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Speeches
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY
FACULTY OF LAW
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW CLASS
FRIDAY 23 MAY 1997
WHAT IS IT REALLY LIKE TO BE A JUSTICE OF
THE HIGH
COURT OF AUSTRALIA? - A CONVERSATION OF LAW
STUDENTS WITH JUSTICE KIRBY
The Honourable Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
1
A profession concerned with justice
You are citizens of a free country living under
a Constitution which upholds the rule of law and of which
the High Court of Australia is the guardian. In that country
lawyers play a vital part to ensure that we live under the
protection of the law. Your mission is justice under the law.
It is a very important mission. You should never forget it.
It is quite as honourable as the mission of the healthcare
professions. It is a wonderful vocation that you will enter.
You should always be optimistic and idealistic about our profession.
It is a profession of helping people. A profession about being
concerned with justice. A very important mission. You are
not in this profession just to make a lot of money. You have
been be called to the colours of the law because our work
is the doing of justice.
Forty Justices of the High Court
I am the fortieth Justice of the High Court
of Australia. Forty in the space of nearly a century is not
really very many if you think about it. The Court was established
by the Constitution. The first appointees were made in 1903.
Here we are, nearly a century later, and there have only been
40 of us. Therefore, although any one of you in this room
may one day end up sitting on the High Court, the probabilities
are slightly against it. You should not, as it were, hold
your breath waiting for it to come along. There are many slips
'twixt the cup and the hopeful judicial lip.
When the Court was first established, there
were three Justices: Chief Justice Sir Samuel Griffith whose
mighty portrait hangs in the No 1 Court in Canberra. Justice
Sir Edmund Barton who had been the first Prime Minister. And
Justice Richard O'Connor, who was one of the leaders of the
Constitutional Conventions. Of the three, two of them were
from New South Wales. That hegemony has continued ever since.
At the moment, of the seven Justices of the Court four come
from New South Wales: Justice Gaudron, Justice McHugh, Justice
Gummow and myself. So New South Wales has four of the seven.
There are constant rumblings about that fact in the other
States. But they may have their revenge because there are
soon appointments to be made. The appointment of the replacement
for Sir Daryl Dawson who retires in August 1997 will surely
be from somewhere other than New South Wales. The vacancy
is out of New South Wales because Justice Dawson comes from
Victoria. Similarly Chief Justice Brennan retires in exactly
a year yesterday. He was an appointee from Queensland, ie
out of New South Wales. Not much room to redress the State
balance there.
The Court remained at three Justices until
about 10 years after its foundation. It was then increased
to five and then up to seven. It remained at seven until the
Depression when it was reduced to six. During the wartime
it returned to a total of seven. It has remained that ever
since. There has been talk from time to time about increasing
the Court to nine Justices; but that has not occurred.
Appointment to the Court
I want to tell you how it came about that I
was appointed. I was sitting in a conference on the 13th level
of the Supreme Court building in Sydney. We were working out
how we could become more user-friendly in the New South Wales
Court of Appeal. Being a user-friendly sort of a person, I
was very anxious to make the Court more responsive to the
legal profession and the community. As I was sitting there
my Associate, Nicholas James, graduate of the Melbourne Law
School, came in with a little yellow sticker. It had a note
on it. "Please phone Mr La Vache". He thought it
was a French name. In fact it was the Federal Attorney General,
the Honourable Michael Lavarch MP.
Earlier in the day, at about 8.30 that morning,
I had been asked where I would be at 6 p.m. that night. I
replied: "I will be in the meeting of the committee working
away on the improvement of the consumer relations for the
Court of Appeal". I knew, because I was a pretty experienced
old-timer by that stage, that something was up. I knew that
the Federal Cabinet was meeting that day. So when the little
yellow sticker was handed to me at this meeting on 12th December
1995 at 5.50 pm, "Please ring Mr La Vache", I knew
that my life had changed. From the President of the Court
of Appeal of New South Wales I was to become a Justice of
the High Court.
Facilities for the Justices
The Justices of the High Court work principally
in the Court's building in Canberra. When the sittings of
the Canberra sessions of the Court are not taking place they
eventually tend to scatter to the different areas of the countries
from which they come. The four of us who come from Sydney
have Chambers in the Law Courts Building on Level 19. So I
have moved from Level 12 where I was as the President of the
Court of Appeal in a huge and magnificent room to my somewhat
more humble and more modest accommodation on Level 19 where
I spend some of my time. The other Justices with Chambers
there are Justice Gaudron, Justice McHugh and Justice Gummow.
The Chief Justice also has rooms there.
After I was given the appointment I drove down
to Canberra to take my seat. It's a lovely drive in February.
Quite an easy drive nowadays. I found my way across Lake Burley
Griffin. I saw this building that I had seen so often from
afar, glimmering in the Lake. I had previously thought that
the time for my appointment to the Court had passed. It shows
you that in life you should never say never. You should always
be optimistic. Always contemplate that things might happen.
You never know in life. Uncertainty is one of life's blessings.
The car drove up to the Court. I went in for the first time
as a soon-to-be Justice. I had not yet been sworn in. I was
shown up to Level 9 which is the level right up the top of
the building. I was shown to the room which was to be mine.
That room had originally been the room of Sir Keith Aickin
Then it became the room of Sir Ninian Stephen. Then it became
the room of Sir William Deane. Now it is my room. One day
it will pass to my successor. It is mine. But only temporarily.
I ask you to note that my two predecessors
went on to become the Governor-General of Australia. Indeed
I traced my judicial lineage back to the beginning. The first
Justice in, as it were, my root of title, was Sir Isaac Isaacs.
He also became Governor-General. Now these are just coincidences,
ladies and gentlemen. You should not put any money on the
succession continuing. A figment of the imagination. A flight
of fancy.
After a while there, and after I had been sworn
in and the formalities concluded, I reached over to the little
console beside my desk. I thought I had better do a bit of
work. The console had in it a number of cassette tapes. I
picked a tape . I put it on. Being a cautious type I thought
I had better just listen to this and make sure. I always check
because once I erased a tape and you never do that twice in
your life. I heard this voice coming over the tape. I recognised
the accents but could not recognise the voice. I listened
carefully. I heard that the case being discussed concerned
the law of standing to sue. It was a question of the principles
of the law of standing. I thought: I know that case. That's
Onus 2
. And so the tape droned on and on. I looked for
Onus. I picked it up. I looked through the judgments.
There it was. It was the voice of the long dead Sir Keith
Aickin. It was his voice speaking from the past. His dictated
judgment in Onus v Alcoa 3
.
The moral of that story is that we are all
passing spirits. You are a passing spirit in the law. Your
time will come. You will flourish. Perhaps you will be important.
And then you will pass. And so it will be with me. One day
somebody will come into that room which I now occupy. They
will reach for a tape. They will listen and will hear a fruity
voice. They will say, "I know that voice". They
will then wonder who on earth that was. That's the nature
of the 700 year old tradition that we inherit. We are but
temporary guardians.
Work methods
The High Court of Australia works somewhat
differently to the Supreme Courts in Canada and the United
States of America. In the United States it's really quite
formal. I suppose that is because their Court is more than
200 years old. They have certain very fixed traditions. One
of these is that they always shake hands before they go into
court to sit. That is a symbol of the fact that, even though
you can disagree about the issues that will be debated, nonetheless
you are colleagues on the Court. We don't do that. We occasionally
disagree, as you have possibly read. But we haven't felt the
need to have such a formality to affirm our professional friendships.
Another technique of the US Supreme Court,
which I think is a very good technique, is that they have
the system of case assignment. At the end of the week, after
they have heard the cases, they meet to talk about the cases.
They do this in a very formal and structured way. They normally
go through them much as the Privy Council did with the junior
judge speaking first. They work their way up from junior to
senior, presumably so that the junior judge will not be intimidated
by the senior judge. Somehow I don't think Justice Mary Gaudron,
even when she was the newest Justice on the High Court, would
have been intimidated by anybody. In fact, the people who
tend to get appointed to the High Court of Australia don't
tend to be easily intimidable. But that was the tradition
of the Privy Council. Perhaps for that reason it was followed
up in the Supreme Court of the United States. In fact, that
Court derived other things from the Privy Council tradition,
including the famous case of Marbury v Madison
4 which was based
on the Privy Council principle that invalid legislation in
the colonies could be struck down by the judges in a way that
English statutes could not. That principle is now the cornerstone
of constitutional review in Australia.
Court and separate opinions
In the United States, after they have had their
discussion, if the Chief Justice is in the majority he assigns
the Justice of the Court who will write the opinion of the
Court (including, sometimes, himself). If the Chief Justice
is not in the majority, the senior of the Associate Justices
(as they call them) has the power of assignment. He or she
assigns the judge who will write the "opinion of the
Court". Generally, the dissentients will agree amongst
themselves as to who will write the main dissenting opinion.
There are more concurrences under that system than we tend
to have. We don't have anything like that system in the High
Court of Australia. I hope that something like that will come
in time.
When I was President of the Court of Appeal
I tried to persuade the judges to adopt a system like that.
I fondly thought that it might be easier in a Court of three
than it is in a Court of seven or a Court sitting five judges.
But that could not be agreed. In part, the resistance in Australia
is because of our different traditions. In part, it's because
of notions of judicial independence. Judges here are fiercely
independent. Many consider that they should state their own
opinions. In part it is simply habit. In part, I think our
present system may even involve a tiny element of judicial
ego: that judges like to see their own opinions published.
I suppose I am as guilty of that sin as others. Whatever the
reasons, we do not have the American system of assignment.
I hope one day we will.
Original jurisdiction
In the work of the High Court there is the
original jurisdiction and the appellate jurisdiction. The
original jurisdiction is now really quite small. Once, when
I was young, it was quite big because then there was no Federal
Court. The High Court used to have to do a lot of tax cases,
intellectual property cases, industrial matters and other
cases. Such cases now go to the Federal Court of Australia
or to other courts. If you look back in the old volumes of
the Commonwealth Law Reports you will see that the
original jurisdiction of the Court was quite a large business
in those days. Now the appellate work of the Court is so great
that the original jurisdiction has virtually gone. If anything
comes in the original jurisdiction, the Court has the power
to remit it to another appropriate court. Usually we do so.
However there is still some work. In Melbourne, on Tuesday,
I was sitting in a case concerning a claim by an Aboriginal
Australian for declarations of legal right
5 . The basis of the
claim was, amongst other things, one of alleged genocide on
the part of Australia for which he was contending that the
Commonwealth of Australia was liable in law. His process was
the subject of an application by the Commonwealth to strike
out his writ and statement of claim. The summons was filed
on the basis that the proceedings did not disclose a cause
of action known to the law, that it did not involve a matter
within the Constitution, that it was not a justiciable issue,
that the plaintiff did not have standing to bring the case,
that the case was frivolous and vexatious, that the pleading
was embarrassing, and that it should be struck out or stayed.
That is the sort of case that a single judge does. We take
it in turns to deal with such practice matters. This week
it was my turn.
I was speaking recently to a writer for
The Bulletin magazine about the future of courtrooms.
Of how our courtrooms in the future will be very much geared
up to information technology. I believe that this will come.
Our laws will be written in the future in a way that makes
many issues susceptible to resolution by artificial intelligence.
Basically, this will be because our profession - your profession,
mine, the law - has really just priced itself out of availability
to most ordinary citizens. That can't be a good thing. Yet
as I sat there during the case this week, I wondered what
push-button court is ever going to be able ever to resolve
a matter as complicated and inter-related with history and
principle and with rights and claims and with anger and frustration?
What push-button judge will ever be able to resolve a matter
like that? It will never be done in your lifetime or mine.
This is because what is important in such cases, what is at
the heart of our mission for justice, is the will
to do justice according to law. No machine can yet be programmed
which takes our place in that respect. It is unlikely that
a machine will ever have that capacity and inclination.
Appellate jurisdiction
So far as the High Court's appellate work is
concerned, it now comes to the Court only by special leave.
I have spoken to people who were Associates to Justices of
the Court decades ago. They tell me of what the High Court
was like back in the 1960s. Basically, it was like the Court
of Appeal of New South Wales now is. It was run off its feet.
Absolutely overwhelmed with work which it could not rebuff
or deflect. It was desperately busy just getting the decisions
out.
In the last year of my service as President
of the Court of Appeal I wrote 389 opinions. In the High Court
of Australia last year I wrote, I think, about 60 opinions.
So the workload changes. It's not as much so far as quantity
is concerned. But everything is hard. In the High Court of
Australia, with very few exceptions, all of the cases are
difficult.
As a judge there is a certain satisfaction
in throughput. To be able to hear a case and to give an immediate
ex tempore judgment when you have got all the facts
and detail in your mind and the law is simple and clear. You
dictate the decision, as it were, in Court, in the presence
of the parties, immediately having heard it. That's a very
satisfying thing. You get better at ex tempore decisions
the longer you do them. There's an essay by me in the
Australian Bar Review on this subject
6 . I commend it to you,
just in case you might ever have the opportunity and the need.
However, in virtually all cases in the High
Court in appellate matters, judgment is reserved. It's very
rare to give an ex tempore judgment in the Full Court.
This is because the Justices know that they are not only solving
the problems of the parties. They are expressing principles
which will become part of the law of our country for the whole
nation 7
. Therefore, it behoves us to be rather careful about it.
That's why, normally, the decisions in the Full High Court
are reserved.
Generally, the Full Court comprises five Justices.
There's a reason for that. With the special leave system virtually
everything heard is on appeal, either from a Court of Appeal
or from a Full Court, either Federal or State. Therefore the
Justices may be reversing three judges of the court below.
For that reason the theory is that you should ordinarily have
five High Court Justices to shoulder that responsibility.
Where there is a constitutional issue, the Judiciary Act
1903 (Cth) contemplates that the Court will comprise
all seven Justices 8
. Except where a Justice has retired or died in office or
is about to retire (as Justice Dawson is) if the matter before
the Court includes a constitutional question it is normal
to have the entire seven Justices participate. The notion
is that the people of Australia are entitled to have the opinion
of the whole Court upon such matters. That's what normally
happens.
During the last year we have heard a number
of important cases where the entire Court participated, such
as in the Waanyi 9
claim which was preliminary to the pastoral leases issue.
Such as the Wik Case 10
where the Court sat seven. We have now, standing for
judgment, a number of constitutional questions where the Court
sat seven Justices. For example, the Ha Case (which
was the case on section 90 of the Constitution concerning
excise duty) will have to be delivered before Justice Dawson
retires. The decision will have to come down before 15 August
1997. I'm not giving any secrets away here. It's just a matter
of logic given the impending retirement of Justice Dawson.
There's also the Levy and Lange cases which
seek to reopen the principles of the Theophanous Case
11
. That case also included Justice Dawson. So it too has
to be decided before 15th August. There are a number of other
such cases which wait in the wings. I am sure that you will
understand that the Court is very busy at the moment, striving
to ensure that it gets finished all of the cases in which
Justice Dawson sat as well as the other cases that have been
heard or are being heard in the meantime.
Work and personal staff
My normal day is work. My life is work. My
life for the last 23 years, since I was first appointed to
judicial office, has virtually always involved working 7 days
a week. I have heard it said that, when Chief Justice Dixon
retired, he became rather disillusioned. That great jurist,
Dixon - possibly Australia's greatest judge - became very
dissatisfied at the end. He was discouraged that he had spent,
effectively, the entirety of his life working in a small annex
to his home in Melbourne - writing judgments. The High Court
was then mainly based in Melbourne. The great Dixon worked
relentlessly in this annex to his home. Every week. Every
weekend. Every day. Well into the night. It's said of Dixon
that at the end of his life, he thought he had wasted his
life. You will have to admit that a working life of such intensity
is not a very civilised way to spend precious time. I am now
facing the same quandary. To be a Justice of the High Court
of Australia, where all the problems are difficult and most
of the cases are important for your fellow citizens, you have
to work very hard. This is the price for the honour and glory
of being the fortieth of the forty Justices in the history
of the Court.
In performing my work I have the assistance
of a secretary who is based in Sydney, and two Associates.
I believe that I am the only judge who advertises for my Associates.
Others take the view that if you've got the intelligence,
wherewithal and intellect to be an Associate to a Justice
of the High Court of Australia, you will take your own initiative
and apply. Perhaps because I came from Concord, New South
Wales, and because in my youth most appointments of this kind
were decided by the Old Boys' Network, I have always taken
the view that, as a matter of principle, you should advertise.
This act signals that this is an equal opportunity position.
Everybody who has the capacity is entitled to apply. The result
of these high Polonian principles is that I get more than
100 applicants. I then have to go through the process of elimination.
It is quite wrenching in many ways. You get to the last 15
or 20 of the applicants and any of them could do the job.
I always take one male and one female Associate. At the moment
I'm about to change my personal staff. Mid-year I change one
and he or she goes off and the new one comes in.
My Associates don't write my judgments. I've
never had staff write my judgments. I gather that does happen
a lot in the United States, if you can believe The Brethren
12
. I'm far too egocentric and idiosyncratic to allow anybody
to write my peerless prose. So I do it myself. My Associates
are kept very busy just keeping up with my output. This includes
not just the judgments but, as I am sure you are all aware,
countless articles in law reviews, Bar Association journals
and book reviews, speeches and the like for the illumination
of all who read. The Associates are an indispensable part
of the Justice's team. You get very close to and work very
closely with them. They learn a lot during the course of a
year. They see a very busy professional person at work at
close quarters.
The materials that you get as a Justice are
not only the oral submissions of counsel, presented in their
argument in court, but increasingly large amounts of written
material. The High Court changed its practice in this regard
in the last few months. Now we are getting the parties to
summarise the factual issues and to put somewhat more detail
in their respective factual and legal submissions. Sir Harry
Gibbs introduced a skeleton outline technique. He took this
course on the basis that such an outline was the most efficient
way to get what people were really saying. However,
we've now gone a little way down the track towards the practice
of the United States Supreme Court. We are now getting more
detailed written briefs. In constitutional cases the written
materials could be several metres high. The Justices receive
an enormous amount of material. The skill then is sifting
and getting through it - going quickly to the essence of it.
The publication of judgments
The preparation of the judgments is a major
enterprise. Once the first draft is typed it is revised and
reconsidered by me four or five times. The draft is then worked
on by the staff. All the footnotes and quotes are checked.
Then the work of my staff is scrutinised by Court officers
who are there to check the text for absolute accuracy. Not
just the citations are checked - but the accuracy of the references
to transcript. This is to make sure that the Justice has not
misunderstood a fact or mis-stated a summary of the evidence
or a case citation. All of that is very carefully checked
in a way that in the Court of Appeal we just didn't have the
resources to do. In the High Court it's done with exquisite
care. Finally, the penultimate draft comes around. After the
seventh or eighth proof you read it for the last time. Then
the Chief Justice sends around a note. It says: "It is
proposed that such and such a case will be handed down on
such and such a day". The page proofs of the pamphlet
come around. That's the end of the internal process. On the
given day, in open court, the reasons are published and the
orders are made. The parties have reached the end of the judicial
line in Australia. It is often a serious moment, given the
importance of the questions decided.
That's what it's really like being a Justice
of the High Court of Australia. It's a life of hard work.
But it is an extremely interesting life. I hope that in your
professional lives all of you will have an opportunity to
see the High Court in action. Perhaps you will have the chance
to appear before the Court. I also hope, above all, that you
will have a fulfilling life as a lawyer, as a citizen and
as a civilised human being.
QUESTIONS
Question: You come from a less privileged
background than many judges in the past. Do you feel that
this is an advantage? Do you believe that the Court should
reflect, in the future, more than it has in the past, the
variety of Australia's population so that it is less monochrome
and therefore more readily able to reach decisions that will
be accepted fully by the people of Australia?
Answer: I don't want to mis-state my position.
My parents on my mother's side had University degrees. They
were painters, botanists and archaeologists in Ireland, Northern
Ireland. My father's family was very well read and interested
in ideas and social reform. I was blessed with very intelligent
and loving parents and a happy family. That's a wonderful
thing to have in your life. Many people now talk about "family
values". I know that society has changed. The concept
of "family" is changing. But if you have a happy
family upbringing, it's a wonderful start in life. I went
to an Opportunity School in the public school system and then
to Fort Street High School. Now, Fort Street has produced
four of the Justices of the High Court
13 . Four out of the
40. Ten percent. So it's scarcely a deprived background.
However, I think I can say to you that, because
I came from an ordinary suburban middle to lower middle class
Australian family, I don't feel myself more important than
anybody else. I feel myself somewhat in touch with the values
and aspirations of ordinary Australians. I think that those
values involve something of integrity and wisdom that we the
judges should never forget. It's very easy in the law, particularly
if you're in a court, to get out of touch with ordinary fellow
citizens. I used to find this very offensive when I was a
barrister. A lot of chitter chatter amongst the lawyers. Laughing
and joking in the presence of clients. Much of it for the
purpose of relieving the stress of the case. Yet with complete
indifference to the clients. They were often undergoing a
most dreadful ordeal. I could never forget that, for the rest
of their lives, I would be their barrister: "Mr Kirby,
my barrister". I think that's something which you should
try to remember when you go out ultimately to practise law
or to exercise whatever vocation you choose. Around their
dinner table clients and other citizens will talk about you
as "my barrister", "my solicitor", "my
adviser". It's a very important that you remember that.
Now you do get people appointed to the Court
who have come from great legal families. Sir William Owen
immediately springs to mind. Sir Victor Windeyer is another.
I digress to say that some of my distinguished predecessors
were fashionable once. Yet now they are rarely, if ever, read.
However, Sir Victor Windeyer is read all the time. Now why
is that? Certainly, he was from an important legal family.
I think he was a grandson of one of the first magistrates
in New South Wales. His uncle was a judge of the Supreme Court
of New South Wales. So it is a great legal family. His son
is now a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales. But
his family is not the reason. Sir Victor Windeyer had a capacity
to conceptualise issues. He was extremely interested in legal
history. He therefore understood that our legal system, the
unique system the common law, is very much dependent on legal
history. He was a great judge. It doesn't really matter where
you come from - your family or forbears. What matters in the
judiciary is who you are, how you work and what values and
learning you reflect in your legal decisions. Clearly it is
vital not to be too full of your own importance. As Sir William
Deane once said - pulling himself down a peg or two with becoming
modesty - you should remember that even being a judge on the
highest court of a country like Australia, in the Southern
Hemisphere, Pacific, in a world, in a mighty universe, is
(objectively speaking) no big deal.
So my answer to your question is there's a
place for everybody in the High Court, so long as they have
the legal talent, integrity and devotion to duty. Or, at least,
there's a place for as many as there are seats amongst the
seven whenever the vacancies come up. Alas, that means that
there is little room, for the children of the great legal
families or the children of the poor. In this respect they
are equal.
The Federal Attorney-General gave an interesting
address at Monash University recently
14 . It received some
coverage in the media. In it, Mr Williams analysed the 40
Justices. Twenty-six were appointed by non-Labor governments
and 14 by Labor governments. The average term of the Chief
Justices was about 9 years and of the other Justices was about
17 years. He pointed out that since the change to the Australian
Constitution which requires the Justices to retire at aged
70 15
, that pattern is going to change. Sir Edward McTiernan sat
on the Court for 45 years. Sir George Rich for a period of
37 years. That just won't happen any more. Judges will be
appointed at about the same age as I was appointed (57). They
will serve for about 10 or 12 or 15 years. That's not such
a bad thing. With such a system there will be a change - with
more people being appointed. I certainly hope that there will
be more women appointed. I also hope that the people who are
appointed, male or female, will be conscious of the fact that
we are not now a monochrome society, if ever we were. Australian
society is made up of myriads of minorities. It's important
as a judge and as a lawyer to understand - or at least to
appreciate - what it is to be in a minority. It is important
to reflect that understanding in your sense of justice and
in your search for justice according to law.
Question: Do you think that, given the
great power entrusted to the Justices of the High Court, there
should be a more formal process for selecting them? Should
there be closer scrutiny of their attitudes and opinions?
Is this the price of accepting that our judges do make law?
Answer: I had to face that question recently
when the Attorney-General came to see me. He is consulting
everybody about the new appointments to the Court. That is,
he is consulting everybody who is anybody! He is consulting
all the Justices of the High Court. I told him that I didn't
think it was appropriate for me to express any opinion. I
know that this is perhaps an eccentric, certainly an unusual,
point of view. It's not the commonly held view. My own feeling
is that a Judicial Commission or some more formalised system
of appointing judges - especially of the High Court of Australia
- would be likely to end up involving judges appointing judges.
I'm against that. Or it would produce a system that is like
that of the United States. There, nominees have to be submitted
to a Senate confirmation hearing. This makes much more politicised
the process of judicial appointment. It would tend, as it
did with Judge Bork in the United States, to grossly over-simplify
complex points of view. Bork may have had his faults. But
he was a brilliant man and a well-respected judge. He didn't
deserve to be rejected because of twenty second advertisements
designed to promote a political head of steam against him
concerning his suggested views on abortion, race relations
or anything else. The process was seriously flawed.
My own somewhat idiosyncratic opinion is that
our system of Executive appointment, like so many things we
have inherited from England, because it evolved over a long
time is (like the jury for example) not without its distinct
strengths. Although the judges of our system are not elected,
they are appointed directly by elected people. Those people
hope against hope that the persons they appoint as judges
will, in a general way, reflect their philosophy of society
and its laws. It is Realpolitik of which I speak.
It's in that way that differing governments appointing judges
hope that they can secure a reflection, over time, of the
kind of philosophy that the people who have elected them have
generally adhered to. Of course, there can be shattering disappointments
for governments of all persuasions. For example, Sir Anthony
Mason and Sir William Deane, the suggested "radicals"
of the High Court in recent times, were both appointed by
Coalition governments. In the case of Sir Anthony Mason it
was the McMahon government. In the case of Sir William Deane
it was the Fraser Government. Both of those governments probably
expected that they would be (if I can coin a phrase) "capital
C Conservatives". So you can just never tell how judges,
who are people of integrity, will develop on the Bench or
will react to particular problems. Yet in a strange and general
way, the fact that you get this accountability to the people
through the sorts of candidates who are appointed as Justices
by governments or different political persuasion has tended,
over time, to bring light and shade to our judiciary - including
in the High Court. My doubt about a Judicial Commission, or
a more formal involvement of judges in the selection process
would be that it would be likely to result in an awful lot
of shade. It could tend to involve judges replicating, perhaps
clone-like, people who were like themselves. I'm against that.
Question: Do you believe that the Federal
Government is cutting back on the High Court's budget and
introducing high fees for proceedings in the Court because
of the anger with the Court's Wik decision? Are you aware
that this is widely rumoured? Do you believe this to be the
case?
Answer: I haven't heard that rumour. It is
true that there have been effective cuts to the Court's budget.
However, I understand that those cuts are not confined to
the Court but are common to a lot of other federal authorities.
They are related to the so-called efficiency dividend. Perhaps
in the case of the High Court they fail to take into account
the special constitutional position and obligations of the
Court which cannot be avoided or deflected. That is a matter
which is the subject of discussion between the Court and the
Government. I don't think anything else need be said at the
moment.
The one good thing that has happened in recent
years is that the Court has secured has its own budget. It
has a one line entry in the national Budget. Therefore the
Court, in a sense, runs itself. That imposes a duty on the
Court to be economical, to be efficient, to be prudent in
the use of public resources, to share the pain of the rest
of the community when economic requirements necessitate that.
However, the Court must always fulfil its constitutional function.
That the Court will always do.
Question: Did you hear that the Queensland
Premier singled you out for personal criticism for your judgment
in the Wik Case? He described it as "ranting and raving".
How do you respond to such criticism? How can judges answer
back and explain what they have decided when nobody bothers
to read their reasons but feels free to criticise them just
the same?
Answer: If you think I keep a little black
book in which I write down everybody who said a nasty thing
about me, I do not. I have to tell you that in my life, not
just as a judge, but in my whole life, I've had a lot of nasty
things said about me. The black book would be very full. But
it would really be pointless to keep such a book. You should
never carry bitterness. Sometimes the personal comments of
one's critics can be hurtful. Hurtful not only to you as an
individual but to the institution you honour. There was a
thoughtful article by Alan Ramsay in the Sydney Morning
Herald recently. My brother brought it to my attention.
It pointed out that when the High Court delivered its equally
controversial decisions in the Bank Nationalisation case
16 adverse to the Government
and in the Communist Party case
17 , adverse to the
succeeding Government, the judicial umpire's decision was
simply accepted. The Governments got on with the business
of politics. There were certainly no personal attacks on the
Justices of the High Court. It seems that we now live in an
angrier time. The problem from a judge's point of view, whether
a Justice of the High Court or a Judge of a Federal Court
or the Supreme Court of a State, is that you can't answer
back. The convention is that you don't. I think it is a wise
convention. Too many exchanges would be destructive of respect
of the judicial institution. On the other hand, you can sometimes
get appropriate occasions such as conferences, academic meetings
or graduation ceremonies where you can express, in a seemly
way, a point of view that helps to set the record straight.
Graduations particularly are always good for a timely thrust
of a judicial point of view. Because of the course of my professional
life has taken, I seem to get a lot of such occasions. Within
well known limits, you can indicate on such occasions a point
of view which is personal or a point of view of the Court.
The pastoral leases question was bound to involve
a very controversial decision, whichever way it had been decided.
A judge should not feel so sensitive that he or she believes
that no one can criticise a decision, however honestly and
carefully arrived at. In the Wik case, the High Court
divided 4:3. The issues were in many ways quite novel. The
decision is one which affects a lot of people. It concerns
people's land. On such matters, in every society, not just
ours, people feel very keenly. Country people, in difficult
times of economic transition, feel very keenly. The Aboriginal
people feel very keenly. So we shouldn't be too surprised
that tempers rise. But as for the Justices of the High Court,
we simply get on with our work. The institution goes on. It
will continue to do so.
Question: Don't you think that some of
the criticism may be because of a public perception that the
judges, particularly of the High Court, are developing new
law rather than applying the law already made?
Answer: I didn't think I'd get that question
in a law school class. The judges of the common law have been
making the law for 700 years. As Sir Anthony Mason asked in
a foreword to Professor Parkinson's book recently
18 , where else do you
think the volumes of Halsbury came from? I mean,
where did the common law come from if not from the judges?
This is the very genius of our system. In your families and
in your community you must try to explain that. It's actually
a wonderful thing because there's never a gap in our law.
The common law is constantly being developed - by the judges.
In the field of Aboriginal and indigenous people's legal rights,
Australia is not alone in this. Other societies which were
settler societies: the United States, Canada, Australia, New
Zealand, South Africa, Zimbabwe, all of them are going through
an adjustment period. We in Australia are going through an
adjustment period. It's still progressing: our parliaments
and our courts are reconsidering old laws as they affect the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of our country.
We can now see, almost with the eyes of the 21st century,
that some of the rules which were laid down in earlier times
are not appropriate as rules of the common law for Australia
today. Of course, there's always a question of where you draw
the line. Where you stop in judicial law-making. Where you
say: well this is a matter for parliament and not for the
courts. That's always a question on which every judge will
think very carefully. But the one thing a judge can't do,
except on issues of non-justiciability, is to say I won't
answer the question. The judge is duty-bound to give an answer
in the matter before the court. That's the one thing people
can expect from a court. So you should not fall for the idea
that judges merely apply the law and do nothing else. Some
of my predecessors in the High Court occasionally suggested
that. That the Justices never make the law. It would be a
negation of the judicial function, Sir Owen Dixon said, for
the judges to make up the law 19
. But the reality is that, then as now, they were doing what
we do. They were looking into the past for the principles
established by legal authority for its application in their
time. They were looking closely at that authority. They were
deriving from the authority and from the legal policy and
legal principles the law needed for the new case to meet new
situations 20
. How else would we adapt the law from rules laid down for
rural village England to Australia in a world of cyberspace,
of inter-planetary flight and of all the other features of
our modern technological age? Its creativity is the very genius
of our legal system. We shouldn't be ashamed of it. On the
contrary, we should cherish its capacity to adapt and change.
Question: Do you believe that television
cameras should be allowed in the courts?
Answer: I myself have no problem with television
in court. When I sat in the Court practice list recently I
saw that there was a woman with an object with a little red
light on. This meant that she was recording. I said to her,
as is the case, that I really had no personal objection to
her recording the proceedings. But it can't be done without
the authority of the Court. My own view is that courts are
open and the way people nowadays get most of their information
about courts is through radio and television. So I consider
that courts shouldn't stay back forever in the age of the
quill pen. The fear is that television in court would debase
the issues and trivialise them. That we could become part
of the entertainment industry which is what, to a large extent,
the electronic media is today. These are matters which have
to be decided on a collegial basis. My own feeling is that
it is inevitable that television cameras will come into the
court room. So long as you don't have people wandering around
and pushing you around (as you get in conferences) so long
as they're discreet, it's no different from people being able
to come into the court and stay a day or to go after 20 seconds.
It's basically just a matter of open justice. And that is
a hallmark of our judicial system. But it has clear implications
for the new technology of information.
Question: Do you see yourself as the radical
judge on the High Court of Australia? Does that sometimes
involve you in conflict with you colleagues?
Answer: I think it's for other people to put
me into boxes and neat slots. Of course, I sometimes read
the published estimates of me and of others. In some things
I would say I am radical. I tried to express that idea when
I was sworn in. My remarks are recorded in the Australian
Law Journal 21
. I endeavoured to counteract the large serving of self-satisfaction
and self-praise that tends to occur on such occasions when
a new judge is sworn in. I said that we could be proud of
the law and of our institutions of justice. But that the law
in Australia has not always been such a wonderful thing. Not
always so splendid if you were a woman. Not always so wonderful
if you were an Aboriginal Australian or Torres Strait Islander.
Not always so great if you were an Asian Australian in the
time of the White Australia policy. No so marvellous if you
couldn't speak English in courts of law. Not so splendid if
you happened to be a homosexual Australian or bisexual. Australian
law has not always been sensitive to everyone's human rights.
I have had a chance, through the experiences of my life, to
see the law through the prism of human rights and international
human rights law. I suppose that I have had more experience,
in that regard, than any other Australian lawyer. I see things
slightly differently for that reason. But I believe that the
international dimension of Australian law is the way of the
future. That all lawyers of your age will come to see Australian
law through the prism of international human rights and international
law generally.
On the other hand, in some things, I'm really
quite cautious. Reassuringly so for the conservatives amongst
you. For example, I'm not very enthusiastic about a change
in the constitutional monarchy which is provided for in our
Constitution. I think in a peculiar way, rather as the jury
evolved and the way judges are appointed, the system enshrined
in the Constitution, with an absent head of state, has a lot
going for it. If you look around the world and you see the
problems that heads of state often cause, there's a certain
genius in our system in having an absent head of state. Constitutional
monarchies also tend to be temperate polities. Anyway it's
my point of view as a citizen.
So please don't put me in a box. Human emotions
and thought and mind and philosophy are very complicated things.
On some matters I could be radical. On some other matters
I could be quite conservative. Justice McHugh considers me
irretrievably conservative in contract law. Where I go on
your spectrum, or on Professor Blackshield's scaleograms,
is for others to say.
Question: Don't you think that one of the
problems of Australian law is that it is too concerned with
property rather than with individual rights. The law's conception
of itself is as a protector of private property rather than
human dignity and liberty. Criminal law falls more heavily
on the poor and the disadvantaged. Do you agree?
Answer: We are not alone in Australian society
in providing for offences against property as well as offences
against the person. People tend to be rather respectful of
their person and to insist that they be protected by the law.
But they also tend to be very possessive of their property.
It's true that there are some crimes which fall more heavily
on some groups in our society. I've made no secret, for example,
that I think our current approach to drug laws is not always
very rational. I'm hopeful that the recommendations in Justice
Woods' recent Royal Commission report will at least receive
a fair hearing from our political leaders and consideration
by our society. Otherwise, we may just go on debasing our
legal system with the involvement of lots of people in the
criminal justice system who are either drug dependent persons
or occasional recreational drug users. That's a large human
rights issue for the future. It is one for you to think about
as lawyers and as citizens.
What we've got to consider in the criminal
law is the redefinition of what it is that is so anti-social
that we will punish it with the deprivation of liberty or
the imposition of large fines and so on. These are issues
which lawyers of today should certainly be concentrating on.
Where appropriate, you should lift our voices. You have great
advantages. You have skills and training. You have capacities
of explanation and exposition. You can't just keep quiet where
basic rights are involved. If you think that something is
unjust and you feel strongly about it, and if it affects the
human dignity of another person, you should lift your voice.
That's your civic obligation and privilege. Drug law reform
is one area in which I hope that you will interest itself.
But there are many more. Think freshly. Don't just think with
the blinkers of the past on your mind. Alas, the law tends
to produce people who are all too readily locked, unquestioningly,
into the past.
The great challenge for us as lawyers entering
a new millennium is to cherish our past and to respect legal
authority and ancient principle. But also to keep our minds
open to the possibility that either what was done by the law
in the past was unjust then or that it's wrong now. If that
is so, it is our civic duty by argument and persuasion, to
move for the law's improvement. Sometimes, as lawyers, we
can contribute at the margin to such improvement. We can do
so in our professional work. It's our vocation. Justice according
to law. According to law. But justice too. That's our mission.
It is the banner to which you, as young lawyers, have been
called.
| 1 |
Justice of
the High Court of Australia. President of the International
Commission of Jurists. Text of an address at the University
of Sydney, Faculty of Law on 23 May 1997. The text has
been corrected.
|
| 2 |
Onus v Alcoa of Australia Limited (1981) 149
CLR 27.
|
| 3 |
Ibid, at 46-58.
|
| 4 |
1 Cranch (5 US) 137 (1803).
|
| 5 |
Thorpe v The Commonwealth of Australia [No 3],
unreported, 12 June 1997.
|
| 6 |
M D Kirby, "Ex tempore Reasons", (1992)
Australian Bar Review 93.
|
| 7 |
Cf McHugh J in Pfennig v The Queen (1995)
182 CLR 461 at 519.
|
| 8 |
Ibid, s 23(1).
|
| 9 |
Re North Ganalanja Corporation; Ex parte Queensland
(1996) 71 ALJR 344.
|
| 10 |
Wik Peoples v Queensland (1996) 71 ALJR 173.
|
| 11 |
Theophanous v Herald and Weekly Times Ltd
(1994) 182 CLR 104.
|
| 12 |
Bob Woodward and S Armstrong, The Brethren - Inside
the Supreme Court, Simon and Schuster, New York (1979).
|
| 13 |
Barton J, Evatt J, Barwick CJ and Kirby J.
|
| 14 |
D Williams, "Judicial Independence and the High
Court", Address, Monash University, 1 May 1997.
|
| 15 |
Australian Constitution , s 72, introduced
by the Constitution Alteration (Retirement of Judges)
1977.
|
| 16 |
Bank of New South Wales v The Commonwealth
(1948) 76 CLR 1.
|
| 17 |
Australian Communist Party v The Commonwealth
(1951) 83 CLR 1.
|
| 18 |
P Parkinson, The Principles of Equity, LBC,
Sydney, 1996, v at vi.
|
| 19 |
(1952) 85 CLR xi at xiv. See also Rootes v Shelton
(1967) 116 CLR 383 at 386 per Kitto J. Cf M D Kirby,
"Judicial Activism?" in (1997) Uni of WA
Law Rev forthcoming.
|
| 20 |
Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay
(1988) 165 CLR 197 at 252.
|
| 21 |
(1996) 70 ALJ 269.
|
|