词条 | Bond v Commonwealth |
释义 |
name=Bond v Commonwealth | court=High Court of Australia | image=Coat of Arms of Australia.svg | date decided=19 November 1903 | full name=Bond v The Commonwealth of Australia |ArgueDate=18 November 1903| citations={{Cite AustLII |year=1903 |court=HCA |num=2 |parallelcite=(1903) 1 CLR 13}} |judges= Griffith CJ| prior actions= | subsequent actions= | opinions= }} Bond v Commonwealth[1] was an early decision of the High Court of Australia that established that rights under the Constitution could not be taken away by Commonwealth legislation.[2] The case was the second case heard by the High Court. BackgroundMr. Bond had been an employee of the Post and Telegraph Department of the State of Victoria, before it was transferred to the Commonwealth postal service on 1 March 1901, soon after federation, in accordance with Section 69 of the Constitution.[3] Following the transfer, the Commonwealth paid Bond wages at the rate of £132 per annum instead of his previous wage of £150, and sued for the balance, under section 84 of the Constitution,[4] which guaranteed commensurate wages for employees transferred to Commonwealth jurisdiction. Mr Bond was represented by Isaacs {{post-nominals|country=AUS|KC}}. Mitchell argued for the Commonwealth that the claim was not enforceable in a Court of law by virtue of sec. 78(1) of the Public Service Act 1902, which came into effect on 1 January 1903, and provided: "Nothing in this Act shall authorize the expenditure of any greater sum out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund by way of payment of any salary than is from time to time appropriated by the Parliament for that purpose"…[1][5] DecisionChief Justice Griffith, held that the Constitution did grant rights, which in Bond's case was a right to continued employment and receive equivalent wages. Regarding the Commonwealth’s case – the Court held that in the face of Bond's constitutional right, whether sec. 78(1) of the Public Service Act,[5] was or was not defensible in a court became irrelevant and the judgment ruled it unnecessary to consider the question altogether. ConsequencesThe intention apparent in the Constitution,[4] was that public servants who transferred to the Commonwealth would continue to receive the same benefits they received from the States. The High Court's decision in Deakin v Webb,[6] finding that Commonwealth officials and public servants were not liable to pay State income tax, increased their effective salary. Higgins {{post-nominals|country=AUS|KC}} who appeared in the High Court on behalf of Alfred Deakin wrote in 1905 that "The man in the street is startled and puzzled. He sees a public official, enjoying a regular salary in the postal department, paying the Victorian income-tax until federation, and then suddenly exempted from the tax because the post-office has passed over to federal control."[7] The situation was resolved in 1907 by the Commonwealth Parliament enacting legislation that permitted the States to tax the income of a Commonwealth officer.[8][9] References1. ^1 {{Cite AustLII |litigants=Bond v Commonwealth |year=1903 |court=HCA |num=2 |parallelcite=(1903) 1 CLR 13}} 2. ^{{cite book |author1=Edney, R |author2=Bagaric, M |title=Australian Sentencing: Principles and Practice |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2007 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iLiE7FwXdsEC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA78#v=onepage&q&f=false |page=78 |lastauthoramp=y}} 3. ^{{cite Legislation AU|Cth|act|coaca430|Constitution|69}} Transfer of certain departments. 4. ^1 {{cite Legislation AU|Cth|act|coaca430|Constitution|84}} Transfer of officers. 5. ^1 {{cite Legislation AU|Cth|num_act|cpsa190251902309|Commonwealth Public Service Act 1902}} s 78 Payments. 6. ^{{cite AustLII|litigants=Deakin v Webb |year=1904 |court=HCA |num=57 |parallelcite=(1904) 1 CLR 585.}} 7. ^{{cite journal |url=https://archive.org/stream/jstor-1323360/1323360_djvu.txt | last = Higgins | first = H.B. | authorlink = H.B. Higgins | title = McCulloch v Maryland in Australia | journal = Harvard Law Review | volume = XVIII | issue = 8 | pages = 559–571 | publisher = The Harvard Law Review Association |date=June 1905 | doi = 10.2307/1323360 | jstor = 1323360 }} 8. ^{{cite Legislation AU|Cth|num_act|tcsa190771907284|Commonwealth Salaries Act 1907}} 9. ^{{cite BAILII |litigants=The Commissioners of Taxation v Baxter |link=Baxter v Commissioners of Taxation (NSW)#Commissioners of Taxation v Baxter in the Privy Council |year=1908 |court=UKPC |num=1 |format=1 |parallelcite=[1908] {{abbr|AC|Appeal Cases}} 214}}; {{cite AustLII|UKPCHCA|1|1908|parallelcite=(1908) 5 CLR 398 |courtname=auto |juris=}}. 4 : High Court of Australia cases|Australian constitutional law|1903 in case law|1903 in Australian law |
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