Williams and Hume, Supra note 73, 173.
(2006) 228 CLR 45, 76.
366
Rosalind Dixon and Gabrielle Appleby
many pages justifying his judicial conclusions, and he developed a consistent
jurisprudential approach across cases. But like Murphy J, Kirby J also ulti-
mately adopted an unorthodox approach to constitutional interpretation:
Kirby J argued that international law should not only play an important role
in shaping the development of the common law and interpretation of statutes
in Australia, but also in the interpretation of the Constitution, particularly in
relation to those provisions and limitations that protect rights. For Kirby J, such
a role included interpreting the scope of implied constitutional limits – such
as the need for an independent and impartial tribunal under the Kable prin-
ciple – consistently with international human rights standards
100
and the reso-
lution of ambiguities in constitutional text by reference to international law.
101
The most direct – and blistering – criticism of Kirby J’s approach came
from McHugh J in
Al-Kateb v.
Godwin. McHugh J, a strong proponent of the
strict – and by that time uncontroversially orthodox – approach to drawing
implications grounded in the text and structure of the Constitution, explained
that there was a danger such that the approach advocated by Kirby J could
result in judicial amendment of the Constitution, subverting the purpose of
the referendum requirements of s 128.
102
‘As a matter of constitutional doc-
trine’, McHugh J declared, ‘it must be regarded as heretical’.
103
He then took
aim at the position that judges should refer to foreign authority in approaching
constitutional interpretation. This, he said, would result in judges being given
‘a “loose-leaf” copy of the Constitution’.
104
A constitutional Bill of Rights, he
argued, must be achieved through section 128 or not at all. Justice Heydon
tallied up the score in Roach, noting that Kirby J’s approach to using interna-
tional law in constitutional interpretation has been ‘denied by 21 of the Justices
of this Court who have considered the matter, and affirmed by only one’.
105
The rejection of Kirby J’s approach in this context also had potential connec-
tions to, or at least parallels with, the role played by Murphy J in an earlier era.
Justice Kirby was unusual among members of the Court in publicly celebrat-
ing Murphy J’s legacy as a jurist,
106
and because of this, his embrace of interna-
tional human rights law may itself have suffered from an indirect association
100
See e.g., Forge v. Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2006) 228 CLR 45.
101
See e.g., Newcrest Mining (WA) Ltd v. Commonwealth (1997) 190 CLR 513, 657–8; Kartinyeri
v. Commonwealth (1998) 195 CLR 337, 418 (Kirby J).
102
Al-Kateb v.
Godwin (2004) 219 CLR 562, 591–4.
103
Ibid.
, 593.
104
Ibid.
, 595.
105
Roach v.
Australian Electoral Commissioner (2007) 233 CLR 162, 225.
106
See e.g.,
www.google.com.au/webhp?sourceid
=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#
q
=justice+kirby+justice+murphy
.