Puneet Varma (Editor)

Leask v Commonwealth

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Decided
  
5 November 1996

Prior action(s)
  
none

End date
  
November 5, 1996

Citation(s)
  
(1996) 187 CLR 579

Subsequent action(s)
  
none

Ruling court
  
High Court of Australia

Leask v Commonwealth

Full case name
  
Stephen Arthur Leask v The Commonwealth of Australia

Judge(s) sitting
  
Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Kirby JJ

People also search for
  
Polyukhovich v Commonwealth

Leask v Commonwealth (1996) 187 CLR 579 is a High Court of Australia case that discussed the role of proportionality in the Australian Constitution.

Contents

Background

The act under question was the Financial Transactions Reports Act 1988 (Cth), which imposed an obligation on 'cash dealers' to report all transactions above $10,000 to a statutory authority. It was also an offence if it could be proved the transactions were designed to avoid tracking. The offence was a strict liability offence.

Incidentality

Once there is a sufficient connection between the Act and the head of power, proportionality is irrelevant for non-purposive powers. Whether or not there is a sufficient connection does not rely on the desirability of the legislation.

Proportionality

It was noted that the law was disproportionate to the currency and coins power (section 51(xii)), and that it was an inappropriate means to achieving the end. (Proportionality may be examined by testing if the law is appropriate and adapted to some means.) Dawson J noted that the test of whether the measures in a law are appropriate and necessary to achieve certain objectives, while used in Europe, was irrelevant for the Australian Constitution; "[t]hey are essentially political rather than judicial considerations".

Re Dingjan; Ex parte Wagner described the process by which it is determined whether a law is "with respect to" a section 51 head of power:

  1. By reference to the rights, powers, liabilities, duties and privileges which it creates (Commonwealth v Tasmania)
  2. A judgment as to the connection of this characterisation to the head of power

Thus, the connection involves some kind of degree, but once it has been established, it does not matter whether the law is appropriate for its aims.

However, proportionality may be relevant, and a law not invalid, if an immunity conferred by a limitation of a power is affected incidentally by the achievement of a legitimate end.

References

Leask v Commonwealth Wikipedia