Boilermakers' Case | |
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Court | High Court of Australia |
Full case name | The Queen v Kirby; Ex parte Boilermakers' Society of Australia |
Decided | 2 March 1956 |
Citation(s) | [1956] HCA 10, (1956) 94 CLR 254 |
Case history | |
Subsequent action(s) | none |
Court membership | |
Judge(s) sitting | Dixon CJ, McTiernan, Williams, Webb, Fullagar, Kitto and Taylor JJ |
The Boilermakers' Case was a 1956 decision of the High Court of Australia which considered the powers of the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration to punish the Boilermakers' Society of Australia, a union which had disobeyed the orders of that court in relation to an industrial dispute between boilermakers and their employer body, the Metal Trades Employers' Association.
The High Court held that the judicial power of the Commonwealth could not be vested in a tribunal that also exercised non-judicial functions. It is a major case dealing with the separation of powers in Australian law.
The significance of the case was that it restricted the use of judicial power only to Chapter III courts (under the Australian Constitution), as well as establishing that these courts could exercise no other power. In this way, it clarified the separation of powers doctrine in Australia.
The decision led to the abolition of the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration and the creation of two new Australian industrial relations bodies: the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission (later known as the Australian Industrial Relations Commission), whose limited-term members could create industrial awards and settle interstate industrial disputes, and the Commonwealth Industrial Court, whose judges could interpret and enforce awards made by the Commission.