tralian Constitution – An example of referential intentions yielding unexpected legal conse-
451 (per Barton J): ‘Whether persons were Judges, whether tribunals were Courts, and whether
they exercised what is now called judicial power, depended and depends on substance and not
The Centrality and Diversity of the Invisible Constitution
163
legislation, engages, in a prospective way, the High Court’s exercise of the
judicial power of the Commonwealth. This is because either (a) the High
Court may be apt to hear appeals in respect of the decisions issuing from the
exercise of that function, or (b) the exercise of that function may not be apt for
appeal to the High Court (e.g., if the function of the state courts is not an exer-
cise of judicial power), meaning that vesting that function in the state court
will shape the scope and character of the relationship between the courts in
the constitutionally mandated hierarchy.
47
The constitutional consequence
is that state legislatures may not vest functions in their courts which would
change those courts in ways that would undermine or distort this judicial hier-
archy that has the exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth at
its apex.
48
This constitutional limitation upon the power of state legislatures
is not expressly stated: it arises by way of implication. But the implication is
not the result of lawmakers’ intentions, but rather the textual mandate that a
certain judicial hierarchy shall exist.
49
This sort of realist approach to the meaning of the language of natural sci-
ence is well-known.
50
Its application to legal language, which refers to social,
political and institutional phenomena such as
direct choice,
the people,
judicial
power,
courts,
an appellate hierarchy having a certain court exercising a certain
sort of power at its apex, etc., is less commonly discussed by philosophers of
language.
51
But as a matter of practice, it is implicit in the methodology that
47
See the remarks of Gummow J in Kable v. Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) (1996) 189
CLR 51, 142–3.
48
See e.g.,
Kable v.
Director of Public Prosecutions (
NSW) (1996) 189 CLR 51;
Kirk v.
Industrial
Court of New South Wales (2010) 239 CLR 531.
49
The implication is reinforced by the constitutionally-stated power of the federal legislature to
vest state courts with federal jurisdiction (sections 71, 77), which establishes a further connec-
tion between state courts and the exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth: see
e.g., Kable v. Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) (1996) 189 CLR 51.
50
See in particular Hilary Putnam, ‘Dreaming and Depth Grammar’ in R. J. Butler (ed.), An-
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