LAW
SOCIETY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA
HIGH COURT DINNER
WEDNESDAY, 24 OCTOBER 2001
85 JOURNEYS TO PERTH
The
Hon Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
I thank
Simon Freitag for his brilliant speech to honour the toast
to the judiciary. He is so full of good advice and homilies
for the Justices of the High Court that I can assure him
we are looking forward with eager anticipation to his appearances
so that we can give a little advice of our own in return.
His is a name we will certainly remember.
The
Court has come here with two equally talented young lawyers
from Perth. They and Simon Freitag demonstrate what an outstanding
profession is being trained in Western Australia. One of
my associates, Bruce Leishman, is the first law graduate
from Murdoch University to be appointed an associate in
the High Court. Jan Syminton serves as research officer
for all of the Justices. She is one of the foundation graduating
class of the Notre Dame Law School. With such outstanding
talent, the high calibre of the legal profession in Western
Australia seems assured.
I have
been waiting patiently for an opportunity to speak at this
dinner. I have been coming to Western Australia since 1975,
when I was first appointed to judicial office. At that time,
the Chief Justice was Sir Lawrence Jackson. The judges of
the Supreme Court were Justices Virtue, Burt, Lavan, Wickham,
Wallace, Jones and Wright. There was no Federal Court, Family
Court or Federal Magistrate's service. The judiciary and
the profession were smaller.
I could
comfort myself about the long delay in receiving this call
by the knowledge that Sir Anthony Mason had to wait twenty
years before he was invited to respond to this toast. Even
a confirmed ego-maniac and narcissist, he said, would draw
the inference that he was not held in high regard as an
after dinner speaker.
When,
at last, his chance came Justice Mason was mortified to
be told that he had but two or three minutes - about a minute
per decade. Eventually, with the intercession of Justice
Toohey, a longer address was negotiated evidencing a flexibility
in matters of time for which the High Court too is justly
famous, especially on special leave days.
We
in the High Court recognise the spirit in which Mr Freitag's
speech has been delivered. We have had almost a century
to get used to the special way in which the profession in
Perth has welcomed our annual visits.
The
first sitting of the High Court was held in Melbourne, then
the federal capital, in October 1903. At that time, the
Court had no permanent facilities. It had to make do with
a few rooms in the Supreme Court of Victoria, put aside
for its use. Section 12 of the Judiciary Act 1903 required
that sittings of the Court should be held, as required,
in each place in which there was a District Registry. Such
a registry was established in Perth. Thus, the prospect
of a visit here loomed soon after the Court was established.
Imagine
the excitement of the Justices when they heard that, out
of the generosity and warm feelings of the profession in
Western Australia, a special room had been set aside in
the Supreme Court building in Perth which would be dedicated
to the High Court. The curiosity of the first three Justices
soon got the better of them. Within seven weeks of their
inaugural sitting in Melbourne they arrived in Perth to
inspect the palace which they believed to be waiting for
them. When you deduct the time spent in the sea travel you
will get a measure of the frisson of excitement with which
the foundation Justices approached their Perth premises.
Never
since the eyes of King Henry VIII first fell upon the unlovely
face of Anne of Cleves, so different from the portrait by
Holbein which had inflamed his carnal appetite, has a look
of such disappointment been witnessed as when Griffith,
Barton and O'Connor entered the High Court room in Perth.
It was subterranean. It was famous for its rats and cockroaches.
No biscuit jar (the small delight of a judge's life) was
ever safe from the vermin. In the middle of the room was
a large leather armchair, held together by glue, which gave
off an aroma of putrid delicacy.
The
Justices kept telling themselves: "Be it ever so humble,
there's no place like home". Ever since that moment,
they have been in no doubt about the particular love in
which they are held by the profession in the West.
Chief
Justice Mason, ninety years later, described his astonishment
in discovering, on his appointment, what he was so ungrateful
as to describe as the "meagre accommodation provided
for us in the Supreme Court". He even went so far as
to say that it was an "exceedingly small room - slightly
larger than a dog kennel" into which he and Justices
Gibbs and Stephen were bundled. It soon became known that
the aroma of that leather chair worked a spell upon the
vermin. It was the glue that did the trick. It seems that
a particular variety of glue used in Perth between the years
1932 and 1951 was irresistible to western cockroaches. Alas,
the same glue that held together the High Court's leather
armchair was used in the binding of the Appeal Cases between
those years. In the result, half of every page was gobbled
up leaving a great void in the collected jurisprudence of
this State.
Some
scholars have attributed grave legal error to the missing
volumes. Just imagine going through life without Donoghue
v Stevenson? Or Liversidge v Anderson? Or the High Tree
Case and Lord Denning's immortal early prose? Some unkind
critics have even alleged that the errors they detect in
Nagle v Rottnest Island Authority derive from the inability
of the High Court to check the applicable principles in
Donoghue v Stevenson - because the cockroaches of Perth
had got there first.
Eventually,
upon the appointment of Sir Ronald Wilson as a Justice of
the Court, the first from Western Australia, a profound
change occurred. In a great march, rivalled only by Napoleon's
manoeuvres through the Pripet Marshes, Sir Ronald led the
High Court up the grand staircase to new premises adjacent
to what is now Courtroom No 4. Full of nostalgia, I leapt
up the stairs during this visit to Perth to revisit the
place where the Justices were huddled together during the
Wilson and Toohey years before the austere Commonwealth
Court Building became our humble home. The room is now occupied
by orderlies and computers. It was bigger than a dog kennel;
but not much.
The
first case heard by the High Court in Perth was Murray v
Collector of Customs. At the Bar were Pilkington, Burt KC
and F M Stone, still famous names in the West. It was a
case about tariffs. In haste to depart their dungeon, the
Justices gave their decision on the spot. The losing party
immediately sought a certificate under s 74 of the Constitution
to appeal to the Privy Council. This request was refused
as were all but one of those that followed.
The
second case in Perth was Backhouse v Moderata. By this time,
a year after the first visit, the Court had picked up some
of the habits of the Privy Council. Special leave to appeal
was refused with the use of that enigmatic phrase that the
decision below was "not attended by sufficient doubt".
I never use that formula myself. When, in my days in the
Court of Appeal it was used in respect of one of my judgments
I lost sleepness nights over its meaning. Did it mean that
my efforts were attended by doubt, even a lot of doubt -
simply not sufficient doubt to engage the High Court's attention?
The
third case was City of Perth v Malley. Unsurprisingly, this
involved a problem concerned with sewers and the drainage
of land. You can imagine the alacrity of the Justices as
they fell upon that problem fresh from their sub-riparian
accommodation. Needless to say, the City of Perth and the
cause of vermin eradication won.
True
to the injunction of the Judiciary Act, the High Court has
been coming to Perth ever since those early days. In 1905,
the editor of the Commonwealth Law Review asked the Attorneys-General
of the States and of the Commonwealth about whether the
annual peregrinations should be maintained, given the costs
and inconvenience involved. The Attorney-General of Tasmania
urged that the journeys should be retained "temporarily
at least". Queensland hinted darkly that if they were
not, litigants might just as well appeal to the Privy Council.
The Attorney-General of Western Australia, W F Sayer, urged
that the High Court should hear appeals and other business
in the State in which the matter arose. He pointed out that
it was desirable for the Court to have the assistance of
counsel and practitioners "experienced in the laws
of the State". So it proved this week in Perth in an
appeal that involved the practice of the courts of Western
Australia. Those of us brought up in the barbarous rules
of pre-Judicature Act practice in New South Wales, often
need a lot of help with the rules of other enlightened States.
H B
Higgins, who had been Commonwealth Attorney-General answered
the enquiry in suitably enigmatic fashion. He said that
the judges had ample time for travel around Australia. Then,
somewhat contradictorily, he expressed the opinion that
they were overworked and needed immediate enhancement of
their number. Blessed with such combined illogicality and
solicitude, it was unsurprising that soon afterwards, Higgins
found himself appointed to the High Court, sharing in the
joys of its Perth facilities.
There
have been only two interruptions to the annual visits to
Perth. Between 1932 and 1934, the visits were suspended
by Order in Council made under the Financial Emergency Act.
Between 1938 and 1945 there were no visits, for the most
part due to the wartime emergency. But they were resumed
as soon as the war ended. There was no stronger proponent
for the annual pilgrimage than Sir Owen Dixon.
In
1980, when the Queen opened the Court's permanent building
in Canberra, Chief Justice Barwick hinted darkly that the
annual visits would cease. But he was quickly succeeded
by Chief Justice Gibbs, a Queenslander, who resolutely supported
the retention of this link with the judges and lawyers of
the West. So far as I am aware, there is no danger to this
settled aspect of our lives. And so it is that, for the
eighty-fifth time, the High Court Justices are back in Perth.
In
the centenary year of federation, it is natural that we
should look back, and remember, our history in this way,
with its mixture of achievements and failures. The magnificent
vista of the city of Perth, which is the backdrop to this
dinner, symbolises the most attractive nation that has been
built under the protection of the Constitution. The War
Memorial, illuminated behind me, reminds us of past and
present dangers.
At
the closing ceremony of the Australian Legal Convention
held recently in Canberra, the President of the Law Council
of Australia, Anne Trimmer, reviewed the great changes that
had come upon the legal profession in the course of the
past century. At its beginning, half of the lawyers of Australia
lived and worked in country towns. Now 80% are based in
the cities. There has also been a shift to large firms,
although the separate Bar remains an occupation for individuals
and 50% of all solicitors work in an establishment with
fewer than four participants all up. At the beginning of
the twentieth century, the staple work was probate, conveyancing
and criminal litigation. The century saw the advent of motor
cars, factories and the negligence explosion. The future
promises the challenge of technology and new opportunities
there for lawyers to serve.
But
the biggest change that came over the profession in the
past century was the arrival of women lawyers. In 1900,
in Western Australia and New South Wales, women were unwanted.
The courts held that Edith Hayes and Ada Evans were not
"persons" for the local Legal Practitioners' Act.
They could therefore not be admitted to practice. Now, women
are everywhere in the law and their number and influence
increase every year.
Some
things have remained the same, as Anne Trimmer pointed out.
Back in 1842, Governor Gipps in New South Wales attacked
the legal profession. Captain James Sterling, arriving at
the Swan River with twelve law books in 1829 was equally
cautious. Today, it seems, judges and lawyers must live
with constant criticism from the Executive, the media and
just about everyone else.
Some
of this criticism is perfectly justified, as we know only
too well. We have all seen colleagues smile at the mistakes
of a litigant in person struggling to understand our complex
rules. We have all witnessed unrepresented prisoners striving
without legal assistance to advance their arguments. No
court must ever be indifferent to their entitlement to justice
in accordance with law and respect for their human dignity.
Sometimes, in the century past, lawyers have been the instruments
of oppression and injustice. It was lawyers who devised
the rules that at first kept women out of their own profession.
It was lawyers who invented the notion of terra nullius
and denied Aboriginals their land rights until, in Mabo,
lawyers changed the law's direction. It was lawyers who
devised and upheld the dictation test and enforced White
Australia. It was lawyers who prosecuted the criminal laws
against homosexuals.
We
all know these things. We know that, as a profession, we
have not done enough for law reform or for pro bono work
or for legal education.
Yet
at critical times in the past century lawyers have upheld
the fundamental principles of the rule of law. The High
Court did so in the Communist Party Case. In Dietrich. In
Mabo. In Kable. And in many other cases. And it is necessary
to say that when the law went wrong, it was often in judgments
that were brief, unanimous and erroneous. The judges who
gave them were celebrated. Brevity is good. But justice
is better.
Laughter
and nostalgia are a potent mix. But an even more important
ingredient for a night such as this is a reminder of the
importance of our role as judges and lawyers. For we are
the alternative model for the world. At this time, and at
all times, the choice is there. It could not be more stark.
Terror. Brute force. And law. And we are for law. In eighty-five
years and eighty-five times eighty five, it will still be
so.