1 / 13

Unit 3 AoS 2 Revision

Unit 3 AoS 2 Revision. DP 5: The role of the High Court in interpreting the Commonwealth Constitution

eagan
Download Presentation

Unit 3 AoS 2 Revision

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 3 AoS 2 Revision DP 5: The role of the High Court in interpreting the Commonwealth Constitution DP 6: The significance of two High Court cases involving the interpretation of the Commonwealth Constitution in terms of their impact on the law making power of the State and Commonwealth parliaments

  2. DP 5: High Court interpretation of the Constitution Why has it been necessary for the High Court to interpret the Constitution?

  3. Answer The High Court, under s.76 of the Constitution is the only court that has the power to interpret the wording of the Constitution and it can only do this when a dispute or case regarding the Constitution comes before it. It is called to interpret the Constitution when the Commonwealth or State parliament passes an act that another parliament, group or individual challenges in the High Court as being ultra vires (beyond their law making power). The High Court then needs to interpret the Constitution to determine the powers of parliament.

  4. Remember… NOTE: High Court decisions on constitutional powers do not CHANGE the wording of the constitution (only a……….can do this) but rather add meaning to it. High Court decisions can alter the balance of power between the Commonwealth and the State parliaments. The actual words of the Constitution and the High Court’s interpretation are read together to determine the law.

  5. Question Using one illustrative example, explain how the High Court interpretation of the Commonwealth Constitution occurs and the impact of this interpretation on the division of powers. 5 marks.

  6. Answer See previous answer for the first part of the question. Then… in the Tasmanian Dams Case the Tasmanian Parliament questioned the powers of the Commonwealth parliament to make laws to overrule the damming of the Franklin River, seeking that the High Court declare the Commonwealth legislation to be ultra vires. The Tasmanian Government wanted to dam the Franklin River. However, the Federal Parliament passes the World Heritage Properties Conservation Act in order to prevent this from occuring and uphold the UNESCO Convention obligations. When Tasmania challenged the validity of the federal legislation, the High Court decided that the act was valid as it was made under the ‘external affairs’ power of the Constitution. The impact was that the High Court extended the meaning of the term ‘external affairs’ (s. 51 xxix) to include law making necessary to uphold obligations under an international treaty signed by Federal Government. This extended the law making powers of the Federal Parliament which could pass legislation in a range of areas, include residual power.

  7. Explain the facts of the two cases that we have studied and explain the impact of the High Court decision.

  8. Answer: Brislan Case

  9. Answer: Franklin Dam Case

  10. Question Has the High Court has a greater impact on changing the division of powers than referendums?

  11. Question In a speech to lawyers in early 2001, High Court Chief Justice Murray Gleeson said that ‘the failure of so many referendums meant that there was a real risk that the public might expect the High Court instead to change the Constitution’. Analyse the effectiveness of both referendum and High Court interpretation of the Constitution as a means of changing the division of law making powers between the Commonwealth and the State Parliaments. 8 marks.

  12. Guidance for answer In order to analyse the effectiveness of referendums as a means of changing the division of power, you should refer to the low success rate of referendums (8 out of 44 have been successful) and the reason why this is so low (lack of bipartisan support, double majority provision, timing etc). Of eight successful referendums, most have had no effect on the DIVISION OF POWES and that three have resulted in an increase in power of Comm parliament. Relate these back to the quote in the question. With regard to the effectiveness of High Court interpretation in altering division of powers, use examples to show how this has occurred (Brislan or Tas Dam cases). It is important to state that the High Court interpretation of the Constitution has had far more impact on changing division of powers that referendum. Again, refer back to the quote in the question that supports your conclusion on the effectiveness. 4 marks for analysis of referendum (need to say 8/44 have been successful) 4 marks for analysis of High Court interpretation (need to use example – Brislan or Tasmanian Dam case) Remember to refer back to quote in discussion

  13. Can you… Explain the role of the High Court in interpreting the Commonwealth Constitution? Explain the significance of TWO High Court cases(Brislan and Tasmanian Dam) that interpret the Constitution and their impact on the division of law making powers between the Commonwealth and state parliaments?

More Related