Cheryl Saunders and Adrienne Stone, ‘Constitutional Reasoning in the High Court of Australia’
Constitutional Implications in Australia
347
level, or the so-called ‘
Boilermakers’ principle’. The
implication is drawn from
the structural division of powers between the three branches of government
in Chapters I, II and III of the Constitution, coupled with the extensive treat-
ment of judicial power in Chapter III itself.
8
The two limbs of the Boilermakers’ principle prohibit the vesting of federal
judicial power in a body other than a Chapter III court, and the vesting of any
power other than federal judicial power (and powers incidental to the exer-
cise of it) in federal Chapter III courts, with their constitutional protections
of tenure and remuneration.
9
The principle requires the Court to grapple
with the definition of ‘judicial power’. In
TCL Air Conditioner (ZhongShan)
Co. Ltd v.
Judges of the Federal Court of Australia, French CJ and Gageler J
identified three aspects of federal judicial power: the nature of the function
conferred; the process by which the function is exercised; and the necessity
for the function to be compatible with the essential characteristics of the
court as an impartial and independent institution.
10
In Nicholas v. The Queen,
Gaudron J explained the centrality of the protection of fair judicial process to
the Boilermakers’ principle, including notions of equality before the law and
procedural fairness.
11
The Boilermakers’ principle has had a major role in shaping legislative pol-
icy in a wide variety of areas in Australia,
from tribunal and court design,
to antiterrorism and anti-organised crime, to immigration policy. In the 1995
decision of Brandy v. Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission,
the High Court struck down an attempt by the Commonwealth government
to introduce greater efficiencies into its tribunal system.
12
The government
had introduced amendments that allowed
the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunities Commission’s determinations to be registered with the Federal
Court, thus giving them the effect of court orders. Brandy threw doubt on the
constitutional validity of several federal tribunals and eventually led to the
introduction of the Federal Magistrates Court, now the Federal Circuit Court.
In the 2007 case of Thomas v. Mowbray, the Boilermakers’ principle was the
basis of a challenge to a provision conferring on the Federal Magistrates Court
the power to issue interim control orders against individuals for the purpose
of preventing a terrorist act, and which included a statutory requirement that
8
R v.
Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers’ Society of Australia (1956) 95 CLR 254, 275–8.
9
Constitution s 72.
10
(2013) 251 CLR 533, 553 [27].
11
(1998) 193 CLR 173, 208–9.
12
Brandy v.
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (1995) 183 CLR 245. See fur-
ther discussion of this case and the consequences in Gabrielle Appleby, ‘Imperfection and
Inconvenience: Boilermakers’ and the Separation of Judicial Power in Australia’ (2012) 30(2)
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