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ACM Home arrow Convenor's Column arrow High Court resolves Head of State debate

High Court resolves Head of State debate Print E-mail
Written by Professor David Flint AM   
Wednesday, 10 January 2007
Sir Samuel Griffith
Image
The Governor is the Constitutional Head of the State, the High Court has declared unanimously, ending the debate which one eminent republican says is “arid” and “irrelevant.”   This is a separate issue to the question whether the Governor-General is a Head of State under international law. There is only one answer to that question, a matter which is discussed in The Cane Toad Republic, 1999. For purposes of international diplomacy and international law, the Governor-General is, unequivocally, a Head of State. The High Court decision relates to constitutional, not international law. This was concerned an application by an elector for the Court to order a Governor to initiate action to fill  a senate vacancy. The Court said:

 

 

“The Governor, as the officiating Constitutional Head of the State, is accordingly named as the person to whom the notification is to be given, and the notification must be regarded as addressed to him in that capacity. So, in certifying to the Governor General the names of the senators elected, chosen, or appointed the Governor must be regarded as acting in the capacity of the Constitutional Head of the State, being in that capacity the proper channel of communication with the officiating Constitutional Head of the Commonwealth, the Governor General.”

 

 

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The High Court continued (the words in brackets have been added for the understanding of this edited extract):

 

 

“We think that he must be regarded as acting in the same capacity (ie a Constitutional Head of State) when discharging the function of issuing a writ for the election of senators under sec. 12 (of the Federal Constiution)…We will assume, without deciding, that sec. 12 imposes a duty upon the Governor to issue a writ in such a case. But the question remains: To whom does he owe this duty? … It has never been suggested that if the Governor failed to issue the writs (for a state election) a mandamus would lie from a State Court to compel him to do so. (that is,  a State Supreme Court could order the Governor to issue the writs).

 

 

“There is, of course, a remedy in such a case but it is to be sought from the direct intervention of the Sovereign and not by recourse to a Court of law. The case of an election to the Senate is not quite analogous. It is conceivable that the Executive Government of a State for the time being might desire that no senator should be chosen to fill a particular vacancy. If they advised the Governor to abstain from taking any action to fill it, and… he accordingly did nothing, it may be that he would have failed in his duty... [I]t is clear that the duty would be one which he owed to the State collectively.

 

 

“It is not easy to see how, in such a case, he could perform this duty without dismissing his Ministers and finding others, and that power is manifestly one the exercise of which could not be reviewed by any authority but the Sovereign. The duty, therefore, is one of the duties which the Constitutional Head of a State owes to the State (and in the case of a Governor, but in a slightly different sense, to the Sovereign), and its performance must be enforced in the manner appropriate to the case of such duties. Instances of such duties—duties of imperfect obligation—are familiar to students of Constitutional Law.

 

 

“It follows…(that) …the Governor … cannot be regarded quoad hoc  (to this extent) as an officer of the Commonwealth. The States are not subordinate to the Commonwealth, and the Commonwealth Judiciary cannot command the Constitutional Head of a State to do in that capacity an act which is primarily a State function.”

 

 

The position is quite clear then. The Governor is the Constitutional Head of the State, and the Governor-General is the Constitutional Head of the Commonwealth.

 

 

The High Court has said so, unanimously. This was in The King v The Governor of the State of South Australia [1907] HCA 31 ; (1907) 4 CLR 1497. (Thanks to a longstanding project of the law schools of the University of Technology, Sydney and the University of New South Wales, you can read the full judgment on the internet. There is a link to the case on the ACM site, as there is to most references in these columns)

 

 

As you can see, this was handed down on 8 August 1907. The chief Justice, Sir Samuel Griffith presided. Among the concurring judges was the future first Australian Governor-General Sir Isaac Isaacs, who was less inclined to support state rights than the other judges. Sir John Downer K.C., of that prominent family, appeared for “the prosecutor”, ie. the person seeking the order.

 

 

 

 

 

 




  Comments (1)
1. substance fading
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , on 10-01-2008 06:29
During the Sydney test match Governor Professor Bashir told the ABC commentators that she enjoyed her role. She accepts every invitation to speak in schools and fulfills as many other engagements as possible. 
She affirmed that the powers of the Governor aren't as substantial as previously. She attends Executive Council meetings weekly and enjoys being informed as to current legislation. As Governor, she may give advice and warn as well as delaying the Vice-Regal assent however if the Premier is insistent then the legislation must eventually be passed. 
Nothing was said in the interview about the cost of security. Presumably there is security provided at her home as well as the $600,000 invoiced to upkeep the empty Government House. 
It would be a better deal for the NSW taxpayers if the Governor was to live in Macquarie Streeet. 
I have made a courtesy call at 104 Bathurst Street, however no one was in attendance and now I'm going to visit Government House and meet my wife who loves history. 
 
Editorial note: 
Thank you for coming to visit us. Unfortunately, the office is closed over Christmas and New Year, re-opening on 14 January. 

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