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Attorney General (NSW) v Quin

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Decided
  
7 June 1990

Subsequent action(s)
  
none

Ruling court
  
High Court of Australia

Prior action(s)
  
none

End date
  
June 7, 1990

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Attorney-General (NSW) v Quin

Full case name
  
Attorney-General (NSW) v Quin

Citation(s)
  
(1990) 170 CLR 1, [1990] HCA 21

Judge(s) sitting
  
Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Dawson & Toohey

Attorney General (NSW) v Quin (1990) 170 CLR 1 is a landmark Australian judgment of the High Court. The matter related to Australian administrative law and to an extent the separation of powers.

Contents

Background

The NSW magistracy was reorganised. Quin had been a magistrate but was not recommended for appointment. The Attorney General departed from the previous method of recommending former magistrates. Quin's challenge was on the basis that he had a real expectation to be reappointed.

  • that this expectation was founded in natural justice
  • Whether estoppel could estoppe a government from changing that policy.
  • Finding

    The High Court of Australia found in favour of the Attorney General ruling that Courts were not able to overrule government policy as the appointment of magistrates is a role of the executive. That "the court has no power to protect a person's rights against adverse decision other than enforceable rights.". "Judicial review has undoubtedly been invoked to set aside administrative acts which are unjust or otherwise unlawful but only to the extent the purported exercise of power is excessive and or otherwise unlawful." Provided the decision was a legitimate application of the policy rather than a ruse.

    Principle

    The Executive cannot by representation or promise disable itself from performing a statutory duty; this includes the adoption of, or acting in accordance with, a new policy.

    References

    Attorney-General (NSW) v Quin Wikipedia