"DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND THE
RULE OF LAW"
SINO-AUSTRALIAN SEMINAR, BEIJING,
20-22 NOVEMBER 2002
Australian lawyers and judges treat the
rule of law as an essential foundation of their legal
system. Like the foundations of any building, the
rule of law is not often examined and most people
who are at work in the building go about their daily
tasks without giving any thought to the nature or
existence of its foundations. In order to understand
the status, significance and role of dispute resolution
within the rule of law it is necessary to look at
what is meant by that expression. We must, therefore,
leave the building and dig into the foundations upon
which it is built before we can look at what is done
inside the building.
To do that it will be necessary to begin
by examining the historical and institutional influences
on the rule of law as an Australian lawyer may understand
it, and the role of the courts in Australia. Then,
having exposed what may lie behind (and thus may influence)
my approach to the subject, seek to identify the content
of the rule of law and consider dispute resolution
and the rule of law.
The rule of law has traditionally been
contrasted with what was referred to as the "rule
of men" in the aphorism "the rule of law,
not of men". Like all such aphorisms the statement
is more powerful than it is revealing. It has generated
the creation of other, competing dichotomies – the
general rule of law as opposed to the personal discretion
to do justice1.
It is a concept which has provoked great jurisprudential
debate among English speaking scholars. To some2, the rule of law is a prerequisite
for any efficacious legal order. To others3, the rule of law is seen as advancing,
even embodying, a particular view of desirable political
values. It would be easy to become enmeshed in this
debate. To do so would not serve any immediate purpose.
It is, nonetheless, important to examine what the
"rule of law" conveys to an Australian lawyer.
Only by revealing the content of that expression,
when it is used by an Australian lawyer, can the relationship
which that lawyer identifies between dispute resolution
and the rule of law be examined properly.
Historical and institutional influences
The Australian legal system grew out of
the English common law tradition. The Australian
constitutional structure, on the other hand, is a
federal system of government, and drew just as heavily
upon the experience of the United States of America
as it did on British political experience. Governmental
structures in Australia, therefore, reflect both traditions.
I mention the origins of Australia's legal system
and the origins of its system of government because
an Australian lawyer's conception of the rule of law
owes much to both of these influences. Indeed, I
doubt that a proper understanding of what an Australian
lawyer means by the rule of law can be reached without
recognising and acknowledging those historical and
institutional influences.
The rule of law can be understood from
the viewpoint of the individual and by reference only
to the relationship which the individual has with
others in society. Viewed from this vantage point,
the rule of law focuses upon the identification of
external norms of behaviour which will predict, regulate
and give content to the rights and duties of society's
participants. From this vantage point, the rule of
law emphasises that the norms are external to the
individual, are applied equally, and are fixed by
an external process which will enable their content
to be identified, with more or less certainty, before
events occur or obligations are undertaken. Looking
at the rule of law from this vantage point may not
reveal all that is relevant.
Other aspects of the rule of law can be
seen where it is viewed from another vantage point:
as a means of describing the way in which the law
and the State are related one to another. The legal
and political history of England can be understood
as a conflict between three rival conceptions – the
supremacy of the law, the supremacy of the Crown and
the supremacy of Parliament4.
Each sought to relate the law to the State. It sought
to relate the place of the legal system to what now
would be encompassed by considerations of political
power, sovereignty, nationhood and related concepts.
In the Middle Ages in Britain the law was
understood as the supreme authority governing the
relations of all who possessed power as well as the
position of those subject to the power of others.
Bracton, the great institutional writer of the 13th
century, said more than once that the King was below
the law. The rule of law, at that time, was understood
to refer to the supremacy of legal rules over the
wishes of any individual in society, no matter what
the position occupied by that individual.
The growth of the territorial State after
the Middle Ages in Europe brought with it the need
for one supreme authority, and Europe (including Britain)
found the State's source of unity and power in the
King. The Crown was understood to embody the sovereignty
of the State and the law was merely the mechanism
for exercising that sovereign power over subject.
By the end of the 19th century, however,
at about the time the Australian colonies were considering
whether to federate, the principle that the Crown
was supreme had given way. In the 17th century, England
had fought a civil war, and had then undergone revolution
in order to establish a new principle: the supremacy
of parliament over the Crown. A V Dicey,
in his work "Law of the Constitution", gave
theoretical structure to the proposition that parliamentary
sovereignty was the pivot of the English legal system.
Even today, in England and in countries where the
legal system derives from England, Dicey's proposition
that Parliament is the supreme law‑making authority
has an hypnotic effect5.
It may be necessary to resolve the competition
between these ideas if setting out to design a new
system of government. But once it is recognised that
these ideas are conceptual tools of analysis and are
to be used to explain what is happening rather than
prescribe what should be done, the need to reconcile
them is less pressing. If reconciliation of these
competing ideas is thought to be necessary, it is
to be found in recognising the subtlety of the interplay
between them. No less importantly, it is necessary
to recognise that there is continuous evolution of
governmental and legal structures as well as evolution
and development of understanding about them. It is
not necessary to choose one theory over the others
and declare it victor.
One example will suffice to illustrate
the importance of recognising that neither governmental
structures nor theoretical analyses of those structures
are static. In the later part of the 20th century,
in parliamentary democracies organised along British
lines, theories about the rule of law have had to
deal with a changing relationship between the legislature
and the executive. Parliamentary sovereignty in such
societies was, in the minds of some at least, underpinned
by the proposition that the executive was, and must
be, controlled by parliament. By the late 20th century,
the contrary was the case in many parliamentary democracies
of the British pattern – the executive controlled
parliament.
The connection between these matters of
governmental structure and an understanding of the
rule of law is not self‑evident. It becomes
apparent only when two further steps are taken in
the analysis. First, what role do the courts have
in developing norms of behaviour in society? Secondly,
what role do the courts have in deciding whether laws
enacted by the legislature or conduct by the executive
is lawful? Both of those questions require consideration
of the relationship between the legal system and the
political system. How and where do they intersect?
In case of conflict, which prevails?
The role of the courts in Australia
The Anglo-Australian tradition is a common
law tradition. Not all law, not all norms of conduct,
find expression in statutes passed by a legislature.
Important parts of the criminal and civil law depend
upon judge‑made rules. In many States of Australia
the law of homicide is largely judge‑made law.
In most States of Australia, at least for the moment,
the civil liability of a person who acts negligently
(that is, without reasonable care for the safety of
another thereby causing damage) is regulated by judge‑made
law. How do these judge‑made rules take their
place in the rule of law? What place do they have
when it is recognised that judge‑made rules
can be modified or abolished by statute? What place
do they have when it is recognised that, subject to
constitutional limitations6, legislation may be passed which reverses the
outcome of civil litigation?
The rule of law must, in an Australian
context, seek to describe and accommodate this relationship
between the courts and the legislature.
In Australia the description of the relationship
between courts and legislature must take account of
a further very important consideration, derived from
America and, until recently, entirely foreign to British
law. In Australia, it is for the courts, and ultimately
the High Court of Australia, to say whether legislation
enacted by the legislature is constitutionally valid.
In addition, and this is not at all foreign to the
British tradition, it is for the courts to say whether
the acts of the executive government are lawful.
The power of judicial review of both legislative and
executive actions is fundamental to an Australian
lawyer's understanding of the rule of law. In the
words of Marshall CJ in Marbury v Madison7, "It is, emphatically, the province and duty of the judicial
department, to say what the law is." Where does
this fit into the rule of law? For an Australian
lawyer the power and duty of the courts to carry out
these tasks of judicial review are central elements
in the rule of law. They are central because they
provide the citizen with the means of ensuring that
governments act lawfully within the limits of the
powers that they have.
The matters of legal and political history
which I have mentioned reflect on the content of the
rule of law. Because they are matters which have
grown out of legal and political history, they may
well find different expression in societies having
a different historical experience or different governmental
structures. One example will serve to make the point.
To an Australian lawyer, judicial review of the constitutional
validity of legislation enacted by the legislature
is, as I have said, a foundation of the Australian
legal system. Until recently, a British lawyer would
have found the notion of judicial review of the validity
of legislation, as distinct from the lawfulness of
action taken apparently under legislative authority,
very strange indeed. Even now, with the introduction
of devolution of legislative and other powers to Scotland
and Wales, and the adoption of the Human Rights
Act, there would be many lawyers in Britain who
would see judicial review of the validity of legislation
as anything but an essential part of the rule of law.
There are two institutional arrangements
which Australian lawyers would regard as being an
integral part of the rule of law. They are notions
of separation of powers and judicial independence.
Doctrines of separation of powers can be traced to
the work of Montesquieu. They have found their most
elaborate governmental expression in the Constitution
of the United States of America with its system of
checks and balances between the three separate branches
of government – legislative, executive and judicial.
In Australia, separation of powers has found a different
kind of institutional expression. Australia adopted
English systems of parliamentary and cabinet government
with the executive therefore being largely drawn from
the legislature. But as a consequence of adopting
a federal system of government, a sharp line is drawn,
at the federal level, between the judicial and the
other branches of government. This division has been
understood as an inevitable and essential consequence
of a federal system. The federal Constitution is
rigid. The government it establishes is a government
of defined powers within which it must be paramount
but beyond which it is incompetent to go8. Because the respective powers of the federal
and the State governments are limited, there must
be a method for deciding where those limits lie.
That is a task given to the federal judiciary. In
Australia, the consequence which is seen as flowing
from these considerations is that non‑judicial
power cannot be given to a federal court and federal
judicial power cannot be given to any body except
a federal court9.
It must be noted, however, that this is a consequence
of the adoption of our federal Constitution. Hitherto
it has not been seen as a necessary element of the
rule of law and, subject to some limitations, State
courts, and State organs of government generally,
do not necessarily reflect this separation of power10.
That may be contrasted with the institutional
arrangements concerning the independence of the judiciary.
That is regarded in Australia, as an essential element
of the rule of law – that judges should be independent
of, and should act independently from, other elements
of government. The means adopted to ensure judicial
independence can again be traced to political upheavals
in Britain long before Australia was settled by Europeans
– to the deposing of James II and the later Act
of Settlement 170111
with its provision that judges should hold office
during good behaviour without diminution in their
remuneration and can be removed from office only by
extraordinary parliamentary steps. These provisions
find reflection in s 72 of the federal Constitution12 and in State constitutions13. An independent judiciary is seen as a necessary
element of the rule of law.
The rule of law requires that norms of
behaviour, and the content of an individual's rights
and duties, should be capable of identification before
events occur. That is, the rule of law requires predictability
and certainty in law. Yet, to an Australian judge
or to an Australian lawyer who works in the courts,
dispute and uncertainty about the content of the law
is essential to their daily experience. How can this
be consistent with the rule of law rather than the
rule of individuals?
Some disputes centre upon identifying what
has happened rather than on any difference about the
applicable legal principle. They are disputes about
facts not law, although that is a distinction which
it is not always easy to make. But even if factual
disputes are excluded from consideration, there are
many disputes in which there is real and lively debate
about the content of the applicable legal principle.
In such cases how can it be said that the law is predictable
and certain? Moreover, to many kinds of legal dispute
there may be more than one correct answer. The judge
may have some discretion in framing the order which
is to be made. In many criminal cases there is no
fixed penalty, only a range of penalties up to a defined
maximum. Again, how is this consistent with the rule
of law not of individuals? Are not the judges acting
as rulers in such cases?
This lengthy examination of what an Australian
lawyer may mean by a reference to the rule of law
may serve to reveal some important aspects of it.
First, its particular content will reflect the legal
and political history of the society. Secondly, it
is an expression which embodies general principles,
the implementation of which, in any particular case,
will require careful analysis. The analysis may give
a range of answers from which a choice must be made
and the choice that is made will be contestable.
Nevertheless, the making of those choices requires
an understanding of what is meant by "the rule
of law".
Are there essential elements of the rule
of law or, as the title of this paper suggested, "the
modern rule of law"? Are there any elements
that are universal, absolute, and immutable?
Content of the rule of law
Human society does not ordinarily admit
of descriptions or prescriptions that are universal,
absolute or immutable. It would be surprising if
a concept like the rule of law, which is concerned
with fundamental aspects of the organisation of society,
were to yield to an analysis which identified some
universal, leave aside immutable, elements when societies
can be and are organised so differently. I therefore
begin from the premise that the rule of law finds
its most useful expression as a set of general principles,
departure from which cannot be always excluded but
must in every case be justified. Because the rule
of law is inextricably entwined with matters of governmental
structure and system, the methods by which departures
from the general principle can be sanctioned, or are
to be justified, may vary from society to society.
In the end, however, the rule of law will be seen
to be concerned primarily with whether norms of behaviour
and the rights and duties of participants in society,
and the consequences that will follow from a failure
to observe them, are both ascertainable and predictable.
This primary concern of the rule of law
can be expressed in different words. Dicey identified,
as critically important characteristics of the rule
of law, first, freedom from the exercise of arbitrary
power by government and, secondly, equality before
the law. The same ideas find more recent expression
by MacCormick14 when he said that:
"Where the rule of law is observed, people
can have reasonable certainty in advance concerning
the rules and standards by which their conduct will
be judged, and the requirements they must satisfy
to give legal validity to their transactions. …
This is possible, it is often said, provided there
is a legal system composed principally of quite clearly
enunciated rules that normally operate only in a prospective
manner, that are expressed in terms of general categories,
not particular indexical, commands to individuals
or small groups singled out for special attention.
The rules should set realistically achievable requirements
to conduct, and should form overall some coherent
pattern, not a chaos of arbitrarily conflicting demands15."
My references to the law being predictable and certain
in application are but another form of seeking to
capture the same fundamental ideas.
There was a third element of Dicey's conception
of the rule of law which I mention in order only to
put it on one side. Dicey made a virtue out of necessity
when he linked the rule of law with the absence of
any written English Constitution. For him this had
led to the establishment of basic liberties by the
provision of common law remedies administered by the
courts. This, in Dicey's view, related the rule of
law and general rights and freedoms, such as the rights
to personal freedom, freedom of discussion and freedom
of assembly. This was to be contrasted, in Dicey's
view, with constitutional declarations of rights which
could be suspended.
The place that should be given to constitutional
or other statements of rights and freedoms is another
large, and separate topic. It is a matter about which
opinions differ and, from time to time, can be a matter
of political controversy. This last consideration
would provide reason enough for me not to enter upon
the debate. But even if that were not so, I do not
think that it can be said yet that constitutionally
entrenched rights and freedoms are an essential element
of the rule of law. Whether Dicey was right to praise
the British system as he did is a matter about which
views differ16.
It is, however, not a question which I would regard
as being central to the relationship between the rule
of law and dispute resolution and it is to that subject
which I now turn.
Dispute resolution and the rule of law
It is relevant to speak of the rule of
law in connection with dispute resolution only if
the dispute concerns legally enforceable rights and
duties and only if the parties to the dispute wish
or are required to have their dispute determined in
accordance with those rights and duties. Not all
disputes concern legal rights and duties. Not all
disputes about legal rights and duties must be resolved
by reference to those rights and duties. Two simple
examples will illustrate what I mean.
If parties to a commercial transaction
fall into dispute about whether some new transaction
should be made, there may be no existing rights and
duties which are to be adjudicated, only the possibility
that some future rights and duties might have been
created. By contrast, if parties to a commercial
transaction are in dispute about the performance of
obligations under that existing contract, it may be
that the maintenance of harmonious relationships between
them is more important to them than deciding whether
one has failed to perform its obligations.
In the second case, the rule of law will
have little or nothing to say to the parties. They
will adjust their relationship in whatever way they
agree. In the former kind of dispute, however, the
rule of law will have an important part to play.
It is only by the application of known and predictable
rules that it will be possible to decide whether rights
and duties have been created and which will oblige
the parties to transact future business together.
The conclusion that there have been no new rights
and duties created is a conclusion which requires
the application of identifiable and certain rules.
No less importantly, in the second case
I mentioned, where continuing relationships between
the parties are seen as important, the conclusion
that the rule of law has little or nothing to say
to those parties depends critically upon both parties
being of that view. If one of the parties attaches
less importance to maintenance of the relationship
than the other party does and wishes to have the rights
and duties of each decided, the rule of law requires
that the dissatisfied party be able to seek external
resolution of the dispute according to known and predictable
laws. It is no answer to say that the other party
or someone else may think that the maintenance of
good relations is important to continued performance
under the contract.
There are some important premises for what
I have said about these two examples which it is as
well to expose. The two most important premises are,
first, that each party may choose whether to submit
the dispute to external resolution rather than reach
an agreement with the opposite party, and, secondly,
that there is an established and accessible body to
resolve the dispute by application of what I have
described as known and predictable laws.
The freedom to choose external dispute
resolution may not be absolute. It may come at a
cost. In many, but not all legal systems, the party
that loses a civil dispute must pay some or all of
the other party's costs of resisting the claim. Even
if the parties resort to the ordinary courts rather
than some private form of dispute resolution they
may, in some systems, have to contribute to the cost
of providing the tribunal. Plainly, there can come
a point at which the penalties for seeking resolution
of a dispute are so large as to prevent all except
the very rich or the very determined from doing that.
Yet, at the other end of the spectrum, if there is
no detriment suffered, trivial and frivolous claims
may occupy too much court time, at the expense of
more substantial disputes. How and where to strike
a balance between the two extremes remains one of
the more pressing problems for some legal systems.
The second premise is that there is an
established and accessible body to resolve the dispute
and to which the dissatisfied party can go. A court
system established by the State must be and remain
the centrepiece of dispute resolution in accordance
with the rule of law. The application of public power
in enforcing society's rules must ultimately find
its roots in structures established by society. That
has several consequences. Some of those consequences
concern the structure of the system that must be established.
Other consequences concern the relationship between
dispute resolution that occurs outside the court system
and the courts themselves.
The structural consequences to which I
wish to draw attention are those which arise in connection
with the resolution of civil rather than criminal
disputes. The structure of the criminal justice system,
with its attendant questions about the investigation,
the prosecution, the determination and the punishment
for breaches of the criminal law is a very large,
but separate subject.
To identify the structural consequences
of the proposition that application of public power
to the resolution of disputes must be rooted in structures
established by the society it is useful to identify
one feature of civil disputes. The adjudication of
civil disputes is largely, but not entirely, backward
looking. It requires identification of what has
happened. It requires identification of what are
the rights and duties of the parties. Seldom, at
least for an Australian lawyer, does it concern the
formulation of new rights and duties which are to
govern the parties into the future. Of course, there
will be cases where one party seeks to prevent the
other from doing something in the future which, if
it were done, would be in breach of that party's obligations.
Further, in cases affecting the status of parties
(as, for example, in family disputes) the judgment
of the court will directly affect the future rights
and duties of the parties. Nonetheless, the civil
law is essentially backward looking in its resolution
of disputes.
That is an inevitable corollary of the
rule of law. Because the parties have made some relevant
transaction, or one stands in some identified relationship
to the other, each of the parties has certain rights
and duties. The rights and duties which each has
may be enforced and it is no answer to that claim
to say that it would have been better if the rights
and duties had been structured differently.
The most important institutional consequence
of the proposition that the application of public
power to the resolution of disputes must be rooted
in structures established by society is that the adjudicator
must be independent of the parties. Not only must
the adjudicator be independent of the parties, the
adjudicator must be independent of other influences.
At first sight the proposition is paradoxical. Why
should the adjudicator who is applying public
power in resolving a dispute be free from influence
by other elements of the structures by which society
is governed? What would be wrong with the adjudicator
taking account of what those who have charge of economic
or other policy say would further that policy in the
interests of the society as a whole?
The answer lies in the requirement that
the law should be predictable and capable of being
ascertained before parties act or undertake obligations
one to another. If the adjudicator is not independent
of external influence, the rules which are given effect
in resolving the dispute are not the known and predictable
rules upon which the parties were and must be entitled
to act. A new and different consideration has intruded
in the dispute. In the example I gave, the case would
be decided not by reference to the parties' rights
and duties. It would be decided in the way that was
thought to advance a particular policy objective.
Independence of adjudication will ordinarily
be assisted by a requirement that proceedings for
the resolution of the dispute take place in public.
The public performance of the task tends to expose
the existence of preconceptions about a dispute and
tends to expose the existence of any inappropriate
external influence on the process.
Two other institutional consequences should
be noticed. Whatever may be the procedures adopted
in a court system (adversarial, inquisitorial or as
is increasingly the case, a mixture of the two) representation
of parties by skilled lawyers permits an adjudicator
to consider competing contentions with a degree of
detachment that is not possible if the adjudicator
has had to be responsible for identifying and formulating
the competing contentions. The more complicated the
dispute, the more necessary it is for the adjudicator
to be assisted by the parties in formulating not only
the issues to be decided, but also the arguments that
are advanced in support.
It cannot be assumed that a court will
always be right. The distinguished English judge,
Sir Robert Megarry, said17:
"No human being is infallible, and for none are
there more public and authoritative explanations of
their errors than for judges." The legal system,
being a human system, is inevitably fallible. A system
of appeal or review is therefore necessary to deal
with some of the errors that are made. You will notice
that I say "some" of the errors that are
made, not all. It is, I think, beyond human capacity
to achieve absolute perfection. Further, not only
is it unrealistic to attempt to achieve such perfection,
finality of judicial decision‑making is essential.
Statutes or other principles which limit the time
within which claims may be made or limit the circumstances
in which a dispute may be reopened are fundamental
to the proper ordering of society. Another distinguished
English judge, Lord Wilberforce, said18:
"Any determination of disputable fact may,
the law recognises, be imperfect: the law aims at
providing the best and safest solution compatible
with human fallibility and having reached that solution
it closes the book. The law knows, and we all know,
that sometimes fresh material may be found, which
perhaps might lead to a different result, but, in
the interest of peace, certainty and security it prevents
further inquiry. It is said that in doing this, the
law is preferring justice to truth. That may be so:
these values cannot always coincide. The law does
its best to reduce the gap. But there are cases where
the certainty of justice prevails over the possibility
of truth … and these are cases where the law insists
on finality. For a policy of closure to be compatible
with justice, it must be attended with safeguards:
so the law allows appeals: so the law, exceptionally,
allows appeals out of time: so the law still more
exceptionally allows judgments to be attacked on the
ground of fraud: so limitation periods may, exceptionally,
be extended. But these are exceptions to a general
rule of high public importance, and as all the cases
show, they are reserved for rare and limited cases,
where the facts justifying them can be strictly proved."
The decision about how many appeals, or
reviews, a case may have is not without difficulty.
The general rule adopted in many legal systems is
that the parties should have a right to seek one review
of what has been decided but that any later review
should be only with the permission of the higher court.
Whatever may be the detail of the rules that are adopted,
the institutional consequence which it is important
to recognise is that there must be some system for
appeal or review of decisions in all but exceptional
cases.
The structural considerations to which
I have been referring are those which affect the adjudication
of civil disputes by courts. What if both parties
choose to resolve their dispute by some other means?
First, it must be the voluntary decision of both parties.
Secondly, if it is done, there may come a point in
that process where a party seeks to have the State
give effect to the outcome that is achieved. That
can be done only if the processes which the parties
employ lead to rights and obligations which can be
enforced or do not affect pre‑existing rights
and obligations.
The extent to which provision is made for
private arbitration of disputes and the enforcement
of resulting awards may vary from jurisdiction to
jurisdiction. Many large commercial transactions
contain arbitration clauses requiring resolution of
disputes by means independent of the court systems
of jurisdictions with which the parties or transactions
may be said to have some connection. The arrangements
that are made under such arbitration provisions may
preclude review of what is decided, they may adopt
procedures very different from those that are adopted
in court proceedings. For example, it is now not
uncommon in international arbitrations for the arbitrators
to say that each side has a limited time in which
to present the whole of its evidence and argument
and that it is for the parties to decide how they
will allocate that time. If it is accepted that these
arrangements are made willingly, they present no challenge
to rule of law principles.
Much of the remaining part of this seminar
will focus upon alternative forms of dispute resolution.
What I have said has sought to provide what an Australian
lawyer understands to be the relevant context for
that discussion. It is, however, a context that is
described from my perspective and, as I have sought
to emphasise, the rule of law is a concept that, in
some respects, reflects the society to which it applies.
As the world becomes smaller, and all peoples and
nations deal more and more with each other, these
differences may lessen. For my part, I look forward
to learning much from the topics that we will hear
later during this seminar.
1 Scalia, "The Rule of Law as a Law of Rules",
(1989) 56 University of Chicago Law Review 1175
at 1176.
2 Fuller, The Morality of Law, (rev ed
1969) at 33‑94.
3 For example, Rawls, A Theory of Justice,
(1972) at 235‑243; R Dworkin, A Matter
of Principle, (1985) at 11‑12.
4 Dixon, "The Law and the Constitution",
in Woinarski (ed), Jesting Pilate and other Papers
and Addresses, 2nd ed (1997) 38 at 39.
5 The Broken Hill Proprietary Company Ltd v
Dagi [1996] 2 VR 117 at 204; Finn, "A Sovereign
People, A Public Trust" in Essays on Law
and Government Volume 1: Principles and Values,
(1995) at 19-21.
6 At a federal level in Australia, the limitations
derived from Ch III of the Constitution, and
from s 51(xxxi) with its requirement for just
terms if a federal law provides for the acquisition
of property, would require consideration.
7 (1803) 1 Cranch 137 at 177; 5 US 87 at 111.
8 R v Kirby; Ex pare Boilermakers' Society
of Australia (1956) 94 CLR 254 at 267.
9 R v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society
of Australia (1956) 94 CLR 254 at 271.
10 City of Collingwood v State of Victoria
[No 2] [1994] 1 VR 652.
12 "The Justices of the High Court and of
the other courts created by the Parliament:
(i) shall be appointed by the Governor‑General
in Council;
(ii) shall not be removed except by the
Governor‑General in Council, on an address
from both Houses of the Parliament in the same session,
praying for such removal on the ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity;
(iii) shall receive such remuneration as
the Parliament may fix; but the remuneration shall
not be diminished during their continuance in office.
The appointment of a Justice of the High
Court shall be for a term expiring upon his attaining
the age of seventy years, and a person shall not
be appointed as a Justice of the High Court if he
has attained that age."
13 See, for example, Constitution Act 1975
(Vic), s 77 and Constitution Act 1902
(NSW), ss 53‑55.
14 MacCormick, "Rhetoric and the Rule of
Law", in Dyzenhaus (ed), Recrafting the
Rule of Law: The Limits of Legal Order, (1999)
163 at 165.
15 The locus classicus for this type of account
remains L Fuller, The Morality of Law,
(rev ed 1969), Ch 2.
16 Craig, "Dicey: Unitary Self‑Correcting
Democracy and Public Law", (1990) 106 Law
Quarterly Review 105; Patapan, "The Author
of Liberty: Dicey, Mill and the Shaping of English
Constitutionalism", (1997) 8 Public Law
Review 256.
17 Erinford Properties Ltd v Cheshire County
Council [1974] Ch 261 at 268.
18 Re Ampthill Peerage [1977] AC 547 at
569.