Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Judicial shockers ... Latest from the trouble prone Queensland branch of the Federales ... Administrative law upsets ... Sandy Street overturned ... On the level in Canberra ... Missing aged care accountant ... Law shop managing director skewered ... Ginger Snatch reports from courtrooms around the nation ... Read more >> 

Politics Media Law Society


Smoke and mirrors ... Spiritual notes … Bishop fends off claim for damages from victim of priestly abuse … How does this work? … Victoria protects politician with DV offences … An oppressive no-publication regime … Celebrity judge battles antisemitism from the gala dinner circuit ... Read on ... 

This area does not yet contain any content.
Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

It's Hitlerish ... Reelection of a charlatan ... Republicans take popular vote for the first time in 20 years ... Amnesia ... Trashing a democracy ... Trump and his team of troubled men ... Mainstream media wilts in the eye of the storm ... Depravity, greed and revenge are the new normal ... Roger Fitch files from Washington ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Change of guard at the High Court ... Richard Glenn appointed CEO and Executive Director of the Court ... The same Richard Glenn who as Commonwealth Ombudsman was birched over mishandling a report into the legality of Robodebt ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

Shmagatha Shmistie 2.0 ... Another round with Vardy and Rooney ... Remote evidence from a witness - on the bus ... Brazilian magistrate looses his shirt ... CV qualifications propped up by pork pies ... Fast justice by Scissors & Paste ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt in London with the latest regrettable court-related conduct ... Read more >> 

"Today is about Dad's wishes and confirming all of our support for him and for his wishes. It shouldn't be difficult or controversial. Love you, Lachlan."   

Lachlan Murdoch's text message to his sister Elisabeth on the eve of a special meeting to discuss altering the family trust so that Lachlan would run and control News Corp and Fox News ... Quoted in the opinion of the Nevada Probate Commissioner who ruled against changing the terms of the trust ... The New York Times, December 9, 2024 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

The great interceptor ... Rugby League ... Dennis Tutty and the try he shouldn't have scored ... Case that changed the face of professional sport ... Growth of the player associations, courtesy of the Barwick High Court ... Free kick ... Restraint of trade ... Braham Dabscheck comments ... Read more ... 


Justinian's archive

Litigation's artful delays ... From Justinian's archive ... April 22, 2014 ... Lawyers and the complexity of litigation ... Delay as a defence tactic ... Access to justice includes preventing access to justice ... Reprising the Flower & Hart saga with starring role by Ian Callinan QC ... Abuse of process ... Queensland CJ declined to intervene ... Tulkinghorn on the case  ... Read more ... 


 

 

« Conan the Barbarian | Main | Another week »
Monday
Mar202017

Justice and unjust laws

March 14 to March 20 ... Malcolm in the Muddle on when it's okay to break the law ... Harrison's new "superhero" barrister ... Kiefel CJ tells judges to stop waffling ... Federal Court finds blogger Belle Gibson misled followers ... Dutton mistakes himself for a free speech standard bearer ..... Week@TheKnees compiled by Sohini Mahta 

NEW Australian Council of Trade Union secretary Sally McManus stirred the pot on her first day on the job (March 15) with her refusal to distance the ACTU from the Construction Forestry Mining Energy Union on ABC's 7.30.

CFMEU has been accused in over 100 court proceedings of breaking the law or contempt of court.  

The ACTU's position is that the Fair Work Act, which restricts industrial action to bargaining periods and the interests in support of which workers can strike, unjustifiably interferes with the right to freedom of association enshrined in international law.

The International Labour Organisation has never finally adjudicated the point, but the Australian Law Reform Commission has said the laws may be inconsistent with ILO conventions.

Asked to respond to McManus' criticism of him on social media that he was "such a nothing" with no central beliefs to define him, PM Malcolm Turnbull condemned McManus for greenlighting breaking the law: "on that basis if people thought taxes were too high they wouldn't have to obey their tax [sic]…"

Comparing breaking unjust laws to win workers' rights with tax avoidance is an iffy thought experiment, not least because Turnbull is loath to pester Australia's wealthiest individuals and corporates to pay their fair share of taxes. 

*  *  *

Sackar: Fair WorkProminent barrister and human rights activist Julian Burnside QC appeared on behalf of Amber Harrison for a brief NSW Supreme Court directions hearing in Sydney on Friday (March 17) morning.  

He argued the case should be transferred to the Federal Court because the counter-claim by Ms Harrison raises "substantial issues" under the Fair Work Act

Justice John Sackar said he was inclined to agree to the transfer because the NSW Supreme Court doesn't have the jurisdiction to deal with Fair Work matters. 

Placing the high-profile litigation before the Federal Court opens the door for Ms Harrison to claim she was a victim of an adverse action. The Financial Review had details this morning (March 20) of Amber's adverse action claim filed in the Federal Court.  

Sackar is still deciding whether to release Harrison's cross-claim to journalists covering the case, but the Australian Financial Review reported that Harrison's lawyers plan to claim Seven failed to provide a safe working environment for her.

Counsel for Seven, David Thomas, told Sackar his client wanted the Fair Work matter struck out of the counter-claim. 

Sackar didn't see the point of striking out part of Harrison's claim if the case was going to be decided by his federal counterparts. "The other place should deal with all other issues," he said.

Harrison appeared to view her (fourth) new lawyer as a game changer. 

"Access to justice shouldn't just be for the privileged, powerful and cashed up," she tweeted shortly before her case was heard on Friday. The same day, she called Burnside a superhero 

*  *  *

High Court chief justice Susan Kiefel eschewed "vanity judgments" in a speech entitled Judicial method in the 21st century at the Supreme Court of Queensland on Thursday (16 March) night. 

Kiefel CJ championed succinct, unified judgments which carry greater authority, inspire confidence and reduce delays for litigants. 

"It is better to resist the temptation to quote extensively from literature," Kiefel CJ added

*  *  *

Mortimer J: Wellness blogger may have been delusional

In a civil case brought by Consumer Affairs Victoria, the Federal Court found fallen wellness blogger Belle Gibson contravened consumer law by misleading the public by building a social media empire off the back of claims she cured her terminal cancers using only natural remedies. 

Gibson failed to honour her promises to donate the proceeds of sales from The Whole Pantry – a website, mobile phone app and recipe book published by Penguin – to charities, including the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre and the Bumi Sehat Foundation. 

But CAV didn't manage to persuade Justice Debra Mortimer that Gibson was acting unconscionably. Though Justice Mortimer said Ms Gibson's statements about having cancer "were obviously false", she raised the possibility that Gibson remained under some "delusion" that she had cancer after releasing her book.

Gibson's penalty will be handed down at a date yet to be determined. She could be personally liable for up to $220,000 and her company Inkerman Road Nominees, now in liquidation, could be fined $1.1 million.

Ms Gibson was not in court for the ruling and hadn’t attending previous hearings.

*  *  *

Dutton: corporates being bullied by activistsImmigration Minister Peter Dutton used his address to the LNP's state council meeting in Cairns on Saturday (March 18) to accuse chief execs, including Alan Joyce of Qantas, of using shareholders' money to drive personal agendas:

"I'd prefer publicly listed companies stick to their knitting and that is delivering the services for their customers and providing a return for their shareholders."

The message seems to be that corporate leaders can't run their businesses and express views on marriage equality at the same time. 

Twenty corporate bosses wrote to the PM last week calling on parliament to pass laws in support of gay marriage.

Dutton said many of Australia's largest corporations were being bullied into supporting social policies out of fear of a boycott of their services or products led by social media activists.

"This is a battle for common sense and for freedom of speech, make no mistake about it." Dutton said, in the same breath as he attempted to silence the business leaders who disagreed with him.  

A Qantas statement said the company would continue to express support for same-sex marriage and "other things we believe in". 

Dutton is a former Queensland drug squad detective with at least six investment properties on his parliamentary register. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.