348
Rosalind Dixon and Gabrielle Appleby
the orders be issued ex parte.
13
The Court dismissed the challenge to the par-
ticular regime, which has led to the spread and adaptation of the control order
regime in the states to target members of organised crime gangs.
The Boilermakers’ principle has also been at the heart of constitutional
disputes over the legality of executive detention, particularly immigration
detention. In Chu Kheng Lim v. Minister for Immigration, Local Government
and Ethnic Affairs, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ accepted that ‘the invol-
untary detention of a citizen in custody by the state is penal or punitive in
character and, under our system of government, exists only as an incident of
the exclusively judicial function of adjudging and punishing criminal guilt’.
14
However, the Court accepted that executive detention for non-punitive pur-
poses, such as the processing and deportation of immigrants pursuant to the
aliens’ power, would not fall foul of this norm. Justice Gummow explained in
Kruger v.
Commonwealth that non-judicial detention would infringe Chapter III
of the Constitution where it was in substance punitive, to be determined by
reference to whether the detention is ‘reasonably capable of being seen as nec-
essary for a legitimate non-punitive purpose’.
15
However, in Kruger, the Court
dismissed a challenge to the
Aboriginals Ordinance 1918 (NT), which author-
ised the involuntary removal and detention of Indigenous children from their
families, on the basis that – however misguided – the policy was implemented
for non-punitive, welfare and protection purposes.
The Court has also subsequently rejected a number of challenges to immi-
gration detention, accepting as constitutionally permissible the potentially
indefinite detention of stateless individuals,
16
the detention of children,
17
and
irrelevancy of the conditions to the constitutionality of detention.
18
Thus,
while the
Boilermakers’ principle may appear to have great possibility for
rights protection in this area, it has proven weak in doing so in practice.
The Court, over time, has also recognised a related implication protecting
the institutional integrity and independence of state courts: the Kable princi-
ple.
19
The Kable principle emerged in the case of Kable v. DPP (NSW) as a
13
Thomas v.
Mowbray (2007) 233 CLR 307.
14
(1992) 176 CLR 1, 27.
15
(1997) 190 CLR 1, 161. While the relevance proportionality of detention to the non-punitive
purpose was doubted, it has more recently been affirmed in Plaintiff S4-2014 v. Minister
for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 253 219, 231 [26], 232 [29] (French CJ, Hayne,
Crennan, Kiefel and Keane JJ).
16
Al-Kateb v. Godwin (2004) 219 CLR 562.
17
Re Woolley; Ex parte Applicants M276/2000 (2004) 225 CLR 1.
18
Behrooz v.
Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous
Affairs (2004) 219 CLR 486.
19
Street v.
Queensland Bar Association (1989) 168 CLR 461, 521 (Deane J).