New South Wales v Commonwealth (1915)
New South Wales v Commonwealth, commonly known as the Wheat case, or more recently as the Inter-State Commission case, is a landmark Australian judgment of the High Court made in 1915 regarding judicial separation of power. It was also a leading case on the freedom of interstate trade and commerce that is guaranteed by section 92 of the Constitution.
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Chapter III CourtEdmund_BartonFebruary 1915Inter-State CommissionInter-State Commission caseKruger v CommonwealthList of High Court of Australia casesNew South Wales v CommonwealthSection 92 of the Constitution of AustraliaSeparation of powers in AustraliaWaterside Workers' Federation of Australia v J W Alexander LtdWheat case
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New South Wales v Commonwealth (1915)
New South Wales v Commonwealth, commonly known as the Wheat case, or more recently as the Inter-State Commission case, is a landmark Australian judgment of the High Court made in 1915 regarding judicial separation of power. It was also a leading case on the freedom of interstate trade and commerce that is guaranteed by section 92 of the Constitution.
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New South Wales v Commonwealth ...... ection 92 of the Constitution.
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36,631,518
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825,936,668
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date decided
1915-03-23
judges
Griffith CJ, Barton, Isaacs, Gavan Duffy, Powers and Rich JJ
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New South Wales v Commonwealth
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Freedom of interstate trade is ...... by reason of interstate trade.
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The Constitution separated the ...... d not exercise judicial power.
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prior actions
Commonwealth v NSW
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New South Wales v Commonwealth ...... ection 92 of the Constitution.
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New South Wales v Commonwealth (1915)
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