In the British High Court, Chancery Division,
9th Feb 2005
Between David Claude Fitzgibbon and HM Attorney General
This British High Court case can be viewed
at: http://www.worldlii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/114.html
Please note that the text below
has been illegally altered from the original
record. When the correct text is available it will be uploaded.
Below you can view how Justice Sir Gavin Lightman ruled
that the claim by David
Fitzgibbon was outside the jurisdiction of the United Kingdom, however the
judgement
confirms that the Australian Constitution is a British law.
One can only wonder then how a British law could move
outside British jurisdiction??
One can only wonder then how the Queen can still appoint governors general,
and governors??
One can only wonder then how the Queen can still be Queen if there is no legal
authority??
Lightman also stated that Australia became independent in 1901. - Not correct.
It is obvious that Lightman has made these decision to avoid thousands of
damages claims against the British government.
- but for how long can these damages claims be avoided?
David Fitzgibbon is now appealing to the European Court of Human Rights.
Neutral Citation Number: [2005] EWHC 114 (Ch)
Case No: CH/2004/APP/0447
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
09/02/2005
B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LIGHTMAN
____________________
Between:
DAVID CLAUDE FITZGIBBON Appellant /Claimant
- and -
HM ATTORNEY GENERAL Respondent /Defendant
____________________
Mr Leolin Price QC and Mr Eason Rajah (instructed by Messrs Beynon Nicholls,
27 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1NE) for the Claimant/Appellant
Mr Jonathan Crow (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor, Queen Anne's Chambers,
28 Broadway, London SW1H 9JS) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 31st January - 1st February 2005
____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lightman:
INTRODUCTION
1. In this action by a claim form under CPR Part 8 dated the 11th November
2003 (as amended) Mr Fitzgibbon ("the Claimant") seeks declarations
relating to the Constitution of Australia ("the Constitution").
In particular he seeks declarations: (1) that the exercise by HM the Queen
and her heirs and successors in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom of the
functions prescribed in the Commonwealth of Australia Act 1900 ("the
1900 Act") are exercised in right of her and their sovereignty of the
United Kingdom; and (2) that the issue of letters patent in respect of the
functions prescribed in the 1900 Act must be under the Great Seal of the United
Kingdom. The Claimant's case is that in exercise of her powers under the 1900
Act (and in particular under the Constitution), the Queen is acting in right
of the United Kingdom, and should accordingly use the Great Seal of the United
Kingdom, and is not acting in right of Australia and accordingly should not
use (as is her practice) the Great Seal of Australia.
2. The Claimant is a lawyer and British and Australian national resident in
Australia and a taxpayer there. He says that: (1) as such he has an interest
in the proper operation of the Constitution; and (2) the functions of HM the
Queen under the Constitution are not being carried out in accordance with
the relevant laws set out in the 1900 Act which is the law of England and
Wales; and (3) he has the necessary standing and this court has the necessary
jurisdiction to grant the declarations necessary to establish, and lead to
the correction of, the longstanding error.
3. By an application notice dated the 18th November 2003, the Attorney General
(who is by amendment the defendant in this action) applied to strike out the
action. In a reserved decision dated the 25th June 2004 ("the Decision")
Master Bowman acceded to the application and struck out the action and ordered
the Claimant to pay costs. The Master refused permission to appeal but on
the 28th October 2004 Patten J granted permission. The appeal is now before
me.
BACKGROUND
4. The 1900 Act constituted the Commonwealth of Australia under the Crown
of the United Kingdom and under the Constitution thereby established. References
in this judgment to sections are to sections in the 1900 Act. Section 2 (of
which the side note reads "Act to extend to the Queen's successors")
reads as follows:
"2. The provisions of this Act referring to the Queen shall extend to
Her Majesty's heirs and successors in the sovereignty of the United Kingdom."
5. Section 3 empowered the Queen to declare by proclamation the Constitution
and at any time thereafter to appoint a Governor General for the Commonwealth
of Australia. Section 9 set out the Constitution. The Constitution makes repeated
reference to the Queen. In particular the Constitution provided: (a) (in clause
1) that the legislative power of the Commonwealth should be vested in a Federal
Parliament consisting of the Queen, a Senate and a House of Representatives;
(b) (in clause 2) that a Governor General appointed by the Queen should be
her representative in the Commonwealth; (c) (in clause 42) that every senator
and every member of the House of Representatives should swear allegiance to
the King or Queen for the time being of the United Kingdom; and (d) (in clause
58) that the Governor General may give the Queen's assent to laws passed by
both Houses of the Parliament. The Constitution (in clause 128) provided that
a proposed law altering the Constitution must be passed by an absolute majority
in each House of Parliament and a majority of electors voting in a referendum.
6. HM Queen Victoria declared the Commonwealth of Australia by Proclamation
under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom dated the 17th September 1900.
Since that date there has been no attempt to amend clause 2 of the 1900 Act.
7. By Letters Patent dated the 29th October 1900 ("the 1900 Letters Patent")
issued under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom permanent provision was
made for the Office of Governor General and in particular: (a) the office
of Governor General was constituted to represent the Queen in the Commonwealth
of Australia and bestowed with power to appoint judges and other officers
and ministers and to summon, prorogue and dissolve Parliament; (b) the manner
of appointment of the Governor General was prescribed to be by Commission
under the Royal Sign Manual and Signet (which required that they be sealed
with the Great Seal of the United Kingdom); and (c) the Great Seal of Australia
was created to be kept and used by the Governor General.
8. On the 21st August 1984 Letters Patent ("the 1984 Letters Patent")
made by HM the Queen revoked or (according to the Claimant) purported to revoke
the 1900 Letters Patent, and made changes to the office of Governor General
under the Constitution including provision for the appointment of Governors
General by Commission under the Great Seal of Australia.
9. The Claimant contends that the 1984 Letters Patent are invalid and without
legal effect because they were not sealed with the Great Seal of the United
Kingdom and that the subsequent appointment of Governors General and the amendment
of the 1984 Letters Patent on the 15th May 2003 under the Great Seal of Australia
are likewise for this reason invalid.
PROCEDURE
10. The Claimant concedes that, since the action raises exclusively questions
of public law the Claimant ought not to have brought proceedings under Part
8 of the CPR but should have made an application in the Administrative Court
under Part 54 of the CPR seeking permission to bring proceedings for judicial
review. The failure to adopt the correct procedure is not necessarily fatal.
What the court has to do in such a situation is to inquire whether the adoption
of the incorrect procedure has occasioned any significant disadvantage to
a party to the proceedings, the public or the court and, if there is no such
disadvantage, to give appropriate direction for the continuation of the proceedings
as they are or for the transfer of the action to the Administrative Court
whichever is the more practical and convenient. Whether there has been any
such significant disadvantage in this case depends on whether, if the proceedings
had been commenced in the Administrative Court, permission would have been
granted to apply for judicial review. The answer to that question, which involves
consideration of all the various issues raised by the parties, must be determinative
of whether this action should be struck out and accordingly whether this appeal
should be allowed or dismissed. If there is no significant disadvantage, directions
must be given whether the action should be transferred to the Administrative
Court or should proceed in this court.
PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS
11. Before I turn to the specific issues raised, I should make four preliminary
observations.
12. First I should say a word about the divisibility of the Crown. The old
doctrine of the indivisibility of the Crown has given way with the development
of the Commonwealth to the current doctrine of the divisibility of the Crown.
There is a difference of view expressed by the members of the Court of Appeal
in R v. Foreign Secretary ex parte Indian Association of Alberta ("the
Indian Association") [1982] 1 QB 892 whether the change occurred during
the latter half of the 19th century or during the early part of the 20th century.
The transition or recognition of the transition would appear to have been
gradual over time and it is not reflected in the 1900 Act. It may be that
indivisibility is inconsistent with the distinct existence of autonomous governments
within the Queen's dominions: see Halsbury's Laws of Australia 90-2375.
13. Second the formula of words that have been used in this case "in
right of the United Kingdom" and "in right of Australia" calls
for clarification. A passage in the judgment of May LJ in the Indian Association
is worth citing both on this and the first matter:
"Although at one time it was correct to describe the Crown as one and
indivisible, with the development of the Commonwealth this is no longer so.
Although there is only one person who is the Sovereign within the British
Commonwealth, it is now a truism that in matters of law and government the
Queen of the United Kingdom, for example, is entirely independent and distinct
from the Queen of Canada. Further, the Crown is a constitutional monarchy
and thus when one speaks today, and as was frequently done in the course of
the argument on this application, of the Crown 'in right of Canada' or of
some other territory within the Commonwealth, this is only a short way of
referring to the Crown acting through and on the advice of Her Ministers in
Canada or in that other territory within the Commonwealth."
14. Thirdly the question raised regarding the use of the seal is one of form
only, and not of substance. There is no question but that HM the Queen wished
and intended the acts done in respect of which use was made of the Great Seal
of Australia.
15. Fourthly, whilst the issue raised is an issue of construction of the 1900
Act, a United Kingdom statute, it is an issue that has no significance or
consequences in this country. The connection with the United Kingdom is only
historical in the sense that the 1900 Act was passed by the legislature here.
On the other hand the issue has potentially substantial consequences in Australia.
I therefore inquired of Mr Price, Counsel for the Claimant, why any proceedings
for the declaratory relief sought were not commenced in Australia rather than
here. Mr Price variously answered that Australian judges would be embarrassed
determining the issue because the answer might raise questions as to the validity
of their appointments as judges; that the Australian courts in other proceedings
had shown a marked disinclination to decide the issue in the way sought; and
that the Australian courts had no jurisdiction to decide the issue. I need
only say that none of these answers have any substance.
JURISDICTION
16. In my judgment this court has no jurisdiction to determine the issues
raised in this action: they are not justiciable here. As soon as Australia
became independent, the 1900 Act ceased to have any effect as an exercise
of sovereign power of the United Kingdom, and whatever effect it then and
thereafter had was as part of the law of the sovereign state of Australia,
into the validity of which this court has no jurisdiction to inquire: see
Buck v. Attorney General [1965] Ch 745 at 771 ("Buck") per Diplock
LJ and the Indian Association at 916G-917D, 921 C-G and 928 A-B. As Mr Crow
(Counsel for the Attorney General) submitted, when HM the Queen is exercising
her functions under the Constitution, she is acting pursuant to Australian
law. It is for the Australian courts to apply Australian law to determine
the capacity in which HM the Queen is acting, the appropriate seal and the
consequences (if any) if the wrong seal is used. It is not for the United
Kingdom courts to enter the field proffering its view as to the proper interpretation
of the Constitution.
17. Mr Price sought support for his contention that this court can determine
the issue raised by reference to the decision of the Court of Appeal in R
(Quark Fishing Ltd) v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
[2004] 2 WLR 1 (now on appeal to the House of Lords). That decision however
is of no assistance to him. The issue in that case was the validity of an
instruction issued by the Foreign Secretary (for the Queen) to an official
in South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, an overseas territory (formerly
called a colony). The Claimant issued judicial review proceedings in this
country successfully challenging the validity of the instruction. Whilst reaffirming
the doctrine of the divisibility of the Crown, the Court of Appeal held that
in issuing that instruction the Queen had acted in right of the United Kingdom,
and not the overseas territory, by reason of the particular facts of that
case, and in particular (i) the fact that it was concerned with a dependent
territory, not a sovereign state; (ii) the small size, population and resources
of the territory; and (iii) the wording of its constitution. No issue was
or could by raised in that case as to the court's jurisdiction. The decision
lends no support for the proposition that this court has jurisdiction to determine
issues as to the constitutional law of Australia.
COMITY
18. Even if this court did have jurisdiction, as a matter of international
comity it should not entertain this case, for to grant the declarations sought
would amount to an unwarranted interference in the affairs of an independent
member of the British Commonwealth: see Buck at 768F-G per Harman LJ and 770H
per Diplock LJ.
PURPOSELESS
19. In my view the action should also be struck out on the ground that it
is quite purposeless. No effective relief is sought. The only relief sought
is the grant of declarations: no effective relief is sought here or elsewhere
and the declarations may be ignored with impunity by Australia. In consequence
the grant of the declarations sought would be (if any) of academic interest
only. Mr Price concedes that, whatever this court declares, the challenges
made by the Claimant in these proceedings can have no practical consequences
unless the challenges are also made, succeed and are followed up in Australia.
It would in the circumstances be both improper and contrary to law to grant
the declarations sought: see Buck at 768E-F per Harman LJ.
DELAY
20. Permission to bring judicial review proceedings seeking the relief sought
would also be refused on the ground of delay. Any challenge to the actions
taken using the Great Seal of Australia could have been made in 1984. The
Claimant has served no evidence and no explanation is given for his delay.
Ignorance of the law can scarcely be assumed: the Claimant is an established
practising lawyer.
21. In deciding whether to exercise its jurisdiction to extend time for the
commencement of judicial review proceedings beyond the 3 month limit laid
down in CPR 54.5, the court must take into account the importance of the question
raised to date and in the future, the existence (or otherwise) of good reasons
for the delay and whether the delay may have occasioned detriment to public
administration. Mr Price referred me to the decision of Roch J to exercise
the jurisdiction to extend time in R v. Rochdale MBC ex parte Schemet (1992)
91 LGR 425 at 437. That judgment is authority for the proposition that in
a proper case the court may permit a challenge to a decision which is months
out of time and indeed it contains a quotation from the judgment of Nicholls
LJ in the unreported case of R v. Westminster CC ex parte Hilditch to the
effect that in appropriate circumstances a claimant may be allowed to challenge
a decision made nearly three years previously. In this case however the delay
is some 19 years, there is no explanation or apparent excuse for the delay,
the relief sought has no practical value, and the detriment to public administration
of the delay is obvious.
INTEREST
22. Likewise it seems to me that permission would be refused on the grounds
that the Claimant has no sufficient interest in obtaining the relief claimed,
for (as I have already said) the grant of the declaration sought would have
no practical effect.
CONCLUSION
23. I have had the benefit of full and detailed argument from Mr Price. Notwithstanding
his customary enthusiasm and youthful vigour, I am firmly of the view that
the Master's order was right and I accordingly dismiss the appeal.
