tHar. nr] THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA 853
of the Court were in the nature of a law, it had no authority
whatever. There was no direction of any Parliament which
he was bound to follow, and there could be no binding quality
in his decrees unless it were to be found in s. 5 of the Common-
wealth of Australia Constitution Act, which declares * This
Act and all laws made by the Parliament of the Common-
wealth under the Constitution shall be binding on the
Courts, Judges, and people of every state and of every part
of the Commonwealth, notwithstanding anything in the laws
of any state’. If this power were not held to be granted
to the Court it would be impossible for it to perform any
effective function. He contended at length that it was
impossible to hold that arbitration merely meant that the
state laws must be obeyed. The Constitution had selected
arbitration as the mode of Commonwealth action in dealing
with industrial disputes because arbitration was a judicial act,
and had the advantages of being a judicial act. By requiring
arbitration the Constitution secured that the substantial
requirements of justice should be observed, that the parties
must both be heard, that the Court must act honestly and
impartially, and so forth. It was thought proper not to
legislate directly to empower the Commonwealth to fix rates
of wages or numbers of hours for the settlement of disputes.
It preferred to do so by the method of arbitration in view of
the fact that Parliament was unfitted to inquire into facts
dependent upon evidence. The decisions of the Court must
be regarded as an exercise of the legislative power, and it
stood on the same footing in that regard as the determina-
tions of the States Wages Boards, which also were legislative
acts, but which were subject to be overridden by the para-
mount authority of Commonwealth legislation. A judgement
of the High Court declaring the law was binding on the people
of the state ; if founded on state law the State Legislature
could alter the law, but it could not reverse the judgement.
On the other hand, a federal award prescribing industrial
conditions was not an interpretation of the law, but intro-
duced new obligations. This was legislation by means of
a subordinate body acting under the Imperial authority, and