AUSTIN & ANOR v COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Judges: Gleeson CJGaudron J
Gummow J
Hayne J
McHugh J
Kirby J
Court:
Full High Court
MEDIA NEUTRAL CITATION:
[2003] HCA 3
McHugh J
205. The first issue in this case stated under s 18 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) is whether the plaintiffs are liable under two federal laws to pay a ``superannuation contributions surcharge'' in respect of ``surchargeable contributions''. If they do, a further question arises as to whether those laws validly apply to the plaintiffs.
206. The joint judgment of Gaudron, Gummow and Hayne JJ states the material facts and summarises the relevant legislation. It is unnecessary for me to repeat them. I agree with their Honours that the federal laws, properly construed, apply to the first plaintiff but not the second plaintiff. But, for slightly different reasons, in my opinion those laws cannot validly apply to the first plaintiff. That is because he is a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and the federal laws burden the constitutional functions of the State of New South Wales, a burden that the Commonwealth Constitution prohibits.
Federalism
207. A federal system of government involves a distribution of legislative power between a central and regional governments with the result that no government has the same legislative authority as a government in a unitary system of government.
[246]
208. As Dicey pointed out:
[248]
``The object for which a federal state is formed involves a division of authority between the national government and the separate States. The powers given to the nation form in effect so many limitations upon the authority of the separate States, and as it is not intended that the central government should have the opportunity of encroaching upon the rights retained by the States, its sphere of action necessarily becomes the object of rigorous definition.''
209. Thus, each legislative authority ``is merely a subordinate law-making body, whose laws are of the nature of by-laws, valid whilst within the authority conferred upon it by the constitution, but invalid or unconstitutional if they go beyond the limits of such authority''.
[249]
210. This distribution of functions and powers is an essential element of federalism. But the system is unlikely to work well - or perhaps at all - unless somebody has the power to define the functions and powers belonging to the central and regional governments respectively. The general terms of the constating document of the federation are never clear enough to avoid disputes concerning
ATC 4085
the limits of their functions and powers. As a result most federal systems - including Australia - have an ultimate judicial ``umpire'' whose interpretations of the constating document bind the central and regional governments and define the boundaries of their powers and functions. As the Constitutional Commission pointed out: [250]``It would seem that the minimal essential features of a federal system as it has come to be understood in Australia are a high degree of autonomy for the governmental institutions of the Commonwealth and the States, a division of power between these organisations, and a judicial `umpire'.''
211. In Australia, the ultimate judicial umpire is this Court. Its judgments ultimately define the powers and functions of the federal and State governments. So in this case, it is for this Court to decide whether expressly or by necessary implication, the Constitution prohibits the Parliament of the Commonwealth from imposing the superannuation contributions surcharge on State judicial officers. The Parliament accepts or assumes that it could not require the States to pay the surcharge in respect of State judicial pensions. And in my opinion, it cannot impose the surcharge by requiring State judges rather than the States to pay it.
212. Most commentators agree that the decision of this Court in
Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd
(``the
Engineers' Case
'')
[251]
213. Despite this change, it soon became apparent that the
Engineers' Case
did not preclude the drawing of constitutional implications concerning the power of the States and the Commonwealth to bind each other. Isaacs J was the principal author of the judgment in the
Engineers' Case
. Yet not long after the decision in that case, his Honour pointed out
-
although in a dissenting judgment
-
in
Pirrie v McFarlane
[256]
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`` [ U]nless, and save in so far as, the contrary appears from some other provisions of the Constitution or from the nature or the subject matter of the power or from the terms in which it is conferred, every grant of legislative power to the Commonwealth should be interpreted as authorizing the Parliament to make laws affecting the operations of the States and their agencies, at any rate if the State is not acting in the exercise of the Crown's prerogative and if the Parliament confines itself to laws which do not discriminate against the States or their agencies .''
(emphasis added)
214. In
Melbourne Corporation v The Commonwealth
,
[258]
``The prima-facie rule is that a power to legislate with respect to a given subject enables the Parliament to make laws which, upon that subject, affect the operations of the States and their agencies. That, as I have pointed out more than once, is the effect of the Engineers' Case stripped of embellishment and reduced to the form of a legal proposition. It is subject, however, to certain reservations and this also I have repeatedly said. Two reservations, that relating to the prerogative and that relating to the taxation power, do not enter into the determination of this case and nothing need be said about them. It is, however, upon the third that, in my opinion, this case turns. The reservation relates to the use of federal legislative power to make, not a general law which governs all alike who come within the area of its operation whether they are subjects of the Crown or the agents of the Crown in right of a State, but a law which discriminates against States, or a law which places a particular disability or burden upon an operation or activity of a State, and more especially upon the execution of its constitutional powers.''
215. However, this celebrated passage does not represent the
ratio decidendi
of the case. Latham CJ and Williams J saw the case as turning on the proper characterisation of the section which they thought was not a law ``with respect to'' banking. Latham CJ said
[260]
``may be invalid in two classes of case, one, where the Commonwealth singles out the States or agencies to which they have delegated some of the normal and essential functions of government, and imposes on them restrictions which prevent them from performing those functions or impede them in doing so; another, where, although the States or their essential agencies are not singled out, they are subjected to some provision of general application, which, in its application to them, would so prevent or impede them.''
216. The issue of the Parliament's power to bind the States in respect of their functions arose again in
Victoria v The Commonwealth
(``the
Payroll Tax Case
'').
[263]
ATC 4087
sense that it imposes some special burden or disability upon them, so that it may be described as a law aimed at their restriction or control''. However, his Honour went on to say that he was not disposed to agree that ``a law which is not discriminatory in this sense is necessarily valid if made within one of the enumerated powers of the Commonwealth''. He said that `` [ a] general law that would prevent a State from continuing to exist and function as such would in my opinion be invalid''.217. In
The Commonwealth v Tasmania
(``the
Tasmanian Dam Case
),
[267]
``The only relevant implication that can be gleaned from the Constitution... is that the Commonwealth cannot, in the exercise of its legislative powers, enact a law which discriminates against or `singles out' a State or imposes some special burden or disability upon a State or inhibits or impairs the continued existence of a State or its capacity to function.''
218. His Honour held that the principle arose from an implied prohibition in the Constitution. He specifically rejected the view of Barwick CJ in the
Pay-roll Tax Case
[269]
219. The view expounded by Mason J in the
Tasmanian Dam Case
prevailed in
Queensland Electricity Commission v The Common- wealth
.
[270]
``This review of the authorities shows that the principle is now well established and that it consists of two elements: (1) the prohibition against discrimination which involves the placing on the States of special burdens or disabilities; and (2) the prohibition against laws of general application which operate to destroy or curtail the continued existence of the States or their capacity to function as governments.''
220. Gibbs CJ,
[272]
221. In
Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth
[276]
222. In
Victoria v The Commonwealth
(``the
Industrial Relations Act Case
''),
[277]
223. Given this long line of judicial exposition of the principle, I am unable to agree with that part of the reasons of the joint judgment
[279]
224. Perhaps nothing of substance turns on the difference between holding that there are two rules and holding that there is one limitation that must be applied by reference to ``such criteria as `special burden' and `curtailment' of `capacity' of the States `to function as governments'''.
[283]
ATC 4088
225. As the present case is concerned with legislation imposing burdens on State judicial officers, the federal legislation is not directed at the States themselves. But that fact does not prevent the application of the Melbourne Corporation principle. In Melbourne Corporation itself, the legislation was directed at the private banks. But it was invalid because it restricted the banking choices open to State governments and their authorities. It prevented them - because it prevented the private banks - from entering into relationships concerning the use and placement of State government funds and borrowings.
226. In
Queensland Electricity Commission
, after referring to the principle of
Melbourne Corporation
, Mason J said:
[284]
``The object of the implied prohibition is to protect the State in the exercise of its functions from the operation of discriminatory laws whether the functions are discharged by the executive government or by an authority brought into existence by the State to carry out public functions even if the authority acts independently and is not subject to government direction and even if its assets and income are not property of the State.''
227. Similarly in
Re Australian Education Union
, this Court held certain awards in relation to the terms and conditions of employment of certain public servants invalid. This Court held that the federal arbitration power did not authorise the Commission to make awards concerning the terms and conditions of employment of high level office holders and senior public servants. The Court said:
[285]
``In our view... critical to a State's capacity to function as a government is its ability, not only to determine the number and identity of those whom it wishes to engage at the higher levels of government, but also to determine the terms and conditions on which those persons shall be engaged. Hence, Ministers, ministerial assistants and advisers, heads of departments and high level statutory office holders, parliamentary officers and judges would clearly fall within this group. The implied limitation would protect the States from the exercise by the Commission of power to fix minimum wages and working conditions in respect of such persons and possibly others as well.''
228. The federal legislation in the present case is concerned with a superannuation contributions surcharge - taxation - and not directly with the terms and conditions of employment of State judicial officers. But that is a difference without relevant constitutional meaning. Nothing in the Constitution or in the principle of Melbourne Corporation prevents the federal Parliament from subjecting State judicial officers to general taxation, provided that it does not discriminate against them as State judicial officers. But the matter is constitutionally different when federal legislation taxes State judicial officers in a way that differs from other income earners. Such a law will be invalid unless the discrimination is such that it has no practical impact on the relationship between the State and the judicial officer. The matter may be one of degree. Drawing the line between a law that treats State judicial officers differently from other income earners and is valid and a law that disadvantages them in a real sense and is invalid may not always be easy. But it must be drawn if the States are to be free from federal laws that impose special burdens or disabilities on their constitutional arrangements relating to the administration of justice.
229. Here the federal law discriminates against State judicial officers in a way that interferes in a significant respect with the States' relationships with their judges. It interferes with the financial arrangements that govern the terms of their offices, not as an incidence of a general tax applicable to all but as a special measure designed to single them out and place a financial burden on them that no one else in the community incurs. The Commonwealth does not dispute that the relevant federal legislation treats the first plaintiff and other State judicial officers differently from the way federal laws concerned with the superannuation contributions surcharge deal with other ``high income earners''. Private ``high income earners'' do not have the surcharge imposed on them. In their case, the surcharge is imposed on their superannuation provider. The federal legislation assumes - no doubt with good reason - that the surcharge will be passed on to the high income earner in his or her capacity as a member of the superannuation scheme in the form of reduced benefits. But in so far as the federal legislation deals with these private ``high income
ATC 4089
earners'', it does not impose any surcharge on them personally. It does not make them liable to pay a debt of hundreds of thousands of dollars, as these federal laws make State judicial officers liable to pay.230. Similarly, federal judges - as ``high income earners'' - are treated differently by the federal legislation from State judicial officers. Federal judges incur no personal liability. When they leave office they do not have the burden of an accumulated debt arising from the imposition of the surcharge. Federal judges who are subjected to the surcharge merely have their pensions reduced at the time of each payment by a specified amount. Their position is very different from State judicial officers who are subjected to the surcharge.
231. The evidence in this case shows, for example, that, when the first plaintiff turns 62 and can retire with a judicial pension, he will have an accumulated superannuation contributions surcharge debt of over $300,000. He will receive a pension on retirement at 62 of about $180,000. The pension will be taxed at the marginal rate. If, instead of retiring at 62, he remains in office until he is required to retire at 72, he will have accumulated a superannuation contributions surcharge debt to the Commonwealth of over $550,000. At age 72, the actuarial evidence indicates that he will have a pension of about $267,000. After paying income tax on his annual pension, four years will pass before his pension receipts match his surcharge debt. If he should die within that four-year period or earlier and is survived by a widow, the pension receipts will be even smaller but the debt owed by the first plaintiff's estate will remain the same.
232. Thus, if the first plaintiff were to serve beyond the age of 62, when he can retire with a judicial pension, it will result in him incurring a debt of an additional $240,000 if he should remain until he is 72. Hence, the federal legislation operates to provide a strong incentive for the first plaintiff and other State judicial officers to retire as soon as they are entitled to a pension. It is true that, independently of the federal legislation, the value of a judge's pension decreases with each day the judge stays in office after becoming eligible to retire with a pension. In that respect, the pension scheme, by entitling a judge to retire after turning 60 and serving for 10 years, has an inherent incentive for retirement on entitlement to the pension. But the legislation in issue in this case provides an additional and greater incentive for the judge to retire early. Thus, the legislation operates so as to hamper the capacity of State governments to retain the services of their judicial officers. More than that, it must also hamper the ability of the States to get suitable persons to take appointments to State judicial offices. Any person approached for appointment to State judicial office knows that under this legislation he or she will incur a significant and increasing financial debt to the Commonwealth upon taking office.
233. So serious was the likely effect on the relationship between State judicial officers and the State of New South Wales that the State felt compelled to enact the
Judges' Pensions Amendment Act
1998 (NSW). That Act amended the
Judges' Pensions Act
1953 (NSW) to provide for the commutation of pensions to enable the payment of the superannuation contributions surcharge. As the New South Wales Attorney-General pointed out in his Second Reading Speech in the Legislative Council,
[286]
234. The federal legislation in question in this case violates the principles enshrined in Melbourne Corporation . It is invalid in so far as it applies to the first plaintiff. I agree with the answers to the questions proposed by Gaudron, Gummow and Hayne JJ.
Footnotes
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