MUTUAL POOLS & STAFF PTY LTD v THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Judges: Mason CJBrennan J
Deane J
Dawson J
Gaudron J
McHugh J
Toohey J
Court:
Full High Court
Brennan J
The Chief Justice has exposed the issues in this case and the circumstances from which those issues arise. For reasons with which I respectfully agree, his Honour concludes that, s. 51(xxxi) apart, the
Swimming Pools Tax Refund Act
1992 (Cth) (``the Refund Act'') finds support in s. 51(ii) or in a combination of s. 61 and s. 51(xxxix) of the Constitution
[45]
Can the extinguishing of a debt be an acquisition of property?
In
Mutual Pools
&
Staff Pty. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[46]
By exercising its legislative power, the Commonwealth can extinguish debts owing by it or interests outstanding against it and thereby obtain a discharge from its liability which a subject could obtain only by purchase or payment of the debt or by transfer or surrender of the interest. If rights against the Commonwealth are extinguished by statute and the rights are proprietary in nature
[47]
Just terms
If the Refund Act must find support in s. 51(xxxi), it cannot satisfy the constitutional requirement of just terms. True it is that the purpose of the Refund Act is to direct refunds to the pool owners who had borne, or who are likely to have borne, the burden of the purported but invalid tax and thus to deny a
ATC 4111
windfall benefit to the suppliers who, though they had made the payment of the purported tax to the Commissioner, had passed it on to the pool owners. That consideration is relevant to the character of the Refund Act, but not to the question whether it provides just terms. A law does not provide just terms for the acquisition of property by the Commonwealth from A if it provides for the payment of the price to B. Here, the debt was owned beneficially by the plaintiff and those other suppliers who had made the payment of the purported tax to the Commonwealth, not by the pool owners from whom the suppliers had recouped the payments they had made. It may be that, if a supplier received a refund, he would be bound in restitution to refund to the owner from whom he had previously recouped the purported tax the amount received or the amount recouped whichever is the less. But that is a question which does not arise for present consideration.The critical question is whether the Refund Act is to be classified as a law with respect to the acquisition of property which must find its support in s. 51(xxxi) of the Constitution.
Classification of laws providing for the taking of property
Section 51(xxxi) of the Constitution has a dual effect. First, it confers power to acquire property from any State or person for any purpose for which the Parliament has power to make laws and it conditions the exercise of that power on the provision of just terms. Second, by an implication required to make the condition of just terms effective, it abstracts the power to support a law for the compulsory acquisition of property from any other legislative power
[49]
In
Australian Tape Manufacturers Association Ltd. v. The Commonwealth
, Mason C.J., Brennan, Deane and Gaudron JJ. said
[56]
``In a case where an obligation to make a payment is imposed as genuine taxation, as a penalty for proscribed conduct, as compensation for a wrong done or damages for an injury inflicted, or as a genuine adjustment of the competing rights, claims or obligations of persons in a particular relationship or area of activity, it is unlikely that there will be any question of an `acquisition of property' within s. 51(xxxi) of the Constitution [57]
``See, generally, . On the other hand, the mere fact that what is imposed is an obligation to make a payment or to hand over property will not suffice to avoid s. 51(xxxi)'s guarantee of `just terms' if the direct expropriation of the money or other property itself would have been within the terms of the sub-section. Were it otherwise, the guarantee of the section would be reduced to a hollow facade.''Attorney-General (Cth) v. Schmidt (1961) 105 C.L.R. 361 at pp. 372-373.''
The question here is whether the Refund Act, though it provides for the acquisition of a debt by the Commonwealth and thus falls literally within s. 51(xxxi), is nevertheless to be classified as a law falling under a head of power other than s. 51(xxxi).
Indicia of classification
A grant of legislative power comprehends a power to enact provisions appropriate and adapted to the fulfilment of any objective falling within the power. As Dixon C.J. said in
Wragg v. State of New South Wales
[58]
``A legislative power, however, with respect to any subject matter contains within itself authority over whatever is incidental to the subject matter of the power and enables the legislature to include within laws made in pursuance of the power provisions which can only be justified as ancillary or incidental.''
In
Burton v. Honan
[59]
ATC 4112
within the power itself so that it extends to matters which are necessary for the reasonable fulfilment of the legislative power over the subject matter''. In Nationwide News Pty. Ltd. v. Wills [60]``If one thing emerges clearly from the decisions of this Court it is that, to bring a law within the reach of the incidental scope of a power, it is enough that the provision is appropriate to effectuate the exercise of the power; one is not confined to what is necessary for the effective exercise of the power.''
I respectfully agree. Although s. 51(xxxi) abstracts from other heads of power the power of acquisition which that paragraph itself confers, it does not thereby abstract the power to prescribe the means appropriate and adapted to the achievement of an objective falling within another head of power where the acquisition of property without just terms is a necessary or characteristic feature of the means prescribed.
In each of the cases in which laws for the acquisition of property without the provision of just terms have been held valid, such an acquisition has been a necessary or characteristic feature of the means selected to achieve an objective within power, the means selected being appropriate and adapted to that end. Therefore a law which selects and enacts means of achieving a legitimate objective is not necessarily invalid because the means involve an acquisition of property without just terms. What is critical to validity is whether the means selected, involving an acquisition of property without just terms, are appropriate and adapted to the achievement of the objective. The absence of just terms is relevant to that question, but not conclusive. Where the absence of just terms enhances the appropriateness of the means selected to the achievement of the legitimate objective, the law which prescribes those means is likely to fall outside s. 51(xxxi) and within another supporting head of power. If it were otherwise, the guarantee of just terms would impair by implication the Parliament's capacity to enact laws effective to fulfil the purposes for which its several legislative powers are conferred. It would be erroneous so to construe grants of legislative power as to fetter their exercise by implying that s. 51(xxxi) precluded the enactment of laws under other heads of power where the laws involved an acquisition of property without just terms, even though laws of that kind are appropriate and adapted to the execution of those powers in the public interest.
It would be erroneous to elevate the constitutional guarantee of just terms to a level which would so fetter other legislative powers as to reduce the capacity of the Parliament to exercise them effectively. When the United States Supreme Court was considering the effect of a charter granted to the proprietors of a bridge on the capacity of the legislature to enact a law affecting the benefits of a franchise created by the charter, the Court wrote
[61]
``The continued existence of a government would be of no great value, if, by implications and presumptions, it was disarmed of the powers necessary to accomplish the ends of its creation, and the functions it was designed to perform, transferred to the hands of privileged corporations.''
This observation, repeated more recently
[62]
In my view, a law may contain a valid provision for the acquisition of property without just terms where such an acquisition is a necessary or characteristic feature of the means which the law selects to achieve its objective and the means selected are appropriate and adapted to achieving an objective within power, not being solely or chiefly the acquisition of property. But where the sole or dominant character of a provision is that of a law for the acquisition of property, it must be supported by s. 51(xxxi) and its validity is then dependent on the provision of just terms.
Classification of the Swimming Pools Tax Refund Act
The purpose of the Refund Act, as its title indicates, is to direct the making of refunds of the payments made as and for tax purportedly imposed by the provisions inserted into the
ATC 4113
It follows that the extinction of the plaintiff's claim without the provision of just terms is supportable as an exercise of power under s. 51(ii) or under the combined operation of s. 61 and s. 51(xxxix) or under both but not as an exercise of power under s. 51(xxxi). Thus the guarantee of just terms is not attracted and the Refund Act is valid.
I would answer the questions in the stated case:
- 1. Yes.
- 2. No.
Footnotes
[45][46]
[47]
[48]
[49]
[50]
[51]
[52]
[53]
[54]
[55]
[56]
[57]
[58]
[59]
[60]
[61]
[62]
[63]
This information is provided by CCH Australia Limited Link opens in new window. View the disclaimer and notice of copyright.