The High Court has allowed the appeals in several related matters on duties payable on land. Following sales of various parcels of land in Melbourne’s Docklands, the Commissioner of State Revenue Continue reading
Decided Cases
Argos Pty Ltd v Minister for the Environment and Sustainable Development
The High Court has partly allowed an appeal from the ACT Court of Appeal on whether corporate appellants have standing to bring an application under the s 5(1) of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1989 (ACT). Continue reading
Commissioner of Taxation v MBI Properties Pty Ltd
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal from a decision of the Full Federal Court on ‘increasing adjustments’ and the meaning of ‘supply’ under s 135-5 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (Cth). Continue reading
Cantarella Bros Pty Ltd v Modena Trading Pty Ltd
A majority of the High Court has allowed an appeal against the decision of the Full Federal Court in Modena Trading Pty Ltd v Cantarella Bros Pty Ltd. Cantarella claimed that Modena had infringed its trademarks Continue reading
Kuczborski v Queensland
Jeremy Gans, ‘News: Qld Bikie Laws Challenge Set for Lengthy Hearing in September’ (30 June 2014).
The High Court has decided a special case on the constitutional validity of Queensland’s Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Act 2013 (Qld) and related provisions under various other law enforcement statutes dealing with restrictions on public association, licensing and clothing aimed at motorcycle clubs. Continue reading
Hunter and New England Local Health District v McKenna
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal from the New South Wales Court of Appeal’s decision in McKenna v Hunter and New England Local Health District. In 2004, Stephen Rose became concerned about the mental health of Continue reading
Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZSCA
James C Hathaway, ‘The Conundrum of Concealment: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZSCA‘ (9 November 2014) (reposted from Reflaw)
A majority of the High Court has dismissed the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection’s appeal against the decision of the Full Federal Court in SZSCA. SZSCA fled Afghanistan after the Taliban threatened to kill him in retaliation for working as a truck driver for various aid agencies. Continue reading
Alphapharm Pty Ltd v H Lundbeck A/S
The High Court has, by majority, dismissed an appeal against a decision of the Full Federal Court dealing with the extension of the term of a patent on anti-depressant drugs, and the requirements for extending the time of those applications. Continue reading
Wellington Capital Ltd v Australian Securities and Investments Commission
The High Court has dismissed an appeal against the decision of the FCAFC in ASIC v Wellington Capital Ltd. Wellington sold a portion of a managed investment scheme to a listed company, ARL, in return for the entire issued share capital of ARL, Continue reading
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v BHP Coal Pty Ltd
A 3:2 majority of the High Court has dismissed an appeal from a decision of the Full Federal Court relating to the dismissal of an employee engaged in industrial action who held a sign that read ‘No principles, SCABS, No guts’ which was deemed to be ‘offensive’ and contrary to BHP’s code of conduct. Continue reading
Gray v Richards
The High Court has partly allowed an appeal from a decision of the NSW Court of Appeal relating to the assessment of damages and fund management fees. Continue reading
Kentwell v The Queen; O’Grady v The Queen
The High Court has allowed two appeals from sentencing decisions of the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal in Kentwell and O’Grady. Continue reading
Brookfield Multiplex Ltd v The Owners — Strata Plan No 61288
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the decision of the NSW Court of Appeal, in The Owners — Strata Plan No 61288 v Brookfield Australia Investments Ltd. Continue reading
Tajjour v State of New South Wales; Hawthorne v State of New South Wales; Forster v State of New South Wales
The High Court has held that s 93X of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) is not invalid. That section makes it an offence for a person to continue to ‘habitually consort’ with convicted offenders after receiving an ‘official warning’, either verbally or in writing, from a police officer. Continue reading
Plaintiff S4/2014 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
The High Court has decided a separate special case that was originally joined to the cases of Plaintiff S297/2013 and Plaintiff M150/2013, recently decided by the Full Court. Continue reading
Maxwell v Highway Hauliers Pty Ltd
The High Court has dismissed an appeal against the decision of the WA Court of Appeal in Maxwell v Highway Hauliers Pty Ltd, relating to statutory provisions on the interpretation of insurance contracts. Continue reading
Commonwealth Bank of Australia v Barker
The High Court has allowed an an appeal from the decision of the Full Federal Court which recognised the existence in Australian law of an implied term of mutual trust and confidence between employers and employees. Continue reading
Versi v The Queen
Pollentine v Attorney-General (Qld)
The High Court has decided a special case and upheld the validity of s 18 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1945 (Qld), which relates to continued detention of child sex offenders after the expiry of sentence, ‘at her Majesty’s pleasure’, on the grounds that the ‘offender is incapable of exercising proper control over the offender’s sexual instincts’. Continue reading
Fitzgerald v The Queen
Jeremy Gans, ‘The DNA, the Handshake and the Didgeridoo: Fitzgerald v The Queen‘ (18 August 2014).
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the decision of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia in R v Fitzgerald and acquitted the appellant of murder. Continue reading
Honeysett v The Queen
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the decision of the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal in R v Honeysett, and has quashed the appellant’s conviction and ordered a new trial. Continue reading
FTZK v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
The High Court has allowed an appeal against the decision of the Full Federal Court in FTZK. FTZK is an asylum seeker who was accused of involvement in a kidnapping-murder while he was in China, an accusation he claims was motivated by his religious practices. Continue reading
Williams v Commonwealth
Simon Evans, ‘Williams [No 2] Symposium: Simon Evans on Benefits to Students’ (23 June 2014).
Graeme Hill, ‘Williams [No 2] Symposium: Graeme Hill on Narrowing the Issues’ (23 June 2014).
Jeremy Gans, ‘News: Chaplaincy Hearing Reaches Its Fourth Day’ (9 May 2014).
The High Court has decided the special case arising out of and brought by the same applicant in the recent landmark constitutional law decision, Williams v Commonwealth [2012] HCA 23, and has ruled that the SUQ Funding Agreement is not supported by the legislative or executive power of the Commonwealth.
Both the present challenge and Williams [No 1] revolved around the Commonwealth’s power to enter into an agreement to fund the public company Scripture Union Queensland’s (SUQ) delivery of chaplaincy services to the Darling Heights State Primary School (attended by Mr William’s children). In Williams [No 1], a majority of the Court held that the executive power of the Commonwealth could not support its entry into the agreement with SUQ in order to fund the chaplaincy program because the executive does not have a broad power to enter into contracts or spend public money without the support of legislation (absent another recognised source of power).
This challenge related to the new funding arrangement with SUQ for the renewed and renamed chaplaincy program, funded by a new series of appropriations acts (which also purportedly support the Commonwealth’s entry into the arrangement). Following the decision in Williams No 1, the Commonwealth Parliament inserted s 32B into the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (Cth), which (in conjunction with associated regulations) purports to grant the Commonwealth a general power to make, vary or administer arrangements and grants, where those arrangements or grants are specified in regulations.
The stated case raised eight questions to be answered by the Full Court. The central issues are whether the Commonwealth’s entry into the SUQ funding agreement is authorised by various appropriation acts, and if not, whether s 32B (and its associated regulations) is wholly invalid as going beyond the ambit of the Commonwealth’s executive power, and if not, whether those provisions are supported by a head of legislative power in the Australian Constitution (specifically, ss 51(xxiiiA), 51(xx) or 51(xxxix), operating in conjunction with s 61).
The Court held that the scheme was not supported by s 51(xxiiiA) because the provision of chaplaincy services is not a ‘benefit’ within the meaning of s 51(xxiiiA) in the sense of material aid (as interpreted by the Court in British Medical Association v Commonwealth [1949] HCA 44 or Alexandra Private Geriatric Hospital Pty Ltd v Commonwealth [1987] HCA 6) directly made to students. Payments to be applied as wages to chaplains who are to ‘support the wellbeing’ of students are not ‘benefits’ to students within the meaning of s 51(xxiiiA): at [47]. Nor was it supported by s 51(xx) as the scheme does not regulate or permit any act by or on behalf of a corporation: ‘[t]he corporation’s capacity to make the agreement and receive and apply the payments is not provided by the impugned provisions’ (at [50]). The Court also declined to reopen Williams [No 1] on the basis that the Commonwealth’s submissions here were ‘no more than a repetition of the “broad basis” submissions’ on executive power rejected by the majority in Williams [No 1], and noting that the Commonwealth’s arguments rested on a ‘false assumption’ about the ambit of federal executive power (see at [78]–[83]). Finally, the Court rejected the s 51(xxxix) argument as being contrary to Pape v Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 23 and Williams [No 1]: appropriations do not necessarily bring the expenditures within the power of the Commonwealth. Crennan J agreed with the majority but made a reservation regarding s 51(xxiiiA) noting that it was unnecessary for the Court to come to any conclusions on the wisdom of the scheme (at [101]); instead it was only necessary to find that the scheme did not provide government assistance to or for students as prescribed and identifiable beneficiaries: [102], [110].
Continue reading
Plaintiff S156/2013 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection
Houston Ash, ‘The High Court Upholds the “PNG Solution”: Plaintiff S156/2013‘ (11 July 2014).
The Full Court has decided the special case in Plaintiff S156/2013 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, and has upheld the validity of the challenged legislation and the Minister’s designation of Papua New Guinea as a regional processing country. Continue reading
Howard v Commissioner of Taxation
The High Court has unanimously dismissed an appeal against the decision of the Full Federal Court in Howard v Commissioner of Taxation, which involved three appeals to the Federal Court relating to the appellant’s 2005 and 2006 taxable income. Continue reading
Lee v The Queen
The High Court has unanimously allowed two appeals against the decision of the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal in Lee v The Queen. Continue reading
ADCO Constructions Pty Ltd v Goudappel
Sidhu v Van Dyke
Katy Barnett, ‘Estopped from Denying the “Love Shack”: Sidhu v Van Dyke‘ (21 May 2014).
The High Court has unanimously dismissed an appeal against the decision of the NSWCA in Van Dyke v Sidhu. Continue reading
Gillard v The Queen
Dale Smith, ‘Can Reckless Abuse of Authority Amount to Rape?: Gillard v The Queen‘ (2 June 2014).
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the ACT Court of Appeal’s decision to dismiss an appeal against multiple convictions for child sexual offences and rape by a family friend of the complainants. The Court quashed each of the four convictions and a new trial has been ordered for those counts. Continue reading
MacarthurCook Fund Management Ltd v TFML Ltd
The High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the decision of the NSW Court of Appeal on the circumstances in which a member of a managed investment scheme can ‘withdraw from’ that scheme under pt 5C.6 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Continue reading
Australian Financial Services and Leasing Pty Ltd v Hills Industries Ltd
The High Court has unanimously dismissed an appeal against the decision of the NSW Court of Appeal in a case concerning (among other things) the scope of so-called ‘defences’ to restitutionary claims, specifically the change of position defence. Continue reading
Stewart v Atco Controls Pty Ltd (in liq)
A five-member bench of the High Court has unanimously allowed an appeal against the decision of the Victorian Court of Appeal in Atco Controls Pty Ltd (in liq) v Stewart. Continue reading
Attorney-General (NT) v Emmerson
A majority of the High Court has allowed an appeal against the decision of the Northern Territory Court of Appeal in Attorney-General (NT) v Emmerson. Continue reading
Achurch v The Queen [No 2]
New South Wales Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages v Norrie
Thiess v Collector of Customs
Taylor v Owners — Strata Plan No 11564
Western Australia v Brown
Woodside Energy Ltd v Electricity Generation Corp; Electricity Generation Corp v Woodside Energy Ltd
James v The Queen
Australian Electoral Commission v Johnston
Milne v The Queen
Barbaro v The Queen; Zirilli v The Queen
Smith v Western Australia
Clark v Macourt
Reeves v The Queen
Unions NSW v New South Wales
Minister for Home Affairs and Justice v Adamas
Plaintiff M76/2013 v Minister for Immigration, Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship
Commonwealth v Australian Capital Territory (‘Same-Sex Marriage Case’)
- Brad Jessup, ‘The Court Hurts: Commonwealth v Australian Capital Territory (Same Sex Marriage Case)’ (23 April 2014).
- Jeremy Gans, ‘News: The High Court Sets a Date’ (4 December 2013).
- Jeremy Gans, ‘News: Same-Sex Marriage Hearings Ins and Outs’ (3 December 2013).
- Brad Jessup, ‘News: The ACT Same Sex Marriage Law and Friends of the Court’ (27 November 2013).
- Jeremy Gans, ‘News: Same-Sex Marriage Case Hearing Set for 3 and 4 December’ (5 November 2013).
- Jeremy Gans, ‘News: The ACT Signals It May Dispute the Commonwealth’s Claims about Marriage’ (28 October 2013).
- Brad Jessup, ‘News: Sex, No Specific Sex, and Same Sex: The ACT’s ‘Marriage Equality Laws’ and Norrie’s Case‘ (27 October 2013).
- Martin Clark, ‘News: Commonwealth’s Same-Sex Marriage Challenge Submissions Now Online’ (24 October 2013).