HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
KIEFEL CJ,
GAGELER, KEANE, GORDON, EDELMAN, STEWARD AND GLEESON JJFREDERICK CHETCUTI APPELLANT
AND
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA RESPONDENT
Chetcuti v Commonwealth of Australia
[2021] HCA 25
Date of Hearing: 11 May 2021
Date of Judgment: 12 August 2021M122/2020
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
On appeal from the High Court
Representation
G L Schoff QC with G A Costello QC and K E Slack for the appellant (instructed by Lawson Bayly)
S P Donaghue QC, Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth, and C L Lenehan SC with Z C Heger for the respondent (instructed by Australian Government Solicitor)
M J Wait SC, Solicitor-General for the State of South Australia, with J F Metzer for the Attorney-General for the State of South Australia, intervening (instructed by Crown Solicitor's Office (SA))
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Chetcuti v Commonwealth of Australia
Constitutional law (Cth) – Powers of Commonwealth Parliament – Naturalisation and aliens – Deportation – Where appellant entered Australia before commencement of Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) – Where appellant born in Malta and entered Australia as British subject – Where appellant became citizen of United Kingdom and Colonies in 1949 and citizen of Malta in 1964 – Where appellant had not applied to become Australian citizen by registration under Nationality and Citizenship Act – Where appellant's visa cancelled following conviction – Whether appellant entered Australia as alien – Whether within power of Parliament to treat appellant as alien within meaning of s 51(xix) of Constitution.
Words and phrases – "alien", "alienage", "aliens power", "allegiance", "Australian independence", "British subject", "citizen", "citizenship", "Crown in right of Australia", "non-citizen", "treat as an alien".
Constitution, s 51(xix).
British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (UK), s 1(1)(a).
Nationality Act 1920 (Cth), ss 5(1), 6(1)(a).
Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth), ss 12, 24, 25.
KIEFEL CJ, GAGELER, KEANE AND GLEESON JJ. This is an appeal as of right from a final judgment given by Nettle J[1] after a trial on agreed facts in a proceeding in the original jurisdiction of the High Court in which the appellant challenged his detention under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) on the ground that he is not within the reach of the legislative power with respect to aliens conferred by s 51(xix) of the Constitution. His Honour concluded that the appellant is within the reach of that power and so gave judgment for the respondent.
[1]Chetcuti v The Commonwealth (2020) 95 ALJR 1; 385 ALR 1.
The conclusion reached by Nettle J was correct. The appeal must be dismissed.
The appellant's circumstances
The appellant was born on 8 August 1945 in Malta, then still a Colony of the United Kingdom. By virtue of his birth in Malta, the appellant had from birth the status of a British subject under the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (UK) and from 1 January 1949 the status of a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies under the British Nationality Act 1948 (UK). At the commencement of the Malta Independence Act 1964 (UK) on 21 September 1964, the appellant ceased to have the status of a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies, and acquired in its place the status of a citizen of the State of Malta under the Constitution of Malta. When the State of Malta became the Republic of Malta on 13 December 1974, he continued to have the status of a Maltese citizen under Maltese law.
The appellant arrived in Australia on 31 July 1948. He has not since left Australia other than to visit Malta for several months between 1958 and 1959.
At the time of his arrival in Australia, the appellant had the status of a British subject under the Nationality Act 1920 (Cth) by virtue of his birth "within His Majesty's dominions and allegiance"[2]. At the commencement of the AustralianCitizenship Act 1948 (Cth)[3] on 26 January 1949, the appellant had the status of a British subject under that Act by virtue of his citizenship of the United Kingdom and Colonies[4]. Cessation of that citizenship on 21 September 1964 resulted in simultaneous cessation of that status.
[2]See s 5(1) (definition of "British subject") and s 6(1)(a) of the Nationality Act.
[3]Originally known as the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) and now superseded by the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth).
[4]See s 5(1) (definition of "British subject") and s 7(1) and (2) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
The appellant appears to have regained the status of a British subject under the Australian Citizenship Act on 15 January 1965[5]. From then he appears to have retained that status until abolition of that status altogether on the commencement of relevant provisions of the Australian Citizenship Amendment Act 1984 (Cth) on 1 May 1987[6].
[5]See s 5 of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1958 (Cth), which repealed and replaced s 7(2) of the Australian Citizenship Act, inserting a regulation making power for the purposes of that section; reg 1 of the Regulations under the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948-1960 (Cth); s 6 of the Citizenship Act 1969 (Cth), which repealed and replaced s 7(1) and (2) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[6]See s 7 of the Australian Citizenship Amendment Act. No party sought to argue that Malta becoming a republic on 13 December 1974 affected the appellant's status as a British subject under the Australian Citizenship Act.
Following a trial by jury in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, the appellant was convicted in 1993 of murder and sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 24 years.
At the commencement of relevant provisions of the Migration Legislation Amendment Act 1994 (Cth) on 1 September 1994, the appellant was taken to be granted an Absorbed Person visa under the Migration Act[7].
[7]See s 8 of the Migration Legislation Amendment Act, which inserted s 26AB, now s 34 of the Migration Act.
In 2017, by reference to the appellant's conviction in 1993, the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection made a decision to cancel his Absorbed Person visa under the Migration Act[8]. The appellant was soon afterwards taken into detention under the Migration Act. There he remains.
[8]See s 501 of the Migration Act.
The initial decision to cancel the appellant's visa was set aside by consent on judicial review by the Federal Court, following which the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection immediately made another decision to cancel the visa. That further cancellation decision was upheld at first instance on judicial review by the Federal Court in 2018 but set aside on appeal to the Full Court of the Federal Court in 2019[9]. The Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs then immediately made yet another decision to cancel the visa. That further cancellation decision was at the time Nettle J gave judgment the subject of an undetermined application to the Federal Court for judicial review.
[9]Chetcuti v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2019) 270 FCR 335.
The appellant's argument
Since 2 April 1984[10], the Commonwealth Parliament has relied on the legislative power with respect to aliens to sustain the Migration Act. Subject to providing through s 15A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) for the Migration Act to have a distributive and severable operation to the extent of any constitutional overreach[11], the Parliament has done so treating all non-citizens as aliens. And since 1 September 1994[12], it has done so creating a clear-cut distinction between lawful non-citizens, being non-citizens who hold visas permitting them to enter and remain in Australia[13], and unlawful non-citizens, being non-citizens who do not hold visas[14] and who are in consequence liable to detention and to removal from Australia[15].
[10]The date of commencement of the Migration Amendment Act 1983 (Cth). See generally Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Nystrom (2006) 228 CLR 566 at 574-575 [10], [13].
[11]Pochi v Macphee (1982) 151 CLR 101 at 110.
[12]The date the Migration Reform Act 1992 (Cth) fully came into force. See generally Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs v Nystrom (2006) 228 CLR 566 at 575-576 [15].
[13]Section 13 of the Migration Act.
[14]Sections 14 and 15 of the Migration Act.
[15]Sections 189, 196 and 198 of the Migration Act.
In challenging his detention on the ground that he is not within the reach of the aliens power, the appellant does not seek to disturb the settled understanding that the aliens power encompasses both power to determine who is and who is not to have the legal status of an alien and power to attach consequences to that status[16]. Nor does the appellant seek to disturb the settled understanding that, in determining who is and who is not to have the legal status of an alien, it is in general open to the Parliament to "treat as an alien any person who was born outside Australia, whose parents were not Australians, and who has not been naturalized as an Australian"[17].
[16]Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Te (2002) 212 CLR 162 at 170-172 [21]-[26], 219-220 [209]-[210]; Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 35 [2], 87 [190]; Koroitamana v The Commonwealth (2006) 227 CLR 31 at 38 [11], 46 [48]. See earlier Brazil, "Australian Nationality and Immigration", in Ryan (ed), International Law in Australia, 2nd ed (1984) 210 at 217 explaining Pochi v Macphee (1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109-110.
[17]Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 185, quoting Pochi v Macphee (1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109-110.
Seeking to build on the recognition by the majority in Love v The Commonwealth[18] of an exception in respect of a person who is an Aboriginal Australian according to the tripartite test in Mabo v Queensland [No 2][19], the appellant argues for recognition of a further exception. The further exception is in respect of a person who was a natural born British subject and who commenced residing permanently in Australia before 26 January 1949. The appellant argues that the status of a non-alien attaches indelibly to a person in that category either by reason of the person having been born within the allegiance of an as yet undivided Imperial Crown or by reason of the Parliament having once and for all determined the person not to be an alien under the Nationality Act.
[18](2020) 94 ALJR 198; 375 ALR 597.
[19](1992) 175 CLR 1 at 70.
The answer to the appellant's argument
The answer to the appellant's argument is to be found in the reasons for judgment of the majority in Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[20], from which the holding of the majority in Love v The Commonwealth does not depart except in respect of an Aboriginal Australian according to the tripartite test in Mabo v Queensland[No 2].
[20](2003) 218 CLR 28.
The conclusion of the majority in Shaw was confined in its terms to a determination that "the aliens power has reached all those persons who entered this country after the commencement of [the Australian Citizenship Act] on 26 January 1949 and who were born out of Australia of parents who were not Australian citizens and who had not been naturalised"[21]. The reasoning employed by the majority to reach that conclusion nevertheless equally supports the conclusion that the aliens power has reached all those persons who entered this country before 26 January 1949 who did not then or did not afterwards become Australian citizens.
[21](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 43 [32], 87 [190].
Essential to the reasoning of the majority in Shaw were the propositions that: (i) "[t]here never was a common law notion of 'British subject' rendered into an immutable element of 'the law of the Constitution'"[22]; (ii) the Commonwealth Parliament exercised the aliens power in establishing by the Australian Citizenship Act the status of an Australian citizen on and from 26 January 1949[23]; (iii) on and from which date persons who have not had the status of Australian citizens have been aliens, persons having the status of British subjects but not the status of Australian citizens forming a class of aliens on whom special privileges were for some time afterwards conferred[24]; and (iv) by which date the development of Australian sovereignty had been such that the constitutional term "subject of the Queen"[25] could no longer be taken to refer to a subject of an Imperial Crown but to a subject of the Crown in right of Australia, being an Australian citizen[26].
[22](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [28], 87 [190].
[23](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [21]-[22], 87 [190].
[24](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [21]-[22], 87 [190].
[25]See ss 34 and 117 of the Constitution.
[26](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 37-38 [13]-[14], 39-40 [20], 42 [28], 87 [190].
The significance of that reasoning to the status on and from 26 January 1949 of a person who entered Australia before that date and who did not on that date or afterwards become an Australian citizen is best appreciated by noting at the outset observations as early as 1906[27] and as late as 1936[28] that there was no such thing as a distinct "Australian nationality". The Nationality Act – itself an exercise of the aliens power – did no more than restate the common law[29] as replicated in the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act[30] (which appears in relevant part to have applied in Australia by paramount force[31]) in so far as it provided that "[a]ny person born within his Majesty's dominions and allegiance" was to be deemed to be a natural born British subject[32] so as to be included within the statutory definition of British subject[33] and for that reason excluded from the statutory definition of alien[34].
[27]Attorney-General for the Commonwealth v Ah Sheung (1906) 4 CLR 949 at 951.
[28]R v Burgess; Ex parte Henry (1936) 55 CLR 608 at 650.
[29]See Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 183-184.
[30]Section 1(1)(a) and s 27(1) (definitions of "British subject" and "alien") of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act.
[31]See Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 440 [148].
[32]Section 6(1)(a) of the Nationality Act.
[33]Section 5(1) (definition of "British subject") of the Nationality Act.
[34]Section 5(1) (definition of "alien") of the Nationality Act.
Even at the time of enactment of the Nationality Act in 1920, political and demographic forces within the British Empire were fracturing the consensus reached at the Imperial Conference of 1911 that "Imperial nationality should be worldwide and uniform"[35] which had underpinned the enactment in 1914 of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act[36]. Following on from the Balfour Declaration of the Imperial Conference of 1926 to the effect that the United Kingdom and its Dominions were "autonomous Communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations"[37], the Imperial Conference of 1930 not only agreed to the principles of the Statute of Westminster 1931 (UK), ultimately adopted by the Commonwealth Parliament in the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1942 (Cth), but concluded that "it is for each Member of the Commonwealth to define for itself its own nationals"[38].
[35]Great Britain, Minutes of Proceedings of the Imperial Conference, 1911 (1911) [Cd 5745] at 267.
[36]Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 82-89.
[37]Australia, Parliament, Imperial Conference, 1926: Summary of Proceedings (1927) at 10.
[38]Great Britain, Imperial Conference, 1930: Summary of Proceedings (1930) Cmd 3717 at 19, 22.
On the understanding that the expression "a member of the community" of a Member of the Commonwealth of Nations was "intended to have a rather technical meaning, as denoting a person whom that Member of the Commonwealth has, either by legislative definition of its nationals or citizens or otherwise, decided to regard as 'belonging' to it, for the purposes of civil and political rights and duties, immigration, deportation, diplomatic representation, or the exercise of extra-territorial jurisdiction", the Imperial Conference of 1937 went on to resolve that it was for each Member of the Commonwealth of Nations "to decide which persons have with it that definite connection ... which would enable it to recognize them as members of its community"[39]. The resolution continued[40]:
"Each Member of the Commonwealth would in the normal course include as members of its community: –
(a)persons who were born in, or became British subjects by naturalisation in, or as a result of the annexation of, its territory and still reside there, and
(b)persons who, coming as British subjects from other parts of the Commonwealth, have identified themselves with the community to which they have come.
As regards those mentioned under (b) it is for each Member to prescribe the conditions under which any British subject coming from another part of the Commonwealth will be considered to have so identified himself with the new community to which he has resorted as to become a member thereof."
[39]Great Britain, Imperial Conference, 1937: Summary of Proceedings (1937) Cmd 5482 at 25.
[40]Great Britain, Imperial Conference, 1937: Summary of Proceedings (1937) Cmd 5482 at 26.
Prompted by the enactment of the Canadian Citizenship Act 1946 (Can), the British Commonwealth Conference on Nationality and Citizenship of 1947 agreed upon a system for the working out of the resolution of the Imperial Conference of 1937 by which each Member of the Commonwealth of Nations "shall by its legislation determine who are its citizens, shall declare those citizens to be British subjects and shall recognise as British subjects the citizens of the other countries"[41]. Enacted in 1948 and commencing sequentially in 1949, the British Nationality Act and the Australian Citizenship Act implemented that agreed legislative pattern.
[41]British Commonwealth Conference on Nationality and Citizenship (London, February 1947): Report with Appendices (1947) at 3 [9].
Professor Parry authoritatively[42] explained[43]:
"What the [British Nationality Act], and the parallel enactments elsewhere, did was to create a new, statutory concept of citizenship of each country concerned and to render the traditional and familiar status of a British subject ... a derivative status, capable of enjoyment, transitional cases apart, only in virtue of possession of the citizenship of one or more of the local communities of the Commonwealth. The concept of allegiance, which had been the foundation of the status of a subject, was not imported into the rules governing local citizenship but was altogether swept away, together with all other rules of the common law respecting nationality."
[42]See Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 441 [151].
[43]Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 92 (footnote omitted).
To similar effect, Gibbs CJ said of the British Nationality Act and the Australian Citizenship Act in Pochi v Macphee[44]:
"The principles to which this legislation gave effect were that the peoples of each of the countries of the Commonwealth should have separate citizenship, but that all citizens of Commonwealth countries should have the common status of British subjects. ... [T]he Australian Citizenship Act gave effect to this common status, which was, of course, derivative, being dependent on the possession of citizenship."
[44](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 108.
Through the operation of s 2(2) of the Statute of Westminster as adopted by the Commonwealth Parliament in the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act, the Australian Citizenship Act would have prevailed over the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act if and to the extent that there had been any inconsistency[45]. In the co-ordinated sequence of events that occurred, however, no inconsistency arose. The British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act was repealed in relevant part on the commencement of the British Nationality Act on 1 January 1949[46]. The Australian Citizenship Act then commenced on 26 January 1949 and on that date repealed the Nationality Act[47].
[45]Phonographic Performance Co of Australia Ltd v The Commonwealth (2012) 246 CLR 561 at 573 [21], citing Kirmani v Captain Cook Cruises Pty Ltd[No 1] (1985) 159 CLR 351 at 375-377, 403-404, 423-424.
[46]Section 34(3) of and the Fourth Schedule to the British Nationality Act.
[47]Section 3 of and the First Schedule to the Australian Citizenship Act.
Part II of the Australian Citizenship Act provided for the status of British subject to be conferred on and from 26 January 1949 on an Australian citizen[48] as well as on a person who "by an enactment for the time being in force" in a specified country was a citizen of that country[49]. The countries specified were some (but not all) of the Members of the Commonwealth of Nations. They included "the United Kingdom and Colonies"[50], which were "deemed to constitute one country"[51]. The term "alien" was relevantly defined to mean a person who was not a British subject[52].
[48]Section 7(1) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[49]Section 7(1) and (2) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[50]Section 7(2) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[51]Section 5(3)(d) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[52]Section 5(1) (definition of "alien") of the Australian Citizenship Act.
Part III of the Australian Citizenship Act provided for the acquisition of Australian citizenship on and from 26 January 1949 to be by birth[53], by descent[54], by registration[55] or by naturalisation[56]. On and from 26 January 1949 a citizen of a specified country who was thereby a British subject could become an Australian citizen on application through registration, generally after residing in Australia for a period of five years[57]. But an alien who was not a British subject could become an Australian citizen only through naturalisation[58].
[53]Section 10 of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[54]Section 11 of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[55]Sections 12 and 13 of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[56]Sections 14-16 of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[57]Section 12(1)(b) of the Australian Citizenship Act.
[58]Section 14 of the Australian Citizenship Act.
The Australian Citizenship Act did not ignore the position of persons who had been British subjects under the Nationality Act and who had resided in Australia before 26 January 1949. Part IV was headed "Transitional Provisions".
Within Pt IV, s 24 provided:
"In this Part, 'British subject' includes a person who was, immediately prior to the date of commencement of this Act, entitled in Australia or a Territory to all political and other rights, powers and privileges to which a natural-born British subject was then entitled."
Section 25(1) went on to provide:
"A person who was a British subject immediately prior to the date of commencement of this Act shall, on that date, become an Australian citizen if –
(a)he was born in Australia and would have been an Australian citizen if ... this Act had been in force at the time of his birth;
(b) ...
(c) he was a person naturalized in Australia; or
(d)he had been, immediately prior to the date of commencement of this Act, ordinarily resident in Australia ... for a period of at least five years."
No less than Pts II and III, Pt IV of the Australian Citizenship Act was enacted in the exercise of the aliens power. The power that supported the creation of the new status of an Australian citizen to be conferred prospectively by reference to legislatively established criteria supported as well the transitional conferral of that new status by reference to essentially the same criteria.
The following statement of the majority in Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs[59] was restated by the majority in Shaw[60]:
"The transition from Empire to Commonwealth and the emergence of Australia and other Dominions as independent sovereign nations within the Commonwealth inevitably changed the nature of the relationship between the United Kingdom and its former colonies and rendered obsolete notions of an indivisible Crown. A separate Australian citizenship was established by the ... Australian Citizenship Act ... The fact that a person who was born neither in Australia nor of Australian parents and who had not become a citizen of this country was a British subject or a subject of the Queen by reason of his birth in another country could no longer be seen as having the effect, so far as this country is concerned, of precluding his classification as an 'alien'."
[59](1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184.
[60](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 44-45 [37], 87 [190].
The final sentence of that statement is as much applicable to a person who entered Australia before 26 January 1949 and who on 26 January 1949 failed to meet the criteria for the acquisition of Australian citizenship set out in s 25(1) of the Australian Citizenship Act as it is applicable to a person who entered Australia on or after 26 January 1949 and who then and thereafter failed to meet the criteria for the acquisition of Australian citizenship set out in Pt III of the Australian Citizenship Act.
The British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act having been repealed on the commencement of the British Nationality Act on 1 January 1949, the appellant's status in Australia as a British subject immediately before the commencement of the Australian Citizenship Act on 26 January 1949 was conferred solely by operation of the Nationality Act. His status in Australia as a British subject on and from 26 January 1949 was conferred solely by operation of the Australian Citizenship Act. The appellant being a person born outside Australia whose parents were not Australians, it was open to the Parliament in the exercise of the aliens power through prescription of the criteria for the conferral of Australian citizenship set out in s 25(1)(d) of the Australian Citizenship Act to deny him the status of an Australian citizen and thereby to treat him as an alien in the transition that occurred on 26 January 1949.
The appellant missed out on becoming an Australian citizen on 26 January 1949 through operation of s 25(1)(d) of the Australian Citizenship Act only because, having arrived in Australia on 31 July 1948, he had then been ordinarily resident in Australia for a period of less than five years. His position, however, was not irremediable. After he had resided in Australia for a period of five years – that is, after 31 July 1953 – it was open to him under the Australian Citizenship Act by virtue of his new citizenship of the United Kingdom and Colonies to apply to become an Australian citizen by registration. That course of action remained available to him until the provision for obtaining Australian citizenship by registration was removed from the Australian Citizenship Act at the commencement of relevant provisions of the Australian Citizenship Act 1973 (Cth) on 1 December 1973[61]. His problem is that he did not take that available course of action.
[61]Section 2(3) of the Australian Citizenship Act 1973; Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, No 140, 4 October 1973.
The conclusion that the appellant was and remains within the reach of the aliens power can therefore be arrived at, as in Shaw, without need to explore common law notions of allegiance and alienage[62] and without attempting to pinpoint the precise time prior to 26 January 1949 when there emerged a distinct Crown in right of Australia[63]. There is also no need to explore the position before 26 January 1949, touched on in Shaw[64], of a person not born within the dominions and allegiance of the Imperial Crown who acquired under local naturalisation legislation in one part of the British Empire the status of a British subject not recognised in other parts[65]. Even less is there need to re-examine the present position of an Aboriginal Australian according to the tripartite test in Mabo v Queensland[No 2], recently examined in Love v The Commonwealth.
[62](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42-43 [29].
[63](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 41 [24]. See earlier Victoria v The Commonwealth (Industrial Relations Act Case) (1996) 187 CLR 416 at 477-478; Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 498 [85].
[64](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 39-40 [20].
[65]See Ex parte Lau You Fat (1888) 9 LR (NSW) (L) 269; R v Francis; Ex parte Markwald [1918] 1 KB 617; Markwald v Attorney-General [1920] 1 Ch 348.
Disposition of the appeal
The appeal is to be dismissed with costs.
GORDON J. I agree with Kiefel CJ, Gageler, Keane and Gleeson JJ that, in light of the reasoning of the majority in Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[66], this appeal must be dismissed.
[66](2003) 218 CLR 28.
While I accept that one aspect of the power in s 51(xix) of the Constitution with respect to "naturalization and aliens", as well as of the "immigration" power in s 51(xxvii), is the power to define a concept of "citizenship"[67], I remain of the view that Parliament's "power to define, for some purposes, who are members of the Australian community does not constitute a power to define the scope of the aliens power under s 51(xix)"[68]. The qualification identified by Gibbs CJ in Pochi v Macphee[69] that "Parliament cannot, simply by giving its own definition of 'alien', expand the power under s 51(xix) to include persons who could not possibly answer the description of 'aliens' in the ordinary understanding of the word" is important because "[t]o suggest that Parliament has the power, under the aliens power, to define alienage status, risks circularity – it presupposes, as the basis for validity of the law, that the people to whom the law applies are aliens within the constitutional meaning"[70].
[67]Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 262-263 [325]; 375 ALR 597 at 676-677.
[68]Love (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 263 [326]; 375 ALR 597 at 677.
[69](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109. See also Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 186; Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 435-436 [132], 469-470 [238], 490 [297], 491-492 [303]; Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Te (2002) 212 CLR 162 at 173 [31], 175 [39], 205 [159]; Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 36 [9]; Singh v The Commonwealth (2004) 222 CLR 322 at 329 [4], 382-383 [151], 383 [153]; Koroitamana v The Commonwealth (2006) 227 CLR 31 at 54‑55 [81].
[70]Love (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 263 [327]; 375 ALR 597 at 677.
Relatedly, citizenship is a matter that is relevant to alienage, but it is not determinative of alienage[71]. "Aliens" is a constitutional term, whereas "citizenship" is a purely statutory concept[72]. "Non‑citizen" is not a synonym for "alien"[73]. It is not the case that, on and from the commencement of the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth)[74] on 26 January 1949, all persons who have not had the status of Australian citizens have been aliens. Indeed, the majority holding in Love v The Commonwealth was to the contrary[75].
[71]Love (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 259-261 [303]-[311], especially at 259 [303]; 375 ALR 597 at 672-674, especially at 672.
[72]Love (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 258 [300], 259 [305]; 375 ALR 597 at 671, 672.
[73]See Pochi (1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109; Chu Kheng Lim v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1992) 176 CLR 1 at 54; Re Patterson (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 435-436 [132], 491 [300]; Ex parte Te (2002) 212 CLR 162 at 179 [53]; Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 61 [94]; Singh (2004) 222 CLR 322 at 382 [149]‑[150]; Love (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 258 [295], [300], 259-261 [304]-[311], 283-285 [432]-[437]; 375 ALR 597 at 670-674, 703-705.
[74]Originally enacted as the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth).
[75](2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 218 [81]; 375 ALR 597 at 616.
It is, however, unnecessary in this case to chart the metes and bounds of the constitutional concept of "alien". Mr Chetcuti was a "natural-born British subject" under the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (UK) by reason of his birth in present day Malta, "within His Majesty's dominions and allegiance"[76], and when he arrived in Australia on 31 July 1948 he had the status of a "British subject" under the Nationality Act 1920 (Cth)[77]. It is sufficient to dispose of this appeal that, in accordance with the majority's reasoning in Shaw[78], "[i]t can hardly be said that, as the relevant political facts and circumstances stood" when Mr Chetcuti arrived in Australia in 1948, persons who were British subjects born out of Australia of parents who had not been naturalised in Australia "could not possibly answer the description of aliens in the ordinary understanding of that word". The following aspects of the majority's reasoning in Shaw are both relevant and determinative.
[76]British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (UK), s 1(1)(a).
[77]Nationality Act 1920 (Cth), ss 5(1) definition of "British subject" and 6(1)(a).
[78]cf (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [22]; see also 42 [27]‑[28], 43 [32], 87 [190].
First, "[t]he Constitution took effect at a time when 'the Crown' was said to be 'indivisible' and when the common law notion of allegiance to that 'Crown' informed the statutory use of the term 'British subject'"[79] (emphasis added). But, "[t]here never was a common law notion of 'British subject' rendered into an immutable element of 'the law of the Constitution'"[80].
[79]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40-41 [23].
[80]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [28].
Indeed, in 1900 the term "the Crown" was used in several distinct senses, including "the Crown in right of" a government when identifying the powers of the United Kingdom (the parent state) in relation to its dependencies (the newly created and evolving political units)[81]. And, in the statute establishing the Australian federation, the Imperial Parliament "unquestionably" treated Australia as a distinct entity[82]. It is apparent, albeit not explicit, that the majority in Shaw considered that the Constitution itself implicitly recognised that the notion of the "indivisible" Imperial Crown was in a state of flux at federation[83].
[81]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40-41 [23]. See also Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 499 [88], 501 [90].
[82]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40-41 [23], quoting Moore, "The Crown as Corporation" (1904) 20 Law Quarterly Review 351 at 359. See also Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 501 [90].
[83]See, similarly, Nolan (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 185-186; Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 525-526 [165]-[166].
Second, the text of the Constitution "contemplates changes in the political and constitutional relationship between the United Kingdom and Australia" and it is, therefore, "impossible to read the legislative power with respect to 'aliens' as subject to some implicit restriction protective from its reach those who are not Australian citizens but who entered Australia as citizens of the United Kingdom and colonies under the [British Nationality Act 1948 (UK)]"[84] (emphasis added).
[84]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [27]; see also 38 [14], 42 [26], 43 [30]. See also Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 525 [164]; Re Patterson (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 467 [229].
The majority's reference in Shaw to persons entering Australia "as citizens of the United Kingdom and colonies" reflects that Mr Shaw had that status when he entered Australia[85]; it does not mean that their Honours' reasoning is incapable of applying to a person (like Mr Chetcuti) who entered Australia in 1948, prior to the commencement of the British Nationality Act 1948 (UK), as a "British subject" under the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (UK). As will be explained next, this is because the British Nationality Act 1948 (UK) and the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) did not, in and of themselves, have any transformative effect in respect of either the relationship between the United Kingdom and Australia, or the divisibility of the Imperial Crown. "The transition from Empire to Commonwealth and the emergence of Australia and other Dominions as independent sovereign nations within the Commonwealth"[86] was the result of various constitutional and political changes that took place, especially after federation.
[85](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 35 [3], 38 [15]; see also 73 [130].
[86]See Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 44-45 [37], quoting Nolan (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184.
The relevant constitutional and political changes included: the Balfour Declaration of the Imperial Conference of 1926[87]; the Statute of Westminster 1931 (UK)[88]; and negotiations between the governments of the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries about nationality and citizenship, which culminated in the enactment of the British Nationality Act 1948 (UK) and the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth)[89].
[87]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 41 [24].
[88]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 37-38 [12]-[13]; see also 41 [25].
[89]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 38 [17]; see also 39 [18]-[19]. See also reasons of Kiefel CJ, Gageler, Keane and Gleeson JJ at [18]‑[22].
Those changes that had taken place by 1948, and the development and evolution of the relationship between Australia and the United Kingdom, had rendered any notion of an "indivisible" Crown obsolete[90]. As the majority said in Shaw, it is an "undoubted truth that, by 1948, the Imperial Crown, indivisible in nature, with an undivided allegiance, was no longer apparent, whether in this country or the United Kingdom"[91] (emphasis added).
[90]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [28]; see also 44-45 [37], quoting Nolan (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184. See also Minister for Works (WA) v Gulson (1944) 69 CLR 338 at 350-351.
[91](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [28].
Understood in light of those facts and matters, references in the Constitution to "the Queen" must be to the "office" (not to the person)[92], and the constitutional term "'subject of the Queen', with its implicit reference to notions of sovereignty, must recognise that at least by 1948 the subjects of the Queen to which reference was made were subjects of the monarch in right of Australia, not subjects of the monarch in right of the United Kingdom"[93] (emphasis added).
[92]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 38 [14].
[93]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [20]. See also Re Patterson (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 467 [229].
The British Nationality Act 1948 (UK) and the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) put in place new arrangements which "reflected [the] significant changes in the Imperial system which had taken place since federation"[94] (emphasis added). Those Acts did not create any fundamental shift in the relationship between the United Kingdom and Australia, nor did their commencement result in the division of the Imperial Crown. And, consistent with the significant changes which had taken place by 1948, the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) "[u]ndoubtedly, to a significant degree, ... depended upon the aliens power"[95]. The expression "British subject" was "not a constitutional expression; [but] a statutory expression"[96] in the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth). It is irrelevant that "British subjects" did not fall within the statutory definition of "alien" in s 5(1) of the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) or within the former definition of "[a]lien" in s 5(1) of the Nationality Act 1920 (Cth). By 1948, "British subjects" were aliens in the constitutional sense; albeit a "class of aliens with special advantages in Australian law"[97].
[94]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 38-39 [17]. See also Nolan (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184; Re Patterson (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 467 [229].
[95]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [21]; see also 40 [22]. See also Kenny v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1993) 42 FCR 330 at 346.
[96]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 36 [10]; see also 42 [28].
[97]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [22].
There is no principled basis for suggesting that the Commonwealth Parliament would have lacked power to enact the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) – which, as noted, depended "to a significant degree" upon the aliens power[98] – some months earlier than it did, with a commencement date shortly prior to Mr Chetcuti's arrival in Australia. Once that is accepted, it is difficult to see how the commencement of that Act on 26 January 1949, when combined with the significant changes which had taken place by 1948, could be characterised as transforming the constitutional status of British subjects. In truth, as the majority in Shaw recognised[99], the necessary transformation had already taken place.
[98]Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [21].
[99](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 38-39 [17]. See also Nolan (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184; Re Patterson (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 467 [229].
For these reasons, Mr Chetcuti, like Mr Shaw, arrived in Australia as an "alien" in the constitutional sense and he has not lost that status by reason of his subsequent personal history in Australia[100]. He did not acquire Australian citizenship automatically under s 25(1) of the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) and he did not subsequently apply to become an Australian citizen by registration under s 12(1) of that Act by reason of his citizenship of the United Kingdom and Colonies.
[100]cf Shaw (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 43 [31].
It is unnecessary to determine in this case, and the majority in Shaw did not address, whether all persons born outside of Australia of parents who had not been naturalised in Australia, who had entered Australia before 26 January 1949 and who, on that date, did not meet the criteria for the acquisition of Australian citizenship in s 25(1) of the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) are "aliens". Indeed, the majority in Shaw focussed on the constitutional and political changes that had taken place by 1948[101], being changes to which reference has just been made, and their ultimate conclusion was confined to dealing with persons "who entered this country after ... 26 January 1949"[102] (emphasis added). Neither Shaw nor this appeal addressed any larger question.
[101](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 38 [17], 40 [20], [22], 42 [28].
[102](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 43 [32].
EDELMAN J.
Is Mr Chetcuti an alien?
Mr Chetcuti was born on 8 August 1945. He arrived in Australia on 31 July 1948 from his birthplace in Malta. He arrived as a British subject. Apart from spending approximately eight months in Malta as a teenager, he has remained in Australia for 73 years. He has voted in local, State, and federal elections. He was registered in the birthday ballot for compulsory military service during the Vietnam war. He was employed for seven years as a teacher by the New South Wales Education Department. And he has spent 24 years in an Australian prison for murder.
In 2017, as a result of his conviction and sentence of imprisonment in 1993, the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection purported to cancel Mr Chetcuti's Absorbed Person visa under s 501 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), following which Mr Chetcuti was detained in immigration detention under s 189 of the Migration Act pending removal to Malta. In his claim before the primary judge in this Court, Mr Chetcuti sought relief including a declaration that his detention was unlawful, a declaration that he is not an alien within s 51(xix) of the Constitution, and damages for false imprisonment. The primary judge rejected Mr Chetcuti's claim. This appeal concerns whether Mr Chetcuti falls within the scope of the constitutional meaning of "alien" in s 51(xix) of the Constitution and therefore whether he is within the application of the Migration Act such that he can lawfully be detained or removed from Australia. Mr Chetcuti submits that (i) he arrived in Australia as a British subject outside the constitutional conception of alien and (ii) his non‑alien status continued as he became a subject of the Queen of Australia upon the bifurcation of the Crown, in effect rendering his status almost indelible so that, absent renunciation, he could never fall within the meaning of an "alien" in s 51(xix).
The unchanging, essential meaning of an "alien" in s 51(xix) of the Constitution is a foreigner to the Australian political community. But the application of this meaning, like the application of the meaning of all constitutional terms, can change over time. The application can be affected by changes in political and social facts and circumstances. Based on the political and social facts and circumstances of 1948, there is some force in the first aspect of Mr Chetcuti's submission. In 1948, when Mr Chetcuti arrived in Australia as a British subject, no legislation existed recognising Australian citizenship. The Nationality Act 1920 (Cth) defined an "alien" as "a person who is not a British subject"[103]. At that time, many Australians may have been surprised by a suggestion, consistently with one of the Commonwealth's submissions, that the Commonwealth had power to treat a British subject as an alien, particularly where the British subject: was living in Australia; was eligible for a passport; and, when old enough, was eligible to vote in Australian elections, to be elected to the Commonwealth Parliament, and to be conscripted to fight wars.
[103]Nationality Act 1920 (Cth), s 5(1).
There is less force in the second aspect of Mr Chetcuti's submission, which requires consideration of the application of the constitutional meaning of "alien" according to the political and social facts and circumstances since 2017. In Pochi v Macphee[104], this Court rejected the notion that an alien could become a non‑alien by absorption into the Australian community. That conclusion was not challenged on this appeal, so matters such as the length of Mr Chetcuti's stay in Australia and the strength of any of his general bonds to the community must be put to one side. That leaves for consideration Mr Chetcuti's submission that, in the application of the constitutional meaning of "alien" since 2017, the Commonwealth Parliament has no power to treat him as an alien even though: he is a Maltese citizen; he has never been a citizen of Australia; he was not born in Australia; and he does not have Australian parents.
[104](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 111. See also Cunliffe v The Commonwealth (1994) 182 CLR 272 at 295.
This Court has previously been confronted with cases where the parties' submissions raised the two issues of (i) a person's status upon arrival in Australia and (ii) that person's status as at a relevant later time. In Sue v Hill[105], a majority of this Court decided the case on the basis that whatever the status of Ms Hill was when she migrated to Australia from the United Kingdom in 1971, as at the time of her nomination for election as a senator for the State of Queensland on 4 September 1998 her British citizenship meant that she was a subject or citizen of a foreign power within the meaning of s 44(i) of the Constitution. By contrast, in Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs[106], a majority of this Court decided the case on the basis that when Mr Shaw arrived in Australia as a British subject on 17 July 1974 he fell within the scope of the aliens power in s 51(xix) of the Constitution, which extended at least to people who had entered Australia on or after 26 January 1949 and who were born outside of Australia to parents who were not Australian citizens. There was no suggestion that any change in political or social facts or circumstances since 17 July 1974 had removed Mr Shaw from the scope of the aliens power.
[105](1999) 199 CLR 462 at 503 [97], 529 [176].
[106](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 43 [32], 87 [190].
In the present appeal, the only question that needs to be decided is whether Mr Chetcuti was a constitutional alien at the time at which he is said to fall within the application of the Migration Act. Whatever his status might have been almost seven decades earlier upon his arrival in Australia, that status was not cryogenically frozen and impervious to the application of the Constitution to new political and social facts and circumstances. In light of the many changes in political and social facts and circumstances since 31 July 1948, the contemporary application of the aliens power in s 51(xix) of the Constitution leads to the conclusion that Mr Chetcuti was within the scope of the aliens power at least from 2017.
The meaning of "alien" in s 51(xix) of the Constitution
Essential meaning and application
Putting to one side the effect of judicial decisions and other constitutional practices that, metaphorically, "divert[] the flow of constitutional law into new channels"[107], for more than a century it has been "beyond controversy"[108] or "beyond question"[109] that, whilst the application of the terms of the Constitution might change, the essential meaning or, perhaps less accurately, the "connotation" of a constitutional term cannot change: "whatever it meant in 1900 it must mean so long as the Constitution exists"[110]. As Windeyer J said, and as has been reiterated numerous times subsequently in this Court[111]:
"We must not, in interpreting the Constitution, restrict the denotation of its terms to the things they denoted in 1900. The denotation of words becomes enlarged as new things falling within their connotations come into existence or become known. But in the interpretation of the Constitution the connotation or connotations of its words should remain constant."
[107]Victoria v The Commonwealth ("the Payroll Tax Case") (1971) 122 CLR 353 at 396.
[108]King v Jones (1972) 128 CLR 221 at 229.
[109]Lansell v Lansell (1964) 110 CLR 353 at 366.
[110]R v Barger (1908) 6 CLR 41 at 68. See also Andrews v Howell (1941) 65 CLR 255 at 278; Australian Communist Party v The Commonwealth (1951) 83 CLR 1 at 195, 199, 274; Attorney‑General (Vict); Ex rel Black v The Commonwealth (1981) 146 CLR 559 at 578.
[111]Ex parte Professional Engineers' Association (1959) 107 CLR 208 at 267. See also Street v Queensland Bar Association (1989) 168 CLR 461 at 537; McGinty v Western Australia (1996) 186 CLR 140 at 200; Eastman v The Queen (2000) 203 CLR 1 at 45 [142]-[143]; Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 426-427 [108]-[109].
Since the Constitution is a foundational document which was intended to endure "for the continued life and progress of the community"[112], the essential meaning of a constitutional term should be expressed at a level of generality, and with sufficient abstraction from specific detail, to permit the term to be applied to new circumstances and with the benefit of developed understandings with due fidelity to the unchanged purposes underlying both the term and the Constitution. Hence, when interpreting the meaning of the term "foreign power" in s 44(i) of the Constitution, that expression has been accurately understood as "an abstract concept apt to describe different nation states at different times according to their circumstances"[113]. As McHugh J said in Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor[114], "[t]his method of interpretation is equally applicable to the term 'aliens' in s 51(xix) of the Constitution".
[112]The Commonwealth v Kreglinger & Fernau Ltd and Bardsley (1926) 37 CLR 393 at 413.
[113]Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462 at 524‑525 [162].
[114](2001) 207 CLR 391 at 427 [111].
If the meaning of "alien" were defined at too granular a level of generality then the flexibility needed for its application over the long‑term operation of the Constitution would be undermined. Such a granular definition would frustrate the long‑term fulfilment of the purpose of the power conferred upon Parliament over both naturalisation and aliens. When the term "alien" in s 51(xix) is interpreted at the appropriate level of generality, both as a matter of etymology[115] and as a matter of legal meaning[116], it means a person who does not belong to the Australian political community. As Griffith CJ said in Potter v Minahan[117], "every human being (unless outlawed) is a member of some community, and is entitled to regard the part of the earth occupied by that community as a place to which he may resort when he thinks fit". But although the meaning of "alien" can be simply stated, this case is yet another demonstration of the difficulty in the application of that meaning, as it evolves over time, in relation to British subjects[118].
[115]Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 208 [18], 215 [61]; 375 ALR 597 at 602, 612.
[116]Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 259 [302], 276 [403]; 375 ALR 597 at 672, 694.
[117](1908) 7 CLR 277 at 289.
[118]See also Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178; Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391; Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28.
Alienage cannot be applied solely by reference to non-allegiance or non‑citizenship
The meaning of "alien" in s 51(xix) does not correspond precisely with the concepts of either (i) non-subjecthood or non‑allegiance or (ii) non‑citizenship. To set the meaning by reference to either non‑allegiance or non-citizenship would be to ascribe too narrow a scope for the evolution of application of that constitutional term. It is necessary to reiterate why "alien" was not, and is not, the simple antonym of either (i) a person who, as a subject, owes allegiance to the relevant sovereign or (ii) a person who is an Australian citizen.
One stable, but overly narrow, essential meaning of "alien" might have been that taken by Quick and Garran, who asserted in 1901 that an alien was "a person who owes allegiance to a foreign State, who is born out of the jurisdiction of the Queen, or who is not a British subject"[119]. On that approach, every British subject, born in a Dominion, who did not owe a foreign allegiance, was a non‑alien. Similarly, in his dissenting judgment in Singh v The Commonwealth[120], McHugh J said that "the essential meaning – the connotation – of the term 'alien' was a person who did not owe permanent allegiance to the Crown". That essential meaning should not be adopted. To ascribe to the term "alien" the essential meaning of "non‑subject" or, at an even greater level of specificity, "non‑subject of the Queen" or "person not owing permanent allegiance to the Crown", would be to define the term at too great a level of specificity. Norms concerning subjecthood and allegiance were in a state of flux at the time of Federation, particularly due to the Royal Commission in 1868[121]. As the joint judgment in Shaw said, "[t]here never was a common law notion of 'British subject' rendered into an immutable element of 'the law of the Constitution'"[122].
[119]Quick and Garran, The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (1901) at 599.
[120](2004) 222 CLR 322 at 343 [38].
[121] Great Britain, Report of the Royal Commissioners for Inquiring into the Laws of Naturalization and Allegiance (1869). See also In re Stepney Election Petition; Isaacson v Durant (1886) 17 QBD 54; Parry, British Nationality (1951) at 7; Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 78-79.
[122](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 42 [28].
The early understandings of how "alien" would be applied, and the early applications by this Court, were inconsistent with such an essential meaning that equated "alien" merely with a person not owing permanent allegiance to the Crown. Those applications in the Convention debates and in early decisions of this Court were underpinned by the very slippery, perhaps incoherent, notion of race even of persons who owed permanent allegiance to the Crown[123]. Hence, in Shaw, Heydon J, a member of the majority, observed that "[i]t is not in fact self‑evident that from 1 January 1901 all British subjects were not aliens, and inquiry into a subsequent date on which, or process by which, they became aliens tends to proceed on a false footing so far as it excludes the possibility that on 1 January 1901 some of them were aliens"[124].
[123]Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 276-278 [404]‑[409]; 375 ALR 597 at 694‑697.
[124](2003) 218 CLR 28 at 87 [190].
An example of the way in which the slippery, possibly incoherent, notion of race underpinned this Court's understanding of the concept of alienage is the decision in Robtelmes v Brenan[125]. The question before the Court was whether any head of power, including s 51(xix), of the Constitution supported s 8 of the Pacific Island Labourers Act 1901 (Cth), which permitted the deportation from Australia of all Pacific Island labourers whose employment had concluded. Griffith CJ said of Pacific Islanders, including the appellant in that case, that "[t]hey are aliens; that is indisputable"[126]. Barton J also said that it was "undeniable" that the aliens power extended to deporting Pacific Islanders[127]. And O'Connor J began his judgment by comparing the exclusion of Pacific Islanders with the exclusion of those who were ethnically Chinese as aliens, in each case without regard to whether they were British subjects[128]. This decision was reached by application of the concept of alienage through a racial lens, irrespective of considerations of British subjecthood. As Dr Prince observed of the racially based approach taken by this Court[129], many Pacific Islanders were British subjects, including Torres Strait Islanders, those from British colonies such as Fiji and, after 1888, British New Guinea. And many others came from British protectorates such as the Solomon Islands and the Gilbert Islands or had been born in Queensland or married British subjects.
[125](1906) 4 CLR 395.
[126](1906) 4 CLR 395 at 403.
[127](1906) 4 CLR 395 at 415.
[128](1906) 4 CLR 395 at 417.
[129]Prince, "'Australia's Most Inhumane Mass Deportation Abuse': Robtelmes v Brenan and Expulsion of the 'Alien' Islanders" (2018) 5(1) Law and History 117 at 133‑134.
Although British subjecthood, embodying allegiance to the Queen, did not control the meaning of the term "alien" in s 51(xix), that concept nevertheless had a substantial effect on the early application of the meaning of "alien" as a person who is a foreigner to the Australian political community. The effect of allegiance on the application of the meaning of "alien" began to fade after the commencement of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) ("the 1949 Act")[130]. As I explained in Love v The Commonwealth[131] by reference to the observations of Professor Parry, the 1949 Act was said to have had the effect that the concept of allegiance was "altogether swept away, together with all other rules of the common law respecting nationality".
[130]Subsequently renamed as the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth) before being repealed and replaced by the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth): see Australian Citizenship (Transitionals and Consequentials)Act 2007 (Cth), Sch 1, item 42.
[131](2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 282‑283 [430]; 375 ALR 597 at 703, referring to Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 441-442 [151].
Any suggestion that the essential meaning of "alien" is "non‑citizen" has far less to commend it. In 1902, Salmond wrote that "[t]here are citizens in France and in the United States of America, but the law and language of England know of subjects only"[132]. The founders of the Constitution had also consciously rejected any constitutional notions of citizenship, in part because of the uncertainty of that concept[133]. As Barton explained, "'[c]itizens' is an undefined term, and is not known to the Constitution"[134]. Although, as explained below, norms of citizenship can have a strong effect on the application of the meaning of an "alien", to re‑define the essential meaning of "alien" as "non-citizen" would effectively be a judicial amendment to the Constitution. It would also be contrary to basic constitutional principle.
[132]Salmond, "Citizenship and Allegiance" (1902) 18 Law Quarterly Review 49 at 49.
[133]Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 283-284 [434]; 375 ALR 597 at 704, referring, amongst other matters, to Official Record of the Debates of the Australasian Federal Convention (Melbourne), 3 March 1898 at 1788, 1797, Official Record of the Debates of the Australasian Federal Convention (Melbourne), 8 February 1898 at 677, 2 March 1898 at 1751, and Official Record of the Debates of the Australasian Federal Convention (Melbourne), 2 March 1898 at 1761.
[134]Official Record of the Debates of the Australasian Federal Convention (Melbourne), 3 March 1898 at 1786.
In Love v The Commonwealth[135], multiple members of this Court acknowledged the existence of a constitutional limit upon the extent to which Parliament could affect the meaning of "alien" by legislation. This limit, which Gibbs CJ (with whom Mason and Wilson JJ agreed) had earlier regarded as clear in Pochi v Macphee[136] and which many other members of this Court have reiterated[137], was that the Commonwealth Parliament cannot "simply by giving its own definition of 'alien', expand the power under s 51(xix) to include persons who could not possibly answer the description of 'aliens' in the ordinary understanding of the word". Whether such Commonwealth legislation involves a definition of "alien" or a definition of "citizen", the limit ensures that it is for the judiciary, and not for Parliament, to provide the final interpretation and application of the meaning of the Constitution. This is the principle of law recognised in Marbury v Madison[138] that is deeply embedded in the foundations of the Constitution.
[135](2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 206 [7], 212 [50], 233 [168], 243 [236], 260 [310], 283 [433], 291 [466]; 375 ALR 597 at 600, 609, 636, 651, 673‑674, 703‑704, 714‑715.
[136](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109.
[137]Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 185‑186; Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 435‑436 [132], 469‑470 [238], 490 [297], 491‑492 [303]; Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 36 [9]; Singh v The Commonwealth (2004) 222 CLR 322 at 329 [4], 382-383 [151]; Koroitamana v The Commonwealth (2006) 227 CLR 31 at 54-55 [81].
[138](1803) 5 US 137.
In Love v The Commonwealth[139], as in this case, the Solicitor‑General of the Commonwealth gave an example of a person who, whatever their status under statutory citizenship laws, would be beyond the aliens power due to the strength of that person's connection with the Australian political community. His example, which should be accepted as correct, is a person born in Australia, to two parents who are Australian citizens, who is not a citizen of another country, and who has not renounced their allegiance to Australia. Another example, recognised by a majority of this Court in Love v The Commonwealth, is Aboriginal Australians.
[139](2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 273 [395], 286-287 [444]; 375 ALR 597 at 691, 708.
In Pochi v Macphee, Gibbs CJ considered that the limit on Parliament's ability to legislate over aliens would not be exceeded if Parliament treated as an alien a person who was born outside Australia, to parents who were not "Australians", and who had not been naturalised as an "Australian"[140]. The Chief Justice was not considering the position of Aboriginal Australians. Rather, his point, correctly made, was that the meaning of a constitutional term is not dictated by the fluctuating content of legislation on a related subject.
[140](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109-110.
Even putting to one side the error in defining the essential meaning of a constitutional term ("alien") by reference to a notion that (i) at best, was little understood and was evolving at Federation and (ii) conflates constitutional meaning with an exercise of legislative power (ie the statutory rules governing persons who are eligible to be citizens), there is a degree of circularity in treating a constitutional power to legislate over aliens as co-extensive with, and defined by, a power to legislate over anyone who is not a citizen. The power to legislate over citizens is itself derived "to a significant degree"[141] from the constitutional power with respect to aliens[142]. Hence, the Commonwealth Parliament could not recite itself into power by using the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth) to deny citizenship to "every Aboriginal Australian ... or ... every descendant of Australians of Chinese (or other) ethnicity"[143] and thereby acquire power over these groups under the aliens power. Nor is the grant of statutory citizenship a constitutional ratchet so that, unless a person renounces their citizenship, the grant under statute of citizenship becomes irrevocable, taking the person beyond the power over naturalisation and aliens. In short, the meaning of "alien" in the Constitution is not, and has never been, "any person who has not received Australian citizenship". Instead, the constitutional meaning requires a "search ... for the essential character of the constitutional idea of alienage"[144]. That essential character is absence of membership of the Australian political community.
[141]Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [21].
[142]See also Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 283 [433]; 375 ALR 597 at 704, citing Hwang v The Commonwealth (2005) 80 ALJR 125 at 128 [10]; 222 ALR 83 at 86‑87 and Singh v The Commonwealth (2004) 222 CLR 322 at 374‑375 [124].
[143]Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 61 [94].
[144]Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 61 [94].
Norms that influence the application of the aliens power
Although neither non‑allegiance nor non‑citizenship is part of the essential meaning of "alien" and hence neither can dictate whether or not a person can be treated as falling outside the membership of the Australian political community, the scope of application of the aliens power over time has been heavily influenced by the concept of allegiance and, later, the concept of citizenship, particularly a person's place of birth (ius soli) and the citizenship of a person's parents (ius sanguinis)[145]. The aliens power is also a partial source for the power to create statutory citizenship, which, in turn, assists to define the membership of the Australian political community.
[145]See Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 285‑287 [441]‑[446]; 375 ALR 597 at 706‑708.
At the time of Federation, the concepts of allegiance and subjecthood were powerful factors in the application of whether a person was a member of the Australian political community, notwithstanding that the concept of allegiance was complicated by a strong racial lens through which it was initially understood and applied. On this appeal, Mr Chetcuti relied heavily upon the concept of allegiance to assert that since he had arrived in Australia as a British subject with an allegiance to the Crown, and since (as he claimed) the Crown had not yet divided, he could not have been an alien when he arrived in Australia. The submissions of the parties therefore attempted to identify a point in time at which Australia achieved independence from the United Kingdom. These reasons follow the approach of the parties, but three points should be emphasised.
First, there is no magic date when independence was suddenly achieved by Australia. The move towards independence had a slow and incremental character. It is an example of "the gradualness, the extreme gradualness, of inevitability"[146]. Secondly, although the relevant date in Shaw was said to be at the latest 26 January 1949, it is arguable that the Crown had divided earlier, so that by the time Mr Chetcuti arrived in Australia on 31 July 1948 he arrived as a British subject to a country where the sovereign had separate identity in relation to Australia. But the further back that a date on which Australian independence, and the division of the Crown, is said to have occurred, the more care must be taken that history is not being revised contrary to the political and social facts and circumstances at the time. Thirdly, and in any event, allegiance was only a factor in the application of the meaning of "alien". The factors governing the application of constitutional meaning can change over time. From 26 January 1949, the factor of allegiance began to be overtaken by a focus on citizenship.
[146]R v Hush; Ex parte Devanny (1932) 48 CLR 487 at 518.
Australian independence and the absence of any magic date
There is no magic date when, like Cinderella at midnight, all British subjects who had no other connection to Australia which was capable of taking them outside s 51(xix) suddenly became capable of being treated as aliens in Australia. Rather, the process of Australian independence from the United Kingdom, as the special case before the primary judge pointed out in painstaking detail, involved incremental development marked by a number of significant political and legal steps following Federation in 1901.
The incremental development was, in large part, political. In 1917, a constitutional resolution at the Imperial War Conference recognised that readjustment of the constitutional recognition of the different parts of the British Empire should be based upon "a full recognition of the Dominions as autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth". On 30 July 1918, the Imperial War Cabinet resolved that the Prime Ministers of the Dominions "have the right of direct communication with the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and vice versa". That resolution was described the same year by Pollock as the beginning of "the building" of a new constitution which would treat the Dominions as "partners on an equal footing"[147]. Following the Treaty of Versailles, Viscount Grey described the "self-governing Dominions" as "free communities, independent as regards all their own affairs, and partners in those that concern the Empire at large"[148]. At the Imperial Conference of 1930 it was resolved that the King would act in appointing a Governor-General of a Dominion by advice of his Ministers in the Dominion concerned. In 1931, when Sir Isaac Isaacs was appointed as the Governor‑General of Australia under s 2 of the Constitution, the appointment was therefore made by the King on the advice of his Australian Ministers.
[147]Pollock, "Notes: The League of Nations" (1918) 34 Law Quarterly Review 344 at 346.
[148]"Occasional Notes" (1920) 149 The Law Times 200 at 200.
Part of this political evolution was the gradual recognition of the division of the Crown with respect to the Commonwealth of Australia[149]. On 28 June 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed on behalf of the British Empire but also contained indented signatures for the Dominions, including a signature for the Commonwealth of Australia by the Prime Minister and Minister for the Navy. In 1926, the Balfour Declaration declared the Dominions to be "autonomous Communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another ... though united by a common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations"[150]. Other aspects of the Balfour Declaration were less clear in their recognition of Australian independence[151]. It might be said that, although the Balfour Declaration was the "declaration of independence" of the Dominions, the Imperial Conference "recognised that this principle was still not reflected in reality"[152]. At that time there also remained strongly held views of the unity of the Crown[153]. However, the recognition of Her Majesty as the Queen of Australia in the Royal Style and Titles Act 1973 (Cth)[154] was a formal recognition of a division of the Crown in relation to Great Britain and the Commonwealth of Australia[155].
[149]Compare the different evolution of the arguably independent Crown in relation to the States discussed in Twomey, The Australia Acts 1986: Australia's Statutes of Independence (2010) at 461‑472.
[150]Imperial Conference, Summary of Proceedings (1926) at 10.
[151]Winterton, "The Evolution of a Separate Australian Crown" (1993) 19 Monash University Law Review 1 at 7‑8.
[152]Twomey, "Sue v Hill – The Evolution of Australian Independence", in Stone and Williams (eds), The High Court at the Crossroads: Essays in Constitutional Law (2000) 77 at 83‑84.
[153]See Winterton, "The Evolution of a Separate Australian Crown" (1993) 19 Monash University Law Review 1 at 13‑16, referring to the views of Berriedale Keith, Leo Amery, Sir Robert Garran, Sir Cecil Hurst, Sir John Latham, and Philip Noel Baker.
[154]Passed in accordance with s 58 of the Constitution.
[155]Southern Centre of Theosophy Inc v South Australia (1979) 145 CLR 246 at 261.
Despite these large strides in political theory towards Australian independence, there was still a substantial degree of practical integration between Australia and the United Kingdom at the time that the 1949 Act came into effect on 26 January 1949. Immediately prior to that date, there was no statutory concept of an Australian citizen. At that time, Australian passports could be issued to British subjects[156] and a relevant qualification for election to the House of Representatives was that the person "must be a subject of the King, either natural born or for at least five years naturalized under a law of the United Kingdom or of the Commonwealth"[157]. Even after 26 January 1949, when statutory qualifications for election were amended on 22 April 1949, this requirement was replaced with a requirement that the person "must be a British subject"[158]. And the issue of Australian passports remained possible for British subjects who were not Australian citizens[159].
[156]Passports Act 1938 (Cth), s 7(1).
[157]Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Cth), s 69(1)(b), as amended by Commonwealth Electoral Act 1925 (Cth), s 4. See also Constitution, s 34.
[158]Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Cth), s 69(1)(b), as amended by Commonwealth Electoral Act 1949 (Cth), s 5(a).
[159]Passports Act 1938 (Cth), s 7(1), as amended by Passports Act 1948 (Cth), s 4.
Further, although Australia might in theory have had the power to make a declaration of war[160], on 3 September 1939 Prime Minister Menzies announced that Great Britain was at war with Germany and that "as a result, Australia is also at war". On the other hand, on 9 December 1941 Prime Minister Curtin independently announced that Australia had declared war against the Japanese Empire following accession by the King the previous day to the Prime Minister's request for assignment to the Governor‑General of the power to declare and proclaim a state of war between the Commonwealth of Australia and Finland, Hungary, Rumania, and the Japanese Empire[161].
[160]Compare Twomey, "Sue v Hill – The Evolution of Australian Independence", in Stone and Williams (eds), The High Court at the Crossroads: Essays in Constitutional Law (2000) 77 at 86.
[161]Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, No 104, 7 April 1942 at 859.
Apart from the legislation already discussed, the incremental development of Australian sovereignty over this period also included: the Nationality Act 1920 (Cth); the Commonwealth Public Service Act 1922 (Cth); the Statute of Westminster 1931 (UK); and the Aliens Deportation Act 1946 (Cth). These legislative steps to complete independence were arguably not wholly concluded until the passage of the Australia Acts 1986 (Cth and UK). But a significant legislative step, which was the focus of this appeal, was the enactment of the 1949 Act.
The 1949 Act and the Shaw decision
As explained earlier in these reasons, in Shaw a majority of this Court held that British subjects who entered Australia as citizens of the United Kingdom and colonies after the 1949 Act took effect, and who had not fulfilled the criteria to be Australian citizens, were capable of being treated as falling within s 51(xix) as aliens to the Australian community. No party challenged that conclusion, although Mr Chetcuti submitted that the date could not be pushed further back from 26 January 1949 to the date of his arrival on 31 July 1948.
The genesis of the 1949 Act was the British Commonwealth Conference on Nationality and Citizenship in February 1947, which itself had followed consideration in 1945 of the creation of Australian citizenship and the creation of Canadian citizenship in 1946[162]. The Report of that conference recorded the general view of the conference that it would be desirable to adopt a scheme of legislation which combined two matters: first, the ability of each country to determine who are its citizens; and secondly, the maintenance of the common status of British subjects throughout the Commonwealth by recognition of the citizens of particular countries of the Commonwealth as British subjects[163]. Most Commonwealth countries subsequently adopted this model in domestic legislation.
[162]See Australia, House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 30 September 1948 at 1060, 1062 and the Canadian Citizenship Act 1946 (Can).
[163]British Commonwealth Conference on Nationality and Citizenship (London, February 1947): Report with Appendices (1947) at 3 [8]-[9].
Consistently with this model, the 1949 Act created the new concept of an Australian citizen, with citizenship broadly arising from categories of birth, descent, registration, and naturalisation[164], and with Australian citizenship being lost in circumstances including the acquisition of foreign citizenship[165]. There were express assurances in the second reading speech of the 1949 Act that British subjects would "continue to be free from the disabilities and restrictions that apply to aliens"[166]. Section 5(1) of the 1949 Act defined an alien as a "person who is not a British subject, an Irish citizen or a protected person". By s 7, which was common to the model applied by most Commonwealth countries that adopted the model[167], a person was a British subject if the person was an Australian citizen or, by an enactment in a relevant country, was a citizen of that country. The relevant countries were: the United Kingdom and colonies, Canada, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Newfoundland, India, Pakistan, Southern Rhodesia, and Ceylon[168].
[164]See Love v The Commonwealth (2020) 94 ALJR 198 at 285 [441]; 375 ALR 597 at 706‑707.
[165]Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth), s 17.
[166]Australia, House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 30 September 1948 at 1062.
[167]Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 93.
[168]1949 Act, s 7(2).
The 1949 Act contained a transitional provision, s 25, which, subject to an exception not presently relevant, conferred Australian citizenship on all British subjects who: (i) were born in Australia and would have been an Australian citizen under s 10 at the time of birth if that section had been in force; (ii) were born in New Guinea; (iii) were naturalised in Australia; or (iv) had been, immediately prior to the date of commencement of the 1949 Act, ordinarily resident in Australia or New Guinea (or partly resident in both), for a period of at least five years.
The gap in the transitional provision meant that not all British subjects became Australian citizens. In broad terms, the new Australian citizenship was not automatically conferred upon British subjects who had migrated to Australia less than five years before 26 January 1949. Those persons could become Australian citizens only by registration, subject to conditions including at least five years of residence in Australia[169]. British subjects could not be naturalised. Naturalisation was reserved for aliens or protected persons[170].
[169]1949 Act, s 12(1)(b).
[170]1949 Act, s 14(2).
Despite the gap in the transitional provision, and consistently with the intention of the 1949 Act that British subjects would continue to be free from the restrictions that applied to aliens, those British subjects who were not Australian citizens could still be issued with Australian passports[171]. Indeed, approximately a decade after the 1949 Act, the legislation was still seen as not having had the effect of making any British subject an alien. As Professor Parry observed in 1957 of the s 7 common clause[172]:
"And though not every country of the Commonwealth has enacted this clause [(ie not South Africa or Ceylon)], the situation has at least been produced that no citizen of any country of the Commonwealth is an alien in any other. Where, therefore, under the law of any such country, the distinction between subject and alien – or between non-alien and alien – is drawn, the British subject who is not a local citizen, equally with the local citizen, is not to be classed as an alien."
Professor Parry concluded that the introduction of local citizenship in Commonwealth countries "did not of itself prejudice the non-citizen [British] subject", but he observed that "this is a situation which cannot remain constant"[173].
[171]Passports Act 1938 (Cth), s 7(1), as amended by Passports Act 1948 (Cth), s 4.
[172]Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 93.
[173]Parry, Nationality and Citizenship Laws of The Commonwealth and of The Republic of Ireland (1957) at 94.
Agreeing to a change in the "common code" at the Conference held in 1947 did not have the effect of transforming the Imperial Crown into a divided Crown. That is because, whilst the Conference recommended that each British Dominion should create its own rules for citizenship, it was also agreed to continue with the principle of "common status". In that respect, it was recommended that each British Dominion pass a law whereby citizenship in that Dominion conferred upon a person the status of British subject[251]. The adoption of the Canadian scheme was not intended to divide the Commonwealth and Empire or the Imperial Crown; rather it was to avoid, as described above, a particular disadvantage found in the old "common code". Citizens of each British Dominion otherwise expressly retained their status as British subjects.
[251]See, eg, Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth), s 7. See also Australia, House of Representatives, Nationality and Citizenship Bill 1948, Explanatory Memorandum at 1-2 [5]-[7].
Another relevant event was the enactment of the Royal Style and Titles Act (Australia) 1947 (Cth). Pursuant to that Act, the Parliament of the Commonwealth assented to the omission from the Royal Style and Titles of the words "Indiae Imperator" and "Emperor of India"[252]. Seeking in this way the assent of the Federal Parliament was another step towards the emergence of the Crown in right of Australia. But in 1947, the Royal Style and Titles still did not refer to Australia. The first reference to Australia only appeared in 1953[253]. The reference to the United Kingdom in the Royal Style and Titles was only deleted in 1973[254].
[252]Royal Style and Titles Act (Australia) 1947 (Cth), s 3; Australia, Senate, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 November 1947 at 2796.
[253]Royal Style and Titles Act 1953 (Cth), Schedule.
[254]Royal Style and Titles Act 1973 (Cth), Schedule.
With very great respect to the learned primary judge, it should not be accepted that the Imperial Crown was transformed, relevantly into the Crown in right of Australia, from the enactment of the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act in 1942. It may be accepted that Australia's adoption of the Statute of Westminster was a pivotal step towards Australia's independence; but it was not the step that completed that process. The preamble to the Statute of Westminster affirms that the British Dominions remained "united by a common allegiance to the Crown"[255]. The Statute of Westminster legally affirmed what probably already existed (due to the forbearance of the Imperial Parliament), namely, the relationship of equality that existed as between each British Dominion Parliament and the Parliament at Westminster. But, critically, it did not alter the constitutional relationship between each British Dominion and the Crown. That relationship was expressed to be one of "common allegiance"[256]. That quality of commonality is not consistent with a divided Crown; indeed, it is entirely inconsistent with it.
[255]Preamble to the Statute of Westminster 1931 (UK).
[256]Preamble to the Statute of Westminster 1931 (UK).
Similar expressions of unity may be found in the Balfour Declaration of the Imperial Conference of 1926[257]. Again, the purpose of the Balfour Declaration was to acknowledge the equality in status and power of certain of the British Dominions, including Australia. But that Declaration in no way authorised, recognised or established that the Imperial Crown was a divided monarchy in 1926. On the contrary, the Declaration expressly recognised the continuation of a "united" allegiance to the Crown by all British subjects throughout the United Kingdom and the British Dominions[258]. For example, the Imperial Conference included a "message" to the King and Queen, which expressed the hope that their Majesties "may long be spared to strengthen the ties of affection and devotion which unite the peoples of the British Commonwealth under the Crown"[259]. Under the heading "STATUS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THE DOMINIONS", the British Dominions are described in the Balfour Declaration in the following way[260]:
"They are autonomous Communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations." (emphasis in original)
The expression of "common allegiance" is again inconsistent with the existence in 1926 of a divided Crown and is entirely consistent with the statements made by this Court in 1920[261] and in 1944[262], set out above.
[257]See, eg, Australia, Parliament, Imperial Conference, 1926: Summary of Proceedings (1927) at 10.
[258]Australia, Parliament, Imperial Conference, 1926: Summary of Proceedings (1927) at 10.
[259]Australia, Parliament, Imperial Conference, 1926: Summary of Proceedings (1927) at 9.
[260]Australia, Parliament, Imperial Conference, 1926: Summary of Proceedings (1927) at 10.
[261]Amalgamated Society of Engineers v Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 129 at 152 per Knox CJ, Isaacs, Rich and Starke JJ.
[262]Minister for Works (WA) v Gulson (1944) 69 CLR 338 at 356 per Rich J, 366 per Williams J.
The foregoing accords with Sir Owen Dixon's analysis of the Statute of Westminster. Writing extra‑judicially in 1935, Sir Owen Dixon made several observations about that Statute. One of these concerned the supremacy of the Crown and the proposition that the Crown became "the visible sign of national power"[263]. Sir Owen Dixon then observed[264]: "[t]he Sovereign remains at the head of each member of the British Commonwealth and its powers of government are exercised in his name".
[263]Sir Owen Dixon, "The Law and the Constitution", in Jesting Pilate and Other Papers and Addresses (1965) 38 at 59.
[264]Sir Owen Dixon, "The Law and the Constitution", in Jesting Pilate and Other Papers and Addresses (1965) 38 at 59-60.
Whilst the ultimate decision in Shaw was carefully expressed to be confined to those British subjects who had arrived in Australia after 26 January 1949 (Mr Shaw had arrived in 1974), it should be accepted that the reasoning of the plurality was premised on the likelihood that the Crown in right of Australia had emerged before that date. As Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ observed[265]:
"The classification by s 7 of the Citizenship Act of the citizens of the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Newfoundland, India, Pakistan, Southern Rhodesia and Ceylon, as British subjects in Australian law by virtue of that citizenship, also was an exercise of the legislative power with respect to aliens. The new statutory status rendered those persons a class of aliens with special advantages in Australian law, as mentioned above. It can hardly be said that, as the relevant political facts and circumstances stood in 1948, those citizens could not possibly answer the description of aliens in the ordinary understanding of that word." (emphasis added)
[265]Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 40 [22].
However, no earlier date for the emergence of the Crown in right of Australia was identified by the plurality and the ultimate decision was confined to 26 January 1949. Moreover, the observation about the circumstances in 1948 was heavily qualified; all that was said was that the citizens of, for example, the United Kingdom could "possibly" answer the description of an alien in 1948. In any event, and with great respect, a different view of the "relevant political facts and circumstances" can be taken. For the reasons set out above, this Court acknowledged in 1944[266] the existence of an undivided Crown, but nothing took place thereafter, and before the 1948 Citizenship Act came into effect, which supports the emergence of the Crown in right of Australia.
[266]Minister for Works (WA) v Gulson (1944) 69 CLR 338 at 356 per Rich J, 366 per Williams J.
By reason of the foregoing, it may also be doubted whether the passing of the 1948 Citizenship Act itself justified the conclusion that the Crown in right of Australia had, by then, finally emerged as the Australian Head of State with Australians henceforth owing allegiance to a distinct King[267]. It may be that history justifies a later date[268]. The plurality in Shaw recognised the difficulty in identifying any particular moment of division. Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ said[269]:
"The development of the 'autonomous Communities' recognised by the Imperial Conference of 1926 proceeded by steps and over periods which had different consequences for the reading of various provisions of the Constitution. To ask when Australia actually achieved complete constitutional independence or other questions phrased in similar terms is to assume a simple answer to a complex issue, rather than to attend to the particular matter arising under the Constitution or involving its interpretation which has arisen for decision." (footnote omitted)
[267]The constitutional meaning of "alien" is, of course, not susceptible to legislative alteration.
[268]In Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391, McHugh J identified the date of the commencement of the Royal Style and Titles Act 1973 (Cth), being 19 October 1973, as the date on which the Crown in right of Australia became manifest: at 421 [91], 431-432 [121]-[123], 436 [135]; Callinan J preferred the passing of the Australia Acts 1986 (Cth and UK): at 518 [375].
[269]Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 41 [24].
In Nolan, the emergence of the Crown in right of Australia was described as a "truism"[270] arising from the change in relations between Australia and the United Kingdom. Australia's independence as a sovereign power was not the product of any one specific legislative change; nor was it the product of any declaration or international meeting. Rather, it was a gradual process comprising political and cultural changes that the law over time, and following these changes, came to recognise as fulfilled. The most important political change was the decision of the Imperial Parliament to cease to pass laws concerning any of the Empire's Dominions. Other changes included the entry into the Washington Naval Treaty[271] in 1922 and the fall of Singapore in 1942. Legal recognition of Australia's emerging independence then appeared from, amongst other things, the Balfour Declaration, the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act and the 1948 Citizenship Act. Critically, the process of independence did not call for, or depend upon, any positive act, or assent, on the part of the Australian people. It was, as McHugh J has described, a "mystical process"[272].
[270]Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 184 per Mason CJ, Wilson, Brennan, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ.
[271]Also known as the Five‑Power Treaty or Washington Treaty.
[272]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 432 [124].
Nonetheless, as already mentioned, the plurality in Shaw drew a bright line by selecting 26 January 1949 as the date by which the Imperial Crown relevantly divided. That bright line is a necessary and convenient constitutional fiction which should not now be disturbed. In that respect, the correctness of the decision in Shaw (as distinct from some of the plurality's reasoning) was not challenged by Mr Chetcuti. It follows that it may be accepted, for the disposition of this appeal, that British subjects who arrived in Australia after 26 January 1949 did so as aliens in the constitutional sense. As it happens, nothing here turns upon whether the time at which the Crown divided was in 1949, or some later date[273]. All that matters is that the division took place at some point after Mr Chetcuti's arrival in Australia.
[273]See fn 268 above.
It follows that when Mr Chetcuti arrived in Australia, before 26 January 1949, he did so as a British subject and as a non-alien. That accords, if it matters, with the application to him of both the Nationality Act and the Aliens Act then in force in 1948.
Did Mr Chetcuti subsequently become an alien?
The next issue for determination is whether Mr Chetcuti became an alien after 26 January 1949 when, in light of the foregoing, the Crown must be taken to have become the Crown in right of Australia. That issue must be determined in accordance with the principle that a person may acquire the status or character of alienage by reason of supervening constitutional and political events not involving any positive act or assent on the part of the person concerned[274]. It is also possible for supervening constitutional and political events to have the effect of rendering someone who was an alien into a non‑alien, and further, to have the effect of maintaining a person's status as a pre‑existing non‑alien.
[274]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 468‑469 [235] per Gummow and Hayne JJ.
An important element of the emergence of a distinctly Australian Crown was the transfer of allegiance from the Imperial Monarch to an Australian Head of State[275]. This took place as part of the "mystical process"[276]. "By parity of reasoning"[277], when the allegiance of citizens of Australia was transferred to the Queen of Australia, so too was the allegiance of those British subjects living at that time in Australia who, when they arrived, were the same British subjects as Australians who had been born in Australia. As McHugh J said in Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor[278]:
"Logically, it must follow that, upon the completion of the evolutionary process, the subjects of the Queen born and living in Australia became subjects of the Queen of Australia. Henceforth, by a mystical process, they owed their allegiance to the Queen of Australia, not the Queen of the United Kingdom. In Pochi v Macphee, Gibbs CJ said that '[t]he allegiance which Australians owe to Her Majesty is owed not as British subjects but as subjects of the Queen of Australia'.
But upon what legal or logical basis can this Court distinguish between subjects of the Queen of the United Kingdom born in Australia and those subjects of the Queen born outside, but living in, Australia when the evolutionary process was complete? I can see none. Birth within the sovereign's territories was the criterion by which the common law distinguished the subject of the sovereign from the alien. But that fact provides no ground for a court distinguishing between the subjects of the evolutionary process. It is also true that subjects of the Queen born in the United Kingdom continued to owe allegiance to the Queen in right of the United Kingdom. But that was not incompatible with them also owing allegiance to the Queen of Australia as subjects of that Queen while they continued to live in Australia. Whether or not they were aliens, they were under the protection of and owed allegiance to the Queen of Australia as long as they lived here. If they were subjects of the Queen living here immediately before the end of the evolutionary process, there is no constitutional reason why they could not become subjects of the Queen of Australia as well as subjects of the United Kingdom. Sue v Hill holds that this dual allegiance prevents them from being members of the federal Parliament. But nothing in the Constitution indicates that allegiance to the Queen in two capacities makes a person born in the United Kingdom an alien for the purpose of the Constitution. Indeed s 117 of the Constitution strongly supports the opposite conclusion." (emphasis in original; footnotes omitted)
[275]Nolan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1988) 165 CLR 178 at 191 per Gaudron J; Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 421 [90], 434-435 [130]-[131] per McHugh J, 517 [372]-[373] per Callinan J.
[276]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 432 [124] per McHugh J.
[277]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 435 [131] per McHugh J.
[278](2001) 207 CLR 391 at 432-433 [124]-[125].
McHugh J was initially of the view in Patterson that British subjects became subjects of the Queen in right of Australia in 1973 upon the passing of the Royal Style and Titles Act 1973 (Cth). From that time, the Royal Style and Titles of Her Majesty the Queen in this country became: "Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God Queen of Australia and Her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth". His Honour said[279]:
"no attempt was made to assert the sovereignty of the Queen of Australia until the passing of the Royal Style and Titles Act 1973. Until the commencement of that Act – and maybe later – all British subjects resident in Australia, whether born here or overseas, owed their allegiance to the Queen of the United Kingdom. That being so, those British subjects, born in the United Kingdom, who were living in Australia at the commencement of the Royal Style and Titles Act 1973 became subjects of the Queen of Australia as well as subjects of the Queen of the United Kingdom. Accordingly, they were not and did not subsequently become aliens within the meaning of s 51(xix) of the Constitution."
[279]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 436‑437 [135].
Callinan J was of a similar opinion. His Honour said[280]:
"For a long time, it could not seriously be doubted that a British subject of the Queen living permanently in Australia was also an Australian. The majority in Sue v Hill accepted however, that the relationship between Australia and the United Kingdom (and their citizens) might alter by an evolutionary process, or by a process of transformation. In Nolan v Ministerfor Immigration and Ethnic Affairs a majority of this Court said that 'subject of the Queen' in s 117 of the Constitution by then meant subject of the Queen of Australia ...
In the same way as the evolutionary process, to which the majority in Sue v Hill referred, transformed the meaning of the monarch as used in the Constitution, that process should also have transformed a subject of the monarch born in the United Kingdom – but having lived permanently as a subject of the monarch in this country for the period that this prosecutor has – into one of the people of Australia and a citizen of this country." (footnotes omitted)
[280]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 517 [372]-[373].
Later, in Shaw, McHugh J expressed the view that the evolutionary process by which the Queen became the Queen of Australia was only completed upon the passing of the Australia Acts 1986 (Cth and UK)[281]. As already mentioned, it should now be accepted that this evolutionary process to an Australian Crown was completed by 26 January 1949.
[281]This had been the view of Callinan J in Patterson: Shaw v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (2003) 218 CLR 28 at 48 [51].
The correctness of the foregoing reasoning did not need to be considered by the plurality in Shaw. Their Honours did not comment on it because when Mr Shaw arrived in Australia in 1974, he was already an alien.
Nettle J, sitting as the primary judge in the decision below, disagreed with the foregoing reasoning of McHugh and Callinan JJ in Patterson. His Honour said[282]:
"But, with respect, there was a logical basis of distinction between those classes of persons in that non‑citizen subjects of the Queen born outside Australia continued to owe obligations of allegiance to the Queen in right of the United Kingdom, and so continued to owe allegiance to what, as a result of the process of evolution, had become a foreign sovereign power. Of course, that did not mean that Parliament was bound to treat such persons as aliens – as the later emergent ubiquity of dual citizenship attests. But the completion of that evolution does mean that it was open to Parliament to do so on the basis laid down in Nolan: that a non‑citizen born abroad, to parents who were not Australians, and thus owing allegiance to a foreign power, is, generally speaking, not beyond the scope of Commonwealth legislative power with respect to 'aliens', in the ordinary, contemporary understanding of that term." (emphasis in original; footnotes omitted)
[282]Chetcuti v The Commonwealth (2020) 95 ALJR 1 at 7 [32]; 385 ALR 1 at 7-8.
With great respect, I disagree. That is for two reasons. First, because of McHugh J's observation in Patterson – leaving aside disqualification as a member of Parliament[283] – nothing in the Constitution indicates that allegiance to the Queen in two capacities makes a person, who has arrived in Australia as a non‑alien British subject, an alien for the purpose of the Constitution after 26 January 1949. Secondly, and more fundamentally, it is difficult to accept that British subjects, resident in Australia, retained any allegiance to the Queen in right of the United Kingdom when they took up allegiance to the Queen in right of Australia. The better view is that, together with all Australian citizens, one allegiance replaced the other. This conclusion is consistent with the legal proposition that the Crown in right of Australia, when exercising duties within this country, should be considered "present"[284] in Australia. Following completion of the "mystical process"[285], the Crown in right of the United Kingdom ceased entirely to be "present" in Australia. In such circumstances, it should not be accepted that British subjects, who arrived as non‑aliens and have lived permanently in Australia ever since, retained any allegiance to that Crown.
[283]Constitution, s 44. See also Sue v Hill (1999) 199 CLR 462.
[284]In re Holmes (1861) 2 Johns & Hem 527 at 543 per Sir William Page Wood V-C [70 ER 1167 at 1174], quoted in R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs; Ex parte Indian Association of Alberta [1982] QB 892 at 922 per Kerr LJ.
[285]Re Patterson; Ex parte Taylor (2001) 207 CLR 391 at 432 [124] per McHugh J.
Such a conclusion may perhaps more readily be drawn in the case of Mr Chetcuti, who arrived in Australia at the age of three and has lived here ever since[286].
[286]Save for a temporary absence between November 1958 and July 1959.
It follows that Mr Chetcuti is not an alien for the purposes of the Constitution and the Commonwealth has no constitutionally valid power to remove him to Malta. The foregoing conclusion is not inconsistent with the usually accepted definition of "alien" as propounded by Gibbs CJ in Pochi v Macphee[287] and set out above. That expression of principle was not intended to be an exhaustive statement of the power conferred by s 51(xix) of the Constitution[288]. Moreover, the question of who is an alien had not then been "fully explored" before the Court[289]. Nor was Gibbs CJ required to decide whether a person in the position of Mr Chetcuti was an alien. It follows, for the reasons already given, that the principle expressed by Gibbs CJ must necessarily be qualified. It does not apply to British subjects who arrived in Australia before 26 January 1949 as non‑aliens, who have since lived here as Australians, who thus owe allegiance to the Queen of Australia, and who have not otherwise renounced that allegiance.
[287](1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109-110 (Mason and Wilson JJ agreeing).
[288]Cunliffe v The Commonwealth (1994) 182 CLR 272 at 374-375 per Toohey J.
[289]Pochi v Macphee (1982) 151 CLR 101 at 109 per Gibbs CJ, 112 per Murphy J.
Mr Chetcuti's Maltese citizenship
In 1964, Maltese citizenship was conferred automatically on Mr Chetcuti. The Commonwealth submitted that this was sufficient to render him an alien, as it was demonstrative of allegiance to a foreign power. The Commonwealth relied upon Singh, where a child, born in Australia in 1998 of Indian parents, and who was thereby automatically an Indian citizen, was found to be an alien. Singh may be distinguished because Mr Chetcuti did not arrive in Australia as an "alien", and has not, for the reasons I have given, since become an alien. His allegiance, by reason of his birth in Malta in 1945 and his arrival in Australia as a British subject in 1948, at first to the Crown generally and thereafter to the Crown in right of Australia, distinguishes him from the plaintiff in Singh, whose only allegiance was to the Republic of India. Mr Chetcuti's allegiance to the Crown was not broken because in 1964 the Constitution of Malta rendered automatically every person born in Malta a Maltese citizen[290]. Nor is there here anything like the express regulation, considered in Re Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs; Ex parte Ame[291], whereby new citizens of Papua New Guinea ceased to be Australian citizens[292]. For the reasons already explained, citizenship is not the same legal concept as that of being a non‑alien. The remote and automatic conferral of Maltese citizenship on Mr Chetcuti did not deny or preclude the continued existence of his allegiance to the Australian Crown[293]. No specific right, privilege or obligation conferred on Mr Chetcuti by reason of him being a Maltese citizen was ever identified which supported the presence of an allegiance to the Republic of Malta[294]. In that respect, Mr Chetcuti stands in the same position as Australian dual citizens; it has never been suggested by this Court that such citizens are aliens because of an allegiance to a foreign power.
[290]Constitution of Malta, s 23(1).
[291](2005) 222 CLR 439.
[292]Papua New Guinea Independence (Australian Citizenship) Regulations 1975 (Cth), reg 4.
[293]cf Sykes v Cleary (1992) 176 CLR 77 at 107 per Mason CJ, Toohey and McHugh JJ.
[294]cf Re Canavan (2017) 263 CLR 284 at 329 [134] per Kiefel CJ, Bell, Gageler, Keane, Nettle, Gordon and Edelman JJ.
I would allow the appeal.