[562] See Cole v Whitfield
[1988] HCA 18; (1988) 165 CLR 360 at 385, quoted above at [346].
[563] (1949) 79 CLR 201; [1949]
HCA 44.
[564] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at
292.
[565] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at 281;
[1987] HCA 6.
[566] R v Public Vehicles
Licensing Appeal Tribunal (Tas); Ex parte Australian National Airways Pty Ltd
[1964] HCA 15; (1964) 113 CLR 207 at 225 per Dixon CJ, Kitto, Taylor, Menzies, Windeyer and
Owen JJ; [1964] HCA 15.
[567] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 138-143 [404]- [419].
[568] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at
260.
[569] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 230,
279-280, 286-287 and 292 respectively.
[570] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[571] British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 254, 261, 281-282 and
286-287.
[572] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 260,
quoted above at [428].
[573] See above at [428].
[574] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at 280.
[575] See Wong v The
Commonwealth [2009] HCA 3; (2009) 236 CLR 573 at 588-591 [48]- [50]; [2009] HCA 3.
[576] [1949] UKHL 1; [1949] AC 426 at 446 and
451-453.
[577] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at
279.
[578] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at
280.
[579] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at 281,
quoted above at [423].
[580] British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 233.
[581] British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 260, quoted above at
[428].
[582] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 260,
see above at [428].
[583] Sykes v Cleary [1992] HCA 60; (1992)
176 CLR 77 at 96; [1992] HCA 60.
[584] R v Boston [1923] HCA 59; (1923) 33
CLR 386 at 402; [1923] HCA 59.
[585] Formerly the Department of
Education, Science and Training ("DEST").
[586] [2005] HCA 61; (2005) 224 CLR 494 at
573-574 [150]- [151] per Gummow, Hayne, Callinan and Heydon JJ; [2005] HCA
61.
[587] [2005] HCA 61; (2005) 224 CLR 494 at 574
[151] per Gummow, Hayne, Callinan and Heydon JJ.
[588] Australia, Senate,
Journals of the Senate, 1976-1977, No 82, 17 February 1977 at 572.
[589] Section 81: "All revenues
or moneys raised or received by the Executive Government of the Commonwealth
shall form one Consolidated Revenue Fund,
to be appropriated for the purposes of
the Commonwealth in the manner and subject to the charges and liabilities
imposed by this
Constitution."
[590] Section 83: "No money shall
be drawn from the Treasury of the Commonwealth except under appropriation made
by law."
[591] ICM Agriculture Pty Ltd v
The Commonwealth [2009] HCA 51; (2009) 240 CLR 140 at 169 [41]; [2009] HCA 51, referring to
Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation ("Pape") (2009) 238
CLR 1; [2009] HCA 23.
[592] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 55 [113] per French CJ, 87 [227], 89 [234] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
See also Davis v The Commonwealth ("Davis") [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at
92 per Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ, 107 per Brennan J; [1988] HCA
63.
[593] Barton v The Commonwealth
[1974] HCA 20; (1974) 131 CLR 477 at 498 per Mason J; [1974] HCA 20.
[594] New South Wales v
Bardolph ("Bardolph") (1934) 52 CLR 455; [1934] HCA 74.
[595] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden ("the AAP Case") [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397
per Mason J; [1975] HCA 52. See also Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 111
per Brennan J and Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 87 [228] per Gummow, Crennan
and Bell JJ.
[596] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 87-88 [228] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[597] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 397 per Mason J. See also Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 111
per Brennan J.
[598] As, for example, in Pape
[2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1.
[599] R v Kidman [1915] HCA 58; (1915) 20
CLR 425 at 440 per Isaacs J; [1915] HCA 58. See Australian Communist Party v
The Commonwealth [1951] HCA 5; (1951) 83 CLR 1 at 259 per Fullagar J; [1951] HCA 5. See
also Burns v Ransley (1949) [1949] HCA 45; 79 CLR 101 at 109-110 per Latham CJ, 116 per
Dixon J; [1949] HCA 45; R v Sharkey [1949] HCA 46; (1949) 79 CLR 121 at 148-149 per
Dixon J; [1949] HCA 46.
[600] As in Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1.
[601] As in Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988)
166 CLR 79.
[602] Blackstone, Commentaries
on the Laws of England, (1765), bk 1, c 7 at 232:
"[I]t can only be applied to those rights and capacities which the king
enjoys alone, in contradistinction to others, and not to those
which he enjoys
in common with any of his subjects: for if once any one prerogative of the
crown could be held in common with the
subject, it would cease to be prerogative
any longer."
In Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Official Liquidator of E O Farley
Ltd [1940] HCA 13; (1940) 63 CLR 278 at 320-321, Evatt J described those rights and
powers as the "royal prerogatives" or "executive prerogatives";
[1940] HCA 13.
[603] Dicey, Introduction to
the Study of the Law of the Constitution, 10th ed (1959) at 424-425
described the prerogative powers accorded to the Crown broadly:
"The prerogative appears to be both historically and as a matter of actual
fact nothing else than the residue of discretionary or
arbitrary authority,
which at any given time is legally left in the hands of the Crown. ... Every
act which the executive government
can lawfully do without the authority of the
Act of Parliament is done in virtue of this prerogative."
[604] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at
107-109. See Victoria v Australian Building Construction Employees' and
Builders Labourers' Federation [1982] HCA 31; (1982) 152 CLR 25 at 63-64 per
Stephen J, 155 per Brennan J; [1982] HCA 31. See also Joseph v
Colonial Treasurer (NSW) [1918] HCA 30; (1918) 25 CLR 32 at 48 per Isaacs, Powers and Rich
JJ; [1918] HCA 30. See further Evatt, The Royal Prerogative,
(1987) at 12-13 and Goldsworthy, The Sovereignty of Parliament: History
and Philosophy, (1999) at 81-82.
[605] Ex parte McLean
[1930] HCA 12; (1930) 43 CLR 472 at 485 per Dixon J; [1930] HCA 12. See also Jemena Asset
Management (3) Pty Ltd v Coinvest Ltd [2011] HCA 33; (2011) 85 ALJR 945 at 952 [36]; [2011] HCA 33; 280
ALR 206 at 214; [2011] HCA 33.
[606] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338.
[607] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455.
[608] Melbourne Corporation v
The Commonwealth [1947] HCA 26; (1947) 74 CLR 31 at 82-83 per Dixon J; [1947] HCA 26.
[609] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 397 per Mason J. See also Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 111 per
Brennan J and Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 87 [228] per Gummow, Crennan and
Bell JJ.
[610] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 88-89 [229]- [231].
[611] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 83 [215] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[612] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 85 [220] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[613] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
357.
[614] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
357-358.
[615] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
398.
[616] And the earlier Schools
Assistance (Learning Together – Achievement Through Choice and
Opportunity) Act 2004 (Cth).
[617] See s 3(2)(a) and Pt
4.
[618] See s 3(2)(b) and Pt
5.
[619] See s 3(2)(c) and Pt
6.
[620] See Pt 6, Div 6.
[621] AAP Case [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134
CLR 338 at 398 per Mason J.
[622] The Commonwealth v
Tasmania [1983] HCA 21; (1983) 158 CLR 1 at 253 per Deane J ("the Tasmanian Dam
Case"); [1983] HCA 21.
[623] Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR
79 at 94 per Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ.
[624] [1983] HCA 21; (1983) 158 CLR 1 at
252-253.
[625] Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR
79 at 111 per Brennan J.
[626] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd ("the Wool Tops Case")
[1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 438, 446, 449-451 per Isaacs J; [1922] HCA 62; Victorian
Stevedoring and General Contracting Co Pty Ltd and Meakes v Dignan
("Dignan") [1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46 CLR 73 at 114 per Evatt J; [1931] HCA 34;
Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation ("Lange") [1997] HCA 25; (1997) 189
CLR 520 at 558-559; [1997] HCA 25.
[627] Amalgamated Society of
Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd [1920] HCA 54; (1920) 28 CLR 129 at 147 per Knox CJ,
Isaacs, Rich and Starke JJ, approving what was said by Lord Haldane, when a
member of the
House of Commons, introducing the Bill for the Australian
Constitution into the Imperial Parliament and distinguishing it from the
American Constitution; [1920] HCA 54. See also Quick and Garran, The
Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth, (1901) at
703.
[628] Representation of the
People Act 1832 (UK) (2 & 3 Will IV c 45). See, generally, Bagehot,
The English Constitution, 2nd ed (1872) at xxv-xxvi. See also
Adegbenro v Akintola [1963] AC 614 at 631.
[629] Dignan [1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46 CLR
73 at 114 per Evatt J.
[630] (2010) 243 CLR 1 at 109-112
[336]-[347] per Crennan J; [2010] HCA 46. See, generally, Twomey, The
Chameleon Crown: The Queen and Her Australian Governors, (2006), Ch
1.
[631] (1998) 195 CLR 424; [1998]
HCA 71.
[632] [1998] HCA 71; (1998) 195 CLR 424 at 451
[42] per Gaudron, Gummow and Hayne JJ, citing Kinley, "Governmental
Accountability in Australia and the United Kingdom: A Conceptual
Analysis of
the Role of Non-Parliamentary Institutions and Devices", (1995) 18 University
of New South Wales Law Journal 409 at 411.
[633] See Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934)
52 CLR 455 at 509 per Dixon J.
[634] Sir Samuel Griffith,
Notes on Australian Federation: Its Nature and Probable Effects, (1896)
at 17-18.
[635] Rowe v Electoral
Commissioner (2010) 243 CLR 1 at 107 [330], 108-112 [333]-[347] per Crennan
J.
[636] Dignan [1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46 CLR
73 at 89-90 per Dixon J. See also Plaut v Spendthrift Farm Inc [1995] USSC 32; 514 US
211 at 219 (1995).
[637] See the Public Service
Act 1999 (Cth).
[638] See, for example, Carr v
Western Australia [2007] HCA 47; (2007) 232 CLR 138 at 143 [7] per Gleeson CJ; [2007] HCA
47.
[639] Lange [1997] HCA 25; (1997) 189 CLR
520 at 559. See also Birch, Representative and Responsible
Government, (1964) at 17-18 and Walker, The Oxford Companion to
Law, (1980) at 1065.
[640] See Byers, "The Australian
Constitution and Responsible Government", (1985) 1 Australian Bar Review
233.
[641] Cf Campbell, "Commonwealth
Contracts", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal 14, especially at 18;
Campbell, "Federal Contract Law", (1970) 44 Australian Law Journal 580,
especially at 580, 585-586.
[642] R v Kidman [1915] HCA 58; (1915) 20
CLR 425 at 440-441 per Isaacs J; Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 112 per
Brennan J.
[643] Nicholas v The Queen
[1998] HCA 9; (1998) 193 CLR 173 at 231 [142] per Gummow J; [1998] HCA 9.
[644] Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1
at 87 [227] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ. See also A v Hayden [1984] HCA 67; (1984)
156 CLR 532 at 580-581 per Brennan J; [1984] HCA 67; White v Director of
Military Prosecutions [2007] HCA 29; (2007) 231 CLR 570 at 592 [37] per Gummow, Hayne and
Crennan JJ; [2007] HCA 29.
[645] (1997) 191 CLR 471 at 491
per Brennan CJ, 527, 531 per Gaudron J, 545-552 per Gummow and Kirby JJ; [1997]
HCA 29.
[646] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
496.
[647] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
503.
[648] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
507.
[649] [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at
508.
[650] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 23 [8],
64 [135] per French CJ, 70-71 [167]-[171] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 97
[267], 133 [393]-[394] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
[651] HIH Claims Support Ltd v
Insurance Australia Ltd (2011) 244 CLR 72; [2011] HCA 31.
[652] Australian Communist
Party v The Commonwealth [1951] HCA 5; (1951) 83 CLR 1 at 259 per Fullagar J. See also
Burns v Ransley [1949] HCA 45; (1949) 79 CLR 101 at 109-110 per Latham CJ, 116 per
Dixon J; R v Sharkey [1949] HCA 46; (1949) 79 CLR 121 at 148-149 per Dixon J.
[653] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338.
[654] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79.
[655] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1.
[656] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
361-362.
[657] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
362.
[658] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
379.
[659] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
396.
[660] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
404-405.
[661] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, Volume 1: 1901-14, (1981) 129 at
130-132.
[662] Australia, Report of the
Royal Commission on the Constitution, (1929), Minutes of Evidence, Pt 1 at
71-72.
[663] See Pape [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1.
[664] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 59 [124]
per French CJ.
[665] Australian Bicentennial
Authority Act 1980 (Cth).
[666] See Davis [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166
CLR 79 at 88 per Mason CJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ:
"The primary object for which the Authority is established is to formulate,
to plan, to develop, to promote, to co-ordinate and to
implement,
consistently with applicable legislation of the Parliament of the
Commonwealth, a national programme of celebrations and activities".
(emphasis added)
[667] Renfree, The Executive
Power of the Commonwealth of Australia, (1984) at 456.
[668] As explained in the reasons
of Crennan J at [460], the Guidelines, first issued in December 2006, have been
replaced by updated
versions. Nothing said in these reasons turns on the
differences between various versions of the Guidelines.
[669] The predecessor to the
Schools Assistance Act 2008 (Cth), the Schools Assistance (Learning
Together – Achievement Through Choice and Opportunity) Act 2004 (Cth),
made provision for grants to government and non-government schools. Presently
the Commonwealth provides funding for government
schools under the Federal
Financial Relations Act 2009 (Cth).
[670] See the reasons of Crennan J
at [472] for an overview of the relevant contemporary parliamentary practice
regarding appropriations.
[671] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 104 [292] per Hayne and Kiefel
JJ; [2009] HCA 23, quoting The State of New South Wales v The
Commonwealth [1908] HCA 68; (1908) 7 CLR 179 at 190-191 per Griffith CJ, 200 per Isaacs J;
[1908] HCA 68; Victoria v The Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338
at 386-387 per Stephen J, 392-393 per Mason J; [1975] HCA 52.
[672] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 72 [176] per Gummow, Crennan
and Bell JJ.
[673] [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1.
[674] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63 [133] per French CJ.
[675] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 91-92 [242] per Gummow, Crennan
and Bell JJ.
[676] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 36 [53], 55 [111] per French
CJ, 73 [178], 75 [184]-[186] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ, 113 [320] per
Hayne and Kiefel JJ, 210 [600],
211-212 [603], 212-213 [606]-[607] per Heydon
J.
[677] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 438 per
Isaacs J; [1922] HCA 62.
[678] Zines, The High Court and
the Constitution, 5th ed (2008) at 342.
[679] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
437-438 per Isaacs J; Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238
CLR 1 at 115-116 [326]- [327]; see also Davis v The Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988)
166 CLR 79 at 92; [1988] HCA 63.
[680] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, (1981), vol 1, 129 at 130.
[681] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, (1981), vol 1, 129 at 131; see also
Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 119 [337] per
Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
[682] [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
437.
[683] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
440.
[684] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
441.
[685] Harrison Moore, The
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2nd ed (1910) at 98; see also
the references in Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR
1 at 108 [306].
[686] Saunders, "The Development
of the Commonwealth Spending Power", [1978] MelbULawRw 4; (1978) 11 Melbourne University Law
Review 369 at 381; see also Pape v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 108-109 [306]- [307].
[687] (1926) 38 CLR 399; [1926]
HCA 48.
[688] (1945) 71 CLR 237; [1945]
HCA 30. See Saunders, "The Development of the Commonwealth Spending Power",
[1978] MelbULawRw 4; (1978) 11 Melbourne University Law Review 369 at 388-401.
[689] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
378-379.
[690] [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at
396-397.
[691] See also Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362 per Barwick CJ, 405-406
per Jacobs J.
[692] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379.
[693] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397.
[694] [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1 at 10;
[1926] HCA 39.
[695] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 432
per Knox CJ and Gavan Duffy J, 433, 437, 441, 447-448, 451 per Isaacs J, 453-454
per Higgins J, 461 per
Starke J.
[696] [1924] HCA 5; (1924) 34 CLR 198 at 220,
222-224 per Isaacs and Rich JJ; [1924] HCA 5.
[697] Deakin, "Channel of
Communication with Imperial Government: Position of Consuls: Executive Power
of Commonwealth", in Brazil and
Mitchell (eds), Opinions of Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth of Australia, (1981), vol 1, 129 at 131.
[698] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362 (emphasis added).
[699] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 379.
[700] [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237.
[701] Which became the
Constitution Alteration (Social Services) 1946 (Cth), s 2 of which
inserted s 51(xxiiiA) into the Constitution.
[702] Australia, House of
Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 March 1946 at
648.
[703] See the former Education
Act 1945 (Cth), s 14(c), which was one of the provisions said by the
Attorney-General of the Commonwealth to be of doubtful validity: Australia,
House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 March 1946
at 648; see also the former National Security (Universities Commission)
Regulations (Cth), reg 17.
[704] National Security
(Universities Commission) Regulations, reg 17, par 2 of Second Schedule.
[705] [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 279;
[1949] HCA 44.
[706] [1987] HCA 6; (1987) 162 CLR 271 at 280;
[1987] HCA 6.
[707] British Medical
Association v The Commonwealth [1949] HCA 44; (1949) 79 CLR 201 at 243 per Latham CJ, 254
per Rich J, 260 per Dixon J, 279, 282 per McTiernan J, 292 per Webb J;
Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth [1987] HCA 6; (1987)
162 CLR 271 at 279 per Mason ACJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ.
[708] Re Pacific Coal Pty Ltd;
Ex parte Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2000] HCA 34; (2000) 203 CLR 346
at 375 [83] per Gaudron J; [2000] HCA 34; New South Wales v The Commonwealth
(Work Choices Case) [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229 CLR 1 at 114-115 [178] per Gleeson CJ,
Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Crennan JJ; [2006] HCA 52.
[709] New South Wales v The
Commonwealth (Work Choices Case) [2006] HCA 52; (2006) 229 CLR 1 at 121 [198].
[710] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
438-439, 446-451.
[711] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
439.
[712] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
449-450.
[713] Amalgamated Society of
Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd [1920] HCA 54; (1920) 28 CLR 129 at 146-147; [1920]
HCA 54; R v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society of Australia [1956] HCA 10; (1956) 94
CLR 254 at 275; [1956] HCA 10.
[714] Winterton, "The Relationship
between Commonwealth Legislative and Executive Power", [2004] AdelLawRw 3; (2004) 25 Adelaide Law
Review 21 at 36.
[715] (1990) 169 CLR 195 at 202
per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ; [1990] HCA 7.
[716] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at 433,
455, 460-461.
[717] (1934) 52 CLR 455; [1934]
HCA 74.
[718] New South Wales v
Bardolph [1934] HCA 74; (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 509, Gavan Duffy CJ agreeing at 493; and see
also Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth
[1977] HCA 71; (1977) 139 CLR 54 at 61 per Barwick CJ, 113 per Aickin J, where their Honours
appear to support that view; [1977] HCA 71.
[719] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397.
[720] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 397 per Mason J; see also
at 362 per Barwick CJ, 375 per Gibbs J.
[721] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63-64 [133] per French CJ,
91-92 [241]-[242] per Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ.
[722] Attorney-General (Vict) v
The Commonwealth [1945] HCA 30; (1945) 71 CLR 237 at 271-272.
[723] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 398.
[724] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 119 [335] per Hayne and Kiefel
JJ.
[725] The Commonwealth v
Colonial Combing, Spinning and Weaving Co Ltd [1922] HCA 62; (1922) 31 CLR 421 at
441.
[726] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 396.
[727] [1983] HCA 29; (1983) 158 CLR 535 at 560;
[1983] HCA 29.
[728] (2000) 202 CLR 535 at
554-555 [38] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ;
[2000] HCA 22.
[729] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 63 [132] per French CJ, 114
[323], 115-116 [327] per Hayne and Kiefel JJ; see also at 181 [519], 188-189
[537] per Heydon J.
[730] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 398.
[731] [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 92.
[732] Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 93-94.
[733] Davis v The
Commonwealth [1988] HCA 63; (1988) 166 CLR 79 at 111.
[734] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 357 per Barwick CJ.
[735] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 398 per Mason J.
[736] Pape v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23; (2009) 238 CLR 1 at 199 [569].
[737] [1983] HCA 21; (1983) 158 CLR 1 at 109;
[1983] HCA 21.
[738] See Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362 per Barwick CJ, 379 per
Gibbs J, 396 per Mason J.
[739] Victoria v The
Commonwealth and Hayden [1975] HCA 52; (1975) 134 CLR 338 at 362 per Barwick CJ, 379 per
Gibbs J, 396 per Mason J.
[740] The Commonwealth v
Australian Commonwealth Shipping Board [1926] HCA 39; (1926) 39 CLR 1 at 9-10.
[741] At [103].
[742] At [108]-[109].
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