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Lane v Morrison [2009] HCA 5 (16 January 2009)
Last Updated: 6 February 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ
BRIAN GEORGE LANE PLAINTIFF
AND
COLONEL PETER JOHN MORRISON
& ANOR DEFENDANTS
Lane v Morrison
[2009] HCA 5
16 January
2009
C3/2008
ORDER
1. The name of the first defendant be amended to "Colonel Peter John
Morrison, a Military Judge of the Australian Military Court".
2. The Plaintiff have leave to file a Further Amended Application for an
Order to Show Cause in the form notified to the registry
on 9 January
2009.
3. The Further Amended Application for an Order to Show Cause, insofar as it
seeks relief on Grounds 4, 5 and 7, be dismissed.
4. The Further Amended Application for an Order to Show Cause, insofar as it
seeks relief on Grounds 1, 2, 3 and 6, be referred for
further hearing by a
Full Court.
5. The plaintiff file and serve a revised s 78B notice by not later than
4pm on 23 January 2009, and file an affidavit of service
by not later than 4pm
on 2 February 2009.
6. The second defendant prepare and file an Application to Show Cause book,
in accordance with the index as settled by the Registry,
by not later than 4pm
on 10 March 2009 (being within 10 working days of the plaintiff filing the
affidavit of service of the s 78B
notice).
7. The standard timetable for filing submissions set out in High Court
Practice Direction No 1 of 2000 be varied as follows:
7.1 The plaintiff shall file and serve its written submissions on or before
6 February 2009.
7.2 The second defendant shall file and serve its written submissions at
least 15 clear working days before the hearing of the
Further Amended
Application by the Full Court.
7.3 Any intervener shall file and serve its written submissions at least
10 clear working days before the hearing of the Further
Amended Application
by the Full Court.
7.4 The plaintiff may file and serve written submissions in reply at least
five working days before the hearing of the Further Amended
Application by the
Full Court.
7.5 The second defendant may file and serve written submissions in reply to
any interveners at least five working days before the
hearing of the Further
Amended Application by the Full Court.
8. Costs of this hearing be costs in the cause.
9. The plaintiff's summons dated 16 July 2008 be otherwise dismissed.
10. Liberty to apply in writing on three clear working days
notice.
Representation
A W Street SC with M J Duncan and K S Cochrane for the plaintiff (instructed
by Provest Law)
Submitting appearance for the first defendant
S J Gageler SC, Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth, with N M Wood for the
second defendant (instructed by Australian Government
Solicitor)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Lane v Morrison
Constitutional law – High Court – original jurisdiction –
defence power – military justice system –
application for show cause
order – whether arguable – notice to Attorneys-General –
Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth), s 78B – requirement of notice
– not to include proposed argument
- FRENCH
CJ. The plaintiff seeks an order against a Military Judge of the Australian
Military Court (AMC) to show cause why prohibition
should not issue to restrain
him from trying charges against the plaintiff under the Defence Force
Discipline Act 1982 (Cth) ("the Act"). Declarations of the
invalidity of various provisions of the Act are also sought.
- The
plaintiff was charged on 8 August 2007, under ss 61(3) and 25 of the Act,
with offences of committing an indecent act and assaulting a superior officer.
The offences are said to have arisen out of an incident
at Roma in the State of
Queensland in August 2005. At the time he was a member of the Australian
Defence Force. Although initially
referred by the Director of Military
Prosecutions to the former Registrar of Military Justice with a request that a
court-martial
be convened, the charges were ultimately referred by the Registrar
of the AMC to be heard by that Court. That referral was done
under transitional
provisions following amendments to the Act which established the AMC and the
office of Registrar of that
Court[1].
- The
charges were listed for hearing before the AMC on 25 March 2008. The
plaintiff objected to its jurisdiction The charges
will now not be listed for
trial until the proceedings before this Court have been resolved.
- The
application to show cause was listed for directions on 9 December 2008. It was
adjourned to 13 January to allow the plaintiff
to refine his grounds for the
relief claimed. When the matter came on for further directions on
13 January, a proposed further
amended application was handed up in Court.
A proposed amended notice under s 78B of the Judiciary Act 1903
(Cth) had also been lodged with the Court. The notice ran to some 37 pages
setting out arguments in support of the various grounds
for relief. As to that,
it suffices to say that, where s 78B of the Judiciary Act applies to
a pending cause, it requires "notice of the cause, specifying the nature of the
matter" to be given to the Attorneys-General
of the Commonwealth and the
States[2]. The
section does not require the inclusion of detailed submissions in a notice
issued under it.
- The
Commonwealth is named as second defendant in the application. The
Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth informed the Court that
the Commonwealth
would consent to the referral of the application to the Full Court on ground 1.
It would not oppose referral on
grounds 2, 3 and 6. It opposes referral to the
extent that the application relies on grounds 4, 5 and 7 and it does so on the
basis
that they are untenable.
- Section
61(3) of the Act provides, inter alia, that a person who is a defence member or
a defence civilian is guilty of an offence if:
"(a) the person engages in conduct outside the Jervis Bay Territory (whether or
not in a public place); and
(b) engaging in that conduct would be a Territory offence, if it took place in
the Jervis Bay Territory (whether or not in a public
place)."
The maximum punishment for such an offence
is the maximum punishment for the relevant Territory offence. If the punishment
for the
Territory offence is fixed then the maximum under s 61 will be that
fixed
punishment[3].
- The
term "Territory offence" is defined to include an offence against a law of the
Commonwealth in force in the Jervis Bay Territory
other than the Act or
regulations made under
it[4]. The
criminal law in force in the Jervis Bay Territory included, at the relevant
time, the Crimes Act 1900 (ACT).
- The
Australian Military Court is created by s 114 of the Act. It is designated
as a Court of
record[5]. It
consists of the Chief Military Judge and such other military judges as from time
to time hold office in accordance with the
Act[6]. The
Court has jurisdiction under the Act "to try any charge against any
person"[7]. This
is subject to certain classes of offences set out in s 63, which require
the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions before they can be tried in
the AMC. The AMC may sit at any place
inside or outside
Australia[8].
There is provision for trial by a military
jury[9].
- The
plaintiff in effect challenges the establishment of the AMC under the Act, and
the provisions of the Act which confer jurisdiction to try offences under
s 61 which would be offences against the criminal law generally applicable
in the Jervis Bay Territory.
- The
first ground for the relief claimed challenges the validity of the provisions of
the Act establishing the AMC on the basis that its independence from command
structures within the Australian Defence Force is inconsistent
with s 68 of
the Constitution. That section vests command of the Naval and Military Forces
of the Commonwealth in the Governor-General. Having regard to comments
made by
Callinan J in White v Director of Military
Prosecutions[10]
the Commonwealth supports the referral of the further amended application to the
Full Court for further hearing insofar as the claim
for relief is based on
ground 1.
- In
ground 2, the plaintiff asserts that the AMC is not a service tribunal but a
federal court impermissibly created "outside Ch III"
and "contrary to
section 71 of the Constitution". The Commonwealth does not oppose referral of
the amended application to the extent that it relies on ground 2. That is on
the
basis that the issue raised by ground 2 is whether a body such as the AMC
can be created with the indicia of a federal court. The
Commonwealth stated in
its submissions that it understands from the plaintiff that the term "service
tribunal" is used to mean "an
ad hoc Military Tribunal, not a permanent Court".
- Ground
3 involves the contention that the Act purports to confer on the AMC a general
criminal jurisdiction which is not subordinate and supplementary to the general
criminal
law and can only validly be conferred on a Ch III court. Ground
6 raises the contention that the Act is beyond the power conferred by
s 51(vi) of the Constitution to the extent that it confers a general
criminal jurisdiction on the AMC. The Commonwealth does not oppose the referral
of the amended
application insofar as it seeks relief on grounds 3 and 6.
- By
ground 4 the plaintiff contends that the AMC's general criminal jurisdiction is
invalidly conferred in that:
"... general criminal jurisdiction for valid laws of the Commonwealth can only
be vested in a court created under s 71 exercising the judicial power of
the Commonwealth under Chapter III conferred with such jurisdiction
pursuant to ss 75, 76 and 77 and within the protection of s 80
constituted by judges appointed under s 72 of the
Constitution".
- In
submissions in the proposed s 78B notice dealing with this ground, the
plaintiff says that the trial and determination of
the alleged offences against
s 61 of the Act "is within s 80 of the Constitution and accordingly
constitutes an exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth". Further
reference is made to "the correct principles
of interpretation of s 80 in
Chapter III ...". The plaintiff submits that R v
Bernasconi[11]
is wrong to the extent that it supports a reading down of s 80 to exclude
trial in the Territories. Similarly it is submitted that Kingswell v The
Queen[12]
is wrong to the extent that it provides that s 80 is not a guarantee of
trial by jury for all serious offences against the law of the Commonwealth. The
plaintiff also seeks to distinguish
or have overruled R v Archdall and
Roskruge; Ex parte
Carrigan[13];
R v Federal Court of Bankruptcy; Ex parte
Lowenstein[14];
Sachter v Attorney-General
(Cth)[15];
Zarb v
Kennedy[16];
Li Chia Hsing v
Rankin[17];
Cheng v The
Queen[18]
and Re Colina; Ex parte
Torney[19].
- Ground
5 is expressed as follows:
"That the Australian Military Court is impermissibly defined and vested by
Defence Force Discipline Act 1982 ss 10, 61, 114 and 115 and Part
VIII Division 3 with a criminal jurisdiction because trial of the alleged
offence under s 61 to be prosecuted by the Director of Military
Prosecutions is a general criminal jurisdiction 'matter' of a kind specified in
ss 75 (i), 76 (i) and (ii) of the Constitution interferes with an essential
feature of State government and offends the integrated judicial system in
Australia under the Constitution through Chapter III and ss 51, 52,
73, 80, 106, 107, 109, 111, 118, 119, 120, 121 and 122 of the
Constitution."
There seems to have been an error of
logic in the construction of this ground which, as presently framed, does not
make much sense.
It seems to suggest that the jurisdiction of the AMC is
invalidly conferred because the trial of the particular offence with which
the
plaintiff is charged under s 61 will interfere with an essential feature of
State government and offend the integrated judicial system in Australia.
- In
his explanation of the ground in the proposed s 78B notice the plaintiff
says, inter alia:
"67 The general criminal jurisdiction of a State is an essential feature for
continued existence of the States as recognised by the
Constitution and
effectively the DFDA impermissibly discriminates between application of the
general criminal law of the States and the Jervis
Bay Territory general criminal
law. Section 109 of the Constitution does not permit the co-existence of what
are in essence State laws that must be inconsistent with the DFDA offences under
s 61. It matters not whether the jurisdiction involves of the judicial
power of the Commonwealth as there still an incompatible interference
by
Commonwealth law with an essential function of State governments, and in this
case specifically, the State of Queensland."
[sic]
- The
submissions in relation to ground 5, like those in relation to other grounds,
are expressed in sweeping language but do not disclose
clear lines of argument.
The ground appears to roll up two propositions. The first is that the Act
"interferes with an essential feature of State government". The second is that
it "offends the integrated judicial system in Australia
under the Constitution
...". In submissions in support of the ground in the proposed s 78B
notice, the plaintiff seeks to distinguish or have overruled
some sixteen
decisions of this Court. The ground appears also to rely, inter alia, upon
various provisions of the Constitution including ss 118 and 122 in a way
that eludes ready comprehension.
- By
ground 7, it is asserted that the alleged offence against s 61 of the Act
is beyond the jurisdiction of the AMC. This is because Ch III and
ss 106 and 109 of the Constitution preclude trial by service tribunals of
an offence that would be a civil offence under the general law unless the
alleged offence
has a service connection and was said to have been committed on
active service outside the jurisdiction of ordinary courts or in
circumstances
or places where the jurisdiction of ordinary courts cannot be exercised.
- The
Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth submitted that, as appears from amendments
to grounds 4 and 5 in the proposed further amended
application, and, as is made
clear by the proposed s 78B notice, the plaintiff is seeking to reagitate
grounds dismissed as
unarguable by Gleeson CJ in White v Director of
Military Prosecutions [2006] HCATrans 566 at 770-885. The Commonwealth
contended that:
"10.1. By ground 4 the Plaintiff seeks a trial on indictment and by a jury
pursuant to s 80 of the Constitution. The plaintiff in the recent matter
of White v DMP (2007) 231 CLR 570 sought to raise the same
issue. Gleeson CJ dismissed the application for an order to show cause in
that matter insofar as it
raised that issue on the ground that there was 'no
arguable basis for a grant of final relief'.
10.2. By ground 5 the Plaintiff appears to argue in part that s 61 of the
DFDA does not give full faith and credit to the criminal jurisdiction of the
State of Queensland and is thus invalid. Again,
in this case, the issue was
raised by the plaintiff in White and again the application in that matter
was dismissed by Gleeson CJ on the basis that there was no 'arguable basis
for a grant
of final relief'."
- The
Solicitor General also pointed out that the proposed s 78B notice indicates
that the plaintiff seeks to argue, under ground 5,
that Parliament cannot
confer a "separate judicial power to determine criminal guilt outside
Chapter III of the Constitution and beyond the appellate power of s 73
of the Constitution". Particular reliance is placed on the operation of
s 61 of the Act. The plaintiff's argument, it was said, is very similar to
if not the same in substance as the arguments rejected by the Full Court
in
White[20].
Insofar as the amended application seeks by ground 5 to agitate the arguments
again, the Solicitor-General submitted that it should
be dismissed. The other
arguments in relation to ground 5 appear to be the same as those raised by
grounds 3 and/or 6.
- As
to ground 7, the Solicitor-General contended that in order to succeed the
plaintiff would need leave to argue that each High Court
case decided post World
War II that has considered the constitutional validity of a military justice
system outside Ch III of
the Constitution was wrongly decided because in
each case there was no service connection of the type said by the plaintiff to
be necessary. Reference
was made in this context to White; Re Aird;
Ex parte
Alpert[21];
Re Tyler; Ex parte
Foley[22];
Re Nolan; Ex parte
Young;[23]
and Re Tracey; Ex parte
Ryan[24].
- In
his submission in reply, the plaintiff argued that the observations made by
Gleeson CJ in White were "clearly distinguishable" as White's
application for referral was based on different legislation. It did not involve
the AMC,
a military jury or the vesting of criminal jurisdiction. How that
distinction was material to the aspects of the grounds under challenge
by the
Commonwealth did not emerge with any clarity.
- In
relation to ground 4, the plaintiff said the ground was "based on s 80 of
the Constitution and the true characterisation of the offence as being within
Ch III". He contended that the ground was not run in White and the
basis upon which the majority in Re Tracey and Nolan distinguished
s 80 was the allegedly different nature of service offences from offences
created by the ordinary law. This "parallel coexistence", it
was said, could
not be sustained by close analysis of the structure and text of the
Constitution, and in particular the 10 sections of Ch III (including
s 80).
- Ground
5 is said to have been based on controversies raised under s 61 of the Act,
being matters within ss 75(i), 76(i) and (ii) of the Constitution " ... as
well as a Melbourne Corporation argument and the related argument of offending
an integrated judicial system".
- As
to ground 7, the plaintiff said there was no concession that the proceedings
were within the Defence power and that the test applied
to determine whether
disciplinary proceedings are within legislative power is wrong because it fails
to give effect to other Constitutional
principles of limitation.
- In
my opinion the submissions made on behalf of the Commonwealth in respect of
grounds 4, 5 and 7 should be accepted. In light of
the existing authority of
this Court, the contentions raised by those grounds to the extent that they do
not overlap with grounds
2, 3 and 6 are unsustainable and should go no further.
I am prepared therefore to make directions giving leave to the plaintiff
to file
its proposed Further Amended Application for an Order to Show Cause. I will
order that the application so filed be dismissed
insofar as it seeks relief on
grounds 4, 5 and 7 and that it otherwise be referred for further hearing by a
Full Court on grounds
1, 2, 3 and 6. I note that the parties have agreed a
Statement of Facts which all accept as sufficient for the purposes of the
hearing.
The matter should be able to be heard in the April sittings of the
Court.
- The
orders I will make are as follows:
- The
name of the first defendant be amended to "Colonel Peter John Morrison, a
Military Judge of the Australian Military Court".
- The
Plaintiff have leave to file a Further Amended Application for an Order to Show
Cause in the form notified to the registry on
9 January 2009.
- The
Further Amended Application for an Order to Show Cause, insofar as it seeks
relief on Grounds 4, 5 and 7, be dismissed.
- The
Further Amended Application for an Order to Show Cause, insofar as it seeks
relief on Grounds 1, 2, 3 and 6, be referred for further
hearing by a Full
Court.
- The
plaintiff file and serve a revised s 78B notice by not later than 4pm on 23
January 2009, and file an affidavit of service
by not later than 4pm on 2
February 2009.
- The
second defendant prepare and file an Application to Show Cause book, in
accordance with the index as settled by the Registry,
by not later than 4pm on
10 March 2009 (being within 10 working days of the plaintiff filing the
affidavit of service of the s 78B
notice).
- The
standard timetable for filing submissions set out in High Court Practice
Direction No 1 of 2000 be varied as
follows:
7.1 The plaintiff shall file and serve its written submissions on or before 6
February 2009.
7.2 The second defendant shall file and serve its written submissions at least
15 clear working days before the hearing of the Further
Amended Application by
the Full Court.
7.3 Any intervener shall file and serve its written submissions at least 10
clear working days before the hearing of the Further
Amended Application by the
Full Court.
7.4 The plaintiff may file and serve written submissions in reply at least five
working days before the hearing of the Further Amended
Application by the Full
Court.
7.5 The second defendant may file and serve written submissions in reply to any
interveners at least five working days before the
hearing of the Further Amended
Application by the Full Court.
- Costs
of this hearing be costs in the cause.
- The
plaintiff's summons dated 16 July 2008 be otherwise dismissed.
- Liberty
to apply in writing on three clear working days notice.
[1] Defence Legislation Amendment
Act 2006 (Cth) No 159 of 2006, Sched 1, pt 3, item 257 sub-items (1) and
(2).
[2] The scope of such notices was
discussed by the Court of Appeal of New South Wales in State Bank of New
South Wales v Commonwealth Saving Bank of Australia (1986) 4 NSWLR 549.
[3] Section 61(4).
[4] Section 3.
[5] Section 114(1A).
[6] Section 114(2).
[7] Section 115.
[8] Section 117.
[9] Sections 132A, 132AA, 132AB.
[10] [2007] HCA 29; (2007) 231 CLR 570 at 649
[241]- [242]; [2007] HCA 29.
[11] (1915) 19 CLR 629; [1915] HCA
13.
[12] (1985) 159 CLR 264; [1985] HCA
72.
[13] (1928)41 CLR 128; [1928] HCA
18.
[14] (1938) 59 CLR 556; [1938] HCA
10.
[15] (1954) 94 CLR 86; [1954] HCA
43.
[16] (1968) 121 CLR 283; [1968] HCA
80.
[17] (1978) 141 CLR 182; [1978] HCA
56.
[18] (2000) 203 CLR 248; [2000] HCA
53.
[19] (1999) 200 CLR 386; [1999] HCA
57.
[20] See White v Director of
Military Prosecutions [2007] HCA 29; (2007) 231 CLR 570 at [14] and [24]-[25] per Gleeson
CJ, [57]-[59] and [75] per Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ, [233]-[238] per
Callinan J, [246] per Heydon
J.
[21] (2004) 220 CLR 308; [2004] HCA
44.
[22] (1994) 181 CLR 18; [1994] HCA
25.
[23] (1991) 172 CLR 460; [1991] HCA
29.
[24] (1989) 166 CLR 518; [1989] HCA
12.
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