477, 482. See also Nelson v. Walker (1910) 10 CLR 560, 586 per Isaacs J; H. Lucke, ‘Ad hoc
138
Jeffrey Goldsworthy
was referring to implicatures such as those identified by the expressio unius
presumption.
121
His perceptive observation that these implicatures do not need
to be ‘necessary’ is consistent with my previous denial that they must be obvi-
ous.
122
But he insisted that ‘structural’ implications do have to be ‘practically
necessary’. Such an implication is derived from a constitutional ‘structure’,
formed by an interrelated group of provisions with a common purpose such as
establishing a particular institution or protecting a general principle. In sub-
sequent constitutional cases dealing with ‘structural’ implications, the High
Court has consistently favoured the ‘practical necessity’ test.
123
But as a test for genuine implications, this test is dubious. Since it is pos-
sible for a provision that is essential to the practical efficacy of a law to have
been omitted due to any number of possible mistakes by the lawmakers, its
practical efficacy cannot by itself prove that it was included by implication.
For example, if the lawmakers erroneously believed that the provision was not
practically necessary to achieve their purposes, it is hardly plausible to regard
it as an implicit assumption or any other kind of implication. Surely their error
would show that the law needs to be amended to correct a deficiency, not that
it already includes something they deliberately excluded from it. When what
we have said or written turns out to be deficient, genuine implications do not
magically spring up to protect us from our mistakes.
124
It follows that the obviousness test should be preferred to that of practi-
cal efficacy as the test for genuine structural implications. Instead of asking
whether the alleged implication is practically necessary for the instrument to
operate effectively, we should ask whether it is so obvious as not to be reason-
ably deniable. A structural implication that passes this test is what I previously
called an implicit assumption.
125
Practical necessity may, of course,
be part of
the evidence that something was so obvious it was taken for granted, as shown
by the examples in the first paragraph of Section
4.4.4
.
But it does not follow that fabricated implications, which are not really
there to be discovered, are necessarily illegitimate (although calling them
implications might be criticised as misleading). Elsewhere, I have acknowl-
edged that the difficulty of amending constitutions might be regarded as a
reason for judges to be more creative when interpreting them, compared with
121
Personal correspondence on file with the author.
122
See Section
4.4.5
.
123
See e.g.,
Lange v.
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1997) 189 CLR 520, 567;
MZXOT v.
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