At the time this article was published
Senator Nurgitz and Robert Kaplan were Co-Chairmen of the Special Joint
Committee on Regulations and Other Statutory Instruments. Together with
Vice-Chairmen Howard Crosby and Committee Counsel François Bernier, they
attended the Brisbane Conference held from June 4-6, 1986. For a full report of
the conference, write to the Clerk, Committee of Subordinate Legislation,
Parliament House, Brisbane, Queensland 4000, Australia.
At the invitation of the Queensland
Committee of Subordinate Legislation, a Canadian delegation attended the
inaugural Conference of Australian Subordinate Legislation Committees. The
Conference brought together representatives of seven Australian jurisdictions
whose legislatures have established parliamentary committees for the review and
scrutiny of delegated legislation. It brought together representatives from
other Commonwealth countries including Zambia, Zimbabwe and Canada. The need
for regional conferences of this kind was discussed at the 1983 Commonwealth
Conference on Delegated Legislation in Ottawa. It will come as no surprise to
those familiar with Australia's leading role in the parliamentary scrutiny of
delegated legislation that the first such regional conference was held there.
Sir Walter Campbell, Governor of the State
of Queensland, opened the Conference by noting that the growth of delegated
legislation is a matter of longstanding concern in parliamentary democracies.
It goes back to Lord Hewart's 1929 attack on the new despotism of delegated
legislation. In 1929, the issue was one of parliamentary sovereignty. In 1985,
the issue has become that of managerial efficiency and Government intrusion
into the community's affairs. But the nub of the problem is the same in both
cases. This is the practical need for subordinate legislation and at the same
time the fear of perceived threats to parliamentary authority from public
functionaries making such legislation. The balance between the legislature's
authority over legislation and the Government's administrative responsibility
to make equitable and managerially sound rules within the intentions of the Act
is at the core of our system of public administration."
Sir Walter identified the safeguards
available to Parliament if its "overriding authority" is to be
maintained. These include: the careful choice of the delegate to which the
power to legislate is given; ensuring that the empowering provision is
appropriately specific as to what may be legislated; publishing the delegated
legislation widely to ensure public knowledge thereof; and parliamentary review
of delegated legislation.
The Governor reminded delegates that whether
these safeguards are utilized is basically a matter for the Parliament itself.
While expressing support for the concept of parliamentary control of delegated
legislation, he reminded delegates of Bernard Crick's famous remark that in our
system of government "control means influence not direct power; advice,
not command; intrusion, not obstruction; scrutiny, not initiation; and
publicity not secrecy."1
The Conference was chaired by Cordon Simpson
MLA, Chairman of the Queensland Committee of Subordinate Legislation. He
introduced the Acting Chief Justice of Queensland who spoke on the subject of
"The Courts and Subordinate Legislation". Mr. Justice Kelly described
the role of the Courts in the supervision of subordinate legislation and drew
attention to the essential distinction between judicial and parliamentary
review. As he put it, the courts' supervision of delegated legislation
"only comes into operation at a comparatively late stage, if it comes into
operation at all". Judicial review of the legality of subordinate
legislation can only arise "in the course of some proceeding brought by
one party against. another and where the determination of that question is
necessary for the determination of some ultimate issue between those
parties". These circumstances, according to the Chief Justice,
"obviously limit the extent to which courts are called upon to exercise
their power to review subordinate legislation."
While the distinction may, seem obvious, it
is not without interest to insist on the inherent limits of judicial review.
The suggestion has sometimes been made, at least in Canada, that a
parliamentary scrutiny committee should not concern itself with questions Of
validity as these involve legal considerations which are the proper province of
the courts. This view ignores the functional distinction between judicial and
parliamentary review: the purpose of the first is to decide on a dispute
between two parties, while the second is directed at the maintenance of
parliamentary legislative supremacy. To argue that judgments as to the legality
of delegated legislation are the exclusive province of the courts is
unrealistic. Chief Justice Kelly, when questioned on this point, indicated that,
in principle, he found no objection to a scrutiny committee examining the
validity of instruments of delegated legislation.
On the second day of the Conference,
delegates heard from three distinguished speakers: Professor Dennis Pearce
delivered a keynote address on "The Limits of Review"; the Honourable
Mr. justice MePherson, Chairman of the Queensland Law Reform Commission, gave a
paper on "Some Unexpected Consequences of Subordinate Legislation;
finally, the Conference heard the Solicitor-General of Queensland on "The
Practice and Procedure of the Solicitor-General's Office in Relation to
Subordinate Legislation".
Scrutiny of Legislation on its Merit
Professor Pearce is well-known throughout
the Commonwealth as the author of Delegated Legislation in Australia and New
Zealand (1977) and Statutory Interpretation in Australia (1974). He was also a
guest at both the First and Second Commonwealth Conferences on Delegated
Legislation. In selecting his topic, Professor Pearce followed up on the theme
of his 1980 address to the First Commonwealth Conference on Delegated
Legislation.2
After noting that "The review
undertaken by subordinate legislation committees is one of the most significant
roles that has to be undertaken by members of Parliament", Professor Pearce
turned to the question of whether the review function of such committees should
be extended beyond the bases at present generally accepted. Should the scrutiny
of delegated legislation extend beyond its procedural and technical aspects and
include its validity? Should the scrutiny of delegated legislation extend
further to an examination of the merits of the legislation? In Canada, the
first of these questions stands resolved insofar as the joint Committee on
Regulations and other Statutory Instruments has, from its inception, reviewed
the legality of statutory instruments. Except to the extent remarked upon
earlier, the Committee's role in this regard has presented no particular
problems.
It is interesting to note, however, that
Professor Pearce's position on this question has changed since he argued
against such a role for scrutiny committees. He explained that: "When I
gave a paper to the first Commonwealth Conference on Delegated Legislation in
October 1980, I ventured the view that it was unwise for parliamentary
Committees to consider the legal validity of delegated legislation. I put the
view that a Committee was likely to find itself in dispute with the
Government's legal advisers.... I said that validity questions were difficult
and often involved matters of opinion. It was better to leave these issues for
resolution by the courts on a challenge to the validity of the legislation in
question. I was taken firmly to task by some of the delegates at that
Conference, particularly those from Canada. I now think that they were right
and that the view that I had put did not represent the best approach for a
Committee to take". On reflection he agreed with comments of Perrin
Beatty, former joint Chairman of the Canadian joint Committee, who said, made
at the First Commonwealth Conference of Delegated Legislation Committees said:
'The fact is that in modern society justice is often beyond the reach of
individual citizens because of factors of cost. This is very disturbing. If
there is some way in which Parliament can satisfy the concerns of citizens in a
responsible way and avoid the need for recourse to the courts, then surely that
is a compelling argument why Parliament should act".
On the issue of review of the merits of
delegated legislation, or policy review as it is sometimes referred to,
Professor Pearce alluded to his previously expressed opinion that scrutiny
committees should not consider matters of policy for two reasons. First,
because committees often lack the support systems that would enable them to
fully investigate policy questions and secondly, because examination of these
questions would involve partisan considerations which might undermine the
usefulness of any such inquiry. He invited members of scrutiny committees to
reconsider what he termed a "self-imposed limitation" and to ask
themselves whether scrutiny committees do not often make policy judgments under
the guise of applying technical scrutiny criteria. Professor Pearce commented
that in examining this issue, he was reminded of the continuous protestations
of courts that they do not consider the merits of administrative decisions but
only their legality. He suggested that, in fact, courts often make policy
judgments while purporting to intervene on the basis of strictly legal considerations.
To anyone familiar with public law, there is a ring of truth to those remarks.
Professor Pearce went on to suggest that scrutiny committees, despite their
often repeated protestations to the contrary, do the same and argued that it
may be proper for them to do so.
To the extent policy relates to the
considerations which administrative authorities have in mind in legislating and
to the means chosen to achieve those goals, it is difficult to argue that
policy judgments are never made by scrutiny committees. If one takes the joint
Committee as an example, some of its scrutiny criteria are openly concerned
with matters of policy. The Committee will examine whether or not a statutory
instrument 'makes some unusual or unexpected use of the powers conferred by the
enabling statute"; whether it "trespasses unduly on the rights and
liberties of the subject"; or whether it "appears to amount to the
exercise of a substantive legislative power properly the subject of direct
parliamentary enactment." It is difficult to see how the application of
criteria such as these does not require parliamentarians to consider, if only
indirectly, the policy aspects of an instrument.3
Many of those attending the Brisbane
Conference warned their colleagues that for scrutiny committees to review the
merits of delegated legislation would jeopardize the bipartisan spirit common
to most scrutiny committees. If these committees do in fact consider policy
issues when reviewing statutory instruments, how do we explain these attitudes?
One answer may be that in politics, the perception of facts is often quite as
important as the facts themselves. Perhaps the bipartisan approach of a
scrutiny committee is preserved not so much by the non consideration of the
policy expressed in regulations, as by the public assertion that it is not
being considered.
Uniform Legislation
Professor Pearce also addressed himself to
the difficulties scrutiny committees may encounter in reviewing subordinate
legislation enacted as part of a uniform legislation scheme. These schemes, by
their nature, are unique to federal states such as Australia and Canada. A
recent example in Canada is the legislation governing the transportation of
dangerous goods. Where agreement is reached by representatives of the central and
provincial authorities as to the form and content of delegated legislation to
be adopted by the jurisdictions involved in the scheme, what role can the
scrutiny committee of one jurisdiction play? A scrutiny committee that objects
to the delegated legislation adopted in its jurisdiction is likely to be met
with the response that the delegated legislation represents the agreement of
all participants in the uniform legislation scheme and that any subsequent
change would bring into question the very existence of the agreement. Professor
Pearce suggested that one approach to the problem may be for uniform
subordinate legislation to be submitted in draft form to a scrutiny committee
before it is formally agreed to and enacted. Beyond this, he suggested that a distinction
be drawn between those provisions which are at the heart of the uniform
legislation scheme and what he termed fringe provisions. "I am not sure
... that uniformity means identity. I do put it to you ... that perhaps there
is some room for committees here to address issues relating to uniformity
within certain bounds and to look to see whether it is possible to ensure that
those provisions do not offend against the principles that the committee would
object to in other legislation. It will be a case of trying to balance whether
the provision is crucial to the operation of the legislation or whether it is,
as it were, on the fringe, that is, a way of implementing the legislation
rather than being in the heartland of the topic with which it is trying to
deal."
As far as Canada is concerned, the concern
is also relevant to subordinate legislation enacted pursuant to
inter-jurisdictional delegations of subordinate legislative power. Under the
Canada Agricultural Products Marketing Act, for example, federal regulatory
powers over the marketing of agricultural commodities are delegated to, and
exercised by, provincial marketing boards.4 If a regulation is
adopted by a provincial authority in the exercise of a federal legislative
power, should it be treated by the Canadian scrutiny committee in the same
manner as any other piece of federal subordinate legislation? Or does the fact
it was enacted by a provincial body entitle it to special consideration?
Although, in the past, the joint Committee has dealt with these regulations on
the same footing as other federal subordinate legislation, it has also been
keenly aware that such regulations are in a unique situation because of their
adoption by administrative bodies over which the federal government exercises no
authority. The eventual revision of the Statutory Instruments Act may provide
ail occasion to examine whether or not regulations enacted as part of uniform
legislation or legislative delegation schemes should be subject to scrutiny by
the Joint Committee on Regulations and other Statutory Instruments.
Canadian Participation
The final session of the Conference was
devoted to presentations and comments by each attending delegation. Our
delegation tabled a report with the Conference and distributed it to all attending
delegates. The report explained the role of the Joint Committee on Regulations
and other Statutory Instruments in the Canadian Parliament and the procedures
it follows. It also dealt with the disallowance procedure recently adopted by
the House of Commons and summarized some recent government initiatives in the
area of regulatory reform. The report made it abundantly clear that Canadian
parliamentarians have a crucial role to play in ensuring that powers delegated
by Parliament are exercised in accordance with the parliamentary authorization
and the principles of fairness and equity.
The remarks made in the opening address of
the Conference on the continued growth of delegated legislation were borne out
by the report's observation that: "The extent to which legislative powers
are delegated by the Parliament of Canada is obvious if one considers that in
the course of a recent Session of Parliament, which lasted a little over three
years, Parliament adopted some 173 statutes; over the same period of time,
approximately 4,000 instruments made pursuant to statutory powers were
published in the Canada Gazette. This does not account for the considerable
number of such instruments the publication of which is not legally required. It
has been remarked that regulations import on the daily lives of Canadians to a
far greater extent that many of the statutes pursuant to which they are
made." The phenomenal growth of subordinate legislation is common to many
Commonwealth jurisdictions. While many parliamentarians reflected on this, the
subject was not specifically discussed by the Conference. This prompted one
delegate to suggest that the subject of deregulation ought to have been the
focus of the Conference.
The Canadian delegation secured adoption, by
the Conference of Australian Subordinate Legislation Committees, of a
resolution urging the Commonwealth Delegated Legislation Committee5
to pursue its efforts to arrange for the holding of the Third Commonwealth
Conference on Delegated Legislation at an early date. Its sponsor reminded
delegates of the resolution, by the Second Commonwealth Conference on Delegated
Legislation, calling for Commonwealth-wide conferences at regular intervals.
The Canadian resolution was adopted by the Conference and is to be communicated
to the members of the Commonwealth Delegated Legislation Committee by the
Chairman of the Conference.
There was widespread agreement amongst those
in attendance that the First Commonwealth Conference of Australian Subordinate
Legislation Committees was a success. And plans are in hand for the
organization of the next conference. The Brisbane Conference gave us a valuable
opportunity to discuss and reflect on issues of common interest with our
Commonwealth colleagues. We also collected valuable information which would
otherwise be difficult or time-consuming to obtain. Beyond the immediate
benefits to participants, the papers presented to the Conference and its
proceedings form a permanent record that is of interest to all
parliamentarians.
Notes
1. Bernard Crick, The Reform of
Parliament, London, 1970.
2. Commonwealth Conference of Delegated
Legislation Committees, Senate Standing Committee on Regulations and
Ordinances, Volume 2, Documents of the Conference, Australian Government
Publishing Services, Canberra, 1981.
3. See for example, the comment of the Law
Reform Commission in LRCC, Independent Administrative Agencies, Report
26, Ottawa, 1985, p. 20, note 21.
4. R.S.C. 1970, c. A- & s. 2.
5. This Committee chaired by the Honourable
Perrin Beatty consists of representatives from the principal regions of the
Commonwealth. It was established as a continuing co-ordinating committee by the
Second Commonwealth Conference on Delegated Legislation and has, as one of its
major purposes, the sponsorship and arrangement of the next Commonwealth
Conference.