CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ); 629 [64] (Kirby J).
(1997) 190 CLR 520, 567 (Gummow J).
The Implicit and the Implied in a Written Constitution
137
contractual.
114
One is practical necessity (or in contract law, business efficacy):
it consists of an alleged implication being practically necessary to enable some
or all of the provisions of a legal instrument to be efficacious or achieve their
intended purposes.
115
This can be called the ‘practical necessity test’.
The other kind is decisional necessity: it consists of interpreters being com-
pelled to acknowledge an alleged implication because it is so obvious as not
to be reasonably deniable. In contract law, the question has sometimes been
said to be whether the court is ‘necessarily driven’ to the conclusion that some
term is implied.
116
Lord Esher used the term in this sense when he said: ‘nec-
essary Implication means, not natural Necessity, but so strong a Probability of
Intention, that an Intention contrary to that, which is imputed . . . cannot be
supposed’.
117
The term ‘necessary’ is used loosely here: what is really required
is not that the implication cannot
possibly be denied, but that it cannot
rea-
sonably be denied.
118
Since a genuine implication depends on the author or
speaker having a certain communicative intention, this amounts to a require-
ment that such an intention is, in the circumstances, obvious. This might be
called the ‘obviousness test’.
119
In Australian Capital Television v. The Commonwealth, in which the
Australian High Court first claimed to discover in
the Constitution an implied
freedom of political communication, Mason CJ observed that implications
may be derived from the actual terms of the Constitution if ‘the relevant
intention is manifested according to the accepted principles of interpreta-
tion’, but that ‘structural rather than textual’ implications ‘must be logically
or practically necessary for the preservation of the integrity of [some consti-
tutional] structure’.
120
By ‘textual’ implications ‘manifested according to the
accepted principles of interpretation’, which do not need to be ‘necessary’, he
114
Discussed in Goldsworthy, chapter note, 168–70. See also E. Peden, Good Faith in the Inter-
pretation of Contracts (2003) 60–71.
115
The version found in contract law is called the ‘business efficacy’ test: see Starke, Seddon and
Ellinghaus, Cheshire & Fifoot’s Law of Contract (6th Aust’n edn 1992) 212–13. As for statutes,
see Slipper Island Resort Ltd v. Minister of Works & Development [1981] 1 NZLR 136, 139.
116
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: