New South Wales v Commonwealth (2006)

New South Wales v Commonwealth
Court High Court of Australia
Full case name New South Wales & Ors v Commonwealth
Decided 14 November 2006
Citation(s) [2006] HCA 52; 229 CLR 1
Transcript(s) Day 1 [2006] HCATrans 215
Day 2 [2006] HCATrans 216
Day 3 [2006] HCATrans 217
Day 4 [2006] HCATrans 218
Day 5 [2006] HCATrans 233
Day 6 [2006] HCATrans 235
Court membership
Judges sitting Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan, Heydon & Crennan JJ
Case opinions
Decision by Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Crennan JJ (par. 1–422)
Dissent Kirby J (par. 423–616) and Callinan J (par. 617–914)
Keywords
This article is about the WorkChoices case. For the Wheat or Inter-State Commission case, see New South Wales v Commonwealth (1915). For the Incorporation case, see New South Wales v Commonwealth (1990).

New South Wales v Commonwealth (WorkChoices case)[1] is a landmark decision of the High Court of Australia, which held that the federal government's WorkChoices legislation[2] was a valid exercise of constitutional power. In essence, the majority (Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon & Crennan JJ) found the Constitution's corporations power capable of sustaining the legislative framework, while the conciliation and arbitration and territories powers were also seen as supporting parts of the law. Further, the majority also held that the legislation permissibly limited State powers and did not interfere with State constitutions or functioning. A minority (Kirby and Callinan JJ) dissented.

The case attracted considerable attention before, during and after the High Court decision was delivered on 14 November 2006. As a legal precedent, it may signify a shift in the distribution of power from the States to the Federal Parliament. Thus, the decision could well be regarded by historians of Australian federalism as an important legal landmark.

Background to the case

From at least 1904 through to the last decade of the 20th Century, the constitutional basis of most Australian federal industrial relations legislation was the conciliation and arbitration power. In general, the Federal Parliament would exercise this power to establish an independent tribunal to set minimum terms and conditions of employment by the compulsory conciliation and arbitration of interstate industrial disputes.

Another important historical fact of note is that for much of the 20th Century, the States and Territories had their own workplace relations legislation setting terms and conditions for employees not affected by the arbitration of interstate industrial disputes.

WorkChoices legislation

Main article: WorkChoices

In December 2005, the WorkChoices reforms were passed by Federal Parliament. There were many elements in the reforms, including some which elicited political and social controversy and consternation. In a legal sense, perhaps the two most fundamental changes were (1) the purported elimination of State and Territory workplace relations legislation from the federal industrial landscape and (2) the attempt to rely almost completely on the corporations power directly to prescribe minimum terms and conditions of employment regardless of the existence of an intrastate industrial dispute. This unprecedented (but not novel) use of the corporations power to enact federal industrial legislation was accompanied by claims that 85% of the Australian workforce would be covered by WorkChoices.[3]

A legal challenge to the constitutional basis of WorkChoices followed in short order. The plaintiffs were States of New South Wales, Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland, Victoria, and the Australian Workers' Union and Unions New South Wales. The defendant was the Commonwealth of Australia. Attorneys-General for the State of Tasmania, the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory intervened in support of the plaintiffs. The Full Court of the High Court hearing the case comprised Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan, Heydon and Crennan JJ.

Hearings of substantial matters began on 4 May 2006, and concluded on 11 May. The outcome of the challenge was the High Court decision of New South Wales & Ors v Commonwealth, delivered on 14 November 2006.[1]

Legal contentions

Commonwealth

The Commonwealth argued the WorkChoices legislation was constitutionally valid. It said the corporations power supported any law that directly created, altered, or impaired the rights, powers, duties, liabilities or privileges of a corporation. Further, it was said that the power was validly exercised by any law:

The principal argument of the Government of Australia is that the legislation is supported by Section 51(xx) of the Australian Constitution, commonly known as "the corporations power", which gives the Parliament of Australia the power to make laws with respect to "foreign corporations, and trading or financial corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth."

Some sections of the legislation are also based on other powers in the Constitution, for example the territories power, insofar as the laws apply to territories, and sections relating to employees of the Government of Australia. Generally speaking, those sections were not challenged by the states and the unions.[4]

States and unions

Shortly put, the plaintiffs argued the WorkChoices legislation was constitutionally invalid. They said that the corporations power did not support the legislative framework. In this regard, the plaintiffs argued there were three alternative limitations on the corporations power:

The states and trade unions involved in the case divided the issues between themselves, with the lawyers for each party arguing a particular part of the overall argument.

The challengers argued that the legislation was not a valid law under the Constitution of Australia, because it is not supported by any of the heads of power granted to the Parliament of Australia by Section 51 of the Australian Constitution. Their principal argument was that the corporations power did not extend far enough to support the legislation.

They distinguished the WorkChoices legislation from other laws which rely on the corporations power (such as the Trade Practices Act 1974) on the basis that those other laws are "manifestly laws with respect to... corporations" because they have "a structure whereby the corporation is a relevant actor and the activities in question are to be in trade or commerce."[4] That is, those other laws were aimed directly at corporations, and more specifically at their trading and commercial activities. They argued that the WorkChoices legislation was really directed at industrial relations, and was only remotely connected with corporations.

The challengers argued that the limits of the corporations power had not really been tested, since the vast majority of the case law was focused on determining to which corporations the power applies.

The states also argued that since the time of Federation, the industrial relations system in Australia had been largely state run. The Commonwealth's conciliation and arbitration power is specifically limited to interstate disputes, and does not extend to disputes existing entirely within one state.

The Judgment

The Court ruled 5:2 in favour of the Commonwealth (Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Crennan JJ; Kirby and Callinan JJ dissenting).[1]

Majority Judgment

The majority of the High Court :

Their Honours also rejected other arguments of the plaintiffs that parts of the WorkChoices legislation

The majority declared:[5]

A law which prescribes norms regulating the relationship between constitutional corporations and their employees, or affecting constitutional corporations in the manner considered and upheld in Fontana Films[6] or, as Gaudron J said in Re Pacific Coal, "laws prescribing the industrial rights and obligations of [constitutional] corporations and their employees and the means by which they are to conduct their industrial relations"[7] are laws with respect to constitutional corporations.

Kirby J (Dissenting)

The significant ideas put forward by Kirby J include:

Callinan J (Dissenting)

Callinan J summarises his judgment at paragraph 913. Generally, the reasons set down in paragraph 913 include:

Significance and controversy

Media coverage and commentary on the case has been significant. The case has been "hailed as the most important constitutional case in 80 years"[3] (a probable reference to Engineers, heard 86 years prior). It has also been described as potentially one of the most important cases in the history of the Court.[8]

Some feel that this media coverage may be slightly overstated, but it is generally agreed that the case is the most important case regarding the scope of the Federal Parliament's power since the Tasmanian Dams Case in 1983.

The case is also significant because of the politics surrounding it. Underpinning the challenge is a major political rift in Australian politics between the two major political forces: the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and the Liberal/National Coalition.

In 2006 not only did the Coalition hold the Federal Government of Australia but they also held a majority in the Senate allowing them to completely dominate the Federal Parliament. Federal Labor's poor result at the 2004 federal election provided the Coalition with control of the Senate for the first time since 1980. This gave the Coalition complete Federal legislative freedom. Conversely, Labor governments have been elected in all six states and two territories.

The Workplace Relations WorkChoices Act is itself politically contentious and perceived by some as an attack on both the Union and Labor movements, and the minimum wage setting system as a whole. The Coalition (inspired by conservative think tank the H. R. Nicholls Society) believe the step to have "bravely taken advantage of...new found legislative freedom and have created a substantially different and national industrial relations system". The ALP have been aggressive critics of the new laws. On the day the Bill was introduced into the Australian House of Representatives 11 members of the ALP were ejected during heated debate over the Bill. In this context the creation of "one national system" is seen by some as a sensible step to modernise Australia's industrial relations regime. Others see it as a coup d'état of the Labor Party's power to create union friendly legislative regimes through their respective State Parliaments.

The political (and party political) dimension has led commentators to draw comparisons between this case and two others: the Bank Nationalisation Case and the Communist Party Case, because in those cases the High Court was the final arbiter of divisive political issues.

The Case is also significant in that it had the most lawyers to ever appear in the High Court at one time, outstripping Wik Peoples v Queensland for the title. A picture of the proceedings has been placed on the High Court of Australia's website for this reason.

Queensland Premier Peter Beattie has said that if the Commonwealth were successful in the case, it would pave the way for the Commonwealth to use the corporations head of power to move into other areas of law traditionally within the purview of the States, such as transport, education and health. He has stated that this "would leave the federation in confusion" and has suggested that a Constitutional Convention would be necessary if that situation arose.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 NSW v Commonwealth (WorkChoices case) [2006] HCA 52, (2006) 229 CLR 1.
  2. "Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005". Commonwealth of Australia.
  3. 1 2 Pelly, Michael (5 May 2006). "Workplace test case: 54 lawyers line up". Sydney Morning Herald.
  4. 1 2 transcript NSW v Commonwealth [2006] HCATrans 215 (4 May 2006)
  5. NSW v Commonwealth [2006] HCA 52 at [198], (2006) 229 CLR 1
  6. Actors & Announcers Equity Association v Fontana Films Pty Ltd [1982] HCA 23, (1982) 150 CLR 169
  7. Re Pacific Coal [2000] HCA 34 at par. 83, 203 CLR 346.
  8. Jennett, Greg (4 May 2006). "High Court challenge begins against Govt's new IR laws". Lateline.
  9. "High Court case threatens Federation". Herald Sun. 5 May 2006.

Further reading

See also

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