Index
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What If?: LPDT v MICMSMA [2024] HCA 12
Douglas McDonald-Norman
In order to determine whether a decision is affected by jurisdictional error, a court must ask two questions. Has an error occurred, in breach of the statutory conferral of power to make that decision? And, if so, was that error material to the decision-maker’s ultimate exercise of power? For an error to be material, an applicant for review must establish that there is a realistic possibility that, if not for the error, the decision-maker’s ultimate exercise of power could have been different.
SDCV v Director-General of Security: ‘Closed evidence' and ‘practical justice'
David Hume
In SDCV v Director-General of Security [2022] HCA 22, the High Court held, 4:3, that it was constitutionally-permissible for the Federal Court to have regard to 'closed' information, which was known to the Court and the Government’s lawyers, and was the subject of 'closed' submissions involving the judges and the Government’s lawyers but was not disclosed to SDCV or his lawyers. The key issue in the case was whether the statutory scheme established by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) – which permitted the Federal Court to rely on closed information, while prohibiting it from being disclosed to SDCV – required or permitted the Federal Court to act in a procedurally unfair way.
In this post, I first address the factual and procedural background (which are interesting in and of themselves); secondly, I address some key aspects of the majority’s reasoning; and, thirdly, I make some observations on the reasoning and outcome.
Book forum: Alan Robertson SC
Alan Robertson SC
Dr Amanda Sapienza’s Judicial Review of Non-Statutory Executive Action is an important work because it has as its centre of attention non-statutory executive action, rather than dealing with it, however well, in a more general context of public law. In this second category I would include, for …
AJL20 v Commonwealth: Non-refoulement, indefinite detention and the ‘totally screwed’
Sangeetha Pillai
It’s coming up to the 30th birthday of Australia’s policy of mandatory immigration detention for non-citizens who do not hold a visa. Throughout its lifetime, the policy has remained a controversial cornerstone of Australia’s migration law framework, facing – and withstanding – multiple High Court challenges.